Monday, October 21, 2024

Wet liberals & classicide

The Victorian Labor Government has just announced its new housing policy. It is going to override current planning laws to build high-rises of up to 20 storeys around train stations (within a 1km radius). This is to accommodate the massive population growth Australia is experiencing from immigration.

One notable feature of this policy is that some of the most beautiful heritage suburbs of Melbourne have been targeted, including Brighton, Hawthorn and Malvern. These are upper-middle class suburbs, with a well-established way of life that is now likely to radically change. 

The Anglo upper middle class in these suburbs are mostly "Teal" in their politics. They are what was once known as liberal wets, being socially liberal but less committed to laissez-faire economics than the liberal "dries". 

The identity of this class was based in part on certain status markers having to do with wealth and lifestyle (a holiday home in Portsea, overseas holidays, designer renovations, and especially children attending expensive private schools). But it was also based, especially for the wives, on holding socially liberal views. This has proven to be tragic, because one consequence of holding to these views is that it makes it impossible to defend your own class existence. It is a class marker that fatally undermines your own existence. It is a "classicide". 

Oddly, the Anglo upper middle class was too conservative - in the bad sense of the word. It failed to adapt quickly enough. When it was clear that social liberalism was the wrong path, it did not abandon it in time in order to secure its own future. It stubbornly clung to the one thing it needed to be rid of.

I want to try to explain one aspect of why socially liberal views were self-sabotaging. To do so I am going to go back to one of the Australian wet liberals of the 1980s, George Brandis. Brandis wrote extensively about his political philosophy, so he is a useful political figure to focus on.


My basic argument is that the liberal wets inherited a political philosophy from the nineteenth century (particularly from John Stuart Mill) that is overly individualistic. Their idea was that the core human good is a freedom to be an autonomous individual, so that we self-determine our own unique purposes in life. Here is a sample of Brandis writing about autonomy:

the sovereign idea which inspires our side of politics has always been the same: our belief that the paramount public value is the freedom of the individual ...

the most important single thing we must do is renew our commitment to the freedom of the individual, and restore that commitment to the very centre of our political value system: not one among several competing values, but the core value, from which our world view ultimately derives.

Liberalism ... has such a central guiding principle - respect for the freedom of the individual, his dignity and his autonomy; his right ... to be the architect of his own life 

Every one of those reforms extended the bounds of human freedom, gave individual men and women greater autonomy ...

There is a kind of metaphysical basis to this kind of thinking which Brandis touches upon here:

To the liberal, the most fundamental characteristic of any society is that it is a coming together of a number of individual persons, each of whom has a unique identity, unique needs and aspirations, the individuality of each of whom is equally important. The pursuit of individual ends, subject to the agreed mutual constraints necessary to social existence, is the dynamic force of human progress.

I firmly believe that this is a faulty metaphysics. It emphasises the idea that our identities, needs and aspirations are unique and wholly individual. This is a view that derives from the early moderns, such as Thomas Hobbes. Hobbes explicitly rejected the earlier view that each kind of creature has a "quiddity", i.e., an essence that gives it a particular nature distinct from other kinds of creatures and therefore at least some commonality in identity, needs and purposes. Instead, his theory was that we are determined at the atomic level to either desire things or be averse to them, and that these determinations are unique to each individual. 

A nineteenth century liberal feminist, Victoria Woodhull, advanced a similar sort of argument:

Now, individual freedom...means freedom to obey the natural condition of the individual, modified only by the various external forces....which induce action in the individual. What that action will be, must be determined solely by the individual and the operating causes, and in no two cases can they be precisely alike...Now, is it not plain that freedom means that individuals...are subject only to the laws of their own being.

Now, one problem with taking this view is that it makes a common moral language very difficult, as there is no way to predict the good for any particular individual, and it also makes the idea of a common good very difficult, because there only exist individual goods known only to the individuals themselves. Language about the good tends to be expressed instead in terms of pluralism or diversity or tolerance or non-discrimination.

The alternative view is to see humans, like other creatures, as having a certain nature, so that it then makes sense that there might be a common telos (end or purpose) in seeking to embody the best aspects of this nature. This does not exclude this nature having a somewhat different expression according to personal traits, but nonetheless it exists as an underlying essence of what makes us recognisably men and women.

The idea of a wholly unique individual nature also distorts the relationship between the individual and society. It makes liberals frame this relationship as either "the individual comes first and society is derived from this fact" (the "good" liberal option) or "society comes first and the individual is merely derivative" (the "bad" non-liberal option). In either case, there is a sundering of individual and community.

Here again is Brandis:

This view of a society of free and autonomous individuals distinguishes in two essential respects Liberal social theory from the approaches of its most important contemporary rivals, conservatism and socialism. Firstly, conservatism and socialism have in common the belief that the basic units, the 'building blocks', of human society are structures much vaster than the individual.

The conservative sees society as a naturally ordered, harmonious hierarchy; while in the eyes of the socialist, the basic structures of society are irreconcilably hostile classes...Both agree that individual persons are but incidents of larger entities...It is the distinctive claim of liberalism that the individual person is the central unit of society and is therefore prior to and of greater significance than the social structures through which he pursues his ends.
The better alternative is to recognise that there is, as Francis Bacon put it, a "double nature of the good". In other words, we fulfil our nature as men and women partly through ourselves as individually embodied and ensouled beings, but also through our membership of communal bodies. These other bodies help to carry certain aspects of our own good, such as our identity, our roles (e.g. as fathers and mothers), our loves, our social commitments, our attachments to people and place, our connection to generations past, present and future, our close connection to a particular culture and so on.

The individual good is not therefore somehow set apart from the good of the communal bodies we belong to. In contributing to the common good, we are advancing our own good as an individual. Nor do the communal bodies render us somehow derivative or incidental. They exist, in part, so that we can be more fully ourselves. 

Are liberal wets entirely individualistic? In the sense I have outlined above, yes. They cannot truly connect the individual to the communities he or she belongs to. However, liberals sometimes do, in a superficial way, concede that society does merit some attention. They might, for instance, add on the word "responsibilities" to their political formulas (for instance, here in Victoria we have something called the "Charter of Human Rights and Responsibilities"). They might sometimes invoke the necessity of maintaining social cohesion, which is a weak and inadequate way of trying to counterbalance liberal individualism, but even this was too much for Brandis. He complained (of the former Liberal PM John Howard) that:
...in qualifying the Liberal Party's commitment to the freedom of the individual as its core value, and weighing it against what he often called social cohesion, Howard made a profound departure from the tradition of Deakin and Menzies.
Most significantly, liberal wets like to see themselves as being less selfish than liberal dries, despite being committed to a radically individualistic politics. How do they manage this? By emphasising the idea that they are committed to equal rights for all people. This is something very big for the Teal types. They will see themselves in individualistic terms as having little connection to any community or tradition of their own. But they are fierce in promoting the idea of the rights of those seen as somehow marginalised. It comes across as a pathological altruism, but I think it's one of the few ways that they are permitted to transcend their own individualistic politics and claim what they believe to be the moral high ground.

Where does the Anglo upper middle class go from here? Well, they will either merge into the new high-rise, densely packed multiculture or they will leave the former heritage suburbs for somewhere else. But I hope that a few younger ones might read this and consider being more politically adaptable, in the sense of letting go of liberalism as a class marker and instead adopting an alternative that makes it possible to defend a way of life.

11 comments:

  1. Its so ugly, and depressing, to even think that people can have this worldview, and to accept this racial and ethnic dispossession as if it was nothing.

    Its not. But.... you don't know anything about race until you're the only White man in the room.... or highrise.

    How can they be so myopic?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Is the gap between races in Australia or generations, it seems that if you are a asset holder (often a home owner) you have done alright where as people without have gotten screwed in the recent era.

      As boomers and xers (to a lesser extent) are disproportionate asset holders comparably it has left them and the values they espouse on the losing end. Remember housing has gone from 4 times annual wages for boomers to 12 or even 16 times for millennials.

      So people will snap up and housing on offer and trads because they never cared about supplying more are left in the dust.

      Delete
    2. That question is in fact, completely secondary and therefore irrelevant to the larger issue. While it is HUGE on what it is doing to many generations of not just Aussies, but across the West, it misses what is causing it and more importantly, what will be left as a society after either way.

      Yes, the housing bubble and asset expansion have really been a massive generation theft by financial coercion, but what makes it possible?

      Again, its so myopic even while right in diagnosing some very bad symptoms. Consider what kind of society, what people, you want to have in 100 years. That is the issue.

      Delete
  2. For a man interested in conservatism you sure are embracing an attitude antithetical to it in the long term. For instance the preservation you espouse in this post is like the rose preserved for its beauty in resin vs preserving the rose through planting the seeds.

    There is the famous quote "Blessed Are Those Who Plant Trees Under Whose Shade They Will Never Sit" and where we are at as a society was prior gens refusing to plant seeds for future and society moving leftwards as a result.


    This is such a flawed post it'd be worth looking in to the generational gap in housing access.

    Housing affordability gaps have exploded doubling in twenty years from 1998 to 2018 and these are deeply tied to the period of Howard and post Howard governments in Australia.

    A big driver is the financialisation of housing as an investment. Lack of supply constructions, etc. Direct government policy to favor asset holders over wage earners.

    Good charts are here:
    https://theconversation.com/the-housing-wealth-gap-between-older-and-younger-australians-has-widened-alarmingly-in-the-past-30-years-heres-why-197027

    https://www.cis.org.au/publication/generation-left-young-voters-are-deserting-the-right/

    Fundamentally there needs to be an acknowledgement of the YIMBY and NIMBY debate and supply construction in general to address generation gaps. The gen z voting graph in the cis should be of major concern and so much of that is driven by lack of housing supply.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anon, yours is a right liberal mindset, right? You see people as atomised individuals, each pursuing their self-interest in the market. It is a vision of Economic Man. I would challenge you to answer why you will not even consider, for a microsecond, the idea that a massive ramping up of demand via immigration might have a bearing on housing affordability. Is it because of an ideological commitment to the free flow of labour across national borders? Is it because you see people maximising economic self-interest via immigration as a positive value within your worldview?

      Delete
    2. I'm no liberal of any sense or a left winger. Sometimes organic societies require sacrifices from some that benefit others. Unfortunately the only housing contruction on offer is developer based so that is what we are stuck with unless we have meteor strike Canberra and other parties to the left of the Greens are destroyed ( see defeats regarding negative gearing and housing fund).


      Housing construction during the post war immigration matched immigration and prices didn't rise as a result. Later governments disolved the departments that ensured housing was constructed in sufficient numbers and dismantled attempts to move people away from capital cities. I.e. Soldier settlement schemes were dismantled in the 60s, Whitlams attempt to partner with states to build new cities was stopped by Fraser in the 70s (see Monarto https://www.murraybridge.news/scars-still-run-deep-50-years-after/ https://www.abc.net.au/listen/programs/the-history-listen/the-history-listen-monarto-don-dunstan-futuristic-adelaide/103989848). Maybe it'd be good to get your thoughts on Monarto and soldier settlement schemes?

      Regardless of what happens the average age of a woman in Australia has risen to 39.4 years old so low fertility has been locked in. This is from 36.9 in 2003, also think of the governments of the last 20 years that twiddled their thumbs at this. So women are ageing out of having children and one of the key causes of this is lack and expense of housing causing delays in family formation.

      Source - https://www.aihw.gov.au/reports/men-women/female-health/contents/who-are

      So what would be your non-liberal approach to decreasing housing costs?

      Delete
    3. I would ease the demand for housing in two ways. First, through a reduction of immigration. Second, by placing limitations on foreign ownership of housing stock. There could be some medium density development, but it should be in the areas of Melbourne with lower quality housing, so that it is an improvement in housing quality, rather than in the heritage areas.

      Delete
    4. What do “housing costs” have to do with anything? the culture is purely agaisnt Life, so are you being a liberal yourself “anon,” and so no money will fix what your religion forbids: the Existence of Humanity.

      We therefore have to remove your religion of liberalism TOTALLY.

      Delete
  3. Young people are fleeing the affected suburbs because they led the rejection of housing construction and because of lack of housing. This s the only current action to alleviate the issue. I wouldn't racialise or project high political concepts on this issue.

    https://kpmg.com/au/en/home/media/press-releases/2024/09/australian-shrinking-suburbs.html#:~:text=The%20latest%20analysis%20by%20KPMG,out%20of%20inner%2Dcity%20suburbs.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The apartments will also be out of the price range of most young people. I really don't see how this is about housing affordability. If mass immigration is used to keep demand high, and you build high rises in the most expensive areas of Melbourne, you are not going to make much of a difference to the average young person on an average wage.

      Delete
  4. Every evil of the past 500 years is just some apotheosis of something luther said.

    luther said reason is of the devil, so therefore we have people claiming devilry is “intelligence.” Not “intelligent,” but as if devilry is the mere platonic element of intelligence altogether.

    luther said “power” comes from his satanic version of “forgiveness,” and therefore that the more you sin the more “forgiven” and therefore more “powerful” you get. luther then said in that same speech the only real “sin” is to get in the way of other’s sin because that means less of the satanic automatic “forgiveness.”

    take the tissue-thin veneer of the antichrist’s (spoiler as to who “protestant Jesus” is) image off of protestantism and you get the modern world.

    Like I have said many times before, you cannot talk or vote out of this.

    A full scale collapse would not even solve this! A Deluge even larger than The Flood is needed for basic survival (See Our Lady Of Fatima, Our Lady Of Akita), and Luckily The Three Days In Darkness comes in 2029.

    Be Ready.

    ReplyDelete