Tahir says:

>To support the
>democratic fraction of capital against the fascist one just
>does mean that one is laying the conditions for the future
>return of fascism, whenever the ruling class gets into
>difficulties with its ability to manufacture consent.

Is fascism really only a tool of capitalism? It has repeatedly been used like 
that, but it seems to have some kind of autonomy, which manifests itself in the 
opposition of the far-right to ultra-capitalism.
 
 
Mark says:

>Both Germany and 
>Russia adapted to the facts of their exclusion from the world-market, and of 
>their 'containment' by outside powers, and in broadly similar ways, ie by 
>mass mobilisations, pursuit of the 'Bright Future', planning in conditions of 
>autarky, etc. 

Was Germany really isolated from the world-market before the war? It doesn't 
look like that from the Swiss perspective.

>Well, there is some point in looking again at 
>...
>Anything which helps us get 
>a handle on what actually is going on in the so-called New Economy.... 

Haven't we already discussed that? What peculiar thing is there in the "New 
Economy" that we haven't dismissed already as a mirage?


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