A social Darwinist evolves

The zealous federal budget-cutters intent on slashing social programs are the latest social Darwinists, those who believe in economic and social survival of the fittest and think that toughness is the only route to a healthier society. Social Darwinists shout that if you can’t make it on your own, you should please die or get out of the way of those who can.

A discredited philosophy well before the beginning of the 20th century, social Darwinism hangs around because it gives pseudo-intellectual cover for the winners who do not like having the losers — the poor, the old, the infirm and the disadvantaged — get too much of the social pie, especially from the taxes that the winners have paid.   

In 1930, as the future longshoreman philosopher, Eric Hoffer, left Los Angeles after a decade as a day laborer, he was a social Darwinist. He reasoned that because he had made it on his own without ever having been to school and without the assistance of mentors, family, or governments, anyone could — and, therefore, everyone should. He did not consider his self-sufficiency unique.

A favorite story of his was of being among a group of Skid Row denizens whisked into the San Bernardino Mountains to build a section of a road. Without much supervision, the “bums” organized themselves, found within their group people to perform specialized tasks — from preparing meals to reading specs to operating a bulldozer — and got the job accomplished. Had they needed to write a constitution, Hoffer later said, they would also have found a way to do that.

Hoffer’s social Darwinist attitude was further ingrained by his experiences in the early 1930s, when as a migrant field hand he was able to obtain work in varied and difficult circumstances. He became a fervent admirer of capitalism, an anti-New Dealer — while becoming a champion of the outcasts of society, whom, he insisted, had really built America — constructed the railroads and roads and towns, wrested arable land from the desert and forest and created the small and large businesses that were capitalism’s glory.

Hoffer’s attitude began to change when he was swept into a federalized camp for hobos near El Centro, Calif., where he was first inspired to write. It altered more fundamentally in the early 1940s, when in order to work on the San Francisco docks he had to join the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU).

No ordinary union, the ILWU was run by Harry Bridges, a firebrand communist, and had wrested control of the docks from owners who had abused workers with the “shape-up” and other ways to keep wages (and wage-earners) down while maximizing profits.   

The ILWU changed Hoffer’s ideas about the nature of capitalism and social Darwinism.  Previously, the idea that individuals must earn their own living and provide for their own future without relying on a group of peers or on government intervention, safety nets or regulations had been one of his basic tenets.  

But at heart he was more of an enthusiast for free market capitalism than a doctrinaire anti-unionist; and once Hoffer started working under the aegis of the ILWU, he recognized that he benefited from the union’s prior successes in forcing concessions from management. He also liked the union’s fairness in dealing with slackers, miscreants and other internal problems.

So he revised his argument that capitalism was a natural activity of human beings, widening his pantheon of normal human traits to include the equally natural activity of workers bargaining collectively for wages and benefits. This led to his tenet that workers and management were eternally opposed, and that while they would always clash, they should work together to create ways to get the tasks done and build a sustainable enterprise.

As a social Darwinist, Eric Hoffer had evolved. He no longer believed America was or needed to be a dog-eat-dog society; rather, he understood the basic need for the “haves” to uphold the dignity of the less-powerful in their interaction with the more powerful.

No Luddite, he embraced the technology that eased the back-breaking nature of longshore work and used that realization in the 1970s to reach the belief that technological innovations would free humankind from the need to perform mindless toil and thereby enable a larger fraction of society to maximize its intellectual and artistic potential.  

Would that those current day conservatives who are still merciless social Darwinists be as willing to learn as Hoffer was.  

Salisbury resident Tom Shachtman has written more than two dozen books and many television documentaries.

Latest News

Walking among the ‘Herd’

Michel Negroponte

Betti Franceschi

"Herd,” a film by Michel Negroponte, will be screening at The Norfolk Library on Saturday April 13 at 5:30 p.m. This mesmerizing documentary investigates the relationship between humans and other sentient beings by following a herd of shaggy Belted Galloway cattle through a little more than a year of their lives.

Negroponte and his wife have had a second home just outside of Livingston Manor, in the southwest corner of the Catskills, for many years. Like many during the pandemic, they moved up north for what they thought would be a few weeks, and now seldom return to their city dwelling. Adjacent to their property is a privately owned farm and when a herd of Belted Galloways arrived, Negroponte realized the subject of his new film.

Keep ReadingShow less
Fresh perspectives in Norfolk Library film series

Diego Ongaro

Photo submitted

Parisian filmmaker Diego Ongaro, who has been living in Norfolk for the past 20 years, has composed a collection of films for viewing based on his unique taste.

The series, titled “Visions of Europe,” began over the winter at the Norfolk Library with a focus on under-the-radar contemporary films with unique voices, highlighting the creative richness and vitality of the European film landscape.

Keep ReadingShow less
New ground to cover and plenty of groundcover

Young native pachysandra from Lindera Nursery shows a variety of color and delicate flowers.

Dee Salomon

It is still too early to sow seeds outside, except for peas, both the edible and floral kind. I have transplanted a few shrubs and a dogwood tree that was root pruned in the fall. I have also moved a few hellebores that seeded in the near woods back into their garden beds near the house; they seem not to mind the few frosty mornings we have recently had. In years past I would have been cleaning up the plant beds but I now know better and will wait at least six weeks more. I have instead found the most perfect time-consuming activity for early spring: teasing out Vinca minor, also known as periwinkle and myrtle, from the ground in places it was never meant to be.

Planting the stuff in the first place is my biggest ever garden regret. It was recommended to me as a groundcover that would hold together a hillside, bare after a removal of invasive plants save for a dozen or so trees. And here we are, twelve years later; there is vinca everywhere. It blankets the hillside and has crept over the top into the woods. It has made its way left and right. I am convinced that vinca is the plastic of the plant world. The stuff won’t die. (The name Vinca comes from the Latin ‘vincire’ which means ‘to bind or fetter.’) Last year I pulled a bunch and left it strewn on the roof of the root cellar for 6 months and the leaves were still green.

Keep ReadingShow less
Matza Lasagne by 'The Cook and the Rabbi'

Culinary craftsmanship intersects with spiritual insights in the wonderfully collaborative book, “The Cook and the Rabbi.” On April 14 at Oblong Books in Rhinebeck (6422 Montgomery Street), the cook, Susan Simon, and the rabbi, Zoe B. Zak, will lead a conversation about food, tradition, holidays, resilience and what to cook this Passover.

Passover, marked by the traditional seder meal, holds profound significance within Jewish culture and for many carries extra meaning this year at a time of great conflict. The word seder, meaning “order” in Hebrew, unfolds in a 15-step progression intertwining prayers, blessings, stories, and songs that narrate the ancient saga of the liberation of the Israelites from slavery. It’s a narrative that has endured for over two millennia, evolving with time yet retaining its essence, a theme echoed beautifully in “The Cook and the Rabbi.”

Keep ReadingShow less