Clearly in both the U.S. & Europe defense of migrants (documented &
undocumented) will have to be at the center of any developing mass
resistance to the capitalist offensive now in its 40th year or so. While we
are not of course going to get formal (embodied in law) Open Borders, we
have to fight for something very close to that de facto.

Incidentally, in respect to the early  beginnings of the capitalist
offensive & its continued development, one of the most important sources is
Edward P. Morgan, _What Happened To [sic] the 1960s: How Mass Media Culture
Failed American Democracy_. The sub-title is misleading because the
publisher pushed the word "failed" on Ted. His book carefully documents in
great detail the deliberateness of the process by which the "Too much
democracy" of the '60s was distorted and eventuallky driven from popular
consciousness. We need to recover that heritage, & Morgan's book is a fine
starting point.

Carrol

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Angelus Novus
Sent: Sunday, January 29, 2012 11:05 AM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: [Pen-l] Claudio Katz on the Global Economiy Crisis



"Two interpretations of this crisis were dominant at its beginning. The
neoliberals emphasized the culpability of debtors, who took on loans without
being able to pay them back, as well as the irresponsibility of governments,
which took on unmanageable liabilities. The Keynesians, on the other hand,
underlined the absence of financial regulation and the excesses of
speculation. They also insisted on the fall in solvable demand because of
the stagnation of 
wages and social polarization. The two currents also pointed to various
errors of economic policy that have led to the present collapse.

This initial explanation of the origin of the crisis subsequently shifted to
another problem: the differential impact of the convulsions depending on the
regions of the world and consequently the geopolitical modifications, in
other words the turn towards multipolarity, the loss of US hegemony, the
strengthening of China and the increased role of the emerging economies.

How has the economic crisis developed in each region of the world? What are
the strategies of the ruling classes? What kind of scenarios do they profile
on a world level?

[...]

On the European level Germany promotes an aggressive policy aiming at making
workers pay the cost of the crisis. This attack is not just a case of one
more adjustment. It is imposing the destruction of the Welfare State built
after the war and the liquidation of social conquests, which the workers of
other continents had never won. The European unemployment rate is already 20
per cent and under the impact of the precarisation of work, poverty affects
a quarter of the population.

Budgetary tightening in order to support the euro constitutes the other
pillar of German policy. Over the last few months, the existence of this
currency has been on the edge of the precipice and there has been
speculation about it being reorganized, breaking up or disappearing in the
near future. But this is a currency which has been the key to the exporting
domination of Germany, based on the unification of markets and the
elimination of protectionist barriers.

[...]


On all the continents young people are raising their heads and building 
movements by using the social networks to get information and to 
organize. The first embryo of an international movement appeared last 
October 15, when the world marches mobilized multitudes in 950 cities in 80
countries. A coordinated action on this scale had not taken place 
since the mobilizations against the war in Iraq in 2003.

If the regional and international 
convergence of these resistances was reinforced it would be possible to 
develop a response to the bourgeois attempts to confront the workers 
country by country. The leaders of Germany have taken the leadership of 
this strategy and repeat to whomever wants to hear them that German 
workers "have already made sacrifices" and that they "should not pick up the
bill for the lazy South". This message seeks to pit workers against each
other by concealing the profits that the capitalists draw from 
this division. The campaigns of the Right against immigrants have the 
same goal.

A progressive way out of the crisis 
implies resisting this fracture within the world working class. The 
tensions between German and Greek, American and Chinese or Spanish and 
Moroccan workers lead to making the people pay for the consequences of 
the present crisis of capitalism.

Internationalist responses would 
neutralize this threat and would make it possible to bring together 
again the young people and the sectors of the working class which have 
not yet been able yet to get on their feet after the neoliberal attacks. The
year 2012 gives us the chance to change the scenario of the crisis 
in favour of the workers.

Full article: http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article2465
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