[Marxism] Steve Bannon at Oxford Union

2018-11-18 Thread Andrew Stewart via Marxism
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I realize that this guy is complete scum but there is something very
important going on in this video. Whether we couch it in Gramscian terms of
hegemony or war of position/maneuver, Zizek's notion of ideology,
Althusser's ISA, whatever, this is a very noteworthy bit of political media
to consider. Unless the Left can bring an antithesis to this guy (something
Bernie Sanders unfortunately never has been), he could be the core of
American political developments for a long time.





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Andrew Stewart
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[Marxism] The Nation Magazine on "The Japanese Problem"

2018-11-18 Thread Louis Proyect via Marxism

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Bruce Bliven, "The Japanese Problem", The Nation Magazine, Feb. 2, 1921. 
Part of a special issue symposium on Japan and Japanese Immigration:


An important phase of the economic question has to do with depreciation 
in the value of land in any community where the Japanese are admitted. 
The racial antipathy ex-presses itself in a dislike on the part of white 
Californians to having their children in school with the Japanese. As a 
San Joaquin Valley rancher said to me, "The Japanese just won't 
'neighbor.' You might as well live alone in the middle of a desert as to 
live with Japanese around you. I won't let my children go to school with 
them, and won't have anything to do with them if I can help it." For 
this reason the advent of even one Japanese settler in any community 
means a prompt depreciation in the value of farm lands, in that 
neighborhood, just as the advent of one Negro in a block in a Northern 
city means a lowering of real estate values throughout the block.


What the ultimate solution of the Japanese question will be, it is not 
my purpose to discuss here. No one has ever made a careful study of the 
biological side of miscegenation, though I believe competent authorities 
now declare that the supposed weakness, mental and physical, of the 
half-breed children has no basis in fact. As to what ought to be done in 
the immediate present, however, it is easier to speak. That the United 
States will join with the British Domin-ions in • an anti-Asiatic pact 
seems extremely unlikely. It seems equally clear that for purely 
practical and oppor-tunist reasons the Japanese must be excluded from 
the United States for a long time to come. This exclusion, however, 
should be made the subject of a new and definite treaty, such as is now 
being discussed in Washingtori'apd Tokio. The danger of having so 
important and contrOr versial a subject left to the mercies of a 
Gentleman's Agree-\ ment is obvious.

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[Marxism] Salvage Perspectives #6: Evidence of Things Not Seen | Salvage

2018-11-18 Thread Louis Proyect via Marxism

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http://salvage.zone/in-print/salvage-perspectives-6-evidence-of-things-not-seen/
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[Marxism] Donald Trump, Lumpen Capitalist

2018-11-18 Thread Anthony Boynton via Marxism
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I didn't read Farber's article yet, but the entire coterie around Trump is
made up of lumpen-capitalists, a class fraction that proliferates whenever
and wherever the real rate of profit falls near or below zero. Accumulation
of wealth through scams, theft and plunder characterize this sector.

They have always had an important place at the margins in the USA, but have
grown in importance.

Look at Trump's Devos, Mercer, Zinke, Mnunchin

Anthony
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Re: [Marxism] China a planned economy?

2018-11-18 Thread RKOB via Marxism

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Your observation about state sectors in capitalist economies is very 
appropriate. It is a bit funny in my opinion that various pro-China 
"Marxists" defend their view by referring to China's significant state 
sector (State-Owned Enterprises - SOE). They seem not to have heard 
about Lenin's category of "state-monopoly capitalism" but rather imagine 
that capitalism can only exist as neoliberal.


I had a correspondence today with a Russian comrade who correctly 
pointed out that not only China but also Russia has a sizeable state 
sector. He agreed that these are - both in China and Russia - 
state-capitalist corporations. This is why the imperialist Forbes and 
others list so many Chinese SOE in their top ranks. Furthermore, let us 
not forget that even on a formal level the SOE constitute only a 
minority of China's GDP and industry output.


China's capitalist character is proven, among others, by its declining 
share of wages and the rising share of profit (and income inequality in 
general). Comrades might be interested in the following pamphlets which 
deal with these issues:


https://www.thecommunists.net/theory/china-india-rivalry/ (Chapter III 
and IV)


https://www.thecommunists.net/theory/the-catastrophic-failure-of-the-theory-of-catastrophism/ 
(Part 4)




Am 18.11.2018 um 17:53 schrieb John Reimann via Marxism:

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Is the Chinese economy dominated by the capitalist mode? I don't really
have enough information to say decisively, but it seems to me that the
decisive issue is NOT whether the state sector dominates the economy. After
all, there have been many capitalist countries with huge state sectors. The
decisive issue is whether the economy is dominated by state planning. And
with that in mind, here's a figure: 22% of the housing in China is vacant.
(In the US, the rate is slightly over half that.) This is not because of an
expected boom in demand from a youthful population. On the contrary, the
population is aging in China. Nope. It's good, old fashioned rampant
speculation.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-11-08/a-fifth-of-china-s-homes-are-empty-that-s-50-million-apartments?fbclid=IwAR1p3DeoIybtxFGq2jiIO8DI34QXZgowNpLnwT1piEjK-_Rh_68KKRKjGk8

John Reimann



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(Österreichische Sektion der RCIT, www.thecommunists.net)
www.rkob.net
ak...@rkob.net
Tel./SMS/WhatsApp/Telegram: +43-650-4068314



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[Marxism] China a planned economy?

2018-11-18 Thread John Reimann via Marxism
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Is the Chinese economy dominated by the capitalist mode? I don't really
have enough information to say decisively, but it seems to me that the
decisive issue is NOT whether the state sector dominates the economy. After
all, there have been many capitalist countries with huge state sectors. The
decisive issue is whether the economy is dominated by state planning. And
with that in mind, here's a figure: 22% of the housing in China is vacant.
(In the US, the rate is slightly over half that.) This is not because of an
expected boom in demand from a youthful population. On the contrary, the
population is aging in China. Nope. It's good, old fashioned rampant
speculation.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-11-08/a-fifth-of-china-s-homes-are-empty-that-s-50-million-apartments?fbclid=IwAR1p3DeoIybtxFGq2jiIO8DI34QXZgowNpLnwT1piEjK-_Rh_68KKRKjGk8

John Reimann

-- 
*“In politics, abstract terms conceal treachery.” *from "The Black
Jacobins" by C. L. R. James
Check out:https:http://oaklandsocialist.com also on Facebook
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[Marxism] The Obamas are 'Becoming' a billion-dollar brand

2018-11-18 Thread Louis Proyect via Marxism

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https://nypost.com/2018/11/17/the-obamas-are-becoming-a-billion-dollar-brand/
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[Marxism] Too Rich to Jail

2018-11-18 Thread Louis Proyect via Marxism

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NY Times Op-Ed, November 18, 2018
Too Rich to Jail
By Maureen Dowd

WASHINGTON — When I was in Reykjavik in August, Icelanders were bragging 
about putting the corrupt bankers who ravaged their economy in prison. 
In America, it works somewhat differently.


We let the corrupt bankers who ravaged our economy roam free with bigger 
bonuses, more lavish Hamptons houses and fresh risky schemes. The big 
banks are bigger than ever and prosecution of white-collar crimes is at 
a 20-year low. And, cherry on the gilded cake, we put white-collar 
criminals in charge of the country — elevating epic grifters to the 
presidency and powerful cabinet posts.


Reading all the recent stories about the 10th anniversary of the 
financial crisis, it’s easy to see the neon line leading from Barack 
Obama’s failure to punish Wall Street scammers to the fact that 
Republican scammers are now infecting the entire infrastructure of 
government.


“The Tea Party and Occupy Wall Street rose up as opposite expressions of 
anti-establishment rage, nourished by the sense that colluding elites in 
government and business had got away with a crime,” George Packer wrote 
in The New Yorker. “The game was rigged — that became the consensus of 
the alienated.”


President Obama and his Attorney General Eric Holder Jr. made a terrible 
mistake by letting the miscreant bankers off the hook rather than 
saying, as F.D.R. did, “I welcome their hatred.”


Some saw it as the end of the Democratic Party. Democrats were the party 
of workers, charged with protecting people from big money, big banks and 
big fraud. Obama, the great hope to revitalize the left, immediately 
folded. Some analogized that the failure to send bankers to jail or even 
on perp walks made the party’s white blood cell count drop to the point 
that G.O.P. infections could run wild.


In his 2016 book, “Listen, Liberal,” Thomas Frank wrote that “the hope 
drained out of the Obama movement” at the meeting between the fledgling 
president and Wall Street C.E.O.s in March 2009: “After warning them 
about ‘the pitchforks’ of an angry public, Obama reassured the 
frightened bankers that they could count on him to protect them; that he 
had no intention of restructuring their industry or changing the 
economic direction of the nation.” (After he left the White House, Obama 
followed Hillary’s lead, buckraking on Wall Street.)


David Axelrod, the Obama counselor who fought during the crisis to “kick 
the offenders harder,” as he puts it, says he still feels “very 
conflicted.” “We feared that if you took a brick out of the wall then 
the whole damn wall might fall down,” he said. “But it wasn’t helpful, 
as far as Trump. To the extent that people felt the deal was rigged 
against them and in favor of the powerful, it gave him fodder.”


Donald Trump scooped up “the forgotten,” promising to punish Wall Street 
for “getting away with murder,” and pledging to break up the big banks 
and force bankers to pay higher taxes.


But it was just another Trump con. His administration, The Times 
reported, “has presided over a sharp decline in financial penalties 
against banks and big companies accused of malfeasance,” sparing 
corporate wrongdoers billions in fines.


Asked about The Times’s scorching investigation last month on how 
“self-made” Trump received at least $413 million in today’s dollars from 
his father’s real estate empire, much of it through tax dodges, 
Kellyanne Conway shrugged it off, saying, “Haven’t they learned that the 
president always gets the last laugh?”


Trump’s White House started off like a branch office of Goldman Sachs, 
as Elizabeth Warren noted. Gary Cohn, Trump’s former economic adviser 
from Goldman, showed that Wall Street’s arrogance shines bright when he 
recently told Reuters that borrowers were just as responsible for the 
2008 crisis as lenders.


“Who broke the law?” Cohn asked, adding: “Was the waitress in Las Vegas 
who had six houses leveraged at 100 percent with no income, was she 
reckless and stupid? Or was the banker reckless and stupid?”


Binyamin Appelbaum, The Times’s economics wiz, riposted on Twitter: “A 
more accurate characterization of the housing bubble is that it was one 
of the largest orgies of white collar criminality in American history.”


Speaking of orgies, Tim Leissner, the former Goldman Sachs banker whose 
guilty plea in the company’s $600 million international fraud case was 
unsealed this month, told the judge that his conspiracy was “very much 
in line” with the culture of Goldman Sachs “to conceal facts from 
certain compliance and legal employees of Goldman Sachs.”


If you thought Trump’s flimflam 

[Marxism] Brothers Whom Authorities Linked to Pittsburgh Shooting Suspect Had Flyer Supporting Neo-Nazi Group, Officials Say

2018-11-18 Thread Dennis Brasky via Marxism
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https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/article/brothers-whom-authorities-linked-to-pittsburgh-shooting-suspect-had-flyer-supporting-neo-nazi-group-officials-say/
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[Marxism] Hundreds of Thousands in France Protest Taxes by Blocking Roads

2018-11-18 Thread Louis Proyect via Marxism

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NY Times, November 18, 2018
Hundreds of Thousands in France Protest Taxes by Blocking Roads
By Alissa J. Rubin

ÉRAGNY, France — More than a quarter-million people across France joined 
protests on Saturday against planned hikes in gas taxes. Drivers blocked 
roundabouts, highway access roads and intersections.


The demonstrations have harnessed a broader discontent with high taxes 
and, for some, with the policies of President Emmanuel Macron.


Most of the 2,000 demonstrations were in the suburbs, exurbs and rural 
areas of France where people rely on their cars to go to work, visit the 
doctor and do their grocery shopping. Some protesters also blocked 
access to border crossings.


Most of the protests were orderly, though one person was killed and more 
than 200 were injured in accidents or altercations around the country, 
according to the Interior Minister, Christophe Castaner.


In Paris, some 1,200 demonstrators almost reached the Elysée, the 
presidential residence, where they shouted, “Macron quit,” and blocked 
the Champs-Élysées.


That hostile tone, though, was not evident in most small towns and 
suburban areas.


“We are not political people; we do not belong to a union, we are 
citizens,” said Didier Lacombe, a retiree who lives on a fixed income 
near Éragny, a small town about an hour west of Paris.


“The taxes are rising on everything. They put taxes on top of taxes,” 
said Mr. Lacombe, as he and his wife prepared to join what has come to 
be known as the “Yellow Vests” protest after the vests that are required 
in French cars and that were worn by the demonstrators.


“It is not the tax on gas, it’s everything. The injustice is greater and 
greater,” he said.


The protesters, whose movement coalesced rapidly over the last six to 
eight weeks through social media, have grown quickly in numbers. While 
the demonstrations were no larger than those organized by unions who 
object to labor reforms, they were strikingly consistent, given the 
distance between gatherings, which reached from the Mediterranean coast 
to the northern industrial areas of the country.


The demonstrations are unlike some past protests that pressed for higher 
salaries. Now, people are seeking a reduction in the gas tax as well as 
expressing frustration with payroll taxes, which are used for social 
services like health care and social security, said Alexis Spire, a 
senior researcher in sociology at the National Center for Scientific 
Research, a government research agency.


The French taxes, known as social charges, can top 40 percent of 
paychecks and are used to cover health care, unemployment insurance and 
other services.


“It’s a big difference with movements such as the Tea Party in the 
United States,” Mr. Spire said, because the French want government 
involvement. “The French are very attached to their model of social 
protection and they are also very attached to government services.”


For those living outside of cities, it is often hard to feel they are 
getting their money’s worth. Unemployment has remained stubbornly high 
at nearly 10 percent. Rural hospitals have closed, making it more 
difficult for those in need to access health care despite the country’s 
universal health insurance. Mayor's budgets are shrinking in some 
localities, which means city hall might be open for fewer hours or the 
administrative jobs that used to be done there have moved to another 
town. That means more driving for those left without services.


Over the past few days the government has become increasingly alarmed by 
the movement. Though it began last May with a online petition about gas 
prices, it gained traction in October when a call went out for a 
national demonstration to block key roads in an effort to get the 
government’s attention.


With no central organization or coordination, the movement came together 
almost entirely on social media.


“It is a very large front that brings together people who are angry 
about different things, and it is drawn from a number of different 
segments of French society that has coalesced around outrage about taxes 
and the increase in gas prices,” said Jérôme Fourquet, the head of 
opinion polling for IFOP, a leading public opinion research firm.


IFOP surveys recently found that about a third of French people are 
“very dependent” on their car in their daily lives and another third 
“somewhat dependent,” so the price of gas has become a key element in 
the majority of French citizens’ budgets.


“The price of fuel is as politically and sociologically sensitive as the 
price of wheat in the ancient regime,” said Mr. Fourquet, referring to 
the 18th 

[Marxism] ‘Tell Everyone We Scalped You!’ How Caste Still Rules in India

2018-11-18 Thread Louis Proyect via Marxism

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NY Times, Nov. 18, 2018
‘Tell Everyone We Scalped You!’ How Caste Still Rules in India
By Jeffrey Gettleman and Suhasini Raj

THATI, India — When Sardar Singh Jatav set out walking on a muggy night 
in early September to talk with the men who employed his son, he found 
them already waiting for him in the road. But they were not in the mood 
for discussion.


The higher-caste men greeted Mr. Sardar with a punch to the face. Then 
they broke his arm. Then they pinned him down. Mr. Sardar shrieked for 
help. Nobody came.


One higher-caste man stuffed a rag in his mouth. Another gleefully 
pulled out a razor. He grabbed Mr. Sardar’s scalp and began to lift and 
cut, lift and cut, carving off nearly every inch of skin.


“Take that!” Mr. Sardar remembers them saying. “Tell everyone we scalped 
you!”


Mr. Sardar is a Dalit, a class of Indians who are not just considered 
lower caste, but technically outcaste — what used to be called 
untouchable. Bound at the bottom of India’s Hindu society for centuries, 
the Dalit population, now estimated at more than 300 million, has been 
abused for as long as anyone can remember.


And now, according to crime statistics, the violence against them is rising.

This might seem surprising against the new narrative India is writing. 
So much has changed. Millions of people have been lifted out of poverty. 
The Indian economy is now one of the world’s biggest. Everywhere in the 
country, there are new roads, new airports, new infrastructure.


But in many places, especially in poorer rural areas, caste 
infrastructure is still the one that counts. And those who rebel against 
it, like Mr. Sardar, are often greeted with unchecked brutality.


It is violence intended to send a message, pain inflicted to maintain 
India’s old social order. The crimes are happening across the country 
and Dalits are not simply killed: They are humiliated, tortured, 
disfigured, destroyed.


“We have a mental illness,” said Avatthi Ramaiah, a sociology professor 
in Mumbai.


“You may talk about India being a world power, a global power, sending 
satellites into space,” he said. “But the outside world has an image of 
India they don’t know. As long as Hinduism is strong, caste will be 
strong, and as long as there is caste, there will be lower caste,” he added.


”The lower castes don’t have the critical numbers to counterattack,” he 
said. And the result has been violence that he described as “intimate, 
sadistic and cruel.”


In late October, a 14-year-old Dalit girl was beheaded by an upper-caste 
man whose wife said he hated the girl specifically because of her caste. 
A Dalit scavenger was tied up and fatally whipped outside a factory in 
May, in a beating captured on video and broadcast across India. In 
March, a Dalit man was killed by higher-caste men for riding a horse 
(traditionally, Dalits aren’t supposed to do that).


“Such incidents would not have happened in my childhood,” said Chandra 
Bhan Prasad, a well-known political commentator (and a Dalit). “In my 
childhood, a Dalit would not ride a horse. Before 1990, most Dalits 
worked for someone. Now they are paying a price for their freedom.”


For decades, India has struggled to de-weaponize caste. When the 
Constitution was being written in the late 1940s, intellectuals knew 
caste was a sore spot that needed to be urgently addressed. They 
included specific protections for Dalits, who make up about 15 to 20 
percent of India’s 1.3 billion people.


Affirmative action programs, though they have generated deep resentments 
among upper castes, have helped some Dalits escape poverty. Today there 
are Dalit poets, doctors, civil service officers, engineers, and even a 
Dalit president, though it is mostly a ceremonial post.


But 95 percent of Indians still marry within their caste, experts say. 
And recent studies show income and education levels correlate very 
closely with caste. Even controlling for education, Dalits still fall 
behind, indicating that caste discrimination is alive and well in the 
workplace.


Scholars argue that the current political environment has increased the 
vilification of the other — whether that be along caste, creed or gender 
lines. According to national crime statistics, the number of caste-based 
crimes has increased 25 percent since 2010, reaching nearly 41,000 cases 
in 2016, the last year on record.


Many analysts blame the ruling party, the Bharatiya Janata Party, whose 
Hindu supremacist roots have emboldened supporters to lash out at 
minorities, often in the name of Hinduism. One example is the rash of 
people beaten up or killed for slaughtering cows. The animals are 

[Marxism] ‘Bellingcat – Truth in a Post-Truth World’ Review – Variety

2018-11-18 Thread Louis Proyect via Marxism

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https://variety.com/2018/film/reviews/idfa-film-review-bellingcat-truth-in-a-post-truth-world-1203031551/
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[Marxism] The New Deal is Not Enough - Socialist Forum

2018-11-18 Thread Louis Proyect via Marxism

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https://socialistforum.dsausa.org/issues/fall-2018/the-new-deal-is-not-enough/
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[Marxism] Black Athena, White Power | Denise Eileen McCoskey | Eidolon

2018-11-18 Thread Kevin Lindemann and Cathy Campo via Marxism
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https://eidolon.pub/black-athena-white-power-6bd1899a46f2


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[Marxism] Ride of the Red Valkyries: Wagner, Marxism and ‘The Ring’ | Sean Ledwith | Culture Matters

2018-11-18 Thread Kevin Lindemann and Cathy Campo via Marxism
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https://www.culturematters.org.uk/index.php/arts/music/item/2931-ride-of-the-red-valkyries


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