Sunday, January 31, 2021

Hellas: Sophie, The Moon, and Me - We all fall down


 I was thinking of Venus rising with the sun as I had observed in days last week.  I could see the sun was lighting the horizon to the southeast as I look out my kitchen window.  I went online to see what the sky charts showed.  I saw the eastern sky and southern skies had no Venus.  I moved the view around to the west.  The Moon was bright to the west northwest.  I thought of going out to the front porch, but I'd have to unlock the front door and step out into the cold.  


 

I decided to go up the front stairs.  I was thinking of the stairs the narrator in "A Voyage to Arturus" went up went he was getting ready for his journey into the sky.  He looked out a window at each level.  I looked out the window on the second floor after pulling back the yellow curtain.  But, the Moon was through a screen and textured.  I went up the next flight of stairs holding on to the railing.  I was in the dark.  I pulled back the curtain and looked through the wiggly old glass to the bright, cold moon.  

"Pale Hecarte who rules the night," I remembered from some pagan character, or, Shakespeare.  

I turned around and went down the stairs in the dark backwards, and holding on to the rail.  I remembered a nurse online warning, "you are one fall away from a nursing home."

I had climbed up to observe the Moon, not to sacrifice myself in worship.  

Later that morning I read that a 34 year old woman who created dance music was living in Greece and had also gone up to look at the same full moon.  Sophie tripped and fell and died.  Requiescat in pace et amore. 

We were not looking at the moon at the same time.  The reports say she fell at about 4 am Greek time which must be about four hours ahead of my US Eastern Standard Time.  


 

SOPHIE, the influential British producer who molded electronic music into bracingly original avant-garde pop, died in an accidental fall Saturday morning (January 30), a representative confirms. SOPHIE, who was 34, died at roughly 4 a.m. in Athens, Greece, where the artist had been living. In a statement, the labels Transgressive and Future Classic wrote: “True to her spirituality she had climbed up to watch the full moon and accidentally slipped and fell. She will always be here with us.”

SOPHIE emerged on the European club circuit in the early 2010s, breaking out with a string of inventive, house-adjacent singles including 2013’s “Nothing More to Say.” Next single “Bipp,” a stark and disembodied anthem, signalled a new direction and brought international acclaim, both from dance DJs and in the year-end lists of music publications across genres. Subsequent tracks “Lemonade” and “Hard” mixed distinctive vocals and abrasive sound design into SOPHIE’s music, forging a tactile twist on pop. SOPHIE’s 2014 collaboration with PC Music founder A.G. Cook and Quinn Thomas, QT’s “Hey QT,” embodied the new form, a hyperactive sugar rush of unashamedly euphoric hooks.

The 2015 compilation PRODUCT collected these singles and added new music such as “Just Like We Never Said Goodbye,” which pointed to yet another phase of innovation. In 2018, SOPHIE—who prefers not to use gendered or nonbinary pronouns, according to one representative—released a debut album proper, Oil of Every Pearl’s Un-Insides, prominently featuring SOPHIE’s own vocals. Until then, the producer’s identity was kept mysterious, but in press around the debut, SOPHIE stepped into the frame of videos and photo shoots, coming out as trans. The record was widely hailed as a landmark in forward pop music, earning a Best Dance/Electronic Album nomination at the 2019 Grammys and recognition in album of the decade lists the following year.

SOPHIE’s outsize influence on pop and electronic music stems from not only this solo discography but also an expansive collaborative catalog. This repertoire includes productions for Vince Staples, Madonna, and, prominently, Charli XCX, who said in 2019: “There are very few artists who make me feel something up my core and make me wanna cry. Justice and Uffie made me feel something when I was 14, and I didn’t really have that feeling again until I met Sophie. I felt this rush of: Fuck, this is the coolest shit I have ever heard.” Advertisement

In a statement, SOPHIE’s representative wrote: “At this time respect and privacy for the family is our priority. We would also ask for respect for SOPHIE’s fanbase, and to treat the private nature of this news with sensitivity.”

This article was originally published on Saturday, January 30 at 6:52 a.m. Eastern. It was last updated the same day at 7:40 a.m. Eastern.

https://pitchfork.com/news/sophie-has-died/

Whatever Happened to the Spartacist League ? (Notes From Underground) 26 January 2021


 

Whatever Happened to the Spartacist League ?

January 26, 2021 at 4:46 pm (Uncategorized

Years ago when I was a member of the Toronto branch of the Bolshevik Tendency, the assignment I hated most was having to go to [Spartacist League]  Trotskyist League forums. We were banned from meetings of the Internationalist Socialists and whatever the Mandelites were calling themselves, but we were allowed into TL meetings. Unfortunately…

We were required to sit at the back of the meeting in designated seats. After the presentation, we got to make one intervention (3 minutes although the time limit only seemed to apply to us), following that numerous TL members and supporters would shriek abuse at us (we were supposedly racists, anglo-chauvinists, cop-lovers, dubious elements, quitters, etc. etc.). Then at the end, we were herded out to prevent us from talking to anyone who was actually crazy enough to have come to this meeting in the first place (I suppose that included us too).

And they were always on a Saturday night.

Sustained by coffee and cigarettes, very energetic were the TL…and the rest of their international tendency. Among the first to arrive at an event, the last to leave. Always the most annoying: New issues of Workers Vanguard, Spartacist Canada, Spartacist, Women and Revolution, Black History and the Class Struggle, a pamphlet or two, and always always on sub-drives or so it seemed.

Workers Vanguard came out every two weeks for as long as I remember, until last year. In April, the ICL posted on its web site that the frequency of WV would be …irregular. That has turned out to be a bit of an understatement; it has been over seven months since an issue of WV has appeared.

On October 30, a new SL item appeared on the site: A perfunctory “Don’t Vote for the Democrats” leaflet which could easily have been written by a new member of the Spartacus Youth League (does that still exist?), but nothing since then to indicate to regular readers that Biden won the election and has since been sworn in as president, or that a motley crew of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol building on January 6th. Odder too is that the SL does not appear to have written a single word on the uprising that took place after the police murder of George Floyd (or even the murder itself – if I’m wrong, please let me know)

A quick scan through the International Communist League web site and the pattern is the same. Some sections have not had a new item on their pages for almost a year. The Canadian section’s most recent post dates to October, but is a reprint of a leaflet from August about a ten-day strike. It too is of a generic variety of Spart cliches. You can’t help but think, something is going on.

In 2017, the ICL-FI published a long document, “The Chauvinist Hydra” which seemed to consist mostly of a lot of trashing of various sections on the national question. Spartacist leader James Robertson died in 2019. His passing was marking by a brief notice and then months went by before a more substantial obit was published. It’s temping to believe that there’s a power struggle taking place in the group which has paralysed the organization, but that it would have prevented them from publishing across their international tendency to this degree is difficult to accept. The Internationalist Group, led by former WV editor Jan Norden speculates the group is on the verge of collapse, but they wrote that in MAy of 2020. I suppose it’ll all come out in the wash.

But seriously, whatever happened to the Spartacist League?

https://fischerzed.wordpress.com/2021/01/26/whatever-happened-to-the-spartacist-league/

Monday, January 25, 2021

Indianapolis Indiana: Freelance Death Penalty Robbers - Mass Execution of Family Of "Mexicans" - 1 June 2006

 

(Some of the victims of the mass murder )

The Hamilton Avenue Murders is the colloquial name for the mass murder of seven people in a house at 560 North Hamilton Avenue in Indianapolis, Indiana, on June 1, 2006. 

According to the television program America's Most Wanted, the Indianapolis Police Department responded to a 911 call just after 10:00 p.m. They found seven dead victims, three of whom were children. The victims were shot with a military-style weapon, police charged. Evidence technicians recovered 23 discharged 7.62x39mm cartridge casings from the scene. These cartridges accommodate high velocity caliber bullets used in AK-47 and SKS-type rifles.[1]

Witnesses said two suspects were seen entering the house shortly before the murders were believed to have taken place. Flora Albarran arrived with a friend to pick up her son around 10:00 p.m. Albarran's brother, Magno, also arrived about the same time. Both noticed that the house lights were out, which they knew was odd. When Flora Albarran entered, witnesses said she screamed to her friend not to come in. The suspects were seen leaving through the front door moments later.[2]

Victims

The victims were identified as:[3]

  • Emma Valdez, 46
  • Alberto Covarrubias, 56, Valdez's boyfriend
  • Flora Albarran, 22, Valdez's daughter
  • Magno Albarran, 29, Valdez's son, Flora Albarran's brother
  • Luis Albarran, 5, Flora Albarran's son
  • David Covarrubias, 8, Valdez's son
  • Alberto Covarrubias, 11, Valdez's son

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indianapolis_mass_murder#Perpetrators

 

https://www.in.gov/judiciary/opinions/pdf/09281101rdr.pdf

They saw two black men walk up along the side of the house onto the front porch. At least one witness identified Turner as one of the men. The other man, who was a little bit taller, bigger, and more muscular than Turner and not wearing a shirt, was identified as being the same man who had been in Turner‟s truck parked in front of Swartz‟s house moments earlier. That man had something red around his face, and Turner had a dark colored mask aroundhis face. Turner was carrying a long gun that looked like an AK-47, and the other man had a small handgun. 



 

The two men knocked on the door and when it opened forced their way into the house. The man with the red mask was seen through an upstairs windowand appeared to be putting items into a bag and tossing things around. A woman was seen through another window, and appeared to be on her knees with hands behind her head and a gun held to her head.Magno Albarran arrived at 560 North Hamilton, parked in the garage, and brought in the garbage cans.

At around the same time Flora Albarran arrived at the house; she left her car, still running with Banegas inside, double-parked in front of the house and went up to the door. After Flora knocked on the door, someone grabbed her and pulled her inside as she screamed, “[m]y baby, not my baby.” Tr. at 2505. Magnocame around the corner and onto the porch carrying a bag of food.

He set the food down, made a motion as if grabbing something at his side, and entered the house. Almost immediately, there was a single gunshot, followed by a large number of rapid gunshots that sounded different from the first.

The two masked men then ran out of the house and around to the alley. One of them was carrying what appeared to be a pillowcase with items inside. Tires squealed. And neighbors called 911. 5The morning after the shootings, Michelle Clifton awoke in her home located about six blocks from North Hamilton to find a friend banging on her door and Turner asleep at the foot of her bed. Michelle‟s burgundy pick-up truck, which she had allowed Turner to drive the previous day, was parked outside. Clifton‟s friend came inside and told her Turner was on television. Eventually, Clifton, Turner,and the friend got in the friend‟s truck and drove to Kentucky at Turner‟s direction. Turner attempted to persuade Clifton to drive him to Alabama, but when Turner fell asleep Clifton drove back to Indianapolis. Turner later surrendered to police.

A search of Clifton‟s home revealed, among other things, one unfired 7.62x39 mm cartridge and Turner‟s clothing soaking in the bathtub next to bottles of hydrogen peroxide and rubbing alcohol. On June 7, 2006, the State charged Desmond Turner and James Stewart as codefendants with seven counts of murder, seven counts of felony murder, seven counts of Class B felony criminal confinement, one count of Class A felony robbery, and one count of Class B felony burglary.

Line Drawings of Jesus Christ - 25 January 2021


Jesus prays, Jesus was God, Jesus talks to himself. 


 





Sunday, January 24, 2021

Study History, Young Man! On Your Own Time Guillaume Durocher • 19 January 2021

 

In my working life, I regularly encounter people in public affairs with a total lack of interest in history. Even officials with PhDs who swear by democracy and the rule of law, and who claim to promote them, will tell me that a man like Alexis de Tocqueville is too ancient to be of any relevance today.

This sort of thing leaves me stunned but is not particularly surprising in our age when Western “elites” look upon their own civilization’s past with a mixture of total incomprehension and righteous indignation.

It is obviously extremely dangerous when a society’s leadership is ignorant and contemptuous of its past. I’ll go much further back than Tocqueville and cite Cicero as an authority: “To be ignorant of what occurred before you were born is to remain always a child.” We are governed by the human equivalent of self-loathing goldfish.

I well understand the frustration that people feel in studying history, “one damn thing after another.” Almost every child’s memory is scarred by their high-school history classes presenting an inchoate series of dates, personalities, and events to be memorized. Paul Valéry felt the same way, so if you’ve a distaste for history, you are not in bad company. In fact, there is some sense in drilling a few common references into young people’s heads, but on the whole this misses the point. The fault here is with our systems of secondary education, apparently uniformly odious forms of mental circus training, not with history as such.

The point is: How did we get here? What can we learn from past experience? What have we inherited so we don’t start from scratch? I advise every thoughtful young person to discover the pleasures of browsing a good historical atlas to understand how his society, his moment of time, fits in the big picture of the wider human journey. This can inspire right action. Again Cicero: “For what is the worth of human life, unless it is woven into the life of our ancestors by the records of history?”

Personally, I have always strongly felt the intrinsic kinship between history and politics. I later discovered that ancient historians long before me had felt the same way. But the ancients went further, in always emphasizing that the study of past lives and societies should also improve our personal moral character.

Take Polybius, that Greek historian of a Roman Republic which triumphantly unified the lands of the Mediterranean: “not only is there no more authentic way to prepare and train oneself for political life than by studying history, but also there is no more comprehensible and comprehensive teacher of the ability to endure with courage the vicissitudes of Fortune than a record of others’ catastrophes.”

I would go further and claim that the ancient historians’ approach and interests directly resonate with our experiences today. Peruse the introductions of Herodotus, Thucydides, Polybius, or Livy. What do they discuss? The great deeds of the Greeks, Romans, and other nations, the rise and fall of republics and empires, the diversity and conflict among tribes and civilizations, and even globalization. Consider Livy, who says he will document “the history of the greatest nation on earth . . . [so] that each reader will pay the closest attention to the following: how men lived, what their moral principles were, under what leaders and by what measures at home and abroad our empire was won and extended.” Who could be uninterested in the roots of the power and glory of Rome?

Nota bene: You don’t need to read the whole damn things. Chronicles may be necessary but often make for dreary reading. Though a good guide helps, e.g. the excellent Oxford Classics and Landmark series. Walls of text should also be complemented with illustrated encyclopedias featuring all the beautiful non-literary evidence and heritage left behind by our predecessors: architecture, statuary, paintings, artifacts, etc. The past was as alive as we are today, if anything, more so.

History itself also shows that its study is not limited to that of humble bookwyrms like myself. The fact is that the most serious and consequential modern leaders were also men of historical culture: the American Founding Fathers, Bonaparte, Hitler, De Gaulle, Gandhi, even that supposed knucklehead Patton . . . all were great and voracious bibliophiles with wide-ranging interests, in particular historical.

And why do great men study history? Because they seek to put their life’s work in the perspective of the ages, of all past human accomplishment. That is the challenge they put before themselves. That is how they incite their manly pride to accomplish something truly worthy and as great as can be.

But I well understand that such a mindset is incomprehensible in our times, where not just mediocrity but outright defectiveness are celebrated as sacred rights. Why would anyone study the great deeds of past men if this would only remind them of the humdrum nature of their own existence?

In truth, I would not recommend studying history at university randomly, like the Anglo-Saxons and increasingly Continental Europeans do, without a view towards a specific career. Do so, if that is your calling, that is, with the specific goal of becoming a history teacher, a professor, a researcher, a museum curator, an independent historian, etc.

You may be put off by such humble careers. I will say, in France, high-school teaching used to be a fairly respected and prestigious profession, one compatible with higher political activities. Hervé Ryssen had a stint as a history-geography teacher (his pedagogic skills indeed transpire in all his work) and, in a very different genre, the charming leader of the French conservatives in the European Parliament is the 30-something philosophy teacher François-Xavier Bellamy.

More generally, I discover every day more and more content creators who are forging their own career path, most commonly through the steady production of YouTube videos. It seems most young boys these days dream of becoming video game streamers, and no doubt there is a large market for that. (Streamers provide viewers with the characteristically male pleasures of competitiveness, creativity, comradeship, humor, and . . . victory, made shameful only by their virtuality.) But I also encounter more and more surprisingly popular history channels such as those of Survive the Jive, Simon Roper, History Debunked, or the weekly reliving of World War Two series.

There are real openings today for bold, young entrepreneurs. Do not hesitate to call and talk to the best people working in your field of interest. Don’t worry about making money right away, as long as you are actually accomplishing something noteworthy. Live in your mom’s basement if you have to free yourself from the tyranny of rent.

There is a real craft to history, tools and techniques whose use must be learned from the masters: the arts of interpreting ancient documents (see Yale’s New Testament course or maverick historian Richard Carrier’s work), archaeology, archival research, the tracking down of oral sources and private documents (David Irving surely must rank as a master here), etc.

Do not however fall in the trap of studying humanities and then trying to be some kind of generalist. That is particularly dangerous in these times of victim quotas and tickbox careers. We want our young men prosperous and independent. By studying the humanities, you will be largely indistinguishable from the hordes of semi-literate riffraff that are being plowed through the mass ed system in a half-drunken haze.

And anyway, study is best done on your own time, though of course professors and peers can help. There’s no guarantee academia will provide you a proper education. I’m still embarrassed the university system let me graduate with high honors in history and politics without ever reading Tocqueville or Aristotle. In a good state, familiarity and understanding of both would naturally be among the minimum qualifications for suffrage.

Admittedly, one must also be ready, mature enough for classic works. I remember encountering Plato’s Laws and Jeremy Noakes’ Nazism series, and leaving them aside in puzzlement.

If you are interested in public service, be smart and get some identifiable skills or qualifications that separate you from the interchangeable office plankton. If interested in foreign service or intelligence, perhaps learn a relevant language (Chinese, Russian, Arabic . . . sometimes more obscure ones for niche roles). Among European officialdom, economics and law are the surest paths to rising above the rabble of poli-sci graduates.

Basic numeracy, much rarer than you’d think, goes a long way in upgrading your market value from that of disposable intern to a “consultant” charging €750 a day.

But really, you should find and stick to whatever you do with gusto!

And regarding poli-sci: I advise against it. No field is less capable of lifting your mind out of the fashions and ignorance of our time. This is the journalism of the humanities. Much of this field only exists insofar as it caters to and flatters the idiotic assumptions and insincere policies of our current governments. You may as well be undertaking Marxian economic studies in the late Soviet Union.

I.R. theory is dubious. EU studies are a bore and, in the Continent, largely involve enculer des mouches (much ado about very little, pardon my French).

There is little you will learn in poli-sci which cannot be gleaned by reading the newspaper or, better still, an internship in some dismal office. I suppose a two-year course at a community college is justifiable, for slow folks who need help learning the buzzwords for an easy job with an NGO or some quasi-governmental shop. I cannot fault anyone for wishing to get aboard a gravy train.

Nota bene: I am sure there are good political scientists at the margins. Stephen Walt and Amy Chua have said interesting things over the years. I’ve just never met a person who was intellectually or morally improved by the process.

So, as I say, if you aspire to be a man of worth, study history. Be you soldier, scientist, artist, entrepreneur, bureaucrat, bum, or bordello manager, learn from your illustrious predecessors! There’s a warm kinship among peers that extends across generations and boundless aeons. Indulge in the exquisite pleasures of the mind which are also the path to man’s self-knowledge. Listen to Machiavelli, at the end of a long day’s work:

I return home and enter my study; on the threshold I take off my workday clothes, covered with mud and dirt, and put on the garments of court and palace. Fitted out appropriately, I step inside the venerable court of the ancients, where, solicitously received by them, I nourish myself on that food that alone is mine and for which I was born; where I am unashamed to converse with them . . . and they, out of their human kindness, answer me. And for four hours at a time I feel no boredom, I forget all my troubles, I do not dread poverty, and I am not terrified by death. I absorb myself into them completely. And because Dante says that no one understands anything unless he retains [it], I have jotted down what I have profited from in their conversation and composed a short study, De principatibus.

Friday, January 22, 2021

College Professor Says Trump Supporters Should Be Called ‘American Nazis’ and Treated Like War Criminals

In an alarming polemic published on Inauguration Day, a professor at a women’s liberal arts college in Massachusetts, proclaimed that President Trump is a white supremacist, Republicans are not “entitled to exist” and Trump supporters in “Congress, in the media, in universities, and in regular jobs,” should be called “American Nazis,” and treated like Nazi war criminals.

College Professor Loretta Ross, who teaches a course on White Supremacy at Smith College, rejected calls for unity, saying she’s “through giving Republicans the benefit of the doubt.”

Ross last year taught a four-week seminar on “White Supremacy in the Age of Trump,” and discussing “tactics and strategies” to counter the “white supremacist movement” afoot in the land.

“Global contempt for the word “Nazi” is a lesson for us today in the United States after the attempted criminal coup at the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021,” Ross wrote in her Jan. 20 article in Counterpunch.

"We must defend an open, democratic society against these forces of fascism disguised as a respectable Republican Party that encouraged a white supremacist insurrection that seeks to rule like kings above the law. They see calls for unity and civility as weakness, as all fascists do. They take advantage of an open society to undermine the incremental progress of the 20th century in race, gender, citizenship, national, and international relations. For over a century they’ve proven they can’t be trusted with military power, disrupting other democracies by fomenting wars and low-intensity conflicts around the world that have killed millions of people. They are unable to accept the complexity of a multi-cultural and multi-racial globalized world, so they stew in their resentments, and fight every effort to democratize the privileges and benefits of our world. They are at the natural demise of a political party that sought to hold onto power through a web of lies to their followers to enrich a small cabal of people.

America’s tattered global reputation is at stake in this unending Civil War. Instead of denouncing the traitors in 1865, we allowed them to be rehabilitated and enshrined in monuments across the country. Will our descendants look back and see that we flinched yet again when it was time to hold insurrectionists accountable? If not, we’ll have the shortest Reconstruction in history.

Our commitment to human rights, just laws, social welfare, global peace, and democratic governance is what authoritarians seek to undermine through abuse of the concept of freedom. We should call them all American Nazis and prevent them from hiding behind mealy-mouthed words because they’ve shown us who they are. Now we must believe them."

Calling the storming of U.S. Capitol an “attempted criminal coup, Ross denounced those “identified as sympathetic, supportive, or financing these seditious acts,” and called for them to “be treated with the same public condemnation that the Nazis received after World War II. This includes Nazified people in Congress, in the media, in universities, in regular jobs, and throughout society because fascism is not the fevered dream of one delusional man.”

Ross called President Trump “a white supremacist,” and blamed Republicans for what she called “white racist violence” at the Capitol, even though people of all races took part in the riot. In fact, black civil rights activist John Earle Sullivan was arrested in Utah earlier this month for the part he played in the violence.

“Republicans are no longer entitled to exist as a legitimate political party because this authoritarian backlash has been building since new Civil Rights laws were passed in 1964 and 1965 in response to white racist violence captured on TV that required the National Guard to quell,” Ross said. “I’m through giving Republicans the benefit of the doubt after 50 years.”

The professor expressed disgust for Republicans “who brazenly claim they are simply patriots with different opinions,” saying “the term Nazi is not even strong enough.”

“They are seditionists, co-conspirators, and neo-Nazis hiding in plain sight who chose to use whatever power, platforms, and microphones they had to overturn this system of government,” she seethed.

Ross, who wants to see Trump supporters rounded up and prosecuted in a Nuremberg-like trial, went on to say that the goal of these deplorable “Nazis” appears to be “an apartheid-like system in which an embattled minority of people rule over millions of people who oppose them.”

“We must send an unmistakable signal that this will not be tolerated when a more competent neo-fascist seeks to gain permanent power in the Congress or White House in the future,” she said. “I’m calling them American Nazis, who adapted the playbook of the Third Reich. Trump may be gone but Trumpism is not. As House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said, they prioritized their ‘whiteness over democracy.’”

We must defend an open, democratic society against these forces of fascism disguised as a respectable Republican Party that encouraged a white supremacist insurrection that seeks to rule like kings above the law. They see calls for unity and civility as weakness, as all fascists do. They take advantage of an open society to undermine the incremental progress of the 20th century in race, gender, citizenship, national, and international relations.

Our commitment to human rights, just laws, social welfare, global peace, and democratic governance is what authoritarians seek to undermine through abuse of the concept of freedom. We should call them all American Nazis and prevent them from hiding behind mealy-mouthed words because they’ve shown us who they are. Now we must believe them.

Jonathan Turley, a constitutional law professor at George Washington University, expressed dismay at Ross’ lack of tolerance for opposing viewpoints on his blog, Thursday.

“Professor Ross shows no concern for free speech or academic freedom as she calls for identifying and condemning anyone who is viewed as complicit with Trump over the last four years so that they can be ‘treated with the same public condemnation that the Nazis received after World War II,’” Turley lamented.

She is not alone in that view. Washington Post columnist Jennifer Rubin recently declared on a television program (with various media figures who made no objection) that “We have to collectively, in essence, burn down the Republican Party. We have to level them because if there are survivors, if there are people who weather this storm, they will do it again.” Notably, such language is similar to a call recently by James Comey and is not viewed as incitement. Rubin also called for a blacklisting of Trump supporters from universities and the media, a call that has been made by Democratic figures in Congress as well as academics: “I think it’s absolutely abhorrent that any institution of higher learning, any news organization, or any entertainment organization that has a news outlet would hire these people.”

Trump-haters, including Never-Trumpers Max Boot, Nicole Wallace, and Rick Wilson, as well as Obama alumni John Brennan, and Ben Rhodes, have all expressed a desire in recent days to either blacklist Trump supporters or treat them like domestic terrorists.
Additionally, a New York Times contributor recently called for former Vice President Mike Pence to be lynched.

After the Capitol Hill riot on Jan. 6, the Biden campaign vowed to work on getting “a domestic terrorism law” passed to deal with what the left considers right-wing extremists.

Ross, ironically, also teaches a course that is critical of the cancel culture.

“I am challenging the call-out culture,” Professor Ross told the New York Times from her home in Atlanta. “I think you can understand how calling out is toxic. It really does alienate people, and makes them fearful of speaking up.”

Of course, none of that applies to Trump supporters, who she calls Nazis. It goes without saying that those 75 million undesirables should absolutely be canceled.

She talked about her allegedly “popular” class “Calling In the Calling Out Culture” on CBS News back in December.

 https://amgreatness.com/2021/01/21/college-professor-says-trump-supporters-should-be-called-american-nazis-and-treated-like-war-criminals/

Tuesday, January 19, 2021

Buffalo NY: activist wants to remove 'shameful' Martin Luther King Jr. statue - Jan 2019

 


A community activist in Western New York wants to remove a "shameful" statue of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

WIVB-TV reports Samuel Herbert has gathered more than 6,000 signatures to replace an eight-foot bust of MLK in Buffalo's Martin Luther King Jr. Park. He says the statue, unveiled in 1983, doesn't look like the civil rights leader.

"We have allowed this distorted image to sit here for 35 years," he told the Buffalo TV station. "Our beef has never been with the sculptor, but the committee that approved this shameful image of a great American."

According to the Associated Press, the original artist said the bust was supposed to be a representation of MLK -- not a likeness.


 

"It wasn't like he attempted to create a likeness and then failed at that. He knew he was making a lightly abstracted work that would convey the dignity, strength and power of Martin Luther King, and the whole civil rights movement," Edmund Cardoni, executive director of Hallwalls Contemporary Arts Center, told the Buffalo News earlier this year. "I loved it from the start. I still love it."

"Enough of the symbolism, we want realism," Herbert told WIVB on Monday.

Herbert, chairman of the Coalition To Save MLK Park, says he wants to get 10,000 signatures in person and on Change.org to start fundraising for a replacement statue by 2020. He says he's prepared to take the issue to court if necessary.

A potential replacement design has not been revealed. Lee Speight, a sculptor in North Carolina, has offered his own statue of MLK but Herbert told WIVB he wants Chinese artist Master Lei Yixin, who carved the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.

The statue of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. is unveiled at the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial in Washington, Monday, Aug. 22, 2011.

This isn't the first time a statue has raised controversy in Western New York.

A new likeness of Lucille Ball was unveiled in the "I Love Lucy" actress' hometown of Celoron in 2016 after years of online campaigns against the original, dubbed "Scary Lucy." Scary Lucy ended up getting moved to the National Comedy Center in nearby Jamestown.

Friday, January 15, 2021

How Marx became a Marxist in five easy steps (ISO International Socialist Organization) 4 May 2018

 

by Todd Chretien Socialist Worker. Org https://archive.is/2QsCp

ON MAY 5, 1818, Karl Marx was born into a world on the cusp of a great social transformation.

As he and his lifelong political partner and friend Frederick Engels wrote in The Communist Manifesto in 1848: "The bourgeoisie, during its rule of scarce one hundred years, has created more massive and more colossal productive forces than have all preceding generations together."

If anything, these words undersold the changes that capitalism was only beginning to bring into the world in the first decades of Marx's life.

When Marx was a child, most of the mechanical energy for a predominantly agricultural society was still provided by oxen, horses and human beings themselves.

Over the course of successive generations to come, the steam engine bound whole continents together by rail, the gasoline combustion engine broke down the divide between urban and rural, and nuclear fuel supplied electricity to hundreds of millions--while nuclear weapons threatened the annihilation of the whole planet.

What might have seemed, from the vantage point of the middle of the 19th century, exaggerated in the Manifesto, almost a dreamscape, today feels commonplace to us.

Many liberals and conservatives will grant that Marx foresaw what few of his contemporaries did. For instance, the Economist magazine once wrote that Marx's account of the "survival and prosperity of capitalism has never been bettered."

Of course, to paraphrase Shakespeare, Marx came not to praise capitalism, but to bury it--which is where he parts company with the good editors at The Economist.

Marx was hardly the first critic of society, though, and he was not even the first communist. Jesus of Nazareth was among the many to condemn "rich men" long before Marx.

What makes Marx unique is that he was the first to propose a historically specific path for winning equality that combined defiance of oppression and exploitation with a social force potentially capable of replacing the elite with an equitable and democratic common association--socialism--as opposed to a new ruling class.

Marx's insights did not come all at once, but accumulated over time as he tested, revised and fought for his ideas over the course of four decades before his death in 1883. For the purposes of this article (although nothing is ever so simple in real life), I will delineate some of Marx's conclusions as a series of theoretical leaps.

True to the revitalized dialectical method he took over from the German philosopher Hegel, Marx didn't completely reject or leave behind his previous positions, but radically reconstructed his understanding of social dynamics, based on new knowledge and, critically, political struggle.


Leap One: From Critic to Radical Democrat

Marx began his studies as a student of philosophy in the still unsteady aftermath of the great French Revolution of 1789, immersed in a highfalutin world dominated by the aforementioned Hegel.

Hegel emphasized conflict and transformation--whether societal, cultural, spiritual and intellectual--as opposed to a world shaped or determined by static or immutable God-given truth or truths.

In the end, Hegel made peace with Germany's autocracy and retired as sort of academic superstar. But some of his students, aptly named "Young Hegelians," turned his analytical tools to debunking the Christian hierarchy and probing the limits of Germany's supposedly liberal monarch.

They placed great faith in their role as critics, but often got lost in ideological battles disassociated from real politics, leading Marx to subtitle an early work "A Critique of Critical Criticism" at their expense. While some clipped their wings in order to not run afoul of the authorities, Marx's combative disposition led him to conclude that "the weapon of criticism cannot, of course, replace criticism by weapons."

He landed a job in 1842 as editor of a liberal newspaper called the Rheinische Zeitung (Rhineland Times) and set about journalistically savaging laws that prohibited peasants from collecting firewood on the gentries' estates and limited freedom of the press.

These conflicts taught Marx that society was not made up of autonomous individuals operating under a more (or less) democratic government. Rather, society was divided into classes and ruled over by a political state.

Marx wielded his pen like a sword, but the Prussian police wielded real swords, shutting down the paper in 1843 and sending Marx into exile.


Leap Two: A Class with Radical Chains

If he chafed under the power of the ruling class in the Rhineland, Marx came face to face with a radical working class in Paris while living in exile in the winter of 1843-44. This was a movement that terrified the nobility and had, in 1830, helped bring down a king--even if he was replaced by a different king in the end.

Here was a power that Marx came to believe could overturn society, whereas his radical journalism had proven impotent on its own. Here was "a class with radical chains," as he wrote.

This already sounds like the stirring conclusion of The Communist Manifesto in 1848: "Workers of the world, unite! You have nothing to lose but your chains." But Marx was, to put it bluntly, still as much of an elitist as his old critical critic friends, writing in one work: "The head of this emancipation is philosophy, its heart the proletariat."

In other words, philosophers would ride the working class to victory. That victory might aim to abolish the privileges of the old ruling class and redistribute the wealth, but who would rule over it? Benevolent (socialist) intellectuals?

Over the next year, Marx became familiar with the lively networks of radical and revolutionary workers in Paris and wrestled with the limits of his own thinking. Rather than "philosophers" as the natural leaders and workers the inevitable followers, Marx came to see that politics arises from social struggle, not detached contemplation, no matter how radical.

Thus: "The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways; the point is to change it."

This is not only a call to action. Just before writing this famous sentence, Marx noted that "it is essential to educator the educator himself"--thus dethroning intellectuals from a privileged perch over the working class.

Instead of thought preceding change--which is the basis of the idea that "In the beginning there was the word"--Marx concluded that "the coincidence of the changing of circumstances and of human activity or self-changing can be conceived and rationally understood only as revolutionary practice."


Leap Three: Class Struggle and Revolution

Marx was still not entirely clear about what this "revolutionary practice" might consist of. It was certainly more than writing books or articles--a political movement was needed. But what kind?

In 1845 and 1846, Marx produced an odd and wonderful work called The German Ideology that contains the core ideas later popularized in the Communist Manifesto. Most important for our purposes here, Marx finally hit upon how workers could overcome the intellectual and material power of the ruling class, while simultaneously dealing with their own shit:

For the production on a mass scale of this communist consciousness, and for the success of the cause itself, the alteration of men on a mass scale is necessary, an alteration which can only take place in a practical movement, a revolution; this revolution is necessary, therefore, not only because the ruling class cannot be overthrown in any other way, but also because the class overthrowing it can only in a revolution succeed in ridding itself of all the muck of ages and becomes fitted to found society anew.

Marx had come a long way from battling fellow graduate students over French novels and philosophical treaties. He now saw that the working class was the only social group potentially powerful enough to defeat the forces of order, and that the working class itself would become conscious of its own goals in a living mass movement, a revolution--not through lectures by well-meaning philosophers.

Marx's understanding of the "muck" rested heavily on his studies of how capitalist exploitation--that is, spending most of your life at work for someone else--gave rise to what he called alienation and a general depreciation of human spirit and cooperative nature.

This is a tremendously useful insight, but at this point, Marx had only an inkling of how capitalism systematically invented and weaponized what we today might call intersectional oppressions.

For his part, Engels' experience working in his father's factory in Manchester afforded him sharper insights into sexism, abuse, addiction, disease and racism. Nonetheless, Marx understood enough about how capitalism infuses workers with division, hatred and self-loathing to identify the "muck" as a powerful internal enemy that could not be taught, preached or wished away. It had to be fought.


Leap Four: Harder Than It Looks

Within weeks of the Communist Manifesto's publication, revolutions broke out across Europe, and Marx and Engels hustled back to Germany to take part.

Marx was not so naïve as to believe that socialism was on the agenda. He knew that capitalism was only taking root in the 1840s and, concurrently, the working class remained a relatively small portion of the population.

But Marx and Engels did expect 1848 to sweep away the remnants of feudal political and social structures, while winning democratic rights for working-class movements--which would then ride waves of economic growth toward a showdown with the capitalist bosses, whether in the shorter or longer term.

That was the plan. As it turned out, there were two big problems.

First, the emerging capitalists proved to be timid anti-feudalists who found it easier to compromise with monarchs than to conclude democratic alliances with restive and radical working-class movements. (Sound familiar?)

And second, it wasn't a fair fight. In addition to the "muck of ages" and internal divisions, workers faced a centralized, armed, organized enemy in the ruling class state. So long as this state remained whole, it had the power to suppress or absorb any revolutionary challenge.

As Marx explained in 1852, "All revolutions perfected this machine instead of breaking it. The parties that contended in turn for domination regarded the possession of this huge state edifice as the principal spoils of the victor."

This problem remained unsolved over the next two decades as Marx continued his practical and theoretical activities, including agitating against the Confederacy in the U.S. Civil War, writing his groundbreaking work Capital and helping to found the so-called International Workingmen's Association--the first attempt at coordinating international working-class movements.


Leap Five: Taking Power for Ourselves

In 1871, exhausted by a senseless war between Germany and France, workers and the poor in Paris threw out their capitalist government and replaced it with the Paris Commune. For 71 days, the red flag flew over the most famous city in the world.

The Commune granted universal (male) suffrage and placed trade unions, cooperatives, and socialist and anarchist political parties and currents in power. The capitalists and their paid politicians fled the city.

German and French rulers knew the real enemy when they saw it and, putting aside their military conflict, conspired to drown the Commune in blood. Thirty thousand died in the fighting and subsequent mass executions.

In the wake of the fighting, Marx and Engels added a note to The Communist Manifesto, warning that the Paris Commune confirmed that the "working class cannot simply lay hold of the ready-made state machinery, and wield it for its own purposes."

Instead, workers and the oppressed must not only break up the old ruling class state machine, as Marx argued after the experience of 1848, but they must create their own--a democratic and revolutionary form of government, like the Commune--in order to win.

Easier said than done. But Marx's method of incorporating new insights in the best conclusions of previous battles gives us an edge. I would argue, an edge without which we have no chance of winning.

Two hundred years is a long time, at least in the epoch of capitalism.

But Marx would recognize Donald Trump for the reactionary he is, and he would celebrate the teachers' strike wave in West Virginia and Kentucky and Oklahoma and Arizona. He would recognize the terrible human toll of a system based on profits for the few and misery for the many.

He would recognize that radicals must merge with a living mass movement if they want to challenge the powers that be. And he would recognize Egypt and Occupy and Black Lives Matter and #MeToo and the March for Our Lives.

But he would also insist that the only social force capable of moving from protest to power is the global working class.

https://archive.is/2QsCp

Defend North Korea Against US Imperialism! (Workers Vanguard) 29 June 2018

 

https://archive.is/b9zGS

Workers Vanguard No. 1136 29 June 2018

Democrats in Hawkish Frenzy After Trump-Kim Summit

Defend North Korea Against U.S. Imperialism!

For Revolutionary Reunification of Korea!

Donald Trump exited his June 12 Singapore summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un boasting of a "great moment in the history of the world." The president who last year threatened to unleash "fire and fury" and "totally destroy" North Korea because of its development of nuclear weapons now parades as a man of peace. Trump and Kim signed a declaration pledging to "work toward complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula." The statement lacked any details, and the mercurial Trump could change tack at a moment's notice. But make no mistake: what the U.S. rulers demand is nothing less than total disarmament by North Korea, a bureaucratically deformed workers state.

The U.S. and other imperialist powers are determined to restore capitalist rule and untrammeled exploitation to North Korea and the other workers states--China, Vietnam, Laos and Cuba. The overturn and expropriation of capitalism in these countries represent historic gains for the world working class, despite their rule by Stalinist bureaucratic castes that exclude the working class from political power. We Trotskyists stand for the unconditional military defense of the deformed workers states against imperialism and capitalist counterrevolution. This defensism is the prerequisite to our fight for proletarian political revolution to oust the bureaucracies and install regimes based on workers and peasants councils.

North Korea's nuclear program is a rational, essential policy of self-defense against American imperialism. The U.S. is the only country that has ever used atomic weapons, incinerating 200,000 Japanese civilians in Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. Today it openly threatens a nuclear "first strike" against countries on its enemies list. Trump's national security adviser, John Bolton, gave the game away several weeks before the summit when he said the U.S. wanted North Korea to accept the "Libya model."

Pyongyang knows what this means and has repeatedly invoked the "Libya model" in defense of its nuclear policy. In 2003, Libyan leader Muammar el-Qaddafi renounced that country's nuclear arms program and welcomed imperialist inspectors in exchange for an end to economic sanctions. Predictably, Washington failed to hold up its end of the deal, and then in 2011 the U.S. and its NATO allies pummeled the country with airstrikes. Qaddafi was overthrown and murdered by local imperialist-sponsored forces, and Libya plunged into bloody chaos.

The U.S. repeatedly threatened to use nuclear weapons during the 1950-53 Korean War as part of the drive to "roll back Communism" in Asia but was hindered by the Soviet Union's development of its own nuclear armaments. The horrors of that war are still seared into the memory of the Korean people, North and South. The Korean Peninsula had been divided at the 38th parallel after the defeat of Japan, Korea's former colonial overlord, in World War II. In the North, capitalist/landlord rule was overthrown by guerrilla forces acting under the protection of the Soviet Army. In the South, U.S. occupation forces installed a brutal capitalist regime centered on former collaborators with the Japanese.

When North Korean troops advanced south in June 1950, they were welcomed by the workers and peasants as liberators, opening up the prospect of social revolution on the rest of the peninsula. The U.S. and other capitalist powers responded by invading Korea. The peninsula was devastated, with 18 of North Korea's 22 largest cities mostly or totally obliterated, including the capital, Pyongyang, which was flattened. The imperialists slaughtered some four million people, including a million Chinese soldiers whose entry into the war was decisive in turning back the invaders. The war ended in a stalemate. To this day, the U.S. has refused to sign a peace treaty while maintaining a blockade of North Korea in an attempt to economically strangle the workers state. United Nations sanctions imposed at Washington's behest remain in place.

It is unclear how much the Kim regime is willing to concede to the U.S. Under both Kim Jong Un and his predecessor and father, Kim Jong Il, Pyongyang has at times discussed abandoning its nuclear efforts in exchange for economic assistance from the U.S. Any deal with Washington isn't worth the paper it's signed on, as shown most recently by Trump's scuttling of the nuclear accord with Iran. Abandonment of North Korea's nuclear deterrent, as the U.S. insists, would be a criminal betrayal of the Korean working people, and the Kim regime's own suicide note. In the face of Washington's global nuclear hegemony, the possession of nuclear weapons and a delivery system is a necessary means of deterrence against imperialist attack.

While Trump has suspended U.S.-South Korean war games directed against North Korea, joint military exercises with Japan and other countries will continue apace. Some 28,000 American troops remain garrisoned in the South--and another 50,000 in Japan--as a permanent military threat to North Korea and China. The U.S. military presence in South Korea is also a dagger aimed at that country's historically combative proletariat. All U.S. troops out! Down with the U.S./Japan imperialist axis against North Korea! End all sanctions now!

Democrats Beat War Drums

Kim Jong Un's bureaucratic rule is plenty bizarre. But for weird and deadly dangerous, look no further than Washington. It might be that Donald Trump was driven to hold the summit by visions of golf courses along the North Korean coast dancing in his head. But now, absurdly, he has the mantle of peacenik. His enablers in that regard have been the leaders of the Democratic Party, joined by the liberal capitalist media, who are now the chief warmongers against North Korea.

House minority leader Nancy Pelosi denounced Trump for handing Kim "concessions in exchange for vague promises." Calling the summit a "photo op," Elizabeth Warren railed that North Korea remains "a threat to the security of the United States, our allies and the world." MSNBC's Rachel Maddow went off the deep end. Calling Trump's pledge to stop the war games "an absolute jackpot for the North Korean dictator," she alluded darkly (as always) to the hidden hand of Russia's Vladimir Putin pulling Trump's strings. What next? Did the World Cup contrive to ensure that the U.S. wouldn't qualify? By comparison, the wildly eccentric Dennis Rodman seems a font of human understanding for just wanting the North Koreans to get a break.

The Democrats' bellicosity is nothing new. Every major U.S. war in the 20th century was initiated and mainly carried out by Democratic Party administrations--both World Wars, Korea, Vietnam. The Democrats' posture as friends of working people makes them better able to sell imperialist war to the population, usually in the guise of promoting "democracy" and "human rights." It was Democratic president Harry Truman who ordered the atom bombing of Japan and began the Korean War. More recently, Bill Clinton was preparing to bomb North Korea into submission in 1994 had he not obtained a promise from Pyongyang to cease attempts to reprocess plutonium from fuel rods. Barack Obama also threatened to attack North Korea, escalated sanctions and authorized a cyber- and electronic-warfare program to disrupt the North's missile tests.

While North Korea is painted as the immediate target, Washington's central strategic goal in the region is the overturn of the 1949 Chinese Revolution. Thanks to its impressive economic development, China has become a major economic and diplomatic force, providing something of a counterweight to American imperialism. The U.S. is engaged in a series of aggressive military provocations against Beijing in the South China Sea. The installation of the THAAD missile shield system in South Korea last year was also aimed against China, as its tracking radar can degrade the viability of Beijing's nuclear deterrent.

The Democrats have pushed an even more aggressive anti-China policy than Trump. When the White House announced tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from the European Union, Canada and Mexico, citing "national security," Democratic spokesmen went apoplectic, protesting that China should be the target. Bernie Sanders, imperialist "socialist" and darling of the reformist left, called the tariffs against U.S. allies "an absolute disaster" and demanded the imposition of "stiff penalties on countries like China" (as well as Russia and other countries). Trump has done just that, implementing tariffs on $50 billion worth of Chinese goods only days after the Singapore talks, with more promised to come.

Stalinism Undermines the Workers States

Trump's overtures to Kim may have been intended in part to marginalize China, North Korea's reluctant ally. But his trade war has prodded Beijing to ease up on its own pressure against Pyongyang. For years, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) regime has backed UN sanctions against North Korea and joined the calls for it to abandon its nuclear program. China's recent enforcement of sanctions in particular has undermined the already beleaguered North Korean economy. At the same time, China, North Korea's main trade partner since the destruction of the Soviet Union, has maintained a certain level of trade, fearing the chaos that a collapse of the Kim regime would bring. Recent meetings between Chinese leader Xi Jinping and Kim Jong Un indicate that China is preparing to resume a higher level of trade. For its part, Pyongyang appears to be veering toward "market reforms" along Chinese lines.

Beijing's collaboration with Washington against North Korea is a grotesque example of the Stalinist policy of "peaceful coexistence" with imperialism. The CCP bureaucrats' treachery directly harms the defense of China itself. Counterrevolution in North Korea would bring U.S. forces to the Chinese border--a threat the Chinese bureaucracy is well aware of.

From Beijing and Pyongyang to Havana, "peaceful coexistence" is inherent to the Stalinist dogma of building "socialism in one country." That program means pursuing narrow nationalist interests and opposing the fight for world workers revolution--including in the advanced capitalist countries--which is the only road to building a socialist society of material abundance. The Kim regime advances a program for "peaceful reunification" of Korea, which does not challenge capitalist rule in the South. In 2000, when the liberal South Korean regime of Kim Dae-jung undertook an earlier "sunshine policy" of engaging the North, Pyongyang responded by reiterating its call for "a reunified federal state based on the conception of one nation, one state, two systems and two governments" (see "All U.S. Troops Out of Korea Now!", WV No. 738, 30 June 2000).

The truth is that there is a class line dividing North Korea from the capitalist South, drawn with the blood of millions of Koreans. There is no way Korea can be united without either the victory of capitalist counterrevolution in the North or the smashing of capitalism in the South. Capitalist reunification would be a catastrophic defeat for working people in the North and for the proletariat in the South, and internationally. Our program is for the revolutionary reunification of Korea, through socialist revolution in the South and workers political revolution in the North. If China and North Korea had governments based on workers democracy and revolutionary internationalism, they would forge communist unity against imperialism, including through regional economic planning and support to struggles by working people and the oppressed abroad.

Many South Koreans feel solidarity with the North, based on nationalist sentiments fed by a century of bitter experience under Japanese and then U.S. imperial overlords. Such sentiments have surged under President Moon Jae-in, who is riding a wave of popularity for having prepared the groundwork for the Singapore summit. By all reports, the mass of the population welcomed the event as a harbinger of peace and, more immediately, an opportunity to resume visits among family members divided by the Korean War. The Korean Confederation of Trade Unions hailed the summit as opening "an era of peace that is not reversible."

As under Kim Dae-jung, Moon's policy of engagement is also seen by a wing of the South Korean bourgeoisie as an opportunity to undermine North Korea through penetration by the chaebol conglomerates that brutally exploit South Korean workers. The nationalism promoted by the North Korean Stalinists--reflecting their inability to appeal to the proletariat in the South on a class basis--and much of the reformist left in South Korea serves to tie the working class there to its own exploiters.

The South Korean group Workers Solidarity, linked to the Socialist Workers Party (SWP) in Britain, capitulates to its capitalist rulers and their imperialist patrons by refusing to even recognize, much less defend, the overturn of capitalist rule in the North or any of the other workers states. In a June 7 article, Workers Solidarity denounces "imperialist competition between the U.S. and China." SWP founder Tony Cliff and his supporters broke from the Trotskyist Fourth International in 1950 when they refused to defend the Soviet Union, China and North Korea in the Korean War. Steeped in Cold War anti-Communism, they went on to support any and all reactionary forces arrayed against the Soviet Union in the name of "anti-Stalinism" and "democracy," cheering the counterrevolution that finally destroyed the USSR.

Some other reformist leftists, like the U.S. Party for Socialism and Liberation (PSL), oppose imperialist economic and military threats against North Korea but give political support to the North Korean Stalinists, whose rule undermines defense of the workers state. The PSL has recently sponsored events focused on the call for "Korean unity." The audience at a "One Korea" teach-in organized by the PSL's ANSWER coalition in Los Angeles on April 28 broke into applause when a photo of the North and South Korean leaders shaking hands was displayed. Addressing appeals for Korean reunification, a Spartacist League speaker intervened to raise the call for "socialist reunification, which means a workers revolution in the South and a political revolution in the North by the working class."

In the U.S., the pro-capitalist trade-union bureaucracy champions the interests of American imperialism, preferring, in the main, the Democratic Party in power. For its part, the reformist left tails the Democrats' "resistance" to Trump. We warn that the "choice" between the two capitalist parties amounts to which gang of bandits will oversee the exploitation of the working class, the repression of blacks, Latinos and immigrants, and the prosecution of U.S. imperialism's wars abroad.

Our goal is to forge a multiracial revolutionary workers party that can direct anger and frustration among working people and oppressed minorities toward sweeping away capitalist rule. An American workers government would expropriate the capitalist owners of industry and the banks and use the wealth produced by labor for the benefit of the many instead of the profits of a few, helping as well to redress the imperialists' plunder of Korea and the rest of the planet. Only socialist revolution can put an end to the depredations of U.S. imperialism and the threat of nuclear annihilation.

http://www.icl-fi.org/english/wv/1136/north_korea.html

In Memory of 平田素 (Hirata Motomu) 1947–2016 (Workers Vanguard) 7 Sept 2018

 


In Memory of 平田素 (Hirata Motomu) 1947–2016 (Workers Vanguard) 7 Sept 2018

Workers Vanguard No. 1139 7 September 2018

https://archive.fo/xqwX5

WV Japan

In Memory of 平田素 (Hirata Motomu)

1947–2016

(Letter)

Dear comrades,

We recently learned that Hirata Motomu, a founding member of the Spartacist Group Japan, died in September 2016. Though we lost touch with him a few years after he resigned from the SGJ in 2005, we mourn his death and extend condolences to his wife, Toshie, and to his son, Ayumu.

Hirata became radicalized in the early 1970s as a college student, during a time of massive worker and student protest against the Japan-U.S. security treaty and U.S. imperialism’s war against Vietnam. He joined the pseudo-Trotskyist Fourth International Japan (FIJ). Japanese Trotskyism was crippled from birth, rejecting Trotsky’s characterization of the Soviet bureaucracy as a contradictory caste and refusing to militarily defend the USSR against imperialism and internal counterrevolution. Hirata was among those who formed a faction within the FIJ centrally based on defending Trotsky’s position on the Russian question.

After splitting from the FIJ, the faction underwent further fights and splits. The comrades who would go on to be the founding members of the SGJ formed the study group Rekken (Historical Science Research Group), which began a serious, years-long study of Marxism. In the mid 1980s they discovered a pamphlet containing the Declaration of Principles of the Spartacist League/U.S. in a leftist bookstore in Tokyo and contacted the international Spartacist tendency (soon to be the International Communist League). Written discussions and an exchange of visits culminated in an Interim Preliminary Agreement for Common Work in Japan (see Spartacist [English-language edition] No. 41-42, Winter 1987-88). In the summer of 1988, Rekken fused with the iSt to form the SGJ.

As Hirata stated at the fusion conference:

“For us the question of the defense of the Soviet Union was the biggest stumbling block to our coming together with the iSt. I also come out of the FIJ, and so I at least had read the basic documents of Trotskyism, Trotsky’s works, the works of the first conferences of the Comintern. And, so, I had thought that I had a familiarity with the basic tenets of Trotskyism.…

“It was only after much frustration and hard work that we eventually came over to the present position of defense of the Russian workers state.”

Hirata had a long political history. His parents were around the then-Stalinist Japanese Communist Party (JCP) during World War II; one of his brothers joined the JCP; and the other became a member of the left wing of the social-democratic Socialist Party. Unconventionally, his sister married into a family of Burakumin (Japan’s caste of “untouchables”). Being a child of the American Occupation, Hirata became a blues and jazz aficionado, and, with his bottle of whiskey and pack of Hi Lite cigarettes, he frequented clubs where legendary jazz greats such as Yamashita Yosuke or Watanabe Sadao would make surprise appearances. His interest in blues had led him to study the American black question, and he became a strong defender of the oppressed. In the SGJ, he always motivated publishing propaganda in defense of the Ainu (indigenous people), the Korean minority and the Burakumin. The SGJ’s first public event was a presentation to the Buraku Liberation League’s Osaka branch, a meeting that Hirata arranged.

Hirata was an artist. For many years, he made his living as a book and publication designer, and he was able to draw building blueprints by hand. He designed the “Hammer and 4” masthead for the SGJ newspaper and banners. Sadly, he never made the leap to computer design and was condemned to working in low-paying, non-union jobs.

Comrade Hirata had an in-depth understanding of Japanese history. He made a significant contribution to the article in Spartacist, the ICL’s quadrilingual theoretical journal, “The Meiji Restoration: A Bourgeois Non-Democratic Revolution” (Spartacist [English-language edition] No. 58, Spring 2004). Leading comrades of our tendency, such as Jim Robertson and Joseph Seymour, had long been interested in the Meiji Restoration of 1867-68. But it required extensive research in both Japanese- and English-language sources as well as considerable discussion to produce the article, which also dealt with the origins of Japanese communism and the debate over “two-stage revolution,” as well as World War II and the American Occupation. As part of preparing the article, Hirata was one of the comrades who gave an educational presentation for the SGJ. The article was published in Spartacist Japan Pamphlet No. 9.

Hirata was also crucial to circulating the Japanese translation of the 1997 Spartacist article, “The Origins of Chinese Trotskyism,” looking for every opportunity to intersect the Chinese population in Japan and introduce them to a Trotskyist understanding of revolutionary struggle in China. One of the finest articles he wrote was an obituary of Ozaki Hotsuki, brother of heroic Soviet spy Ozaki Hotsumi, who was executed along with Richard Sorge by the WWII Japanese government. We had met Hotsuki, a writer, during our annual trips to Tama Cemetery to honor these heroes.

Hirata was extremely proud to be a member of a democratic-centralist international Trotskyist organization. On sales, he would introduce our newspaper as the publication of the SGJ but would always add: We are the Japanese section of the International Communist League. As a party member, he held many posts—from minutes secretary and composition chief to Tokyo associate of the Spartacist League’s Prometheus Research Library. He was a wonderful educator.

Hirata was curious and observant, easygoing and cheerful. He said what he thought and let comrades fight with him to work through the political issues. In heavily male-chauvinist Japan, where a man typically expects his wife to look after him and the children, Hirata was made of a different fabric. In his own life, when his wife became chronically ill, he devoted himself to caring for her and their young son. We will miss him.

Comradely, The Spartacist Group Japan

https://www.icl-fi.org/print/english/wv/1139/hirata_motomu-ltr.html

Tuesday, January 12, 2021

Ideologues of Decaying Capitalism - The Bankruptcy of Liberal Economists - by Joseph Seymour and Bruce André

 

https://archive.is/lSee7

Workers Vanguard No. 1125 12 January 2018

Ideologues of Decaying Capitalism The Bankruptcy of Liberal Economists

By Joseph Seymour and Bruce André

(Part One)

“This expropriation [of capitalist property] will make it possible for the productive forces to develop to a tremendous extent. And when we see how incredibly capitalism is already retarding this development, when we see how much progress could be achieved on the basis of the level of technique already attained, we are entitled to say with the fullest confidence that the expropriation of the capitalists will inevitably result in an enormous development of the productive forces of human society.” [emphasis in original]

—V.I. Lenin, The State and Revolution (1917)

Lenin thus summarized Karl Marx’s fundamental critique of the capitalist system as well as the ultimate goal of socialism. Marxists gauge human progress by the development of mankind’s productive forces, from the stone tools of primitive society to present-day science, technology and the modern factory. With the advent and development of industrial capitalism beginning in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, one could envisage for the first time a future end to scarcity and class divisions. However, the private ownership of the means of production increasingly acted as a brake on the further development of the productive forces, not least through periodic economic crises. The emergence of modern imperialism at the end of the 19th century marked the onset of an epoch of global capitalist decay. The major capitalist powers, having divided the world through imperial conquest, embarked on a series of wars for its redivision, seeking to expand their colonial holdings and spheres of domination at the expense of their rivals.

The goal of proletarian revolution is to resolve the contradiction at the heart of capitalism, in which production for private profit stifles overall productive growth. Collectivizing the means of production and making the bounty of society available to all, a workers state will organize all of industry in the way that an individual assembly line is today conceived: according to a rational plan. An international socialist economy, by applying scientific planning to the entire economic system, will unleash a qualitative development of the productive forces and of labor productivity. This will liberate the productive capacities of mankind, ultimately eliminating economic scarcity and, with that, laying the material basis for the disappearance of classes and the withering away of the state.

In contrast to that Marxist view, the equation of capitalism with unlimited economic growth was an article of faith for bourgeois economists of the post-World War II generation. Today, that faith has largely faded. In the eyes of liberal economists, the meager rate of economic growth experienced in the U.S. in the past few decades has become the “new normal.” Lawrence Summers, a key economic operator in the Bill Clinton administration in the 1990s, sees the advanced capitalist countries as having entered a prolonged period of “secular stagnation,” reviving a notion that originated among liberal Keynesians like Alvin Hansen during the Great Depression of the 1930s.

That view was reflected in the 2016 presidential election as Hillary Clinton offered nothing except more of the same—“America is great”—with maybe some minor tinkering. Even her left-liberal (“progressive”) Democratic Party challenger Bernie Sanders did not claim that his policies would lead to a substantial boost in economic output but only that they would bring about a somewhat more equitable redistribution of income. Right-wing demagogue Donald Trump promoted the patent lie that he would double the current annual rate of economic growth from 2 percent to 4 percent, or even triple it.

Now, Trump and the Republican-dominated Congress, resurrecting Ronald Reagan’s supply-side economics, have pushed through a massive tax cut for corporations and the ultrarich. The idea that the benefits resulting from tax breaks for the wealthy will “trickle down” to the rest of the population in the form of increased investment, more jobs and higher wages is even more ludicrous today than it was in the 1980s, when it was the centerpiece of Reaganomics. American businesses are already sitting on an unprecedented stockpile of more than $2.4 trillion in cash. Apple and General Motors are hoarding almost 30 percent of their total value in cash. Why are companies not investing those staggering sums in new plants, machinery and additional workers? The obvious answer is that they lack confidence that such investment would generate an acceptable rate of return.

Meanwhile, the Democrats do not even pretend to offer a policy alternative that might significantly increase the rate of growth. Paul Krugman, probably the country’s best-known “progressive” economist because of his regular column in the New York Times, defended Hillary Clinton during the presidential campaign on the grounds that government policy has little effect on economic growth, a supposedly mysterious process beyond the ken of his profession to understand, much less change:

“What do we know about accelerating long-run growth? According to the [Congressional] budget office, potential growth was pretty stable from 1970 to 2000, with nothing either Ronald Reagan or Bill Clinton did making much obvious difference. The subsequent slide began under George W. Bush and continued under Mr. Obama. This history suggests no easy way to change the trend.”

—New York Times, 15 August 2016

The Falling Rate of Profit

A recent, book-length version of the “there’s not much we can do about economic growth” school of thought is Marc Levinson’s An Extraordinary Time: The End of the Postwar Boom and the Return of the Ordinary Economy (2016). A former economics and finance editor of the Economist, house organ of Anglo-American bankers, Levinson strikes a contrarian pose, gleefully debunking the economic policy doctrines of both wings of the bourgeois political spectrum: Keynesianism on the left and monetarism and supply-side economics on the right. He contends that the relatively high rates of growth experienced by the advanced capitalist countries in the three decades after World War II amounted to a fortuitous historical accident that cannot be replicated by any kind of government policy.

A much weightier expression (in every respect) of historical pessimism with regard to the American economy is a recent book by a prominent liberal academic economist, Robert J. Gordon, The Rise and Fall of American Growth: The U.S. Standard of Living Since the Civil War (2016). Unlike An Extraordinary Time, which has a slapdash, journalistic quality, Gordon’s book (a 700-plus-page tome) is a work of serious scholarship. While Gordon’s argumentation differs somewhat from that of Levinson, as does the historical scope of his study, his conclusion is basically the same:

“This is a book about the drama of a revolutionary century when, through a set of miracles, economic growth accelerated, the modern world was created, and then after that creation the potential for future inventions having a similar impact on everyday life of necessity was inevitably diminished. The implications for the future of U.S. and world economic growth could not be more profound....

“The economic revolution of 1870 to 1970 was unique in human history, unrepeatable because so many of its achievements could happen only once.”

Gordon’s use of the term “miracles” underscores his belief that mere mortals cannot consciously control the quantity and content of the material wealth created by their labor.

In the introductory section of An Extraordinary Time, Levinson defends Obama against a charge leveled by right-wing scribe George F. Will, who stated: “Making slow growth normal serves the progressive program of defining economic failure down.” To this Levinson replies, “as if the rate of economic growth were a matter of presidential discretion.” It is, of course, true that in capitalist America the policies of a given administration usually have a marginal effect on economic growth.

The expansion (or contraction) of the production of marketable goods and services under capitalism is mainly determined by the extent to which the executives of large corporations and Wall Street financiers invest profits in new productive facilities, especially those embodying more advanced (labor-saving) technologies. What drives capitalist investment is not the impulse to maximize output or labor productivity but rather to maximize the rate of profit (i.e., the ratio of profit to the market value of the means of production).

However, Marx, in one of his key insights, demonstrated that there is an inherent tendency for the rate of profit, the driving force of the capitalist system, to decline over time. By prompting capitalists to cut back their investments, a falling rate of profit generates periodic crises, usually triggered in financial markets. The result is a contraction of output and increased unemployment.

Marx’s explanation for the falling tendency of the rate of profit flowed from his understanding that surplus value—the unpaid portion of workers’ labor—is the source of profit, not the capitalists’ expenditures on the means of production (e.g., machinery and raw materials). Marx observed that especially in periods of economic boom, when workers can feel emboldened to demand higher wages, individual capitalists invest an increased amount of capital in plant upgrades and such in order to cut labor costs. By doing so, the capitalist gains a competitive advantage. However, as all capitalists follow suit, the total amount of surplus value generated per amount of capital invested—i.e., the average profit rate—declines.

Capitalists invest in expanding productive capacity on the assumption that they will be able to sell the goods produced at a particular rate of profit. However, as the profit rate drops, they find themselves unable to sell their products at the expected profit rate. They cut back investments and slash production, resulting in an economic downturn. Workers are thrown out onto the street; entire factories become rusted relics.

Bourgeois economic ideologues, from Keynesians to monetarists and supply-siders, identify the laws governing the capitalist mode of production with the laws governing production as such. In the absence of a revolutionary working-class alternative, the appeal of Trump’s right-wing populist demagogy is enhanced by the fact that both liberals, like Krugman and Gordon, as well as centrists on the bourgeois political spectrum, like Summers and Levinson, insist that it is not possible to overcome the decades-long stagnation in the living standards of American working people.

From Kennedy’s “New Economics” to Obama’s “New Normal”

In the past, Democratic politicians, especially those on the more liberal wing of the party, promised to deliver a new era of economic prosperity. John F. Kennedy’s successful 1960 presidential campaign against Richard Nixon, who had been vice president in the Republican Eisenhower administration (1953-61), was dominated by Cold War tensions with the Soviet Union and fears among the ruling class that the U.S. was falling behind in science and technology. In its economic message, Kennedy’s campaign resembled Trump’s. His platform called for boosting economic growth and dynamism under the slogan “Let’s get this country moving again.” He pointed to the sluggish economic performance, punctuated by two recessions, during Eisenhower’s second term. In this respect, the campaign tactics used by Kennedy against Nixon and Eisenhower were similar to those used by Trump against Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama.

In An Extraordinary Time, Levinson retrospectively criticizes liberal Keynesians like Walter Heller, chief economic adviser to both the Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson administrations. Heller claimed that fiscal policy (taxation and government expenditure) could be fine-tuned so as to maintain full employment and maximize economic growth. By the late 1970s, Democratic politicians and their intellectual apologists were singing a different, more downbeat, tune.

Capitalizing on the downfall of Nixon resulting from the Watergate scandal, in 1977 Jimmy Carter, a centrist Southern Democrat (like Bill Clinton), entered the White House. A few years later, the hapless Carter administration confronted an unusual condition termed “stagflation”: rapidly rising prices combined with a recession. Levinson describes the widespread economic insecurity that propelled the right-wing Republican Reagan to the presidency in 1981: “The conservative ascendance came only as mortgage interest rates above 11 percent made young people despair of ever buying a home and as layoff notices went out to ironworkers on construction sites and toolmakers in auto plants.”

Surveying those dismal times, a mainstream liberal academic economist, Lester C. Thurow, published a book in 1980 on the state of the U.S. economy titled The Zero-Sum Society: Distribution and the Possibilities for Economic Change. As indicated by the title, Thurow argued that it was no longer possible to substantially increase the size of the economic pie so that everyone would get a somewhat bigger piece. Economic policy now involved recutting the existing pie such that some people would get a larger slice and others a smaller one:

“For most of our problems there are several solutions. But all these solutions have the characteristic that someone must suffer large economic losses. No one wants to volunteer for this role, and we have a political process that is incapable of forcing anyone to shoulder this burden. Everyone wants someone else to suffer the necessary economic losses, and as a consequence none of the possible solutions can be adopted.”

In fact, the almost four decades since Thurow wrote those lines have seen an unremitting war by the bourgeoisie to force workers, minorities and the poor to “suffer the necessary economic losses” to bolster capitalist profits. That one-sided war on workers has been facilitated by the trade-union bureaucracy, which maneuvers for crumbs while peddling a mythical “partnership” of labor with the bosses and their parties, particularly Democrats who falsely pose as “friends of labor.”

Technological Innovation and Capitalist Investment

The main theme of Levinson’s An Extraordinary Time is that economic growth, based on increasing labor productivity through technological innovation, is impervious to government policy. After listing several explanations offered by academic economists for the slower growth of labor productivity in the advanced capitalist countries since the 1970s, Levinson concludes:

“None of these explanations sufficed to explain the productivity bust afflicting countries with vastly different economies and divergent approaches to economic policy. The more deeply the scholars mined the data, the more confused they became. What the data could not yet show was that the world had moved to a new stage of economic growth, one that would develop in a far different way....

“Future advances in well-being would depend heavily on developing innovations and putting them to effective use.”

The last statement is manifestly true. Increases in labor productivity under capitalism are determined by two main factors: the extent to which capitalists invest their profits in new productive facilities (plant and equipment) embodying more advanced technology and the degree to which the new technology increases output per unit of labor input.

Levinson does recognize a causal link between the slowdown in the growth of labor productivity and a decline in the rate of capital investment:

“Across the wealthy economies, business investment, which had increased an average of 5.6 percent per year between 1960 and 1973, grew at a far slower rate, barely 4 percent per year, for the next two decades. Sluggish investment left steel mills operating antiquated blast furnaces and insurance offices using high-speed computer printers to spit out form upon form for clerks to organize in file cabinets. Technological innovations usually arrive in the business world incorporated in new equipment and facilities. With firms deferring such investments at every turn, their workers’ productivity improved at less than half the rate in the decades after 1973 as in the decades before.”

However, Levinson makes no effort to explain why the rate of investment has declined to such an extent. In particular, he does not consider the interrelationship between capital investment, technological innovation and the rate of profit.

As Marx underlined, capitalists will invest in new facilities incorporating more advanced technology if, and only if, they believe the increase in profit per worker will be greater than the increased market value of capital per worker. If capitalists discover that their investments are not generating a competitive rate of profit, they will halt or cut back their investments, often triggering an economic downturn.

Marx thus proved that capitalist production increasingly puts the brakes on historical development, at the same time that it creates capitalism’s own gravedigger, the proletariat. He and Friedrich Engels explained that the only way to end the boom-bust cycles inherent to capitalism is for the working class to take control of the means of production through socialist revolution and institute a planned, collectivized economy.

[TO BE CONTINUED] (Part Two https://www.reddit.com/r/WorkersVanguard2/comments/7uohi4/ideologues_of_decaying_capitalism_the_bankruptcy/?st=jd5d7ha4&sh=d0b93079)

http://www.icl-fi.org/english/wv/1125/economy.html