Economic Aspects of "Love"

Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff

Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Mon Jun 04, 2012 1:53 pm

Image

American Dream wrote: http://www.kersplebedeb.com/mystuff/boo ... lsson.html

Caliban and the Witch: Women, The Body, and Primitive Accumulation

...To fully appreciate Federici’s serious investigation, we have to outline her historical project. Witchcraft and the repression of witches did not arise out of the blue, nor was it a phenomenon of the Middle Ages. In fact, by Federici’s analysis, it was the success of the peasant revolts of the late middle ages, and the steady erosion of feudal power, that set up a historically unique crossroads in the late 1400s. One branch led to the world we’re in, but another, long-forgotten road might have led to a communal, cooperative, egalitarian alternative. The barbaric slaughter that ended the peasant revolts in Europe put in motion the intolerant, incredibly violent, and enslaving system of life from which modern capitalism emerged. Capitalism did not just “take off,” Federici argues, but had to enslave Africans and, most importantly, had to get control of the ultimate commodity—human labor—and the women who were crucial to its reproduction. Thus the persecution of witches went hand in hand with the construction of a new world order in which women were downgraded, deskilled, and devalued. The persecution of witches doesn’t really begin until the mid-16th century and continues to extend its reach for almost 100 years, before being halted in the mid 1600s. Federici shows how ruling elites built on the earlier campaign against heresy to alter social relations in ways that were crucial to the expansion of the early capitalist mode of production.

As Marx documented, the beginnings of capitalism depended on a process of primitive accumulation—a process we mostly think of in terms of dispossession, of the private seizure of common lands and resources (forests, lakes, rivers), and the social manufacture of a large population that had nothing to sell but itself (as labor power for a wage). But Marx had a huge blind spot that Federici strives to reveal: except for his remarks in the Communist Manifesto on the use of women within the bourgeois family—as producers of heirs guaranteeing the transmission of family property—Marx never acknowledged that procreation could become a terrain of exploitation and by the same token a terrain of resistance. He never imagined that women could refuse to reproduce, or that such a refusal could become part of class struggle.

It is stunning (and yet, really not so surprising) that the 19th century Marx would have been so oblivious to the transformation of social dynamics at the end of the middle ages, crucially the repression of women. The foremost analyst of capitalist dynamics, with his penetrating look at wage labor and alienation, commodification and fetishism, completely overlooked the most basic aspect of capitalist production, ie, the production of human labor.

Federici points out that the power difference between women and men and the concealment of women’s unpaid labor under the cover of natural inferiority, have enabled capitalism to immensely expand the ‘unpaid part of the working day,’ and use the (male) wage to accumulate women’s labor; in many cases, they have also served to deflect class antagonism into an antagonism between men and women…. As we have seen, male workers have often been complicit with this process…but [men have] paid the price of self-alienation, and the ‘primitive disaccumulation’ of their own individual and collective powers.”

The book takes a close look at the historical process of “otherizing.” Federici briefly recounts the church’s persecution of heretics in the 15th century and earlier, and then shows how this type of campaign was redirected toward women through criminalizing contraceptives and infanticide, and enforcing pregnancy. The persecution of witches was the language of this effort. The practice of midwifery was attacked and replaced by male-run obstetrics, and eventually all female doctoring was outlawed and driven underground, whether midwifery, herbology, or any other knowledge system developed over millennia. It is not coincidental, according to Federici’s analysis, that this took place at a time when the primary concern of the ruling elite was securing adequate supplies of labor, at the dawn of capitalist development. The African slave trade has its origins in this same era, as does the Conquest and the wholesale slaughter of millions in the New World in pursuit of gold and other riches.

The final chapter shows how the language of witch persecution, of implacable struggles against diabolical “others,” was extended to the New World, and then with the stories of human sacrifice, sexual promiscuity, sodomy, etc., that came back to Europe, the logic was reinforced back in Europe, too. Ultimately, Caliban and the Witch is an important historical corrective. It shows that capitalism arose not as an organic process of improved systems and technological breakthroughs supplanting older, less efficient, superstitious, primitive societies. Rather, it arose through the violent imposition of divisions, showing that primitive accumulation—the beginning process of capitalism—required sustained barbarism and a hysterical and systematic century-long attack on women. And that process eventually went considerably beyond women - thus, primitive accumulation has been above all an accumulation of differences, inequalities, hierarchies, divisions, which have alienated workers from each other and even from themselves...
American Dream
 
Posts: 19946
Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2007 4:56 pm
Location: Planet Earth
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Mon Jun 04, 2012 2:08 pm

Settler colonialism is a global and transnational phenomenon, and as much a thing of the past as a thing of the present. There is no such thing as neo-settler colonialism or post-settler colonialism because settler colonialism is a resilient formation that rarely ends. Not all migrants are settlers; as Patrick Wolfe has noted, settlers come to stay. They are founders of political orders who carry with them a distinct sovereign capacity. And settler colonialism is not colonialism: settlers want Indigenous people to vanish (but can make use of their labour before they are made to disappear). Sometimes settler colonial forms operate within colonial ones, sometimes they subvert them, sometimes they replace them. But even if colonialism and settler colonialism interpenetrate and overlap, they remain separate as they co-define each other.

Edward Cavanagh and Lorenzo Veracini, 2010.


http://settlercolonialstudies.org/about-this-blog/
American Dream
 
Posts: 19946
Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2007 4:56 pm
Location: Planet Earth
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Tue Jun 05, 2012 11:18 am

Direct action meant that the goal of any and all of these activities was to provide ways for people to get in touch with their own powers and capacities, to take back the power of naming themselves and their lives. It was to be distinguished from more conventional political activity even in a democratic system. Instead of attempting to make change by forming interest groups to pressure politicians, anarchists insisted that we learn to think and act for ourselves by joining together in organizations in which our experience, our perception, and our activity can guide and make the change. Knowledge does not precede experience, it flows from it: "We begin by deciding to work, and through working, we learn ... We will learn how to live in libertarian communism by living in it." People learn how to be free only by exercising freedom: "We are not going to find ourselves ... with people ready-made for the future ... Without the continued exercise of their faculties, there will be no free people ... The external revolution and the internal revolution presuppose one another, and they must be simultaneous in order to be successful.”

― Martha Ackelsberg, Free Women of Spain: Anarchism and the Struggle for the Emancipation of Women
American Dream
 
Posts: 19946
Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2007 4:56 pm
Location: Planet Earth
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Wed Jun 06, 2012 12:52 am

http://Libcom.org/library/sex-work-soli ... -salvation

Sex Work: Solidarity Not Salvation

Image

An article by an Australian Wobbly sex worker advocating solidarity and syndicalism. Orginally published in issue #1745, May 2012, of the IWW's newspaper Industrial Worker.


An ongoing debate is taking place in anarchist and feminist circles on the legitimacy of sex work and the rights of sex workers. The two main schools of thought are almost at polar opposites of each other. On the one side you have the abolitionist approach led by feminists, such as Melissa Farley who maintains that sex work is a form of violence against women. Farley has said that “If we view prostitution as violence against women, it makes no sense to legalize or decriminalize prostitution.” On the other side you have sex worker rights activists who view sex work as being much closer to work in general than most realize, who believe that the best way forward for sex workers is in the fight for workers’ rights and social acceptance and for activists to listen to what sex workers have to say. In this article I will discuss why the abolitionist approach discriminates against sex workers and takes advantage of their marginalized status, while the rights approach offer the opportunity to make solid differences in the labor rights and human rights of sex workers.

An example of the kind of arguments put forward by advocates of abolitionism runs as follows:

“The concept of women’s ‘choice’ to sell sex is constructed in line with neoliberal and free-market thinking; the same school of thinking that purports that workers have real ‘choices’ and control over their work. It suggests that women choose to sell sex and we should therefore focus on issues to do with sex workers’ safety, ability to earn money, and persecution by the state. Whilst women’s safety and women’s rights are paramount, the argument for state-regulated brothels and unionization is reformist at best, naive and regressive at worst. Even the proposal for ‘collective brothels’ ignores the gendered nature of prostitution, and its function in supporting male domination.

“An anarchist response should demand the eradication of all exploitative practices and not suggest they can be made safer or better.”
(Taken from a leaflet handed out by abolitionists at the sex work workshop at the 2011 London Anarchist Bookfair.)

A Wobbly approach does call for the eradication of all exploitative practices, not just those that benefit the one advocating for change or that one finds particularly distasteful. Work under capitalism is exploitive, you are either exploited or live off the exploitation of others—most of us do both. Sex under capitalism and patriarchy is all too often commodified and used as a means of exploitation. Work and sex in and of themselves are none of these things. Fighting sex work instead of fighting capitalism and patriarchy does not address the exploitation in its entirety. To focus on the gendered nature of sex work will not change the gendered society we live in; if anything it reinforces the myth that the gender divide is a natural part of life that must be worked around. It also silences the sex workers who do not fit the gendered notions of the female sex worker, a group who are all too conveniently ignored whenever they challenge the abolitionist discourse on sex work.

Abolitionists have accused any approach other than theirs’ as being fundamentally reformist and thus not in line with the principles of anarchism. However, isn’t trying to end an industry because the overarching capitalist, patriarchal system of our times feeds into it, rather than fighting for the emancipation of all workers, in itself reformist?

The anthropologist Laura Agustin contends that the abolitionist movement took up strength at a time when the theories of welfarism were gaining popularity among the middle class who felt they had a duty to better the working class (without addressing the legitimacy of the class system as a whole). Middle-class women, in particular, found an outlet from their own gender oppression, by positioning themselves as the “benevolent saviors” of the “fallen,” thus gaining positions and recognition in the male-dominated public sphere that they never previously could have attained.

There are more than a few remnants of the middle class, almost missionary, desire to “save” by implanting one’s own moral outlook on the “fallen” in today’s abolitionist movement. Not only does it give people a way to feel as if they are rescuing those most in need, but it does so without requiring them (in most instances) to question their own actions and privileges. The sight of someone dressed in sweatshop-manufactured garments with an iPhone, iPad and countless other gadgets made in appalling conditions calling for the abolition of the sex industry never ceases to confound me. It must be one of the few industries that people are calling for the destruction of because of the worst elements within it. They may recognize that the treatment of workers in Apple factories amounts to slavery, and that the instances of rape and sexual assault of garment makers in some factories amount to sexual slavery, but they contend that abolition of either industry is not desirable, that mass-produced clothing and technology, unlike sex, are essentials to our modern lives. Essential to whom I may ask? To the workers making such products? They do not use the products that they slave away producing, they do not benefit from their employment anymore than a sex worker in their country does theirs. It seems the essentiality of a product is judged through the lens of the consumer, not the worker, despite this being something the abolitionist accuses only opponents of abolition of doing. Calling for the abolition of sex work remains, largely, a way for people to position themselves in a seemingly selfless role without having to do the hard work of questioning their own social privilege. This is a fundamentally welfarist and reformist position to take.

Is sex (or the ability to engage in it if you so wish) not as essential to life or at least to happiness and health as any of the above are? Sex is a big part of life, a part that people should be free to take pleasure in and engage in, not a part that is viewed as being bad and dirty and shameful. I am not saying that anyone should be obligated to provide sex for someone else unless they want to, but pointing out that trying to justify abolishing the sex industry with the argument that sex isn’t essential when there are so many industries that produce things we don’t need is incredibly weak. It also, again, focuses more on the consumer than the worker. Instead of focusing on what the sex worker thinks about their work, how important it is, how it makes them feel, we are told to focus on the fact that they consumer doesn’t really need it. The worker is reduced to no more than an object, an object that needs saving whether they want it or not.

Can no worker take pleasure in aspects of their work despite capitalism? Can no woman take pleasure in sex despite patriarchy? If the answer is that they can, then why is it so hard to believe that there are sex workers who choose and/or take pleasure in their work despite capitalism and patriarchy, not because of them? I have been told by abolitionists that this is not possible within the sex industry, that any worker who enjoys their job, or even those who do not enjoy but see it as a better opportunity than anything else available to them, only does so out of internalized misogyny. That if they were freed from this, by adopting an abolitionist mindset (any other stance is accused of being founded on internalized misogyny and therefore invalid) they would see the truth. It sounds an awful lot like religious dogma and is often treated with as much zeal. The abolitionist approach refuses to value or even acknowledge the intelligence, agency, experiences and knowledge of sex workers. This is discrimination posing as feminism. If you want equality for women then you need to listen to all women, not just the ones who say what you want to hear.

Abolitionists seem to view sex workers who do not agree with them as being too brainwashed by patriarchy to advocate for themselves, or that these specific sex workers are not representative of the experiences of the majority of sex workers. As an anarchist I view all work under capitalism to be exploitative, and that sex work is no exception. I do not believe however that work that involves sex is necessarily more exploitative or damaging than other forms of wage slavery. This is not to say that there are not terrible violations of workers’ rights within the sex industry; there are and they are violations I want to fight to overcome. (By acknowledging these violations I am not saying that there are not wonderful experiences between workers and between workers and clients as well.)

If one is serious about respecting and advocating for the rights of sex workers then we have to look at what methods work. We do not live in some anarchist utopia where no one is forced to work in jobs they wouldn’t otherwise do in order to get by, so I do not see the point in spending energy debating whether sex work would exist in an anarchist society and what it would look like, if it starts to cut in to energy that could be spent advocating for the rights of sex workers in the here and now.

Abolitionists have often complained of rights activists using language to legitimize the industry by using terms like “client” instead of “john” and “worker” instead of “prostitute.” Sex workers and rights activists have moved away from the old terms as they are terms that have often been used to disempower and discriminate against workers, whereas “client” and “sex worker” are much more value neutral. Abolitionists are not innocent of using language to further their agenda. Often the term “prostitute” is used to describe sex workers. This positions the worker as an agency-less victim. Once you have positioned someone as being without agency it becomes easier to ignore their voice, to believe that you know what is in their best interest and that you are doing, or advocating, for them.

Another accusation made against rights activists is that they put the client’s wants before the needs and safety of the worker, or that they attempt to legitimize commercial sexual exchanges (something that is not considered a legitimate service by abolitionists). I have not found this to be the case—the majority of rights activists are or have been sex workers, or have close ties to sex workers, and their primary focus is on the rights, needs and safety of sex workers. For instance, Scarlet Alliance, the national sex worker advocacy body, is made up of current and former sex workers. People who would have an interest in worker exploitation, such as employers, are not eligible to join.

That they do not focus on labeling clients (the clientele are too diverse to paint with the one label anyway) is no reflection on how important the needs and safety of sex workers are. In fact it is because they are paramount to the rights movement that the focus is not on making moral judgments on the clients and is instead on labor organizing and worker advocacy. To ignore the vast amounts of change that can be made by workers organizing and advocating together in favor of moralizing over the reasons why the industry exists and whether it is an essential service is to sacrifice the rights and well-being of workers for theoretical gains.

At the end of the day the abolitionist is using their power and social privilege to take advantage of sex workers’ marginalized position, something that they accuse clients of doing. The difference is that they are not seeking sexual but moral gratification. The abolitionist approach does not help sex workers, nor does it empower them. Rather, this approach gives them a role, and penalizes them if they refuse to play it. The sex worker rights approach works in the same way that all workers rights and anti-discrimination movements have worked by empowerment, support and solidarity.

There is no anti-capitalist blueprint as to how to best eradicate exploitation, but rather several schools of thought, often their own internal schools, as to how to reach a free society. I believe that when it comes to eradicating exploitation in the workplace, syndicalism is the approach that best suits the fight at hand. When the workplace is that of a brothel, strip club, street corner, motel room, etc., the fundamentals of the fight are no different from that of other wage slaves. Sex workers need to be able to unionize, as yet there is no sex workers union. While I would love for there to be a sex workers union, I also think the belief that all workers are equal, that we are all wage slaves, that we are all in this fight together and that it is the bosses who are the enemy, make the IWW an ideal union for the marginalized workers who fall through the cracks of the existing trade unions. That said it really is the ideal union for all workers. Actions such as joining the IWW and using the strength of a union, rather than just one’s lone voice, to advocate for change is one way in which sex workers can fight their battle. Another is joining Scarlet Alliance, the national, peak sex worker organization in Australia. Like the IWW, bosses are not able to join, meaning that the interests of Scarlet Alliance are solely the interests of the workers, not those of the bosses or the abolitionists. It is actions like this, actions that empower sex workers, that we need to fight the discrimination and marginalization that exists.

If activists are truly serious about the rights of sex workers they will listen to us even if what we have to say is difficult to hear and they will support us even if they don’t like what we do. It is only when all workers join together that we have the power fight capitalism and the bosses. We do not ask for salvation but for solidarity.
American Dream
 
Posts: 19946
Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2007 4:56 pm
Location: Planet Earth
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Thu Jun 07, 2012 8:49 am

.

"Randian, Paulian, libertarian, anarcho-capitalist, and free-marketist ideologies, all of which are variations of the same principles, are inherently doomed to failure"

In simplified terms, a truly free market, in time, necessitates planned organizational (governmental) intervention to prevent the development of trusts and cartels, which would undermine the “voluntary” association implied by the term “free market” through their inevitable manipulation of the market for their own benefit. This is further supported by the fact that an “invisible hand of the market,” driven by the voluntary “dollar votes” of the consumer, ultimately results in a dictatorship of the wealthy, who by laborious merit or market manipulation have accumulated more capital, and thus more votes, than the majority of other consumers. The average capitalist may well see this as proper, as they assume that those with the most wealth have “earned” the most merit, and therefore “deserve” the most input (and by contrast, those without wealth/property must have no merit, as any true amount of merit should reward them with wealth, and they are therefore parasites). However, even with this being the case, the guidance of market forces is no longer unregulated. Surely the educated libertarian would agree that any market regulation undermines their values, whether that regulation is legislatively enforced or privately appropriated. If trusts and cartels can manipulate the direction of market forces independent of the voluntary interaction of the average consumer, the individual matters little and a “collectivist” rule (plutocracy) is established.

Yet this situation was a natural progression from an unfettered free market, although it could hardly be called free at this point, so any attempt to intervene and undermine the “collectivists” in the name of the “individual,” and to restore that previous state of balance and equality of “dollar vote” value (mind you, equity of weight, not wealth redistribution), whether by an ad hoc voluntary public organization or a self-interested individual, would still constitute as an interruption of the natural order of the market. You see, the market for the libertarian must be free but also natural, and therefore not enforced (the non-aggression principle). As history has repeatedly shown, and this is demonstrably the case even before extensive government regulation was implemented in the early 20th century, market manipulation and monopolization is a natural extension of the accumulation of capital. To insist otherwise, and thus to insist that in the ideal situation whosoever acquires large amounts of capital and property, and therefore market influence (through the capitalist economic principle of “dollar votes”) will refuse to act on that power for the sake of preserving the sanctity of the free market, is a blatant contradiction of the libertarian principle that self-interest and an unfettered competitive drive in fact benefit the market, and thus benefit society as a whole. This would be self-regulation, a denial of what Randian libertarians allege to be the virtue of selfishness, an extension of what they assume to be human nature.

In addition, to insist that, absent government interaction, and thus absent “crony capitalism,” the private accumulation of capital and property will not inevitably result in the blatant influence of market forces through the private manipulation of acquired price/labor/distribution/production controls, is to disregard historical reality. Also, to argue that the enforcement of oligarchy is only achievable through legal precedent and legislative support of government funded police and militaries is to ignore privately funded forces like Pinkertons and Blackwater, which if defined simply as mercenaries, have been protecting property and capital as long as property and capital has existed. In other words, suggesting that monopoly and market manipulation hasn’t occurred in history as a natural product of capitalism itself, and then to argue that where it appears to have happened (with Big Oil, Steel, and Rail in the 19th century, for example), it was only because of some unnatural interference with the forces of capitalism, is ultimately committing the “any true Scotsman” fallacy.

Thus, within an indeterminate amount of time, any free market will inevitably result in the accumulation of capital by a small sector of society, whom the capitalists assert to be the most productive and deserving participants, and these wealthy few will continue to act on their own “virtue” by using their “earned” market influence to accumulate more capital and property, ad infinitum. If private regulation through this natural development of Big Business, and the response of public regulation for the sake of balance and anti-corruption through the unnatural intervention of Big (or even small) Government, each infringe on the “free”-ness of the market, that market is by definition unsustainable. Even if this ideal of equality through the non-aggression of individuals in voluntary associations were achieved (or achievable to begin with), it is ultimately an ideal that is doomed to failure, and is thus an ideal not worth seeking.

This analysis is of course ignoring the ideas argued at length above about the labor theory of value, the appropriation of capital and products away from workers by the owners of the means of production, and the violation of the non-aggression principle through the enforcement of private property and ownership, because these ideas have been argued to infinite lengths before by hundreds of people smarter than I on both sides of the issue. I’ve merely chosen to analyze the issue on their terms alone. My (partisan) conclusion - Randian, Paulian, libertarian, anarcho-capitalist, and free-marketist ideologies, all of which are variations of the same principles, are inherently doomed to failure even in the unlikely event that they were achievable. The unfettered free market invariably fetters itself by its own means. Both historical evidence, and the understanding reached by following libertarian principles to their logical conclusions, suggest that the free market is unsustainable. Its one of those revolutions that eats its own children.


http://voicesofearth.tumblr.com/post/15 ... xsingerpdx




Image

The means is the end, the end is release, release is existing, existing is being One, being One is the means.

This is a conduit for the voices of the world, a pulpit from which anyone who has spoken, does speak, or will speak for the betterment of the oppressed, all species, or our Mother Earth may share their hopes and dreams with their cohabitants. Topics include Anarchism, Socialism, Marxism, Radicalism throughout History, Environmentalism, Pantheism, Buddhism, Taoism, Atheism, Anti-Fascism, Anti-Capitalism, White Privilege, the fight against Racism/ Sexism/ Heterosexism/ Classism/ Ageism/ Ableism, and discussions of any philosophy that encourages or supports the freedom to be happy with whomever one happens to be, to do whatever makes one happy, to flourish in a natural environment conducive to the happiness of all other beings, and to throw off the chains of the destructive system we participate and perpetuate in for the purpose of replacing it with a lifestyle more harmonious with Gaia and her children. As you will hear, on this blog, from your coreligionists from across the centuries, the Revolution of Consciousness and Body can be ours, if we Will it so.
American Dream
 
Posts: 19946
Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2007 4:56 pm
Location: Planet Earth
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Thu Jun 07, 2012 10:14 pm

You can't blow up a social relationship - the anarchist case against terrorism

Image

A clear explanation of why anarchists oppose terrorism, and why terrorism or propaganda by deed can be of no benefit to the working class, as capitalism is a social relationship, not a group of bad individuals.

This essay was was published as a pamphlet around late 1978 or 1979, in the aftermath of the Sydney Hilton Bombing. The black humour of the time around the anarchist movement was that the police and security forces framed Ananda Marga because they came before Anarchism in the alphabet.


Read at: http://libcom.org/library/you-cant-blow ... lationship
American Dream
 
Posts: 19946
Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2007 4:56 pm
Location: Planet Earth
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Fri Jun 08, 2012 12:44 pm

Life, May 28, 1945

Image


Is your work experience a Hieronymus Bosch-like nightmare?
American Dream
 
Posts: 19946
Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2007 4:56 pm
Location: Planet Earth
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Sat Jun 09, 2012 8:32 am

http://liberatedlifeproject.com/2012/02 ... uest-post/

A Declaration of Liberation from Our Own Oppression

Image

A few years ago I came across this piece by social psychologist Dr. Michele Toomey on her website Liberation Psychology. I recently got in touch with Michele and she gave me permission to share it with all of you. Though it is written particularly for women seeking to reclaim their power and agency, I believe it offers much for everyone.

Guest post by Michele Toomey, PhD


Too often we feel that others have all the power and we are at their mercy.

As children, girls tend to be taught to be good, and good means thoughtful, caring, respectful, and generous. Disapproval, rejection, and feelings of being bad are, therefore, strong inhibitors of girls. Girls are not usually taught to develop their physical strength, but instead think of boys as strong and themselves as “pretty.” One of the great gifts of women’s team sports gaining public attention, is the image of athletic women with strong bodies still looking like attractive, healthy women, and not thin waifs. However physical intimidation is still a potential silencer of women.

We are also taught that we need a man, to protect us, provide for us, and to love us, and that a man needs us to emotionally protect him, provide a home and family for him and to love him. This would be fine except for that twist of opposites that says, when men fulfill their role they gain superiority, and when we perform our role we are inferior.

That is a trap for both genders, and as a result, men often end up controlling women and are burdened by them, and women end up looking to men to make everything outside the home happen and then become dependent on them. When we women find ourselves in that position we become victims of our own sexist approach to our power and ourselves.

This manifesto won’t fit you in every way, but in whatever ways it does, grab hold and break out of your oppression of yourself. Declare your liberation from yourself and of yourself by yourself. Unlike physical oppression where another oppresses us, psychological oppression is kept in place by the oppressed. If you are not living as a woman of stature and integrity, this manifesto is meant to inspire and challenge you!

A Woman’s Manifesto

Stop being nice. Start being truthful.
Stop looking for approval. Start commanding respect.
Stop using seduction. Start having integrity.
Stop pleading. Start confronting.
Stop believing we have no power. Start using the power we have.
Stop feeling weak. Start thinking strong.
Stop wishing. Start doing.
Stop relying on men to make it happen. Start making it happen for ourselves.
Stop distrusting women. Start joining them.
Stop preferring men. Start valuing women.
Stop imitating or fearing masculinity. Start empowering femininity.
Stop whining. Start demanding.
Stop fearing the price. Start paying it.
Stop reacting. Start acting.
Stop hiding behind silence. Start speaking out.
Stop ignoring. Start attending.
Stop tolerating. Start refusing.
Stop looking at or to others. Start looking at or to ourselves.
Stop pretending. Start contending.
Stop conforming. Start reforming.

__________
American Dream
 
Posts: 19946
Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2007 4:56 pm
Location: Planet Earth
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Sat Jun 09, 2012 9:25 pm

Keeping sane: Eurocentrism: Native Americans and Muslim women

jahanzebjz:


What redeems it is the idea only
- Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness.

The “it” is colonialism, imperialism, Eurocentrism and European cultural supremacy, which is imposed on non-Europeans by brute force. It is the idea that Europe and its off-shoots are better, advanced and superior to the “other”. If we upgrade the idea, then it would be that West is democratic, it espouses human rights, liberty, justice, and freedom that the “other” does not have. The idea also includes that “We” have to civilize “them”, bring them to light, give them democracy, freedom and liberty. The goals depend on the time in which you are living.

In an abstract way let’s compare the past and the present. I am taking about cultural imperialism in this case. I will divorce the analogies from their social and historical conditions, but the idea of it will, however, remain the same and adaptable:

We have to beat the Indian out of the Indian.

We have to modernize Muslim women by Westernizing them.


The first one will ring a bell to North American readers. The Native population of this continent was forces into boarding schools where the colonizers wished to “civilize” them and bring to them the light of Christianity. They were forced to learn English and forget their own languages. They were forced to give up their cultural clothing and wear a suit and tie. They were forced to cut their hairs and have “proper” haircut. They were forced to read the Bible and forget their spirituality. The idea that to be civilized one had to become European was forced on them by sheer brutality. What I want to focus on, and what I would like you to keep in mind, is the emphasis on the appearance. The Indian had to rid themselves of any appearance which was Indian, and had to transform themselves into a suited and booted European. This was the idea how to save the Indian from the Indian - by forcing it out of them.

Fast forward to today. Muslims are backward, traditional, narrow-minded, religious fanatics and Muslim women are oppressed because of how they dress. Again, let’s focus on the appearance and clothing. “We”, the West, have to “liberate” “them” from their misery by forcing them out of “backwardness” and into “modernity”. Muslim women have to take off their headscarf, veil, hijab, niqab, burqa and chador, because this is the only way to emancipation. Muslim women have to appear European to be considered free. Only short-skirts and mini-skirts will do. Even better would be a cover photo for Playboy. The only way forward, the purpose of history, the way to live a life and the way to be yourself is to transform into a European looking lady. The Eurocentric discourse is that destiny of a Muslim woman is found in Europe, and that Europeans have to absolutely lead them or show them the way to it.

In both cases, Europeans are “helping” the ignorant “other”. And both cases are that of ethnocentrism, which means that the world has to conform to our idea of how to be.

- Jahanzeb Hussain
American Dream
 
Posts: 19946
Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2007 4:56 pm
Location: Planet Earth
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Sat Jun 09, 2012 10:15 pm

I am sure there are liberal American women in belly dancing who are critical of the War on Terror and racial profiling, but the liberalism of these performers, and also of the performance space, is precisely the issue: wearing henna or doing belly dancing generally allows American women to disavow anti-Arab racism while avoiding any reference to the violence inflicted on those actually from these communities. The fact that these performances are focused on the body make it a particularly potent, embodied form of imperial feminism/liberal Orientalism at a time when the actual bodies of Arab and Muslim women, here and in their home countries, are under attack by the United States.
Belly Dancing: Arab-Face, Orientalist Feminism, and U.S. Empire, Sunaina Maira
American Dream
 
Posts: 19946
Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2007 4:56 pm
Location: Planet Earth
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Sun Jun 10, 2012 7:06 pm

http://kloncke.com/2012/06/09/you-are-just-talking/

“You Are Just Talking”

JUNE 9, 2012

Image


on the cover of the Vol. 28 | No. 2 | Spring 2012 edition of Inquiring Mind:

Until you dig a hole, plant a tree, water it and make it survive, you haven’t done a thing. You are just talking.
—Wangari Maathai (1940-2011)
Speech at Goldman Awards, San Francisco, April 24, 2006


powerful to read this while learning about the cordones that emerged under Allende in Chile.

when the bourgeoisie launched a “bosses’ strike” (there’s a new one for me!) as a kind of pressuring – slash – refusal to cooperate with Allende’s lefty government, they planned to withhold the means of production (their own property) in order to force concessions. but instead, the wage-slave folks intimately familiar with those means of production — in factories, in agriculture, even in schools and shantytowns — combined forces to take over and run things themselves.


For the workers the situation was [clear]. The immediate problem was to maintain the transport system, keep the factories open and ensure the supply of food and necessities. Groups of workers took to the streets on the first morning; every available form of transport was commandeered and driven by volunteers. In the factories, vigilance committees were formed to guard against sabotage [by bosses or their accomplices] and production was maintained. In the working-class areas, long patient queues formed outside the stores and supermarkets; either the owners were then persuaded to open them or, if not, the stores were opened and kept open by the local people themselves, who mounted permanent guard.



At the Cristalerias Chile glass factory … the management froze the company bank account. The workers responded by evolving a system of direct distribution. As one explained, “now we sell direct to the co-ops and small businesses and they pay us in cash, so that we can pay wages without having to use the banks at all.”



“…the 600,000 people for whom this hospital is responsible will see that we can provide better and more efficient services by working together with the local health committees which include people from the working-class districts.”



Workers at Alusa, a packaging plant in Santiago, echoed this:

“Management called out the office workers and they did stop work. But we couldn’t let ourselves be part of these manoeuvres. The bosses aren’t going to tell us what to do … So we opened the stores, took out the raw materials, and just kept on producing — production didn’t stop for a single moment. And we won’t stop now or ever. You can see people working with real joy. I think we’ve realised in these last few days that what we’re defending is something more than just a plate of beans.”

No one was exempt from the possibility of attack. The workers at the Bata shoe chain, for example, formed defence committees at every one of its 113 outlets:

“We’ve formed self-defence committees at every outlet to repel attacks. We’ve already had to face a number, particularly [at shops] in upper and middle-class neighborhoods. But we haven’t closed even for one day. We’re against this strike and when it comes to the crunch we’re not going to give in to anyone. Enough is enough.”

A worker from the Ready-Mix concrete plant succinctly summarizes the experience:

“We’ve got to thank the fascists for that anyway, for showing us that you can’t make a revolution by playing marbles. When there’s a problem, we workers have got to be in the front line. We’ve learned more in these few days than in all the previous two years.”



lessons from Maathai; lessons from cordones and Chilean people. where do they resonate? where might there be dissonance?

yes, we need to know how to do things. how to build and create, not only destroy, in the service of revolution.

and yet, how to “make it survive”?

are there some creative processes that we can do in periods of tumult — like running and defending factories, hospitals, and shoe stores — and others that require some amount of stability and spaciousness — like planting and tending to a tree, or healing from trauma?
American Dream
 
Posts: 19946
Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2007 4:56 pm
Location: Planet Earth
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Sun Jun 10, 2012 9:29 pm

The Problem With (Sex) Work

by PETER FRASE on MARCH 28, 2012

As I said in an earlier post, my essay in the forthcoming Jacobin is structured around a review of political theorist Kathi Weeks’ new book The Problem With Work. It’s a timely and interesting book that effectively ties together a number of my preoccupations: the critique of wage labor, the deconstruction of the work ethic, the demand for shorter hours, universal basic income, the politics of the non-reformist reform. More than most other writers on these topics, however, Weeks connects all of these issues to feminism.

One of the benefits of making this link, which I wasn’t able to cover in my essay, is that it gives you the analytical tools to understand sex work correctly. I’m continually enervated and depressed by the way Leftists will unthinkingly throw around stuff like this:

Image


Or, to take another example, there was the incident where some right-wing nut called Elizabeth Warren a “socialist whore” a few months ago. People whose politics I respect mostly treated that phrase as a bit of laughable word salad. But I’ve actually known a few socialist whores in my life, and they’re good comrades! And as I noted recently, the right-wing connection between the threat of socialism and the threat of loose sexual morality is not an arbitrary one.

I was talking recently to an old friend and former editor at the late, lamented $pread Magazine, and she noted that many sex worker rights activists have little experience even interacting with the traditional Left, so reluctant are most leftists to come anywhere near their issues. She also lamented the unfortunate state of the debate over sex work, which tends to be reduced to two equally inadequate positions: a patriarchal moralizing that treats sex work as a uniquely awful form of exploitation in which women can only ever be regarded as victims, and a panglossian libertarianism that revels in sex work as a source of independence and self-expression while glossing over its less glamorous aspects.

The first perspective produces legislative atrocities like the proposed New York City bill that would have penalized taxi drivers for transporting prostitutes. The second perspective can neglect the coercive and violent parts of the sex industry, which are real even if they tend to be misrepresented as the entirety of sex work. But the real problem with a lot of the more exuberant pro-sex work arguments and their anti-sex work counterparts is a bit more subtle: the issue with sex work is not the sex, it’s the work. As Canadian writer and sex worker Sarah M. puts it in an article at the rabble.ca website:

[T]o call sex work degrading, as if that’s news, is to deny that all jobs are degrading . . . Conversely, that these jobs are degrading doesn’t automatically make sex work empowering. It just makes it unexceptional. “Jobs” are degrading because capitalism is degrading, because waged work is degrading. . . . Sex workers don’t want to make prostitution “a job like any other.” It’s already our job. As long as welfare and minimum wage work, which are neither consistent nor sustainable, are the only other options, we will continue to do sex work — legally or illegally, in the open or hidden, safely or in dangerous places, depending on the other factors that determine how we do our work. Because work is about money.

The basic problem that afflicts many pro- and anti-sex work arguments is that they take for granted the desirability and legitimacy of wage labor in general. They are caught up in an ideology that says that work is supposed to be a source of meaning and dignity in life. They are therefore committed to either stigmatizing sex work as an illegitimate and particularly dehumanizing kind of work (if they oppose it) or endorsing it as being just as dignified and fulfilling as any other job (if they support it).


Continues at: http://jacobinmag.com/blog/2012/03/the- ... -sex-work/
American Dream
 
Posts: 19946
Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2007 4:56 pm
Location: Planet Earth
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Tue Jun 12, 2012 9:37 am

http://libcom.org/library/identity-poli ... erspective

Identity, politics, and anti-politics: a critical perspective

Image

A critique of identity politics from a queer, anarchist communist perspective, arguing that identity politics runs the risk of forming cross-class affinities between queers, women, and people of colour, and assimilating radical struggles into establishment politics. Originally published in Pink and Black Attack #4, 2010, and reproduced in Queer Ultraviolence - A Bash Back! Anthology available from Ardent Press.


Introduction

I am a _______________ who seeks the destruction of class society. That blank can be filled with a variety of words, from worker to queer to individual to mixed-race person to anarchist. What each of these terms has in common is that they each signify a certain identity. While identity politics have gained traction in both anarchist/radical scenes and society more generally, the very idea of identity politics is a problem. Identity politics, as a political force, seeks inclusion into the ruling classes, rather than acting as a revolutionary force for the destruction of class society. How ever, this does not mean we should dismiss identity or identity-based organizing and action. The institutions that create and enforce class society (capital, work, the state, police) rely on identities in their strategy of control, by attacking some identities and not others, or by pitting various identities at odds to compete for access to the privilege of acceptance by the dominant classes. In their use of repression based on identities, those in power also create affinity among the dominated. Let this be made clear: I do not contend that every person who identifies with or is identified by a particular social identity has a common experience. Similarly, I do not argue that these identities are anything other than socially constructed. However, I do argue that people who share an identity can find stronger affinity with others who share that identity. This is due to the ways that capitalism and the state enforce identities. While these identities are socially con structed, this does not lessen their importance or their reality. Indeed, it is critical in the struggle for total liberation to understand the ways identities are constructed to subjugate people.

The academics have been speaking for years of “the Other” as the most abstract identity, defined in opposition to the dominant forces. While this abstraction works in the most general comparisons of vari ous identities, it is in the specifici ties of distinct identities that affinities are built. A discussion of every socially-enforced identity would be impossible; instead, I will focus on an analysis of queer identity. Specifically, I will attempt to articulate an anti-assimilationist and anarchist/communist perspective on queer identity, with implications for other identities as well. This is a perspective critical of identity politics as well as a false unity under any one identity (citizen, human race, proletariat). It is critical of as similationist politics and practice, and perhaps most importantly, it is explicitly anti-state and anti-capitalist.

1: Social construction and social facts
To understand identity in the context of the present social order, one must understand the concept of social construction. This concept, in short, refers to the ways in which social institutions establish, regu late, and enforce various identities. One especially telling example is the way in which those labeled “insane” are then forced into institutions which serve only to reaffirm a supposed insanity. Homosexuality was once considered a mental dis order, after all.

The term socially constructed carries an unfortunate connotation, however. It is assumed that if an identity is socially constructed, then it differs in some way from a more authentic, natural identity. This assumption resembles religious dogma in that we are asked to accept an unchanging human nature as defined by someone else. In real ity, to say identity is a social construction means that identities are defined and en forced by social insti tutions such as govern ments and businesses. Thus, identity becomes social fact in the sense that it materially affects people. From queer-bashing to abortion bans, certain identities carry with them material disad vantages. From property rights to Jim Crow, certain identities carry with them material advantages. These identities are socially con structed, and thus become social facts. These inequalities are not expressions of some pre-existing natural order. Instead, the cause of these material inequalities can be traced to the socio-economic context in which they existed. This context is determined by the dominant social order, which continues to be that of capitalism and state power.

Not every act of discrimination or oppression, however, can be con­sidered a direct act of the state or capital. This is particularly true when one considers specific manifestations of patriarchy. Sexual assault and domestic violence are often considered interpersonal disputes, rather than having a larger meaning in the context of a deeply patriarchal social order. However, even if there is not an agent of the state or an agent of capital directly involved, one can not ignore the social framework which normalizes such behavior. One must only consider the fact that the institution of marriage was originally a property relation ship, and even until recent de cades rape was acceptable, as long as it was in the context of mar riage. This is not to say that perpetrators have any excuse. They still enforce the social system of patriarchy, despite (usually) not acting in an official capacity on behalf of the state or capital.

We can thus trace identity-based oppression to either the official business of state power and capitalism, or else to the power of the stat­ist, capitalist social order. The distinc tion, however, be comes academic. The problem clearly lies in this society, in the social order and the in­stitutions that create, maintain, and enforce it. Much as identity is social, so is the oppression around it: it is a result of human interactions, not any sort of higher power.

The term social con struction means also that identity is not fixed, but rather changes according to a variety of factors. Particularly, there exists a tension between those who benefit from inequality, and those who are oppressed by inequality. In the United States, this tension is demonstrated by the range of identity-liberation movements that have been active in the Unit ed States. With a few notable ex ceptions (women’s suffrage be ing one), identity-movements rose to prominence in the 1960s, as chants of black power, gay is good, and sisterhood is powerful became fixtures at demonstra tions and protests. These demon strations and conflicts were sites of struggle over what was meant when the terms black, gay, or woman were used. To be assigned any of these terms meant that one was not fully human, that there was a defect that nobody could correct. The Black Power, Queer Liberation, and Women’s Liberation movements contested the idea that people were to be defined by these identities and thus undeserving of equality. These contesta tions (as each movement was, to a large degree, fo cused only on one specific identity) meant that not only could political inequality be challenged, but also the very definitions of identity. In other words, people began to actively and consciously construct their identities and explore identity in relationship to the larger social structure.

The initial exploration of identity proved useful, providing a greater understanding of the ways in which domination and its specific manifestations (racism, sexism, homophobia) are connected to the state and capitalism. The 1960s were also years of resistance and uprising more generally. These events did not happen separately; instead, they were a part of a larger discontent with society as a whole. How ever, much as the energy of the 1960s was dissipat ed into the traditional, rigid forms of activism and managed dissent, so was the revolutionary potential of exploring identity.

Over time, these movements have left us with or ganizations such as the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), Human Rights Campaign (HRC), and National Organization for Women (NOW) as the self-proclaimed leaders in the struggle for equality under the law. However, what is interesting to note is that these organizations serve as explicitly political organiza tions, seeking political equality through political processes. These groups can thus be understood to engage in identity politics.

2: Identity Politics and Anti-Identity Politics
Given the political effectiveness of these organizations, their model has been emulated by oth ers seeking to reform the current socio-economic order. This has led to identity politics becoming a central part of the contemporary United States political order. This is especially true in the liberal reformist movement, where organizations such as the NAACP, HRC, and NOW are prominent. With their successes in political reform, they (and many other identity-politics organizations) have become embedded in the dominant political discourse. It is here that we encounter one of the main problems of identity politics: the groups which sought to challenge identity-based oppression have instead merely entered into a partnership with those who benefit from oppression. This partnership concerns the ability to define the political agenda for a certain identity. This is clearly demonstrated in the queer community by the HRC, with their push for hate crime laws, marriage, and military service. These demands show that the HRC has accepted the logic of and requested partnership in the government and the marketplace. Essentially, the HRC is fight ing for assimilation into, rather than the destruc tion of, a system that creates and enforces the very oppression they are allegedly struggling against.

However, even identity politics does not have unfettered power in the political mainstream. Even the appearance of altering power relations in this society is, to some, a threat. These reactionaries claim that identity politics seeks special rights for certain groups. This flawed logic rests on the idea that, since people are guaranteed equality under the Constitu­tion, then the problem of legal inequality is non-existent. Even if one accepts the logic of the state, the discrepancy between legal/political equality and social equality is telling.

Another reaction to the Left’s adoption of identity politics is the rise of hard-Right identity politics. This leads to absurdities such as men’s rights movements, white rights movements, and groups dedicated to preserving Christian culture and identity. One can see a connection between these two reactionary positions, despite their apparent contradictions. Each position represents a different tactic towards the same goal: maintaining a class-based society along with the homophobic, white-supremacist, and patriarchal structures that uphold it. This stands in contrast to identity politics, which seeks to mildly reform class society and its institutions.

In short, there today exists a tension between pro gressive identity politics and reactionary anti-identity politics. The failure of both rests in their reliance on the state and capitalism as basis for their vision of society. Both seek to better manage the present order. It is clear: there exists a subset of people in this society that benefit from the current social or der. These people include queer people, people of color, women, and every identity. Politicians, police, prison guards, landlords, and bosses: these are our enemies. They come in all forms.

It is equally clear that queer-bashers, rapists, and racists are similarly enemies of liberation. While in some cases these are not people with access to and the backing of institutional power, the violence they inflict is no less real or important. Indeed, their tactics are taken directly from the state, and uphold systems of control even after the formal powers of­ficially abandon them.

Identity is meaningful in that it marginalizes us in different ways, and the affinity that comes from similar or shared experiences is powerful. However, it must always be remembered that such affinity is rendered useless when it is integrated in a system of domination and control. Such affinity ought to be encouraged, as it strengthens our bonds to one another and promotes conflict with the social order, be it bombing police cars or expelling rapists from one’s community.

3: Identity Anti-Politics: One mixed-race queer’s perspective
A specific sort of affinity is generated between peo ple who are faced with similar oppression based on socially constructed identities. However, problems arise when this affinity is expanded to mean some thing else, such as an idea of racial unity or gender unity. Affinity cannot be reduced to mere identity: for example, simply because I am mixed-race does not mean I have affinity with all people of color. While we are likely to share similar experiences, merely having such experiences does not consti tute affinity. The question of “what constitutes af finity?” is a large one, and well beyond the scope of this work. What is clear, however, is the problem of identity politics to those of us who seek total libera tion.

By working within the political arena, identity-politicians work within accepted notions of power, change, and struggle. They become another lobby, another special interest that some politicians are beholden to while others rail against them. The people that constitute these identities are lost in all of this, become a voting bloc to be traded around rather than people.

This model fails us. Our lives are not political questions, positions to be taken, or votes to be won. We cannot be reduced into discrete categories of identity, each with its own set of lobbyists to win over the bourgeois politicians. This is the dead-end of assimilationism. This is the dead-end of politics. Rather than more politics, more money for lobby ist, and more ad campaigns, we need an end to the political process.

It is, after all, the politicians who had us criminalized or killed. It is the capitalists who make us work to survive, or sometimes keep us out of work. Why do we petition those who marginalize us for an end to our marginalization? They are interested in expanding their power over us, or at the least maintaining it. It is true that they occasionally allow moder­ate concessions, but these concessions should not pacify us. These concessions are not liberation, and sometimes they’re not even liberating. The expansion of marriage rights? Being allowed to fight in the military? These goals are useless because they are simply political goals; they seek to alter the way the political system functions.

The point is not to achieve equality by the political process. The point is to destroy the political process, and with it the apparatus that props up class society. This requires an anti-political outlook. Identity must be treated not as a political concept, but as a facet of our everyday lives. My experiences have convinced me that the current socio-economic or­der has to be destroyed. I find stronger affinity with other queer people because of my understanding of homophobia, but I will not vote for gay marriage. I find stronger affinity with other mixed-race people because of my understanding of racism, but I will not vote for harsher hate crime laws.

It is clear that, because identities shape our experiences, we cannot write off identity as unimportant. However, it is equally clear that we cannot afford to maintain the identities imposed upon us. Thus, an apparent contradiction arises between the necessity of recognizing socially constructed identity while simultaneously trying to destroy the class so ciety that enforces those identities. This contradic tion proves difficult, with a range of responses from a disregard for the destruction of class society to a disregard for identity, and many other arguments somewhere between these two positions. The problem is that there is no contradiction. Indeed, the former necessitates the latter. In order to destroy class society, an analysis of how it functions is critical. In short, we must know our enemy. However, it is important to avoid the pitfall of essentialism; it must always be understood that these identities are constructed by the larger socio-economic structure. The oppression that affects people with various identities is enforced by state power and the power of capital. Understanding this is generates a premise for solidarity, as those marginalized find affinity within their communities with those who face similar struggles. Additionally, the understanding of connections between one’s experience with identity and one’s experience with the larger socio-economic order allows for a solidarity that goes beyond any specific identity.

The importance of identity lies not in identity politics, but rather in the fact that identity is socially constructed by the dominant system in order to maintain capitalism and state power. In turn, the oppression that follows is an integral part of the social order as a whole, whether the violence is on an interpersonal, institutional, or structural level. Oppression also helps build affinity, through shared experiences or through shared struggle. Recognizing identity and identity-based oppression as social facts allows for stronger affinity, and the connections between one’s experiences and the larger social order similarly allows for a solidarity between people who want to abolish the state, abolish capitalism, and abolish the domination that both maintain over our lives. This abolition requires not political negotiation, but anti-political organizing and action.
American Dream
 
Posts: 19946
Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2007 4:56 pm
Location: Planet Earth
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Tue Jun 12, 2012 11:11 am

Written in response to "How to Date a Wall Street Man":


http://jacobinmag.com/blog/2012/02/how- ... continued/

How to Date a Wall Street Man (Continued)

by BRIAN THILL on FEBRUARY 9, 2012

11. Get involved with his extracurricular activities. It’s not all business deals and power lunches with a Wall Street man. Even he likes to let his hair down occasionally in his high-rise offices. The Wall Street man works in a very competitive, stressful environment, so when you find out that he and some of his other fellow Wall Street men are stepping away from watching Greek debt news to paste up “We Are the 1%” signs on the windows adjacent to their cramped cubicles, offer to help them with the lettering, tape, and glitter.

12. Be open to his mood swings. Even the most successful Wall Street man will flub a credit default swap now and then. He is only human after all. It is important to remember that when he does his job well, many lives elsewhere could be ruined, but when he does something wrong, there is a fair chance he will get a stern finger-wag from his superior, and will in those rare moments feel vulnerable and unloved. The Wall Street man will often try to hide this pain, but you should remain by his locked bathroom door for however long it takes to coax him back to his usual level of self-confidence.

13. The Wall Street man may occasionally chase after you with a chainsaw. Every relationship requires give and take, so it’s important to remember that you may find yourself in the company of a Wall Street man who intends to commit grievous bodily harm against you. Don’t get upset by this. If you make a point of asking him before dinner about his rare Hungarian knife collection, he may instead only describe their price and provenance to you, and leave them in their ivory case this time.

14. Avoid discussion of sensitive subjects. Like many men, Wall Street men tend to have certain “hot-button” issues that really set them off. These may have to do with “political” issues, but more often they involve one or another element of “finance” and markets, which he will explain to you are not explicitly “political” matters at all. This foaming rage should be seen as an indicator that he is, in his own way, a passionate man. Even so, your success with a Wall Street man will depend in large part on your ability to heed the warning signs and steer your conversation and ideas clear of anything that smacks of a controversial perspective on markets, debt, finance, monetary policy, IPOs, bond ratings, etc.

15. Be infinitely malleable. While the modern Wall Street man will certainly respect your time and interests (he may even find those things “sexy”), it is important to remember that he will be most interested in you if you make clear to him that you can accommodate his timetables, his way of thinking, and his sense of the power dynamics in the relationship. If he has strong feelings about why you should not purchase those particular kidskin gloves for your Aunt Margaret, whom he has never met, abide by his sage advice. This is, after all, what he does for a living. Both of you will be happier when you allow him to dictate the terms of your relationship.

16. Comment on his body. You are probably attracted to Wall Street men because of their piercing intellect, and you are drawn to the Wall Street man’s ability to think and act rationally and with wisdom in all circumstances. But there’s so much more to him than that! The Wall Street man looks upon the eternal infallibility and permanence of the market and realizes that he must become perfect and eternal himself. This is why he tends to eat healthy foods, exercise frequently, and give a great deal of attention to his personal health and appearance. Comment on his abs, his single chin, or—better yet—those underappreciated lats and delts. You’ll be glad you did.

17. Remember the good times. Because the ego of the Wall Street man is so intimately connected to his profession and the material successes it affords him, you may find yourself at some point in a potentially delicate situation. Though he will seldom if ever speak of it, the Wall Street man is aware in some dark part of himself that the whole thing has collapsed before, and may yet again. Through an elaborate series of maneuvers he has endeavored to keep this truth at bay, but if some bizarre extraterrestrial force or government policy somehow destroys the markets and his life, you’ll have a much better chance of survival if you can remember the good times, when there were seven cars to choose from and a working refrigerator.

18. Tuck a little something away. The Wall Street man spends every day agonizing and strategizing over every tiny shift in the global market. Every modified share price estimate, every hiccup in commodities futures, every incremental movement of the Euro (while it exists) to the dollar is scrupulously studied. But when it comes to down time with his lady, he prides himself on doing precisely the opposite. He is delighted to “lose track” of how much you’ve spent on reupholstering or quick trips to Bimini, or at least to act as if he doesn’t care. In either case, you should take advantage of this to set aside a little something for a rainy day. After all, with all of the modern stresses of dating a Wall Street man, you’ve earned it!

19. Keep him on his toes. It’s important to spice things up now and again, but just make sure to do it tactfully and with great care. Invite your morose college friend to join you for drinks. Provide false directions to a new restaurant so that you can glimpse a new neighborhood and its slightly sinister inhabitants before a quick course-correction. Turn to another news channel, feigning a problem with the remote control. The Wall Street man may not see the immediate value in these acts of creative destruction, but trust me, ladies, he will profit from it in one way or another.

20. Coat yourself in dragon’s blood. Hang a shroud over every mirror in the palace. Research the latest wine-storage innovations and stare at the gathering clouds on the horizon. Fondle the unused cufflinks. Bring home something from the butcher that still appears animal. With this app you can track the compound interest on your savings in real time. Drown your suspicions with heavy doses of Pilates and rooftop gardening, and be thankful for everything you’ve achieved.
American Dream
 
Posts: 19946
Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2007 4:56 pm
Location: Planet Earth
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Tue Jun 12, 2012 1:39 pm

http://libcom.org/library/multicultural ... enan-malik

Multiculturalism undermines diversity - Kenan Malik

Kenan Malik distinguishes between the positive lived experience of a multicultural society, and multicultural state policies which foster division.


Image

‘Has multiculturalism been good or bad for Britain?’ It’s a question to which the answers have become increasingly polarised in recent years. For some, multiculturalism expresses the essence of a modern, liberal society. For others, it has helped create an anxious, fragmented nation.

Part of the difficulty with this debate is that both sides confuse the lived experience of diversity, on the one hand, with multiculturalism as a political process, on the other. The experience of living in a society transformed by mass immigration, a society that is less insular, more vibrant and more cosmopolitan, is positive.

As a political process, however, multiculturalism means something very different. It describes a set of policies, the aim of which is to manage diversity by putting people into ethnic boxes, defining individual needs and rights by virtue of the boxes into which people are put, and using those boxes to shape public policy. It is a case, not for open borders and minds, but for the policing of borders, whether physical, cultural or imaginative.

The conflation of lived experience and political policy has proved highly invidious. On the one hand, it has allowed many on the right – and not just on the right - to blame mass immigration for the failures of social policy and to turn minorities into the problem. On the other hand, it has forced many traditional liberals and radicals to abandon classical notions of liberty, such as an attachment to free speech, in the name of defending diversity.

The irony of multiculturalism as a political process is that it undermines much of what is valuable about diversity as lived experience. When we talk about diversity, what we mean is that the world is a messy place, full of clashes and conflicts. That’s all for the good, for such clashes and conflicts are the stuff of political and cultural engagement.

But the very thing that’s valuable about diversity – the clashes and conflicts that it brings about – is the very thing that worries many multiculturalists. They seek to minimise such conflicts by parceling people up into neat ethnic boxes, and policing the boundaries of those boxes in the name of tolerance and respect. Far from minimising conflict what this does is generate a new set of more destructive, less resolvable conflicts.

To say that clashes and conflicts can be good does not mean, of course, that every clash and conflict is a good. Political conflicts are often useful because they repose social problems in a way that asks: ‘How can we change society to overcome that problem?’ We might disagree on the answer, but the debate itself is a useful one.

Multiculturalism, on the other hand, by reposing political problems in terms of culture or faith, transforms political conflicts into a form that makes them neither useful nor resolvable. Rather than ask, for instance, ‘What are the social roots of racism and what structural changes are required to combat it?’, it demands recognition for one’s particular identity, public affirmation of one’s cultural difference and respect for one’s cultural and faith beliefs.

Multicultural policies have come to be seen as a means of empowering minority communities and giving them a voice. In reality such policies have empowered not individuals but ‘community leaders’ who owe their position and influence largely to their relationship with the state. Multicultural policies tend to treat minority communities as homogenous wholes, ignoring class, religious, gender and other differences, and leaving many within those communities feeling misrepresented and, indeed, disenfranchised.

As well as ignoring conflicts within minority communities, multicultural policies have often created conflicts between them. In allocating political power and financial resources according to ethnicity, such policies have forced people to identify themselves in terms of those ethnicities, and those ethnicities alone, inevitably setting off one group against another.

The logical end point of such policies came with Communities Minister John Denham’s announcement last year of £12m for white working class communities. There are clearly many working class, predominantly white, communities crying out for resources, not because they are white, because they have been politically and financially abandoned over the past decade.

Denham’s £12m will, however, do little to solve any of the structural problems facing such communities, such as a lack of jobs and social housing. What it will do is reinforce the idea that whites have an identity, and a set of interests, that is distinct from the identity and interests of other groups.

The aim of Denham’s policy is clearly to ward off the BNP in areas such Barking and Dagenham in East London. Its consequence, however, will be to feed the BNP’s own pursuit of white identity, and to legitimise the idea that such identity needs privileging. And that is perhaps the biggest indictment of multicultural policies: they have helped turn racism into another form of cultural identity.

To challenge all this, we need to separate the debate about immigration and diversity, on the one hand, from that about multiculturalism, on the other, and defend the one, but oppose the other. The lived experience of diversity has been good for Britain. Multiculturalism has been bad.
American Dream
 
Posts: 19946
Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2007 4:56 pm
Location: Planet Earth
Blog: View Blog (0)

PreviousNext

Return to Data & Research Compilations

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests