I think that the best way to interpret this all is that neoliberalism is
finally coming home to Europe and the U.S..

All of the modes of governmentality (surveillance, the logic of security
supplanting the logic of sovereignty, dissolution of the divide between
police and military, etc.) that have historically defined colonial
enterprises are now being internalized by those that first deployed them
under the guise of austerity, security, etc..

So all of the things that we're used to seeing routinely occur the global
south (election rigging, political assassinations, blatant corruption,
etc.), typically with implicit Western support, have now started to become
normalized in the West / Global North as well.

As a consequence, as the state shrinks to become nothing more than
security/military state meant to defend capital, capital of course will
play an increasingly important role in political life. Expect facebook,
google, amazon, etc, to readily fill the voids left behind by various
crises, austerities, and failures.

With regard to the "what is to be done" question? I've already said my
words on this matter multiple times on this list so I won't repeat them
here other than saying that the BDS movement is one of the few things
giving me hope these days, simply because it is growing, is international,
involves civil society, states, activist groups, etc., and resembles
something like a new version of the notion of the "general strike" but
adapted to global form.

Best,
     ~i



_____________________________________






*Dr. Ian Alan Paulwww.ianalanpaul.com
<http://www.ianalanpaul.com/>Assistant Professor of Emerging MediaArt
Department, SUNY Stony Brook“**History is made by men and women,*
*just as it can also be unmade and rewritten,*
*always with various silences and elisions,*
*always with shapes imposed and*
*disfigurements tolerated.”*

*           -Edward Said*

On Fri, Mar 16, 2018 at 4:59 PM, Brian Holmes <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Folks, as Trump's presidency collapses, what we see in the newspapers are
> multiple preconditions for some kind of rally-round-the-flag war, on a much
> bigger scale than we are already used to:
>
> -- Ignominious losses in special Congressional elections, presaging a big
> defeat in the November midterms
>
> -- Special prosecutor Mueller closing in on the Trump family businesses
>
> -- Porn star closing in on the family jewels
>
> -- New hawks in the cabinet: Christian fundamentalist Mike Pompeo at
> State, torture queen at the head of the CIA, and potentially, John Bolton
> as National Security Adviser
>
> -- Trade war with China, driven by America-first hawk Robert Lighthizer
>
> -- Revelation of ongoing cyberattack on US energy infrastructure by Russia
>
> -- Furore in Britain over the double-spy poisoning
>
> -- $716 US security budget for 2019, including $24 billion for nukes
>
> -- Anthing-can-happen talks with North Korea
>
> -- Imminent abrogation of the nuclear treaty with Iran, etc.
>
> How do you all interpret these things? I don't know enough about the
> infrastructure hacks, not by far, but they seem dead serious, and they are
> echoed by yesterday's revelation of similar intrusions at Saudi refineries,
> with attempted explosive sabotage. However, the revelation of these hacks
> is clearly political: it's an attempt to push back against the assaults on
> Trump by putting the country on a nationalist war footing. Same goes for
> the trade measures. I do not think China would allow itself to be dragged
> into a shooting war - their leadership is too rational and they have a lot
> to gain by keeping the conflict economic - but am I kidding myself when I
> think the same about Russia? Are there other flashpoints - in addition to
> Syria I mean - that would support a full-on proxy war?
>
> Anyway, I resist crying wolf but this seriously looks like a possible
> endgame for democracy-as-we-knew-it. What can the political opposition do?
> What can the streets do? What can the (remains of) the "international
> community" do? What can global civil society do? What can I do?
>
> I guess nobody has ready answers to those questions, but surely you have
> insights.
>
> best, Brian
>
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