Last night I attended a forum on Greece after the elections organized by 
the Campaign for Peace and Democracy that was introduced and then 
chaired by two of its leaders, Thomas Harrison and Joanne Landy. I will 
not offer much detail on the talks since the whole thing can be seen on 
Youtube.

I will say this, however. The two most useful speakers were those who 
were not connected to vanguard formations. Natassa Romanaou, a Syriza-NY 
member and Columbia University professor, basically presented her 
party’s perspectives. Nantina Vgontzas, a sociology PhD student at NYU, 
was the most analytical of all the presenters who sized up the class 
forces in play in both Greece and Europe. If you don’t have the patience 
to watch the Youtube video above, I recommend a look at her FB analysis 
of the elections.

What I want to turn to now are the three spokesmen for the Leninist left 
on the panel whose presentations helped clarify my thinking on the 
theoretical challenges of the current stage of the struggle in Greece. I 
will conclude with some observations about the economic problems 
underlying the political divisions that were addressed to varying 
degrees, but not completely to my satisfaction, by the three. I will 
review them in order of sanity.

Iannis Delatolas is described by the organizers as an art photographer, 
a founding member of AKNY, and a supporter of Antarsya-MARS and of the 
International Socialist Tendency (IST). MARS is an acronym for the 
United Radical Left Front, which Antarsya is aligned with, not a 
reference to the group’s planet of origin. MARS is itself an alliance 
that includes the Plan B group founded by a former Syriza leader who is 
for a Grexit. Apparently two groups in Antarsya are opposed to working 
with the MARSIANS because they are not radical enough. Since one is 
linked to Callinicos’s International Socialist Tendency, I am not 
exactly sure how Delatolas did not get called on the red carpet. The 
other group is linked to the NPA in France. For the two groups, the 
litmus test is support for what they call a revolutionary rupture. No 
hernia belt is required.

full: 
http://louisproyect.org/2015/02/07/a-panel-discussion-on-the-new-syriza-government/
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