Return to Video

The new political story that could change everything

  • 0:01 - 0:03
    Do you feel trapped
  • 0:03 - 0:05
    in a broken economic model?
  • 0:05 - 0:08
    A model that's trashing the living world
  • 0:08 - 0:12
    and threatens the lives
    of our descendants?
  • 0:12 - 0:16
    A model that excludes billions of people
  • 0:16 - 0:20
    while making a handful unimaginably rich?
  • 0:20 - 0:23
    That sorts us into winners and losers,
  • 0:23 - 0:27
    and then blames the losers
    for their misfortune?
  • 0:27 - 0:30
    Welcome to neoliberalism,
  • 0:30 - 0:33
    the zombie doctrine
    that never seems to die,
  • 0:34 - 0:37
    however comprehensively it is discredited.
  • 0:37 - 0:43
    Now you might have imagined
    that the financial crisis of 2008
  • 0:43 - 0:46
    would have led to the collapse
    of neoliberalism.
  • 0:46 - 0:50
    After all, it exposed
    its central features,
  • 0:50 - 0:54
    which were deregulating
    business and finance,
  • 0:54 - 0:57
    tearing down public protections,
  • 0:57 - 1:00
    throwing us into extreme
    competition with each other,
  • 1:00 - 1:04
    as, well, just a little bit flawed.
  • 1:04 - 1:07
    And intellectually, it did collapse.
  • 1:08 - 1:12
    But still, it dominates our lives.
  • 1:12 - 1:14
    Why?
  • 1:14 - 1:18
    Well, I believe the answer
    is that we have not yet produced
  • 1:18 - 1:22
    a new story with which to replace it.
  • 1:23 - 1:27
    Stories are the means
    by which we navigate the world.
  • 1:27 - 1:32
    They allow us to interpret
    its complex and contradictory signals.
  • 1:32 - 1:36
    When we want to make sense of something,
  • 1:36 - 1:40
    the sense we seek is not scientific sense
  • 1:40 - 1:43
    but narrative fidelity.
  • 1:43 - 1:46
    Does what we are hearing reflect the way
  • 1:46 - 1:50
    that we expect humans
    and the world to behave?
  • 1:50 - 1:52
    Does it hang together?
  • 1:52 - 1:54
    Does it progress
  • 1:54 - 1:57
    as a story should progress?
  • 1:58 - 2:02
    Now, we are creatures of narrative,
  • 2:02 - 2:08
    and a string of facts and figures,
    however important facts and figures are --
  • 2:08 - 2:11
    and, you know, I'm an empiricist,
    I believe in facts and figures --
  • 2:11 - 2:17
    but those facts and figures have no power
    to displace a persuasive story.
  • 2:18 - 2:21
    The only thing that can replace a story
  • 2:23 - 2:24
    is a story.
  • 2:24 - 2:27
    You cannot take away someone's story
  • 2:27 - 2:30
    without giving them a new one.
  • 2:30 - 2:34
    And it's not just stories in general
    that we are attuned to,
  • 2:34 - 2:38
    but particular narrative structures.
  • 2:38 - 2:43
    There are a number of basic plots
    that we use again and again,
  • 2:43 - 2:48
    and in politics there is one basic plot
  • 2:48 - 2:52
    which turns out to be
    tremendously powerful,
  • 2:52 - 2:55
    and I call this "the restoration story."
  • 2:56 - 2:57
    It goes as follows.
  • 2:59 - 3:02
    Disorder afflicts the land,
  • 3:02 - 3:05
    caused by powerful and nefarious forces
  • 3:05 - 3:08
    working against the interests of humanity.
  • 3:08 - 3:12
    But the hero will revolt
    against this disorder,
  • 3:12 - 3:14
    fight those powerful forces,
  • 3:14 - 3:17
    against the odds overthrow them
  • 3:17 - 3:20
    and restore harmony to the land.
  • 3:21 - 3:23
    You've heard this story before.
  • 3:24 - 3:25
    It's the Bible story.
  • 3:25 - 3:27
    It's the "Harry Potter" story.
  • 3:28 - 3:30
    It's the "Lord of the Rings" story.
  • 3:30 - 3:32
    It's the "Narnia" story.
  • 3:33 - 3:35
    But it's also the story
  • 3:35 - 3:40
    that has accompanied almost every
    political and religious transformation
  • 3:40 - 3:42
    going back millennia.
  • 3:42 - 3:45
    In fact, we could go as far as to say
  • 3:45 - 3:50
    that without a powerful
    new restoration story,
  • 3:50 - 3:53
    a political and religious transformation
  • 3:53 - 3:55
    might not be able to happen.
  • 3:56 - 3:57
    It's that important.
  • 3:58 - 4:03
    After laissez-faire economics
    triggered the Great Depression,
  • 4:03 - 4:09
    John Maynard Keynes
    sat down to write a new economics,
  • 4:09 - 4:13
    and what he did was to tell
    a restoration story,
  • 4:13 - 4:14
    and it went something like this.
  • 4:16 - 4:18
    Disorder afflicts the land!
  • 4:18 - 4:19
    (Laughter)
  • 4:20 - 4:24
    Caused by the powerful and nefarious
    forces of the economic elite,
  • 4:24 - 4:27
    which have captured the world's wealth.
  • 4:28 - 4:30
    But the hero of the story,
  • 4:30 - 4:36
    the enabling state, supported
    by working class and middle class people,
  • 4:36 - 4:38
    will contest that disorder,
  • 4:38 - 4:43
    will fight those powerful forces
    by redistributing wealth,
  • 4:43 - 4:46
    and through spending
    public money on public goods
  • 4:46 - 4:49
    will generate income and jobs,
  • 4:49 - 4:53
    restoring harmony to the land.
  • 4:53 - 4:55
    Now like all good restoration stories,
  • 4:56 - 4:59
    this one resonated
    across the political spectrum.
  • 4:59 - 5:03
    Democrats and Republicans,
    labor and conservatives,
  • 5:03 - 5:07
    left and right all became,
    broadly, Keynesian.
  • 5:08 - 5:10
    Then, when Keynesianism ran into trouble
  • 5:10 - 5:12
    in the 1970s,
  • 5:12 - 5:17
    the neoliberals, people like
    Friedrich Hayek and Milton Friedman,
  • 5:17 - 5:20
    came forward with
    their new restoration story,
  • 5:20 - 5:22
    and it went something like this.
  • 5:23 - 5:25
    You'll never guess what's coming.
  • 5:25 - 5:26
    (Laughter)
  • 5:26 - 5:29
    Disorder afflicts the land!
  • 5:29 - 5:33
    Caused by the powerful
    and nefarious forces
  • 5:33 - 5:36
    of the overmighty state,
  • 5:36 - 5:40
    whose collectivizing tendencies
    crush freedom and individualism
  • 5:40 - 5:42
    and opportunity.
  • 5:42 - 5:45
    But the hero of the story,
    the entrepreneur,
  • 5:45 - 5:49
    will fight those powerful forces,
  • 5:49 - 5:50
    roll back the state,
  • 5:50 - 5:54
    and through creating
    wealth and opportunity,
  • 5:54 - 5:57
    restore harmony to the land.
  • 5:57 - 6:02
    And that story also resonated
    across the political spectrum.
  • 6:02 - 6:05
    Republicans and Democrats,
    conservatives and labor,
  • 6:05 - 6:08
    they all became, broadly, neoliberal.
  • 6:11 - 6:12
    Opposite stories
  • 6:13 - 6:17
    with an identical narrative structure.
  • 6:18 - 6:21
    Then, in 2008,
  • 6:21 - 6:23
    the neoliberal story fell apart,
  • 6:23 - 6:26
    and its opponents came forward with ...
  • 6:29 - 6:31
    nothing.
  • 6:31 - 6:33
    No new restoration story!
  • 6:33 - 6:37
    The best they had to offer
    was a watered-down neoliberalism
  • 6:37 - 6:40
    or a microwaved Keynesianism.
  • 6:41 - 6:45
    And that is why we're stuck.
  • 6:45 - 6:47
    Without that new story,
  • 6:47 - 6:50
    we are stuck with the old failed story
  • 6:50 - 6:52
    that keeps on failing.
  • 6:53 - 6:56
    Despair is the state we fall into
  • 6:56 - 6:59
    when our imagination fails.
  • 7:00 - 7:04
    When we have no story
    that explains the present
  • 7:04 - 7:06
    and describes the future,
  • 7:06 - 7:09
    hope evaporates.
  • 7:09 - 7:12
    Political failure is at heart
  • 7:12 - 7:15
    a failure of imagination.
  • 7:16 - 7:19
    Without a restoration story
  • 7:19 - 7:22
    that can tell us where we need to go,
  • 7:22 - 7:24
    nothing is going to change,
  • 7:24 - 7:27
    but with such a restoration story,
  • 7:27 - 7:30
    almost everything can change.
  • 7:31 - 7:34
    The story we need to tell
  • 7:34 - 7:37
    is a story which will appeal
    to as wide a range of people as possible,
  • 7:37 - 7:40
    crossing political fault lines.
  • 7:40 - 7:43
    It should resonate
    with deep needs and desires.
  • 7:43 - 7:47
    It should be simple and intelligible,
  • 7:47 - 7:49
    and it should be grounded in reality.
  • 7:49 - 7:54
    Now, I admit that all of this sounds
    like a bit of a tall order.
  • 7:55 - 7:56
    But I believe that in Western nations,
  • 7:56 - 8:00
    there is actually a story like this
  • 8:00 - 8:01
    waiting to be told.
  • 8:03 - 8:04
    Over the past few years,
  • 8:04 - 8:08
    there's been a fascinating
    convergence of findings
  • 8:08 - 8:09
    in several different sciences,
  • 8:09 - 8:14
    in psychology and anthropology
    and neuroscience and evolutionary biology,
  • 8:14 - 8:18
    and they all tell us
    something pretty amazing:
  • 8:18 - 8:23
    that human beings have got
    this massive capacity for altruism.
  • 8:23 - 8:27
    Sure, we all have a bit of selfishness
    and greed inside us,
  • 8:27 - 8:32
    but in most people,
    those are not our dominant values.
  • 8:32 - 8:37
    And we also turn out to be
    the supreme cooperators.
  • 8:37 - 8:39
    We survived the African savannas,
  • 8:39 - 8:44
    despite being weaker and slower
    than our predators and most of our prey,
  • 8:44 - 8:50
    by an amazing ability
    to engage in mutual aid,
  • 8:50 - 8:55
    and that urge to cooperate
    has been hardwired into our minds
  • 8:55 - 8:57
    through natural selection.
  • 8:57 - 9:02
    These are the central,
    crucial facts about humankind:
  • 9:02 - 9:06
    our amazing altruism and cooperation.
  • 9:07 - 9:10
    But something has gone horribly wrong.
  • 9:10 - 9:13
    Disorder afflicts the land.
  • 9:13 - 9:15
    (Laughter)
  • 9:15 - 9:18
    Our good nature has been thwarted
    by several forces,
  • 9:18 - 9:23
    but I think the most powerful of them
    is the dominant political narrative
  • 9:23 - 9:24
    of our times,
  • 9:24 - 9:31
    which tells us that we should live
    in extreme individualism
  • 9:31 - 9:33
    and competition with each other.
  • 9:33 - 9:39
    It pushes us to fight each other,
    to fear and mistrust each other.
  • 9:39 - 9:41
    It atomizes society.
  • 9:41 - 9:46
    It weakens the social bonds
    that make our lives worth living.
  • 9:46 - 9:49
    And into that vacuum
  • 9:49 - 9:54
    grow these violent, intolerant forces.
  • 9:54 - 9:56
    We are a society of altruists,
  • 9:58 - 10:00
    but we are governed by psychopaths.
  • 10:00 - 10:05
    (Applause)
  • 10:09 - 10:11
    But it doesn't have to be like this.
  • 10:11 - 10:12
    It really doesn't,
  • 10:12 - 10:17
    because we have this incredible capacity
    for togetherness and belonging,
  • 10:17 - 10:19
    and by invoking that capacity,
  • 10:19 - 10:24
    we can recover those amazing
    components of our humanity:
  • 10:24 - 10:27
    our altruism and cooperation.
  • 10:27 - 10:32
    Where there is atomization,
    we can build a thriving civic life
  • 10:32 - 10:35
    with a rich participatory culture.
  • 10:35 - 10:39
    Where we find ourselves crushed
    between market and state,
  • 10:39 - 10:45
    we can build an economics
    that respects both people and planet.
  • 10:45 - 10:51
    And we can create this economics
    around that great neglected sphere,
  • 10:51 - 10:52
    the commons.
  • 10:52 - 10:56
    The commons is neither market nor state,
    capitalism nor communism,
  • 10:56 - 10:59
    but it consists of three main elements:
  • 10:59 - 11:01
    a particular resource;
  • 11:01 - 11:04
    a particular community
    that manages that resource;
  • 11:04 - 11:09
    and the rules and negotiations
    the community develops to manage it.
  • 11:09 - 11:13
    Think of community broadband
    or community energy cooperatives
  • 11:13 - 11:17
    or the shared land
    for growing fruit and vegetables
  • 11:17 - 11:19
    that in Britain we call allotments.
  • 11:19 - 11:22
    A common can't be sold,
    it can't be given away,
  • 11:22 - 11:27
    and its benefits are shared equally
    among the members of the community.
  • 11:28 - 11:32
    Where we have been ignored and exploited,
  • 11:32 - 11:34
    we can revive our politics.
  • 11:34 - 11:38
    We can recover democracy
    from the people who have captured it.
  • 11:38 - 11:42
    We can use new rules
    and methods of elections
  • 11:42 - 11:48
    to ensure that financial power
    never trumps democratic power again.
  • 11:48 - 11:51
    (Applause)
  • 11:54 - 11:59
    Representative democracy should
    be tempered by participatory democracy
  • 11:59 - 12:02
    so that we can refine
    our political choices,
  • 12:02 - 12:07
    and that choice should be exercised
    as much as possible at the local level.
  • 12:07 - 12:13
    If something can be decided locally,
    it shouldn't be determined nationally.
  • 12:14 - 12:19
    And I call all this
    the politics of belonging.
  • 12:19 - 12:23
    Now, I think this has got
    the potential to appeal
  • 12:23 - 12:26
    across quite a wide range of people,
  • 12:26 - 12:29
    and the reason for this
    is that among the very few values
  • 12:29 - 12:32
    that both left and right share
  • 12:32 - 12:36
    are belonging and community.
  • 12:36 - 12:38
    And we might mean
    slightly different things by them,
  • 12:38 - 12:41
    but at least we start
    with some language in common.
  • 12:41 - 12:46
    In fact, you can see a lot of politics
    as being a search for belonging.
  • 12:46 - 12:50
    Even fascists seek community,
  • 12:50 - 12:53
    albeit a frighteningly
    homogenous community
  • 12:53 - 12:55
    where everyone looks the same
    and wears the same uniform
  • 12:55 - 12:58
    and chants the same slogans.
  • 12:58 - 13:02
    What we need to create
    is a community based on bridging networks,
  • 13:02 - 13:04
    not bonding networks.
  • 13:04 - 13:08
    Now a bonding network brings together
    people from a homogenous group,
  • 13:08 - 13:13
    whereas a bridging network brings together
    people from different groups.
  • 13:13 - 13:15
    And my belief is that if we create
  • 13:15 - 13:20
    sufficiently rich and vibrant
    bridging communities,
  • 13:20 - 13:24
    we can thwart the urge
    for people to burrow into the security
  • 13:24 - 13:27
    of a homogenous bonding community
  • 13:27 - 13:29
    defending themselves against the other.
  • 13:32 - 13:34
    So in summary,
  • 13:34 - 13:37
    our new story could go
    something like this.
  • 13:39 - 13:41
    Disorder afflicts the land!
  • 13:41 - 13:42
    (Laughter)
  • 13:42 - 13:44
    Caused by the powerful
    and nefarious forces
  • 13:44 - 13:49
    of people who say
    there's no such thing as society,
  • 13:49 - 13:52
    who tell us that
    our highest purpose in life
  • 13:52 - 13:55
    is to fight like stray dogs
    over a dustbin.
  • 13:57 - 14:00
    But the heroes of the story, us,
  • 14:00 - 14:02
    we'll revolt against this disorder.
  • 14:02 - 14:08
    We will fight those nefarious forces
    by building rich, engaging,
  • 14:08 - 14:11
    inclusive and generous communities,
  • 14:11 - 14:12
    and, in doing so,
  • 14:12 - 14:15
    we will restore harmony to the land.
  • 14:15 - 14:19
    (Applause)
  • 14:23 - 14:26
    Now whether or not
    you feel this is the right story,
  • 14:26 - 14:29
    I hope you'll agree that we need one.
  • 14:29 - 14:31
    We need a new restoration story,
  • 14:31 - 14:35
    which is going to guide us
    out of the mess we're in,
  • 14:35 - 14:40
    which tells us why we're in the mess
    and tells us how to get out of that mess.
  • 14:41 - 14:44
    And that story, if we tell it right,
  • 14:44 - 14:48
    will infect the minds of people
    across the political spectrum.
  • 14:49 - 14:54
    Our task is to tell the story
    that lights the path to a better world.
  • 14:54 - 14:56
    Thank you.
  • 14:56 - 14:59
    (Applause)
Title:
The new political story that could change everything
Speaker:
George Monbiot
Description:

To get out of the mess we're in, we need a new story that explains the present and guides the future, says author George Monbiot. Drawing on findings from psychology, neuroscience and evolutionary biology, he offers a new vision for society built around our fundamental capacity for altruism and cooperation. This contagiously optimistic talk will make you rethink the possibilities for our shared future.

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
15:15
  • at 4:59 :
    "labor and conservatives" may be "Labour and Conservatives", refering to two political parties in UK.

English subtitles

Revisions Compare revisions