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Fixing the System - A History of Populism, Ancient and Modern (Paperback)
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Fixing the System - A History of Populism, Ancient and Modern (Paperback)
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Populism is a genuine 'third way' in politics, a middle path
between the extremes of corporate anarchy and collective
authoritarianism. It is a trenchant and timely study.Populism is
distinguished from other political movements by its insistence on
two things conspicuously missing from modern systems of political
economy: genuine democracy based on local citizen assemblies, and
the widespread distribution among the population of privately-owned
economic capital. Adrian Kuzminski's book, in offering a
comprehensive historical account of populism, shows that populism,
now largely overlooked, has in fact had a consistent and distinct
history since ancient times. Kuzminski demonstrates that populism
is a tradition of practice as well as thought, ranging from ancient
city states to the frontier communities of colonial America - all
places where widely distributed private property and democratic
decision-making combined to foster material prosperity and cultural
innovation.The political economy of populism was first articulated
by the ancient Greek philosopher Phaleas of Chalcedon and variously
developed by thinkers as diverse as Aristotle, James Harrington,
George Berkeley, Thomas Jefferson, Edward Kellogg and Frederick
Soddy. Only where none are rich enough to dominate others
economically nor poor enough to be so dominated, populists argue,
can the public interest be served. By democracy-for-all, populists
mean full and direct participation in empowered local citizen
assemblies. This vision of a decentralised, 'bottom-up' democracy
was developed in his later years by Thomas Jefferson, who called
for completing the American revolution by rooting broader levels of
government in such local assemblies, which he called 'ward
republics.' The book includes extensive extracts from Jefferson's
writings on the matter.In calling for a wide distribution of both
property and democracy, populism opposes the political and economic
system found today in the United States and other Western
countries, where property remains highly concentrated in private
hands and where representatives chosen in impersonal mass elections
frustrate democracy by serving private monied interests rather than
the public good. As one of very few systematic alternatives to our
current political and economic system, populism offers a pragmatic
program for fundamental social reform which deserves wide and
serious consideration.
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