QUOTE OF THE DAY

“Many historians, many sociologists and psychologists have written at length, and with a deep concern, about the price that Western man has had to pay and will go on paying for technological progress. They point out, for example, that democracy can hardly be expected to flourish in societies where political and economic power is being progressively concentrated and centralized. But the progress of technology has led and is still leading to just such a concentration and centralization of power. As the machinery of mass production is made more efficient it tends to become more complex and more expensive — and so less available to the enterpriser of limited means.

Moreover, mass production cannot work without mass distribution; but mass distribution raises problems which only the largest producers can satisfactorily solve. In a world of mass production and mass distribution the Little Man, with his inadequate stock of working capital, is at a grave disadvantage. In competition with the Big Man, he loses his money and finally his very existence as an independent pro­ducer; the Big Man has gobbled him up. As the Little Men disappear, more and more economic power comes to be wielded by fewer and fewer people. Under a dic­tatorship the Big Business, made possible by advanc­ing technology and the consequent ruin of Little Busi­ness, is controlled by the State — that is to say, by a small group of party leaders and the soldiers, police­men and civil servants who carry out their orders.

In a capitalist democracy, such as the United States, it is controlled by what Professor C. Wright Mills has called the Power Elite. This Power Elite directly employs several millions of the country’s working force in its factories, offices and stores, controls many millions more by lending them the money to buy its products, and, through its ownership of the media of mass communication, influences the thoughts, the feel­ings and the actions of virtually everybody.

To parody the words of Winston Churchill, never have so many been manipulated so much by so few. We are far in­deed from Jefferson’s ideal of a genuinely free society composed of a hierarchy of self-governing units — “the elementary republics of the wards, the county repub­lics, the State republics and the Republic of the Union, forming a gradation of authorities.””

Aldous Huxley – Brave New World Revisited

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2 Comments
Joseph E Fasciani
Joseph E Fasciani
July 2, 2014 3:07 am

Well thought out and equally well-written, as we always expect from Aldous Huxley!

Mistaken by most for a progressive, even left liberal, he was actually a very quiet Conservative who expressed his concerns by a series of short novels [most can be read overnight], all of which are so witty and incisive that the casual redaer thinks s/he’s just read something by the current smart set.