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2015/03/28

Japan's Lonely Brave Bureaucrat Speaks Out on TV Asahi

A former high level bureaucrat in the Japanese Ministry of Trade was one of the few public officials to bravely speak up for radical change in the wake of the earthquake-tsunami-meltdown catastrophe. The Economist was one of the first in the English language media to report on Shigeaki Koga’s radical proposals for reform of national energy policy. In September 2011, The Economist reported his views:

"I believe this is the final chance for Japan to change," Mr. Koga said in May, when I asked him during a wide-ranging interview why he was speaking out. "If I shut my mouth and obtain a good post in the ministry—even if I did that, in a few years Japan's economy would plunge," he said. "That is why I am taking on risks, and I don't care if I have to resign. Because if I don't speak out, Japan will not change. It is meaningless for me to be in the government if I cannot advocate reform."

Since this time he has been shut out of meaningful participation in reform, but he has been a regular guest commentator on news programs. He has been a regular on TV Asahi’s evening news program Hodo Station, but things took a bad turn in January, when, taking inspiration from the “Je suis Charlie” frenzy, he held up a placard during the broadcast stating “I’m not Abe.”
At a press conference afterwards at the Tokyo Foreign Correspondents Club, Mr. Koga explained the way he was being excluded from further appearances on Hodo Station:

(Reporter) Mr. Koga, just to follow up on this because your case may be very important for the future of Japan. Could you tell us if you are officially and publicly being “sacked” from your job?

If I make any mistake in explaining this, it will bring about many problems. Even if I am scolded, I will be scolded only by TV Asahi. So it is not as scary as being scolded by [Chief Cabinet Secretary] Suga. Precisely speaking, there is no contract that guarantees exactly how many times per year that I will appear on Hodo Station. From TV Asahi’s perspective, they ask me to appear on a case-by-case basis. So, it is not that they are firing me. As far as I have heard, it is the producer who has the leading role in deciding which commentator appears on the show. As for me, I have been very busy, so the producer and I used to set a schedule for next three-month period. Basically, the producer asked me to appear about once a month, and as for the exact date of appearance, we agreed to decide two or three months ahead.
I heard that the head of the press bureau of TV Asahi had not been comfortable with my appearances since last year. But, after January 23, he ordered a strict prohibition on my appearances after April 2015.
I have not heard this from the head in person, so I would like to hear this from him in person.
This is how I understand the case. My appearance on March 6th and 27th were already scheduled. If they had canceled scheduled appearances, there would have been criticism. But since no appearances by me were scheduled after April, I think that is the reason why they decided to enact the prohibition in April.
A reporter at yesterday’s press conference by the president of TV Asahi told me that nothing has been decided yet about my future appearances. Moreover, the president maintained that he is not aware of any pressure coming from the Kantei [Prime Minister’s office]. (as reported by Japanese Perspective)



On March 27, 2015, Mr. Koga made what he said on air would be his last appearance on the show (now on Youtube). He had a rather tense exchange with the host because he wandered off the script to say some general things about government policy that he wanted to cover. He also upset his hosts by suggesting that TV Asahi management was excluding him from further appearances because of explicit or implicit government pressure. 
   He countered the common wisdom that Prime Minister Abe is not accomplishing anything, and explained sarcastically that in fact he was pushing through his vision of a “beautiful Japan.” He then held up a placard that listed the three major goals the Abe administration has been working toward: nuclear technology exports, weapons exports, and gambling (or recklessness might be a better translation). Mr. Koga then gave his own advice that these three arrows of reform should be replaced by exports of renewable energy technology, peace and culture. Then he again held up the “I am not Abe” sign, explaining politely to his host that this time he did not trouble the Asahi staff to make the sign. This one he made for himself. He finished by holding up a placard with a quotation by Gandhi as he advised Japanese people to not be afraid to express their views:

Nearly everything you do is of no importance, but it is important that you do it. Changing yourself may not change the world, but for the world to stay as it is, it depends on you not changing.

Mr. Koga's proposals for changing national policy
goals to renewable energy, peace and culture.
     Shigeaki Koga may be banished from certain media outlets for the time being, but I have a feeling we haven’t heard the last of him. It was interesting to note that in the reporting that followed this controversial broadcast, the media was very good at relating the conflict between Koga and TV Asahi, but there was no mention of the national policy issues that Mr. Koga tried to draw attention to.

UPDATES: All of these later reports on this topic in the mainstream media reported on the controversy and the scandal, but some of them had much to say Mr. Koga's essential message about the ominous drift of national policy toward disaster.

MAY 20, 2015 Shigeaki Koga, "The Threat to Press Freedom in Japan," The New York Times. 

APRIL 26, 2015: "Effort by Japan to Stifle News Media Is Working," The New York Times.

APRIL 5, 2015: Koga’s parting shot may not hit its target.

MARCH 30, 2015: The Japan Times reported on the controversial broadcast a few days afterwards: Ex-bureaucrat blasts Abe on news program.


MARCH 29, 2015: Asahi Shimbun reported on the controversial broadcast the day after I wrote the above: Abe critic claims on air he was axed from TV program at behest of management.

Sources:

Martin Fackler, Effort by Japan to Stifle News Media Is Working, The New York Times, April 26, 2015.

The GoodBureaucrat.” The Economist. September 14, 2011.

Japanese Perspective, February 27, 2015

"Abe critic claims on air he was axed from TV program at behest of management," Asahi Shimbun, March 29, 2015.

Tomohiro Sasaki, "Ex-bureaucrat blasts Abe on news program," The Japan Times, March 30, 2015.

Philip Brasor, "Koga’s parting shot may not hit its target," The Japan Times, April 4, 2015. 

2015/03/06

Commucapitalism in Cold War Plutopia

Commucapitalism: The Sovietization of Capitalism and the Merger of American and Soviet Ideals in Cold War Plutopia

After the 2016 American election results, the mainstream media networks in the United States stopped ignoring the presence of international broadcaster Russia Today. The network had been operating for several years, but its audience had been considered too insignificant to worry about. However, this changed after Hillary Clinton lost the presidential election to Donald Trump and the Democratic Party in general suffered humiliating defeats in both houses of Congress and in state governments across the nation. Suddenly, Russia Today and other minor media platforms on cable television and YouTube were being accused of acting as propaganda tools with an agenda to undermine American democracy.
These denunciations were obviously scapegoating the Democratic and Republican establishment’s failures. Unfortunately for these American critics, Russia Today, and similar media outlets based in other nations, are only following in the path established by the likes of BBC, CNN and Voice of America as international broadcasters. Under American guidance, Russia became a capitalist country in the 1990s, and so naturally its corporations claimed their right to compete in the international sphere. Russia Today was one such organization that competed for a place in the international market for news services. If it is a “propaganda outlet” it is such to the same degree that CNN and BBC stay within the bounds of acceptable discourse in the corporate and governmental structures of the United States and Britain.
An additional misfortune for these mainstream broadcasters is that they have become increasingly incapable of critical analysis of the nations they represent. A growing sector of the public regards them the way that Eastern Europeans and Soviets regarded state media in the 1980s. They simply don’t reflect the reality and concerns of millions of people they supposedly serve. Russia Today saw that there was an audience that was keen to view intelligent, critical analysis of the issues of the day, and thus they have succeeded in a way that has drawn these accusations of “propagandizing.” However, for anyone old enough to remember what network news broadcasting used to be like in Western nations, most of Russia Today’s programs are no different than what used to appear on 60 Minutes or reports and documentaries aired on PBS, the publicly funded television network in the United States.
One example of Russia Today’s successful shows is The Keiser Report, a financial news and commentary show hosted by the American couple Max Keiser and Stacy Herbert. The show is primarily about financial news, but they always manage to make the connections to subjects such as politics, military conflict, and environmental threats.
In a memorable episode broadcast in February 2015, [1] Max interviewed anthropologist David Graeber about his new book The Utopia of Rules: On Technology, Stupidity and the Secret Joys of Bureaucracy. [2] He discussed the way government and corporate entities have merged into a seamless bureaucracy in which it is impossible to make distinctions between the two. For example, corporations might apologize to their customers for the “red tape” of government regulation imposed on them, but the regulations are written by corporate lobbyists.


Graeber explained, “At this point the free market… and the government are so completely fused together that you can’t even tell them apart.” A prime example, one he discussed elsewhere in an interview in Salon.com, was the American health insurance reform known as Obamacare. He stated, “You can’t tell if it’s public or private; and it’s partly government regulated profit-taking, forcing you into a profit-making enterprise [whether you like it] or not. And it creates completely unnecessarily complicated layers of bureaucracy.” [3]
During the Keiser Report interview, Max Keiser commented, “It sounds like the Soviet Union back in the day when people were saying this is completely choked with this bureaucracy, this communism. There’s no entrepreneurism. There’s no growth.” Max Keiser has also noted numerous times on his show that the actions of institutions like the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank have turned capitalism into a command economy. Decisions about interest rates and expanding the money supply benefit a select nomenklatura in the financial sector, but do little to solve underlying problems in the real economy or increase the prosperity of the lower 99%.
David Graeber agreed with Max’s statements about bureaucratization, adding, “I would call it the Sovietization of capitalism.” By this he meant that there was a utopian ideal in communism, and whenever it failed, the system punished people who couldn’t live up to the ideals by stifling them with rules and bureaucracy. In much the same way, the utopian ideal of capitalism produces the same effect. He cites the example of banks that now need fees and penalties imposed on their depositors, not profitable lending, in order to make a profit. This is no different than a government charging a fee for a license plate. He drove home the point by saying further, “Someone figured out that they’re printing enough [euros] to give every individual in Europe 763 euros a month for a year. Well, why not give everybody in Europe 763 euros a month for a year? ... How could that not be a better stimulus for the economy?” The answer was that if they adopted such a bottom up solution, there would be no fees to collect for the mandarins at the top.
In the Salon interview he said:

There was this liberal fantasy in the 19th century that government would dissolve away and be replaced by contractual market relationships; that government itself is just a feudal holdover that would eventually wither away. In fact, exactly the opposite happened. [Government has] kept growing and growing with more and more bureaucrats. The more free-market we get, the more bureaucrats we end up with, too… It always goes up. It went up under Reagan.

This ironic Sovietization of capitalism, has a parallel, and perhaps a cause, in the Cold War factory towns where the two superpowers built their atomic weapons. It turns out there is an ironic extra reason why this new social structure is sometimes called a plutocracy. In Plutopia: Nuclear Families, Atomic Cities, and the Great Soviet and American Plutonium Disasters, [4] Kate Brown highlighted the remarkable hybridization of the American and Soviet systems that occurred in these towns, which were an entirely new form of social organization created out of the existential dread of nuclear war. The differences between the ideals of the two systems can be seen in Table 1:


Table 1
Ideals of American Capitalism and Soviet Communism


American Capitalism
Soviet Communism
1
Property
private
state-owned
2
Individual Outcomes
unequal
equal
3
Economy
free market
directed by the state
4
Speech
free
state-controlled
5
Individual Motivation
enlightened self-interest
enlightened self-sacrifice
6
Value of the Individual
primary
secondary to the collective


Table 2
The actual values adopted in both of the superpowers’ plutonium cities: Richland, USA and Ozersk, USSR


Ozersk-Richland Hybrid Economic and Social Order
1
Property
state-owned
2
Individual Outcomes
unequal
3
Economy
directed by the state, licensed monopolies
4
Speech
state-controlled
5
Individual Motivation
enlightened self-interest
6
Value of the Individual
secondary to the collective


About Table 2

1. Property

The city of Richland, Washington emerged out of the desert for no reason other than the production of plutonium. There was a need to have high quality housing built fast for an elite of scientists and engineers, and this was a factor in the rise to prefab housing and modern suburbia. However, the difference in Richland was that private home ownership was banned. The federal government had to give security clearance to every resident, and monitor their health for radioactive contamination. This would have been impossible if employees of the plutonium factory had been allowed to buy their own homes and sell them on the market to someone who lacked security clearance and an approved reason to be in Richland. Score a point for the Soviet way of life.

2. Individual Outcomes

For the first few years of the Cold War, the USSR was in a panicked rush to catch up to America in the nuclear arms race. It relied on soldiers and prison labor to build a plutonium factory, but it soon learned what the Americans had learned during the Manhattan Project. The best way to maintain security, quality of the product, and loyalty was to lavish scientists, engineers, tradesmen and even the rank and file workers with a quality of life they couldn’tt get elsewhere. In both atomic cities, the perks were so good that many refused to leave even when they knew they were being contaminated with radionuclides. Score a point for good old American inequality of outcomes.

3. Economy

During the Cold War, American conservatism developed its rhetoric lauding free enterprise and deriding government interference, but this movement thrived during the time of greatest state intervention in the economy. Of course, this was the time when great corporations like Boeing, Dupont, and Rockwell emerged, but these existed only because of the massive government programs to build nuclear weapons and missiles, which in turn necessitated the interstate highway system (for evacuation of big cities) and the Internet (to maintain communications after a nuclear attack). Score a point for Soviet-style state management of the economy.

4. Speech

Richland had a newspaper, but it was heavily censored and never ran stories that helped citizens question how the Hanford reactors were being operated. Score another point for the Soviet way.

5. Individual Motivation

We could say that the people who built the atom bombs were making a sacrifice for their country, but both nations had to shower their workers with extra privileges that they couldn’t get outside of their gilded cages. There was an element of sacrifice in the work, but success depended on knighting the workers with elite status. Score a point for the American way of better outcomes for all through enlightened self-interest.

6. Value of the Individual

Both plutonium cities left a legacy of the worst environmental contamination known to mankind. There were horrific accidents, deliberate massive releases of radiation, and reckless contamination of workers and residents in surrounding communities. The cleanup is an unresolved nightmare that will last until the crack of doom. In both places it was implicitly understood by management that this was war, and in this war lives would be sacrificed for the “greater good.” The ideals of the Enlightenment and of the American constitution say that the protection of individual rights must be the basis of the state’s legitimacy, but in the atomic cities of the USA and the USSR, it was individual sacrifice for the state that was required. Score 1 point again for the values of the USSR that emphasized the honor in dying for the motherland.

Cold War Scorecard: America 2, Soviets 4

Though it is common wisdom to say the America won the Cold War, it ain’t over ‘till it’s over. And how will we know when it’s over? The transformation of both nations in the early Cold War suggests that the two systems converged in ways that were seldom acknowledged. In fact, if we want to keep score by the categories of Table 2, the Soviet system had a clear victory. Perhaps this is why now, a quarter century after the fall of the Berlin Wall, academics are taking note of a phenomenon called the Sovietization of capitalism.

In an interview on Talking Stick TV, Kate Brown stated:

I think [the situation of these plutonium factory towns] epitomizes a lot of shifts we find in American society in the post-war years. So making these kinds of exchange, of... rights over one’s body, and civil rights and freedoms for consumer rights and financial security, and national security made sense to a lot of Americans, not just people in Richland… I hope that people will look at this tandem history [of Ozersk and Richland] and see that there are some striking similarities between how easy it was to deny radioactive contamination and public health effects in both the socialist Soviet Union and in American democracy, and that despite the vast differences in these two countries and these two political systems, there was something overarching about the nuclear umbrella that created very similar kinds of cultures and social systems, and systems of knowledge. We need to take a really close look at how the demands of nuclear technology and nuclear secrecy and security create systems and communities that are extremely undemocratic and hierarchical, and also create these plutonium disasters, the full impact of which we’ve yet to really fully digest. [5]

The mixing of communism and capitalism that I have described above is actually an old theory about east-west relations that was referred to as convergence theory. John Feffer discussed it in an article in Truthout, saying “...economist John Kenneth Galbraith... predicted that the United States and the Soviet Union would converge at some point in the future with the market tempered by planning and planning invigorated by the market.” Instead, this best-of-both-worlds blend didn’t come to pass, and he asks whether it is now the worst of both that exists in China, Russia, the United States:

The convergence theorists imagined that the better aspects of capitalism and communism would emerge from the Darwinian competition of the Cold War and that the result would be a more adaptable and humane hybrid. It was a typically Panglossian error. Instead of the best of all possible worlds, the international community now faces an unholy trinity of authoritarian politics, cutthroat economics, and Big Brother surveillance. Even though we might all be eating off IKEA tableware, listening to Spotify, and reading the latest Girl With the Dragon Tattoo knock-off, we are not living in a giant Sweden. Our world is converging in a far more dystopian way. After two successive conservative governments and with a surging far-right party pounding its anti-immigrant drumbeat, even Sweden seems to be heading in the same dismal direction. [6]

Notes

[1] “The Keiser Report,” Episode 723Russia Today, February 24, 2015.

[2] David Graeber, The Utopia of Rules: On Technology, Stupidity and the Secret Joys of Bureaucracy (Melville House, 2015).

[3] Elias Isquith, “David Graeb erexplains the life-sapping reality of bureaucratic life,” Salon, March 5, 2015.

[4] Kate Brown, Plutopia: Nuclear Families, Atomic Cities, and the Great Soviet and American Plutonium Disasters (Oxford University Press, 2013).

[5] Mike McCormick (Interviewer), “KateBrown–The Great Soviet and American Plutonium Disasters,” Talking Stick TV, January 18, 2014.

[6] John Feffer, “The Worst of AllPossible Worlds: Did Market Leninism Win the Cold War?” Truthout, May 26, 2015.