Max Weber Was a Class-Conscious Champion of the Bourgeoisie

During the Cold War, US sociologists lionized Max Weber as a superior alternative to Karl Marx. For all his brilliance, Weber’s social theory glosses over the violent, exploitative nature of capitalism and serves as a pessimistic defense of the status quo.

Sociologist Max Weber, photographed in 1918. (Wikimedia Commons)

Almost every student who studies sociology has heard of Max Weber. Few, however, are aware of how he came to occupy such a preeminent place in its canon.

After all, Weber’s influence was minimal in the immediate decades after his death. Between 1922 and 1947, his key book, Economy and Society, sold just two thousand copies in his native Germany.

Weber’s subsequent rise to a position of extraordinary importance did not merely stem from a belated recognition of his intellectual virtues. Opponents of Marxism in the social sciences seized upon Weber as an alternative to Marx in explaining how societies function and change.

In doing so, they downplayed the partisan political views that shaped Weber’s thinking and the shortcomings of his social theory.

Cold War Sociology

Weber owes his current reputation primarily to Talcott Parsons, the leading theoretician of US sociology during the Cold War. Parsons saw the German thinker as having been engaged in a fight “against the positivist tendencies of Marxian historical materialism” by emphasizing the role of values.

In 1939, Parsons received a letter from the Austrian neoliberal ideologue Friedrich von Hayek, who urged him to revise a translation of Economy and Society. Hayek regarded Weber as an important ideological forerunner of his because his methodological individualism drew on the Austrian school of economics.

As Weber had written:

If I have become a sociologist . . . it is mainly to exorcise the specter of collective conceptions which still lingers among us. . . . Sociology can only process from the action of one or more separate individuals and must therefore adopt strictly individualistic methods.

After the intervention by Parsons, US academics “Americanized” Weber to make him appear as a value-free sociologist. Editors eliminated earlier references in Economy and Society to “the flotsam of African and Asiatic savages” from the armies of Germany’s enemies during World War I. They selected texts that formed the core of Weber’s contribution to sociology.

Max Weber owes his current reputation primarily to Talcott Parsons, the leading theoretician of US sociology during the Cold War.

Crucially, Weber was awarded the prize for sophistication in his debate with Marx. According to this perspective, Weber had rejected Marx’s supposedly crude, two-class model of modern society in favor of a multiclass model. As an alternative to Marx’s economic determinism, he had put forward a multifactor understanding of causation. And instead of offering naive hopes of a better world, he had warned against the danger of bureaucratization.

This assessment of Weber’s contribution was not just confined to the Right. New Left critics like C. Wright Mills, whose book The Power Elite pointed to the interlinking of military, corporate, and political elites in US society, also saw Weber as the originator of key insights into stratification and domination.

Depoliticizing Weber

One way this sociological consensus was achieved was through the construction of Weber as an apolitical figure. Universities taught his theories in an abstract fashion, referring to “Society” in general rather than specific formations.

Writers like Wolfgang Mommsen later situated Weber’s political and social theories in the context of early twentieth-century Germany, but the dominant approach to Weber deemed this context to be irrelevant to the timeless insights that he had produced. However, such a separation is not possible in reality, because Weber’s right-wing nationalism permeates his sociological theories.

“A class-conscious bourgeois” was how Weber once described himself. As a young man, he joined the Evangelical Social Congress and the Pan German League, described by one writer, Michael Stürmer, as “the voice of Germany’s most vicious nationalism.” He was an imperialist who advocated colonization, claiming that

we need more room externally . . . the broad masses of our people should become aware that the expansion of Germany’s power is the only thing which can ensure for them a permanent livelihood.

In his first main study, which looked at the situation of agricultural laborers in eastern Germany, Weber attacked Polish migrant workers, denouncing “the Slavic invasion which would mean a cultural regression of major proportions.”

Weber’s right-wing nationalism permeates his sociological theories. ‘A class-conscious bourgeois’ was how he once described himself.

Nor were these sentiments merely an expression of youthful zeal. Weber was an ardent supporter of Germany’s war effort in 1914, claiming that “the honor of our people bade us not to shrink this duty in a cowardly and slothful fashion.” At the end of his life, he advocated a form of plebiscitary democracy which would be so limited that Georg Lukács described it as no more than “a technical means to achieve a better functioning imperialism.” He also launched vicious attacks on the radical left after the war, claiming that “[Karl] Liebknecht belongs in the madhouse and Rosa Luxemburg in the zoo.”

Bourgeois Ideals

Weber’s wider political project faced two obstacles. One was the influence of the Marxist Social Democratic Party (SPD) inside the German working class. Attempts by conservatives like Otto von Bismarck to destroy it with repressive anti-socialist laws had failed, and Weber embarked on an ideological polemic instead. This polemic was an implicit rather than an explicit one: Weber rarely mentioned Marx or the SPD, but his aim was to create an alternative intellectual standpoint to theirs.

The second obstacle that Weber faced was the political immaturity of the class that he championed. Bismarck and the Junker aristocratic class had united Germany, not the bourgeois liberals who had put forward that goal in 1848. In Weber’s view, Bismarck and his class smothered the bourgeoisie with a state bureaucracy that hemmed in opportunities for expansion and imperialism. He wanted the bourgeoisie to “free itself from its unnatural association” with the Junkers and “return to the self-conscious cultivation of its own ideals.”

Weber rarely mentioned Karl Marx or the SPD, but his aim was to create an alternative intellectual standpoint to theirs.

Weber’s most famous book, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, blends together these two concerns. It provides an account of the rise of capitalism that gives the bourgeoise a sense of its historic mission and a positively charged moral strength. It also offers a method of interpreting history that counteracts Marx’s historical materialism and is designed to show how “ideas become effective forces in history.”

The central thesis of The Protestant Ethic is well known. According to Weber, the Reformation — in particular Martin Luther’s concept of a “calling” and John Calvin’s notion of “predestination” — produced a cultural change, giving rise to a society that no longer regarded moneymaking as dirty and sinful. A new moral imperative led to a “worldly asceticism,” which encouraged the accumulation of capital through a strict avoidance of all spontaneous enjoyment of life.

There is no doubt that Weber produced some valuable insights into how the Protestant religion functioned as an ideology that facilitated the emergence of capitalism. However, the book also contained a series of questionable assumptions that romanticized the transition to capitalism in Europe.

Capitalism and Religion

First of all, there is Weber’s definition of capitalism as an economic system based on “renewed profit by means of continuous rational . . . enterprise,” which rested on “the expectation of profit by the utilization of opportunities for exchange, that is on (formally) peaceful chances of profit.”  Yet as one modern-day exponent of the system, New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman, explained during the heyday of neoliberal globalization: “The hidden hand of the market will never work without a hidden fist — McDonald’s cannot flourish without McDonnell Douglas, the builder of the F-15.”

In other words, actually existing capitalism, then and now, does not function purely through market “rationality” but requires the armed power of the state to intimidate and colonize. Weber wanted to spiritualize the origins of the system so that the early capitalist appeared in the guise of a dour anti-hero driven by a moral duty that their religious convictions imposed. This framework simply airbrushed the brutality associated with the original accumulation of capital in terms of slavery or the theft of common land out of history.

Secondly, Weber can offer no explanation for the reception that Luther and Calvin received. Previous heretical movements such as the Hussites in Bohemia had offered similar ideas to those of Luther but found themselves crushed. Exploring the question of why Luther succeeded while the Hussites failed would have involved a discussion of the crisis provoked by “market feudalism.” Even prior to the Reformation, there was a wealthier class who demanded the right to hire rural labor, dispense with the tradition of “customary price,” and break free of guild restrictions.

Finally, Weber’s desire to show psychological effects that led directly from the theology of Protestantism to the “spirit of capitalism” forced him to standardize that theology around particular doctrines. In practice, however, the Protestant reformation was tremendously diverse.

Actually existing capitalism does not function purely through market ‘rationality’ but requires the armed power of the state to intimidate and colonize.

As the Marxist historian Christopher Hill explained, this school of thought tended to object to forms of mechanical action that did not involve the heart. It emphasized a morality that individuals imposed upon themselves rather than one coming from obedience to priests. As a result, Protestantism did not automatically lead to capitalism. The importance of the Reformation lay in how it undermined the obstacles to capitalist development that the rigid institutions and ceremonies of Catholicism imposed.

The weakness of Weber’s focus on religion to account for historical change stands out most clearly in two books that rarely make it on to the sociological canon. He wrote The Religion of India: The Sociology of Hinduism and Buddhism and The Religion of China: Confucianism and Taoism during his mature period in the midst of World War I. As well as identifying Hinduism and Confucianism as the key determinants that prevented the rise of capitalism in India and China, the two books are replete with condescending racism.

Weber builds on a previous notion expressed in The Protestant Ethic, according to which Asian culture lacked rationality compared to the West, but he now adds some outrageous stereotypes to the mix. He condemns the “unrestricted lust for gain of the Asiatics” and bizarrely claims that the Chinese people had an “absolute insensitivity to monotony.” He even claims that the Chinese language and script deprived its people “of the power of logos, of defining and reasoning.”

Weber’s neglect of material factors is the most evident lacuna in his analysis. There is little discussion of how colonialism in the shape of the East India Company or the Opium Wars waged by Britain for its right to impose drug trafficking on the people of China hindered the development of capitalism in these countries.

Iron Cages

Weber issued some famous warnings about the “iron cage of bureaucracy” that developed in modern societies. Despite what is often claimed, it is untrue that the concept never featured in Marx’s writings. In his Critique of Hegel’s Doctrine of the State (1843), he attacked the state bureaucracy for its claim to be a universal class that stood over the conflicting interests of civil society. According to Marx, its hierarchy was “the hierarchy of knowledge.”

Weber did produce some real insights into the formal structure of bureaucracies. He also dispensed with the myth that bureaucratic “red tape” was inefficient and only emerged in public institutions, noting that “very large modern capitalist enterprises are themselves unequaled models of bureaucratic organization.”

The focus on bureaucracy formed part of Weber’s more pessimistic defense of the social status quo. The dialectic underpinning his model of history is an oscillating pattern between bureaucracy and charisma. A great leader emerges to break free of the iron cage, but his successors are tragically fated to experience a routinization of that charisma.

For Weber, the broad masses will always be ruled by a small number of people who dominate a bureaucratic apparatus.

There is a poorly concealed strain of elitism throughout this view of history. For Weber, the broad masses will always be ruled by a small number of people who dominate a bureaucratic apparatus. In Parliament and Government in Germany, he makes a distinction between those who live from politics and those who live for politics.

The former blend in easily with the full-time bureaucracies of political parties. Only the latter figure can escape the constraints of bureaucracy to become “a politician of great stature,” because “it is easier for him, the more he has a fortune which gives him independence and makes him ‘available,’ not tied to a business (as entrepreneurs are) but a person with an unearned income.”

The US sociologist Alvin Gouldner attacked Weber’s theory as a suprahistorical “metaphysical pathos.” According to Gouldner, Weber had ignored many of the dysfunctions of bureaucracies in his ruler-centric vision, such as their tendency to split into competing empires, their culture of ultraconformism, and their stress on formal outward appearances.

In his own analysis of bureaucracy, the Belgian Marxist Ernest Mandel pointed out that the majority of people would hardly abstain from meetings and allow bureaucracies to dominate if they actually had the power to decide on the issues that shaped their lives. Apathy and acceptance of bureaucracy arise from a sense of powerlessness that is a necessary part of capitalist societies.

If that feeling of powerlessness was absolute, no revolts would be possible. Fortunately, however, history is full of examples of revolutions against states that commanded the highest levels of bureaucratic organization.

Stratification and Struggle

Almost every sociology course contains a module on stratification. The term is derived directly from Weber’s somewhat fragmentary writing on class, status, and party. To his credit, Weber recognized the reality of class conflict, in contrast to the functionalist school that dominated Cold War US sociology.

However, his concept of social class is simply one based on shared life chances. There is no reference to the sphere of production and crucially, the relationship between social classes is not one of exploitation. Weber’s multiclass model becomes a convenient way to separate off the rentier from the manufacturing capitalist, with the former receiving “unearned gains” while the latter does not.

There are, of course, different fractions within the capitalist class, but these divisions are much less absolute than Weber imagined them to be. His concern was to create a “national economic policy” that would guard against “the disarmament of its own nation by fanatical interest groups or the unworthy apostles of economic peace.” Hence the separation of usurious finance from healthy manufacturing.

Weber’s greatest contemporary influence probably comes through his concept of status, which is defined as a measure of prestige and honor. Many writers use this concept to claim that there is a fundamental division between white-collar and blue-collar employees. According to this argument, white-collar employees tend to focus on erecting barriers to exclude those below them from entering their profession. As this segment of the workforce grows, the working class as the agent of change supposedly disappears.

Weber recognized the reality of class conflict, in contrast to the functionalist school that dominated Cold War US sociology.

However, we should note that the social distinction between office and manual workers was much greater in Weber’s time than it is today. Moreover, Weber’s concept of status slips uneasily between precapitalist and modern periods. By using the German term Stand, which can be translated by the English words “estate” or “status,” Weber ossified this division between different categories of workers.

The reality today is that white-collar employees are subject to much greater monitoring at work than in the past. They are the target of productivity-enhancing measures such as key performance indicators and their work contracts are often precarious. Moreover, they are frequently more heavily unionized than in earlier periods.

In other words, as Harry Braverman pointed out in his work Labor and Monopoly Capital, they have been proletarianized. By neglecting the role of exploitation in class relations, Weberian sociology misses this important dynamic.

The criticisms made above are not an argument for removing Weber from the sociological cannon. It is important to understand how capitalist ideology is constructed. By studying Weber in his real political context, we can learn a lot about that process of construction.

Business As Usual: Shutdown or Not, the Police State Will Continue to Flourish

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Orthodox singer Ishay Ribo first Israeli to star in Madison Square Garden

“I’ve pinched myself more than once to check if I was dreaming or it’s really going to happen,” said the popular singer/songwriter.

By Batya Jerenberg, World Israel News

Ishay Ribo announced Monday that he will be headlining a show at New York’s Madison Square Garden (MSG), becoming the first Israeli to star in one of the most famous venues in the world.

“I’ve been keeping this inside for a long time, and I’ve pinched myself more than once to check if I was dreaming or if it’s really going to happen,” Ribo posted to his Facebook account about the September 3rd event.

“I never dreamed that I’d ever appear in Madison [Square Garden], the place where only huge international stars appear, and think that I’d get to play and sing my songs there, along with the liturgical poetry and tunes of the days of Selichot, with my talented friends!”

The concert is scheduled for the middle of the Hebrew month of Elul, when Selichot, special penitential prayers, are said in anticipation of the High Holy Days.

Ribo‘s lyrics, full of faith in God, and catchy pop music tunes have seemingly struck a wide chord in Israel, as he is one of very few performers whose songs are loved by both the religious and the secular sectors. Several of his works have topped the charts on radio stations that cater to very different publics, with Sibat HaSibot (Cause of Causes) being the most-played song in the country in 2021.

Four of his five albums have gone gold (15,000 copies sold), a fact made even more remarkable when knowing that he had to break into the music scene alone, self-releasing his initial album in 2014.

Ribo is an immigrant success story, as the French-born singer moved to the Jerusalem-area village of Kfar Adumim when he was eight years old.

The knitted skullcap-kipa clad singer gave his “eternal thanks” to all his supporters, family, friends and fans for enabling him to reach this pinnacle in his career. He also expressed gratitude to World Bnei Akiva, the religious Zionist youth movement that is sponsoring his show, and to God, because “I have no doubt that everything, but everything…is simply a miraculous process that goes against all my logic.”

While the legendary Shlomo Artzi appeared in MSG in 2017, he performed in a smaller theater in the complex. Other Israeli singers have gone on the main stage, but as part of other shows or as warm-up acts.

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Terror-supporting Arab MK ‘taking a step back’ from politics

Ayman Odeh has repeatedly made incendiary remarks demonizing Israel, including refusing to swear allegiance to the State of Israel when taking office.

By World Israel News Staff

The chairman of the influential Arab Joint List party announced on Tuesday that while he will remain in the Knesset until the next election, he is retiring from national politics.

Ayman Odeh, head of the Hadash-Ta’al party and the founding force behind the Joint List – which united four Arab-Israeli parties and saw them gain a record 15 seats in the Knesset in 2020 – posted on social media that he is “taking a step back” from the political scene.

A source close to Odeh told Maariv that the longtime party leader was retiring because “he wants to bring in new blood and refresh the political landscape.”

Referencing the Arab Ra’am party’s split from the Joint List and the Balad party’s failure to cross the electoral threshold in the November 2022 national election, the source added that Odeh “understands that there is currently no possibility of uniting the Arab parties… so he is taking action and making room [for new people].”

Some political analysts have speculated that Odeh is not planning on staying away from local politics and may run for mayor in his native Haifa.

“We didn’t know about it beforehand… We were in the national headquarters on Saturday, and it never came up,” former Hadash MK Issam Makhoul told Walla News. “It should have been mentioned if thoughts like that were in the air.”

Odeh did not provide a reason for the decision, simply thanking his constituents for their support in a statement and stating that he would continue to work towards “building unity” between Arabs and Jews.

While Odeh’s retirement statement referenced his supposed efforts towards peace, he has been investigated for incitement to terror during his term. Odeh has repeatedly made incendiary remarks demonizing Israel, including refusing to swear allegiance to the State of Israel when taking office.

In October 2021, Odeh attacked now-National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir in a hospital corridor, outside of a room where a hunger-striking terrorist was receiving medical care.

Video showed that Odeh was clearly the aggressor in the incident, yet a police investigation into the fight was eventually closed.

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Is Elon Musk’s criticism of anti-Israel billionaire antisemitic?

The Israeli Foreign Ministry ignored the fact that Soros is a generous donor to numerous social movements, politicians, and charities that are vehemently anti-Israel.

By Lauren Marcus, World Israel News

After Elon Musk criticized Jewish billionaire George Soros – who has used his massive wealth to fund a number of far-left and progressive causes, including the anti-Zionist Black Lives Matter movement and various anti-Israel NGOs – Israeli officials rushed to the philanthropist’s defense.

In a tweet on Tuesday, Musk wrote that Soros reminds him of X-Men villain Magneto. A Twitter user replied that like the comic book bad guy, Soros has good intentions that are being misunderstood by the wider world.

Musk pushed back, writing, “You assume they are good intentions. They are not. He wants to erode the very fabric of civilization. Soros hates humanity.”

Israel’s Foreign Ministry took offense at Musk’s tweet, blaming the entrepreneur for what they claimed was an uptick in antisemitic discourse on the site following his statement.

“The phrase ‘The Jews’ spiked today on the list of topics trending on Twitter following a tweet with antisemitic overtones by none other than the owner and CEO of the social network, Elon Musk,” the Foreign Ministry tweeted. They also charged that Musk’s comment “immediately led to antisemitic conspiracy theories on Twitter.”

Notably, the Foreign Ministry ignored the fact that Soros is a generous donor to numerous social movements, politicians, and charities that are vehemently anti-Israel.

His Open Society Foundations chose Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) for a “Leadership in Government Fellowship” and paid her $85,307 in 2017. Tlaib, who is known for her antisemitic statements, recently held a “Nakba Day” event demonizing Israel, refused to vote to support Iron Dome replenishment, and has repeatedly made comments that the Jewish state is guilty of apartheid and ethnic cleansing.

A Tablet report from 2016 revealed widespread anti-Israel bias in funding from the Open Society Foundations, finding that the organization had methodically created a series of shell nonprofits in order to make it difficult to link the origin of the funding back to Soros.

“We wanted to build… a portfolio of Palestinian grants and in all cases to maintain a low profile and relative distance — particularly on the advocacy front,” read a leaked internal document from the Open Society Foundations.

Soros’ critics have noted his backing for far-left District Attorneys, such as San Francisco’s Chesa Boudin, who implement radical policies like refusing to incarcerate criminals.

Soros’ supporters have often accused people concerned with his policies as being antisemitic or conspiracy theorists.

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Tel Aviv yeshiva harassed by secular protesters wanting it out of the neighborhood

“A storm is brewing in the city of Tel Aviv over Yeshiva Maale Eliyahu, and that, in my opinion is very sad,” said MK Matan Kahana.

By World Israel News Staff

A religious Zionist yeshiva in Tel Aviv has found itself in the crosshairs of secular residents.

City officials had requested that Yeshiva Maale Eliyahu, located on Henrietta Szold Street near Ichilov Medical Center, relocate just 500 yards away in order to permit the expansion of a neighboring school.

The yeshiva’s leadership agreed to the request and, together with the with Tel Aviv-Jaffa municipal officials, worked out a plan to move to a larger facility. In exchange, the city vowed to facilitate the yeshiva’s expansion at the new location.

Two months ago, the city’s planning and construction committee approved plans to convert a building on Clay Street in north Tel Aviv into a facility to house the yeshiva. Part of the yeshiva’s current campus has already been vacated and sectioned off by the city, in keeping with the agreement.

Now, however, it appears city officials have reneged on the deal in response to pressure from secular residents who protested the yeshiva’s relocation.

While the yeshiva has been at its present location since 1996, plans to move the institution some 500 yards to the north prompted an angry backlash from some residents, who accused the city of plotting to force a “far-right yeshiva” into a largely secular neighborhood.

“The residents of north Tel Aviv…were horrified to discover recently that a plan to construct a huge building on the pastoral Clay Street for the far-right yeshiva Ma’ale Eliyahu is about to receive final approval from the Tel Aviv-Jaffa municipality,” a group of activists who dubbed themselves the Headquarters of the Struggle Against the Messianists wrote last Wednesday, The Jewish Press reported, calling on locals to protest the relocation.

“This is expected to increase the yeshiva’s size four times…and will allow it to house 700 students, who will bring their families with them to expand the religious community in the big city.”

The protesters have drawn support from left-wing groups – including the Crime Minister and the Black Flag movements – involved in mass protests against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the judicial reform plan.

On Sunday, the city announced that it has frozen the planned relocation in order to “reexamine” other possible options.

“After discussions and listening to all the relevant parties, the mayor this morning (Monday) ordered the local planning committee to re-examine the plan to move the Ma’ale Eliyahu yeshiva to a building on Clay Street, and to propose additional alternatives,” the announcement read.

Lawmakers from both the opposition and the coalition condemned the campaign against the talmudic institution. MK Avi Maoz (Noam) quoted comments by New York City Mayor Eric Adams defending yeshivas.

“Instead of us focusing on, how do we duplicate the success of improving our children, we attack the yeshivas that are providing a quality education that is embracing our children,” said Adams during a speech at the Teach NYS Annual Dinner 2023, hosted by the Orthodox Union.

“Here, in contrast,” said MK Maoz, “when the Maale Eliyahu yeshiva was asked to move out of its facility next to Ichilov hospital after more than 20 years in order to expand a school, and in exchange was offered large synagogue nearby [to be converted into a yeshiva], a small group of anti-religious activists…launched a crusade, apparently well-funded, to prevent the yeshiva from moving into the building.”

Israel National News reported that Opposition MK Matan Kahana (National Unity) lamented the politicization of the yeshiva’s relocation, saying Tuesday: “A storm is brewing in the city of Tel Aviv over Yeshiva Maale Eliyahu, and that, in my opinion is very sad.”

“The yeshiva agreed to the mayor’s request to relocate in order to expand an existing school. Now there’s a conflict over the new location, just 500 yards away from its original location. No one had ever complained to them about noise or religious coercion or anything else.”

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