Dear Anna, 

As someone who was reading Rifkin's writings from 90s till today, I can say 
that about his visionary critics over the developments in technology, as 
genetical engineering, nano technology, and now the Internet of things, it is 
something impressive. I do appreciated his practice as a professional 
intellectual of managerialism era. As an 'organic intellectual' he strive to 
find a middle ground looking way, solution to the problem of intra class 
struggle, emerged in his time between the fractions of certain capitalist, 
ruling class elements. Why I would appreciate for this kind of effort since I 
think it would serve to delay a perishing, worse suffering and death, more  
then today, and for more amount of people, this could be billions if emerges a 
next global war plus fascism plus revolution like scenario. 

So if it would serve to stop or delay this apocalyptic option that is a good 
thing anyway. But first, I can not see more to expect from him, nor any effort 
for more, like delaying an ecological disasters, or less suffering for less 
people as objective are not perspective he stresses. Because we already started 
to see how geothermal plantations started to damage the environment, as wind 
tribunes, how some other green energy generates cancer, meanwhile 
geo-engineering kind of stuff threatens other balances. What Rifkin foresee a 
world Airbnb, TaskRabbit, kind of global collaborative commons capitalism, 
would compete its social democratic version. This is actually what he openly 
promotes to the emerging new rulers of the world, and those who are ready to 
build partnership with them from the sinking old boys network. 

Such a middle ground perspective, actually, when served to strengthen the hand 
of deadly enemy of say NeoCons, China and Germany, that approaches Russia, and 
align with Others from Brics, such a shifting transnationalist/globalist ruling 
elite constellation for instance, if it also. attract some radical looking left 
wing support, might be threaten the war mongers with fast approaching 
dispossession and, what Gramsci calls Passive Revolution from above. Since this 
threat drives these people to survival counter attacks, all systemic 
destabilization appears as suicidal to observers. The potential of Rifkin's 
vision to replace the failed global governance project -promoted by of the 
Soros-Clinton-Bono constellation, and later failed Green Keynesianism; can be 
replaced with such a perspective, since it offers a structural advantage to 
those in order to suppress and dispossess the U.S.vand Europe based 
conservative (nationalist, extractionist, industrial military complex) ruling 
class frac
 tion. 

Of course these all hypothetical, things are not this simple and black and 
white at all. I just wished to re demonstrate what sort of thinking lies behind 
my critics of Rifkin. This however I think might be what Wallerstein were 
identifying as a good looking alternative both to a real emancipatory vision, 
as well as dying order, which might be more dangerous than today's capitalism. 
It might sound like worry driven and negative apocalyptic perspective yet it is 
historically what has been happening, right? After ever round of clashes 
between elite, war, Revolution, and later things worsen and get more complex. 
Are we moving into enlightenment or destruction today, or equally to both? 

I know the above might sound like an economic, or class reductionist analysis, 
but since I tried to to put ideas together so that it would not offend or 
attack yours or others, respect to those that are not class or political 
economy based, Marxist, so on, yet claiming to envisage emancipatory path. So 
would love to hear how would you react to the above arguments, Anna; since they 
tried to address another reality of growing and worsening sort of 
conscious(less)ness bear by those at the top and at the grass-root levels, like 
right wing, anti Islamist, and fundamentalist movements. this put the arguments 
for the evolution of humanity towards a higher level consciousness, for the 
good of planet, in a troublesome position. I think this point might be the 
point that would demonstrate the difference between Wilber's and Michel's 
positions on Integral Analysis?  

In my opinion, the role of class, capitalism, dialectic materialism are really 
essential to make sense, and analyze the world and universe but might be 
irrelevant to political choices and practices, since history showed again and 
again, since analyses do not give direct result nor guaranty to the good, 
oppressed people or classes, to win a battle. Personalities, communication, 
creativity, collaboration is much more important indeed for the struggle a 
battle. great method and analyses is a pre- but more than that commons humanity 
needs really open, sincere, assertive, brave, critical, radical, 
transformatory, emancipatory, and revolutionary exchanges, cooperations, 
networkings, organizing and actions; without fear of enclosure, exclusion, 
cooptation, so on.

 If we can not manage, I don't think Rifkin's practice would mean anything for 
billions, for more than several decades. yet if we could do our part, his 
efforts would be saving time for general win. This would be much more, even 
beyond what he is able to calculate. So I would not propose to dismiss his or 
any other effort at all; yet from his writings I find hard to see any 
convincing clue to believe that he even tries to effecting rulers by providing 
them an human option. He acts more like a Keynes, or Peter Drucker, providing a 
good business idea, win win option, for the next generation rulers, as well as 
himself. That option he knows should be looking more human and appealing to the 
new middle classes, consumers that should be providing the legitimacy of the 
next degenerative and destructive form of global informational capitalism (if 
we could still call it capitalism at all). And as in Keynes' case, very hard to 
avoid, and depends on his appeal to rulers and some radicals, it lik
 ely to catalyze a war like scenario. 

Orsan 




> On 9 apr. 2015, at 00:40, Bob Haugen <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> On Wed, Apr 8, 2015 at 1:04 PM, Anna Harris <[email protected]> wrote:
>> I don't think much good would be served by initiating a discussion on this 
>> list,
> 
> I can understand from the first responders (including me) why you
> might think so, but I was not being sarcastic when I thought it was a
> great discussion topic. And were the discussion to continue, and you
> to explain why you respect Rifkin's ideas, I promise to refrain from
> further knee-jerk responses and cheap shots at his expense.
> 
> But here's Rifkin apparently talking about "the beginning of the end
> of the capitalist era" to a bunch of rulers of the capitalists. I am
> aware that some of those people do see the end of fossil fuels, but I
> have not seen any signs that they see the end of capitalism. So why
> are they listening to him? What does it mean about the world today?
> 
> Brian Holmes wrote something on this list awhile ago where he thought
> the leaders of the Chinese CP were watching the failures of the US and
> Europe and did not want to repeat them. Possibly part of the same
> story?

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