Now is the time, Ladies and Germs, to think about... the Underwood Tariff act of 1913. When Trump insisted on renaming Mount Denali Mount McKinley, maybe he was being more than the Loony Tunes character he usually plays. Maybe it was a hint. The Underwood Act coupled tariff reductions and income tax. The income tax, brand spanking new from the 16th amendment, was not a mass tax. It was conceived as a class tax - the working and middle class was not the primary target. The wealthy were. It was the rare middle class worker who paid federal income tax up until the 50s. Government, in the pre-income tax days, ran on revenue from tariffs. There were other sources, but tariffs were the bulk of it. Now, consider a crazy person - lets name him Elon M. - who wants pretty much to abolish income tax on the wealthy. Well, how are you going to pay your soldiers, and more importantly, your defense contractors? How about - going back to the tried and true? The system of William McKinley.
“I’m so bored. I hate my life.” - Britney Spears
Das Langweilige ist interessant geworden, weil das Interessante angefangen hat langweilig zu werden. – Thomas Mann
"Never for money/always for love" - The Talking Heads
Sunday, February 02, 2025
Ladies and Gentlemen, I give you the Underwood Tariff act of 1913
Saturday, February 01, 2025
For a future history of the United States: where are the oligarchs?
It would be an odd history of Britain, or France, or Spain, etc., which ignored the role of the aristocracy throughout the early modern period and on through the 19th century.
But exactly that oddness is a keynote of the grand narrative
of American history. Muckrakers, like Ferdinand Lundberg, the muckraking author
of various books about the superrich, or Mathew Josephson, who wrote a memorable
book about the Robber Barons, are definitely on the outskirts of American
historiography. That historiography even lacks an anthropological account of American
capital, something that would conceptualize the admixture of clan wealth and
the corporate legal structure to get at the experience of power in the United
States.
Myself, I take the term bratva, the Russian argot applying
to criminal gangs as associations of “brothers”, as a good overall term that
applies to American plutocracy.
Lately, of course, we have our mouths and eyes full of
plutocracy. From Joe Biden giving a (choke) medal of freedom to the founder of
the Carlyle Group (so much for the regulation of private equity on the Dem side
of the equation) to the obvy influence of Musk, a billionaire, on our
billionaire prez, Trump, they are here to tell us: we’ve always been here.
Yet though this headless heedless nuclear armed country is
led by the most incestuous products of the boardroom and bedroom, I see few
calls to go back to the muckraker classics. In the Neolib era, we are supposed
to forget those embarrassing vulgarians, gawping at the felonious hijinks of
those who made their piles in the 19th and 20th centuries.
A pity. On the list of books about America that are taught
in cultural studies classrooms, I imagine few have a place for the Superrich or
The Robber Barons.
Lundberg did have some rightwing populist leanings – but Josephson
was my angelic ideal, combining an acute literary sensibility (one of the twenties
exiles in Paris, a litterateur who wrote a memoir entitled Life among the
Surrealists) with a solid career at Fortune, back when Agee worked there and
you could visit Whittacker Chambers in his office at the other Luce publication,
Time Magazine, by taking the elevator.
Chambers, of course, was in a Manichean struggle with
Communism. Josephson, though, had his eyes on the prize. The Vanderbilts. The Rockefellers.
The Morgans.
The Robber Barons came out at the right time, when a
combination of Republican populists from the West and Democratic New Dealers
from the East were making robber barons quite uncomfortable with their
questions and committees – for instance, the Nye committee and its questions
about J.P. Morgan’s profiteering in WWI. In the Eisenhauer era and up to the
present, the conservative counter-attack on the “robber baron” myth is very,
very concerned that we see these “entrepreneurs” in a sober light as, well,
geniuses and our heroes. Every bratva has its minstrel.
Josephson quotes the Beards, those permanently unfashionable
populist historians, in the introduction to his book:
“These men were robber barons as were their medieval
counterparts, the dominating figures of an aggressive economic age.
In any case, "to draw the American scene as it unfolded
between the Civil War and the end of the nineteenth century, without these
dominant figures looming in the foreground, is to make a shadow picture,"
as the Beards have written. "To put in the presidents and the leading
senators . . . and leave out such prime actors in the drama is to show scant
respect for the substance of life. Why, moreover, should anyone be interested
in the beginnings of the House of a Howard or Burleigh and indifferent to the
rise of a House of Morgan or Rockefeller?"
That these are “houses” or clans is a claim that, alas, has
not taken root in a historiography that, no matter how Marxist or lefty the
ideology of the historian, still takes no hint from the copious documentation
of the anthropology of clan power in other societies. Those, of course, are “primitive”
societies – not like our techno-powered secular scientific one of today and
tomorrow! An essay by business historian Richard R. John, Robber Baron Redux,
traces the phrase back to Charles and Henry Adams classic account of Jay Gould’s
manipulation of railroad stock, Chapters of Eerie, another book on the
outskirts of our American classics. John also attributes the disrepute of the “robber
baron” thematic in business history to Alfred Chandler, whose influence on
business history is much greater than that of Marx – at least in the U.S.
Chandler preferred Industrial Statesman – not so feverish and ideological. About
the same time, the term entrepreneur was revived by Joseph Schumpeter, and
after a bit of a hiatus there – those crazy sixties and seventies – got take into
the bosom of official speak in the Reaganite eighties. By now, of course, it is
official – with the nineties cult of Jack Welch and the present cult of Elon
Musk being the most celebrated images in the gallery – the rich are treated not
as robbers but as artists. The
entrepreneurial myth – that value comes from the top, from management, rather
than from the bottom, from workers – has been firmly set in place, liquidating
the American rebellion that informed the counter-culture of unions, surrealists
and Fortune journalists during the long period of American questioning.
Friday, January 31, 2025
to scold on the interwebs
There is an etymological mystery about the word ‘scold”. In the great 0ED vol. 9, the etymology is not given – rather, the etymological theories that link the word to some original Scandinavian word are held up as unproven. Others relate the term to “skald”, a kind of satiric poet – the antithesis of bard. However the descent of the word goes, at some point it became contextually misogynistic – the scold and the shrew were stock figures of aggressive women. Scold occurs a number of times in Shakespeare’s Taming of the Shrew, where it possesses a certain figurative stature that is curiously attractive to Petruchio:
Wednesday, January 29, 2025
Bye Bye Miss American Pie
In 1984, Andrew Kopkind and Alexander Cockburn wrote a terrific jeremiad in the Nation that began:
Tuesday, January 28, 2025
auden's New Year's Poem part two: trans- and the palimpsest subject
last bit on Auden's New Year's Letter
Saturday, January 25, 2025
auden's new years poem: part one
1.
“Auden and Isherwood arrived in New York on 26 January 1939.
Ice blocks floating on the Hudson greeted them. The afternoon of their arrival
brought news that Barcelona had fallen to Franco; two days later, news reached
them that Yeats had died in the south of France. Taken together these two events
resulted – as Richard Davenport-Hines says in his biography - in Auden' s mood
being a mixture of apprehension and zest.” – Michael Murphy, Neoclassicism,
Late Modernism, and W. H. Auden's 'New Year Letter'
I was prepared, as well as a human unit could be, for the
worst this January. Living in Paris rather cushions me from the American
shocks, but since I was born and bred a redneck, another Calibanish creole from
the states, the shocks nevertheless tingle.
I decided to do a dry January. It was a surprisingly easy
thing to do, and on the plus side, we have thrown out much fewer bottles this
month. On the minus side, there is really something boring and platitudinous
about no wine and no beer, the welcome guests who enter at evening and restore
one’s faith in, well, whatever fuckery one has been engaged in during day.
I also decided to think of the onset, once again, of Trump
in the U.S. – and the continuing decay in France, under the odious Macron – in
conjunction with Auden’s New Year’s Letter, which was his sort of great spell
to dispel the low, dirty decade of the 30s.
Apprehension and zest. Exactly.
2.
I have often tried to put my finger what I find disturbing
about Auden’s poetry; I think it is the preach-y side of it. Inside the clever
enjambments and post-Jazz age cocktails, there is a homily wanting to get out.
Since a sermon is essay-adjacent, I should be more appreciative, I suppose. Yet
the homily always seems to return us to wooly Anglican half-truths, etiolated
since the age of piracy and territorial seizures, since the time that the
English appetite took huge chunks out of the world, into a bunch of teatime
truths, Fabian socialism.
Unfair. I know.
At the root of the evil, I think, is Auden’s growing
conviction that poetry does nothing. Which is derived from the late romantic
divide between art and life, one of those puzzles Auden shared with Yeats. But
far from doing nothing, poetry in the largest sense – the newspapers, the
movies, the radio, etc. etc. – moved the masses as never before. Poetry had
moved out of the village, and out of the salon, via steam and electricity and
Mr. Edison’s inventions.
Yeats was not being just a romantic when he wrote:
“Did that play of mine send out
Certain men the English shot?
Did words of mine put too great strain
On that woman's reeling brain?
Could my spoken words have checked
That whereby a house lay wrecked?”
In the New Year’s Letter, Auden is still arguing this point.
“Art is not life and cannot be
A midwife to society,
For art is a. fait accompli.
What they should do, or how or when
Life-order comes to living men
It cannot say, for it presents
Already lived experience
Through a convention that creates
Autonomous completed states.”
In this, he is anticipating a Cold War order in which art –
poetry, for instance – finds its place outside of politics, and can only be
corrupted if it gets stuck in such small partisan doings. This division, on
which the pathos of the poem depends, strikes me as simply wrong. But to an
extent, I don’t care. That is, I think it is an incorrect map of the world that
is necessary for the poem to work; and the poem does work.
3.
Looking at the small bore authoritarianism which is drifting
out of D.C. – the authoritarianism of post-viagra Trump pitted against the
nudgery of the technocratically smug Democrats – the New Year’s Letter has a
certain timely vibe:
“Twelve months ago in Brussels, I
Heard the same wishful-thinking sigh
As round me, trembling on their beds,
Or taut with apprehensive dreads,
The sleepless guests of Europe lay
Wishing the centuries away,
And the low mutter of their vows
Went echoing through her haunted house,
As on the verge of happening
There crouched the presence of The Thing.
All formulas were tried to still
The scratching on the window-sill,
All bolts of custom made secure
Against the pressure on the door,
But up the staircase of events
Carrying his special instruments,
To every bedside all the same
The dreadful figure swiftly came.”
I love this, and I love that Auden’s filters
authoritarianism through the stylistics of the Who dunnit, of the special
English variety he loved: Agatha Christie at the Parsonage. This should diminish our sense of the boot
coming down – but instead, by domesticating horror, we see how horror has grown
in the domestic space. That it comes to
our bedsides in bedsits; that exiles are our future.
4.
In Michael Murphey’s essay on the poem, there is, as one
would expect, first a bit of situating. Is Auden late modernist?
Post-modernist? Murphey quotes from Randall Jarrell’s review of the poem, which
is already busy doing situation work:
“In April 1941, in a characteristically spirited review of
Auden's recently published The Double Man, Randall Jarrell began by declaring:
In 1931 Pope's ghost said to me, 'Ten years from now the leading young poet of
the time will publish ... a didactic epistle of about nine hundred tetrameter
couplets.' I answered absently, 'You are a fool'; and who on earth would have
thought him anything else. But he was right: the decline and fall of modernist
poetry . . . were nearer than anyone could have believed.”
I find that a rather vexing proposition: “the decline and fall of modernist poetry” was inscribed in the themes of modernist poetry, with its re-appropriation of the conversational – literally in some of Apollinaire’s poems and some bits of the Wasteland – and its strong citational bent make Auden’s poems, to my eyes, ultra modernist – which, thematically, means the kind of poetry that takes its reference points from World Literature, like good little Goethians, rather than from a narrow Anglophone, or at best cross-Channel, tradition. Auden, writing a poem that is dosed with the parsonage murder motif from New York City, about the world wide coming of fascism, has, contrary to Jarrell, put on his hundred mile modernist boots and gone a-walkin’. Or at least that is my reading.
Thursday, January 23, 2025
Bloody thoughts: Take out some people
MOTHERLESS CHILD TAKE UP YOUR GUN
Once, in my late twenties, I had a off and on again job as a hand in a construction crew (back then, I was a general Jack of all Unemployments). So we made this porch in North Austin, and this dock, cause the place was out on a lake. And we talked, hammered, measured, the usual shit. And I, who was taking what I thought was a year off from my graduate program at U.T., talked the usual routine of an Academic Marxist. Quite happily chirping along.
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