At 9:23 AM 11/28/96, Tom Walker wrote:
>But there is a danger in attacking Rifkin and his "stale idiocies" because
>Rifkin mixes those stale idiocies with some of the most important strategic
>issues of the day. The popular expression is "throwing out the baby with the
>bath water."
>
>It's impor
>But do allow me to indulge a slight digression on the 'nothing new here'
>theme. In October of last year, the Atlantic Monthly carried a cover story
>criticizing the use of the Gross Domestic Product as a surrogate measure of
>national prosperity. Conventional economists arose with such a uniform
friends,
i have not read rifkin's book, mostly because i think he is something of a
charlatan. i have read aronowitz's and difazio's book, and i have written a
review of it for science and society. it is not especially well-written and it
is full of jargon. it certainly never demonstrates t
BUT, BUT, BUT The women we are talking about, working class women of all
races (the largest percentage increase in teen births has been amongst
caucasian teens) do NOT go to college, nor do they receive professional
degrees. Work by Elaine McCrate and (I forgot the other author's name, oops)
has
Tom Walker wrote:
The 'this' that's already happening is not the same 'this' that's nothing
new. Part-time, casual and short term contract work are most definitely not
the 'same thing' as a generalized reduction and redistribution of work time.
Are you seriously suggesting that insecure, part-tim
The labour movement in British Columbia was delighted with the re-election
of the social democratic NDP in the provincial election last May. Since
the election, however, the government (which had campaigned AGAINST the
neoliberal agenda) has taken to slashing the public sector in the name of
redu
> Date: Wed, 27 Nov 1996 16:00:02 +
> From: LabourNet <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Danish truckers also strike
> Comments: To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> Truckers Still Block Border Crossings, Ports
> to Protest Tax Rule
>
> Source: Associated Press
>
> COPENH
November 28, 1996
FRENCH TRUCKERS VOTE TO EXTEND STRIKE
PARIS (Reuter) - Striking truck drivers voted to keep
up their 11-day stranglehold on the French economy on
Thursday, defying government calls to return to work
after talks with bosses collapsed over pay demands.
Truckers maintain
The Financial TimesNovember 28 1996
HOPES OF EARLY END OF FRENCH DRIVERS' STRIKE FADE
By David Buchan in Paris and Charles Batchelor in London
Hopes of a deal in the 10-day French truck drivers'
dispute were hit last night as pay talks broke down and
a government mediator was
>The Irish Times
>OPINION Thursday, November 28, 1996
> _
> =20
> PATIENCE RUNS OUT AS
> ANGELS GO FOR JUGULAR
> ___
The Brecht Forum
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1997 Socialist Scholars Conference
original message posted by:
From: "Robert Saute, CUNY Grad Center" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Socialist Scholars Conference
Tom Cochrane misunderstood. I was NOT rejecting Lipietz et al 100%. In
fact, I've learned a lot from the regulation school. I like Lipietz's
esoteric vs. exoteric distinction, though I'd rather use different words.
I like to think about the dynamics of capital at a high level of
abstraction (
Doug Henwood wrote,
>I just get irritated when Rifkin's stale idiocies are presented as
>fresh advances in human thought.
I can sympathize with Doug's irritation. Rifkin adds nothing to the
discussion other than a popularizing zeal and a slick presentation. Rifkin
is especially good at mining th
At 11:32 PM 11/27/96, Tom Walker wrote:
>What, pray tell, is so 'new' [or even interesting] about this 'nothing new
>here' argument?
Uh, just to clarify, newness is not a virtue by me nor is lack of newness a
vice. I just get irritated when Rifkin's stale idiocies are presented as
fresh advances
Patrick Bond asked,
>Why stop at the (broadly-characterised) point-of-production?
and argued convincingly for:
>Corporate campaigns aimed increasingly at both the power and
>vulnerability that characterise firms' financial relationships.
To which I would add, that the strategic state policy f
The manner in which human beings act upon naturally occurring
material in order to subsist and procreate, and the manner in which
they relate with one another in the process of this production are
governed by economic laws. These scientific economic laws exist
objectively and cannot be created, d
>>> Tom Walker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 28/November/1996
09:33am >>>
>Introductory remarks: Strike breaking and union busting in the
>1990s: What can we learn from the past to combat it?
>... "what strategies might the labour movement adopt to try to eliminate
> that substantial surplus of labour?"...
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