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What Was Liberalism? #2 Capitalism & History | Philosophy Tube - YouTube
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Welcome back. In Episode 1 we talked about
liberalism as an ideology, and what ideology
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means. I strongly advise watching Episode 1 before watching this video otherwise it might not make a whole lot of sense.
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In this video we're gonna be talking about
liberalism's relationship to that curious
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phenomenon that is capitalism.
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'Capitalism,' a little bit like 'liberalism,' is one of those words that it's sometimes difficult to pin down even though we might think we have a rough idea what it means.
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To a lot of people capitalism just means, well, "This - the economic system we have now." And yes
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that's a start, but really the economic system we have now is an example of capitalism - we're interested in what
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capitalism fundamentally is.
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We can say that capitalism has things like free markets; private ownership of machinery, land, and tools; a focus on profit; and people working for wages.
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But again, those are just features of it than
can be present in a greater or lesser degree.
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What's the core of capitalism?
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I'll walk you through an example: let's
say you've got some money and you invest it in buying some wood
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and employing some labourers. The labourers put their time and labour into the wood and they increase its value by carving it into a chair.
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Because it's now increased in value you can sell it for profit. And you keep the profit for yourself rather than give it to
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the people who actually put the work in. Instead you pay them in wages, and the wages are always less than
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the total profit that actually gets made otherwise you wouldn't get anything back on your investment. The
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money you originally invested is called capital: hence you are a capitalist. And that - the investment/wages/capital relation - is the core of what we call capitalism.
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But actually the picture is a little bit bigger than that because we missed a lot of things out. Like,
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where did you get your money in
the first place - did you inherit it, steal
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it, did you win it as a prize? Where did your workers come from - are they black, white, male, female,
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what led them to work for you specifically? Where did you get your wood
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from - was it cut down sustainably by well-paid lumberjacks, or was it chopped by slaves?
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And if there are forty different chair factories in town the answers to these questions might
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be different for every single one of them, but they're all still capitalist factories. That's why in their book
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"How the West Came to Rule," the authors define capitalism not just as that investment/profit/wages
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relationship but also everything - all the social, economic, and political factors - that sustain and reinforces that practice. Which is a whole lot.
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To understand why capitalism and liberalism are so linked together, we need to go back in time
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to before either of them were invented. In
the days before capitalism, strange as it might
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seem now, a lot of land wasn't owned by
anybody - it was what they called common land. The family was the main unit of society so you and
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your peasant family might farm the common
land in order to survive.
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If you were a very wealthy family, maybe even a royal family,
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maybe you wouldn't need to farm the common land because you've got a lot of money already that either
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you or an ancestor stole, probably in a war, from somebody else.
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Then this new thing starts happening called enclosure, where rich people start fencing
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off the common land and saying that they
own it. Nowadays we might call that stealing,
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but then I suppose nobody owned the land so maybe we
can't call it that? But regardless,
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you and your peasant family
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and your village go down to the common moor one morning and find that there's men with
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swords there now saying that you can't use it anymore, so you've lost the only means you
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have for feeding yourself. Great.
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So now, you can't work for yourself as much anymore.
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You have to work for somebody else in
order to survive, working on their land,
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fighting in their armies, or when the Industrial Revolution eventually happens - paid for by
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all that slavery and colonialism we're about to be doing - you'll be able to get a job in
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a factory. As a result, society becomes more atomised
and the individual labourer who must go
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to where the work is and work for somebody else becomes the unit of society.
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And hey, that's the transition from feudalism to capitalism - now we have the free market, we have the investment/profit/wages relationship
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and individual labourers who have to work for someone else in order to survive, and all that other good stuff we talked about.
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(All of this by the way is a very quick, simplified,
and Eurocentric story: if you'd like to
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know more about the invention of capitalism there are recommended readings in the description but you get the rough picture.)
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This transition between feudalism and capitalism
was hugely sped up by the English Civil War.
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Parliament, which was made up of rich white
dudes that very few people actually voted
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for, got upset because Charles I was running
the country on his own and starting to look
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like a bit of a tyrant, at least from where
they were sitting. Eventually the tension
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broke out into an incredibly bloody and fascinating
war with Parliament's forces, led by Oliver
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Cromwell, fighting the King.
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The War ends in 1649 with Charles I having his head cut off and Parliament winning. And oh my God, the king
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is dead! All kinds of new ideas about how to organise a society start getting thrown out there into the public space,
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because a lot of people suddenly get the idea that the king's dead, anything goes! We can built
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whatever kind of society we want! Some people even start saying hey, why don't we have
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religious freedom so that we don't have
so much war all the time, and bring back the
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common land so that nobody has to be poor, and actually why don't we give everyone a say in the government this time around! One
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group called the Diggers even invent a
form of anarchist socialism, hundreds of years
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before Marx is even born!
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Was the Earth made to preserve a few covetous and proud men to live at ease? To bag and barn up the treasures of the Earth from others,
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that these should beg and starve in a fruitful land? Divide England in three parts: scarce one part is manured. So that here is land enough to maintain all her children!
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Yet many starve for want or live under a heavy burden all their lives. And this misery the poor have brought upon themselves, through lifting up particular interests by their labours.
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The Earth, sirs, was made to be a common treasury for all.
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And a lot of these new hopeful radicals fight in Cromwell's army thinking that once the King is gone they'll get the chance to build a better society.
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But when Charles is out of the way, Cromwell says, "Hey, how bout instead of all that freedom stuff,
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fuck you!" He turns around and executes
most of the people who really wanted serious change and
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establishes his own government of "Rich White Dudes Who Want to Be Filthy
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Rich White Dudes. Also Let's Do Slavery a
Lot More and Commit Atrocities in Ireland."
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Suddenly the rich white landowners in Parliament are in charge of everything, and there's nobody standing in their way
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stopping them from stepping up slavery, stepping up colonialism, stepping up capitalism, and generally trying
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to make as much money as possible. Even when Charles' son, Charles, eventually becomes
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King again, Parliament keeps all their new powers.
And capitalism is well and truly let off the leash.
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So there's this contradiction in 17th Century
Britain between lots of people suddenly getting
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great ideas about freedom, and the desires of rich white landowners to absolutely prevent stop that
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freedom from happening because it'll mean they won't be rich anymore. And in 1690, the philosopher
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John Locke writes a book that embodies this contradiction. And he says "Hey, d'yknow what would
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be a great idea? If governments could only be established with the consent of the people!
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Terms & Conditions Apply: offer not available to slaves, women, Indigenous Americans, or
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anybody who doesn't own property. Side effects include slavery, genocide, colonialism, and imperialism.
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And hey, look at that, individualism plus
an emphasis on freedom but with blatant exceptions
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when it's profitable. Liberalism is born!
And a bunch of slave owners decide to take
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John Locke's ideas and pretty much build a whole new country out of them called the United States of America!
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Because of the period of history at which
it emerged liberalism basically takes capitalism
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as a given. Remember in Episode 1 I said that ideologies exist in order to justify to justify violence? Well a lot of the violence that liberalism legitimises is the violence
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that keeps capitalism going. So, in the USA Founding Fathers made exceptions
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to their rules of liberty for slaves, because slavery kept their economy turning. John Stuart Mill made exceptions to
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the rules of liberty for colonialism when colonialism was keeping the British Empire's economy turning. Nowadays my government makes exceptions
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to the rules for the human rights of immigrants, whose labour keeps our economy turning.
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From the very beginning, liberalism was designed to reconcile this vision of a better, freer world with the fact that
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the English Revolution essentially failed to bring that world about, and instead just gave power to
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rich people so they could use capitalism
and get even richer, with all the violence that
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entails. Incidentally, Cromwell's statue
is still outside Parliament.
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We're moving now towards the modern age,
and in Part 3 we'll be looking at liberalism
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and capitalism's latest incarnation: neoliberalism.
In this episode we've learned about
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the histories of capitalism and liberalism,
and how they go together.
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If you liked today's lesson, I have a tip
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