I really appreciate this exchange here, both from lanugo and idlerich. I think it's pretty important to get the correct analysis on this point as it has implications for ones praxis.
The issue is how much you want to ascribe agency to how the current capitalist system functions. The main problem as far as I can see in positing some malevolent actor(s) at work, actively seeking to make life shit for people on a systemic basis (in which all senior politicians are complicit, as it seems is necessary) is that it starts to become more and more ridiculous the more you apply it. To say that there is a hidden hand guiding history is to say something that simply won't be countenanced by most people. For one example, the idea that malevolence was the driving force behind John Locke or Adam Smith, highly influential political/economic theorists whos work laid much of the framework for modern capitalism is something that any person who has read these people would not accept.
My fucking annoying skepticism means I can't completely discount the idea that 9/11 was an inside job; that the bilderbergs don't choose heads of state, etc. However, my skepticism also doesn't allow me to assent to these ideas either.
As a result of this, I've taken that stance that In order to effectively tackle issues of injustice head on, I think it should be taken that essentially the issue of an agency is a 'non-issue. To apportion blame to specific individuals regarding the current state of the system is not what is morally primary: rather the bare necessity for changing the system is. Whether or not you think that such and such an event took place, that is not the issue. The issue is not, 'did Bush blow up the towers?' - but 'were their foreign policies wrong?' and 'how can I do something about this'.
Focusing on what agents may be lurking in the background is a kind of blind-alley which diverts attention from exposing the real problems of the system in a way that is palatable to ordinary people. Most people are scared off by talk of conspiracies, and in the spirit of pragmatism one should alter what one talks about as a result.
This is related to more general problems I have with (especially leftist, non-mainstream) politics today. I think that one of the main problem of the left is its unwillingness to pay attention to, as it were, public image/branding. It's an unfortunate fact that PR plays such an important role in defining the way ordinary people percieve politics, but a fact it remains - and one that should be met head-on, out of pragmatism.
I sometimes buy a lefty paper and as much as I have agreement with the content and the sentiment, I find the writing tired - hackneyed old rhetoric that sounds like it's from the sixties. All this talk of them-and-us only serves to alienate people in a public that no longer recognises the language of the steel-mill and the steamy. It puts young people off to read it, I'm certain, and acts as a kind of accidental exclusionary device - if only if you can get over the wild self-assurance of these publications can you be taken into the fold. It frustrates me as someone who's pretty sympathetic to leftist politics.
It needn't be said that the time is ripe for challenging the system, and I think it should be done from a position of cautious skepticism and dare I say it, respect. The media doesn't take lefty rabble-rousers seriously, and so there is a need to present as responsible, thoughtful, professional. I don't want to have fucking George Galloway the person I vote for (I actually voted for him at the last election (my list vote, but still)). I dunno, the people who are in positions of power in this country and others are capable and smart, but if you read any media these days it seems apparent that the post-coldwar analytic framework of that class is crumbling; they are unable to cognise fully what is happening to the global economy - we should be willing to provide our own analysis in a way that is as palatable to as many people as possible in as morally honest and intellectually rigorous a way as possible.