I am sometimes puzzled whether (very sharp) people so deeply
immersed in their world and their thoughts, do not want to understand what the
topic of discussion is, or pretend not to understand.
My post (here)
to which both Brad DeLong (here)
and Pseudoerasmus (here)
strongly (and at times intemperately) reacted does not at all ask whether
capitalist strategy to contain and defeat Communism was rational (ex ante or ex
post) nor what conflicts could have been avoided, not even whether all
conflicts could have been avoided and still the 1989 outcome would have been
the same.
The stated and clear objective of the text is to argue that
the current crisis of liberal capitalism is not something new and unique. It is
in that context that I discussed capitalism’s actual (factual) response to Communist challenge. And that actual response
was indeed a combination of the use of “power and intimidation” and "superior
economic performance" that with time became even more so, compared to Communist
countries. So my point is that in fighting off the challenge, capitalist
countries used the means, domestically and internationally, that were neither
liberal nor only peaceful. (They used, of course, the peaceful means too: e.g. supporting
land reform in Latin America or providing World Bank loans).
But throughout the text I look only at the actual response and the actual means used, not whether these
means made sense at the time or with the hindsight now, nor whether these means
were better or worse than the means used by Communists. I am simply arguing (and
I think examples are so numerous, some of which are cited by me and others by
Pseudoerasmus; they are not worth listing here) that many of these means were violent
and thus invalidate a vulgar Fukuyamian contention that the triumph of capitalism
was achieved through the force of example and by peaceful means exclusively.
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