Economic Aspects of "Love"

Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff

Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Sun Sep 11, 2011 1:22 am

Eros and Civilization]

1974 Beacon Press edition
Author(s) Herbert Marcuse
Original title Eros and Civilization: A Philosophical Inquiry into Freud

Eros and Civilization is one of German philosopher and social critic Herbert Marcuse's best known works. Written in 1955, it is a synthesis of Karl Marx and Sigmund Freud. Its title alludes to Freud's Civilization and Its Discontents. Marcuse's vision of a non-repressive society, based on Marx and Freud, anticipated the values of 1960s countercultural social movements.

Eros and Civilization discusses the social meaning of biology - history seen not as a class struggle, but a fight against repression of our instincts. It argues that "advanced industrial society" (modern capitalism) is preventing us from reaching a non-repressive society "based on a fundamentally different experience of being, a fundamentally different relation between man and nature, and fundamentally different existential relations". It contends that Freud's argument that repression is needed by civilization to persist is mistaken, as Eros is liberating and constructive.

Marcuse starts with the conflict described by Freud in Civilization and Its Discontents - the struggle between human instincts and the conscience of repression (superego), which is self-repressing trying to follow the society's mores and norms Freud claimed that a clash between Eros and civilization results in the history of humanity being one of his repression: 'Our civilization is, generally speaking, founded on the suppression of instincts.' Sex produces the energy, and it is repressed so the energy can be channeled into progress - but the price of progress is the prevalence of guilt instead of happiness."Progress", for Marcuse, is a concept that provides the explanation and excuse of why the system has to continue; it is the reason which requires the happiness of people is sacrificed (see also pleasure principle).

Marcuse argues that 'the irreconcilable conflict is not between work (reality principle - life without leisure) and Eros (pleasure principle - leisure and pleasure), but between alienated labour (performance principle - economic stratification) and Eros.' Sex is allowed for 'the betters' (capitalists...), and for workers only when not disturbing performance. Marcuse believes that a socialist society could be a society without needing the performance of the 'poor' and without as strong a suppression of our sexual drives: it could replace 'alienated labor' with "non-alienated libidinal work" resulting in "a non-repressive civilization based on 'non-repressive sublimation'".

The argument depends on the assumption that instincts can be shaped by historical phenomena such as repression. Marcuse concludes that our society's troubles result not from biological repression itself but from its increase due to "surplus repression" which is the result of contemporary society. The result is a philosophy that is a merger of Freud and Marx, or what one reviewer called an 'eroticized Marx'.





.
Last edited by American Dream on Sun Sep 11, 2011 9:22 am, edited 1 time in total.
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 Sep 11, 2011 2:02 am

Herbert Marcuse > Quotes

Image



"Free election of masters does not abolish the masters or the slaves."
— Herbert Marcuse


"The means of communication, the irresistible output of the entertainment and information industry carry with them prescribed attitudes and habits, certain intellectual and emotional reactions which bind the consumers to the producers and, through the latter to the whole social system. The products indoctrinate and manipulate; they promote a false consciousness which is immune against its falsehood...Thus emerges a pattern of one-dimensional thought and behavior."
— Herbert Marcuse


"Art breaks open a dimension inaccessible to other experience, a dimension in which human beings, nature, and things no longer stand under the law of the established reality principle...The encounter with the truth of art happens in the estranging language and images which make perceptible, visible, and audible that which is no longer, or not yet, perceived, said, and heard in everyday life."
— Herbert Marcuse


"The truth of art lies in its power to break the monopoly of established reality to define what is real."
— Herbert Marcuse


"Under conditions of a truly human existence, the difference between succumbing to disease at the age of ten, thirty, fifty, or seventy, and dying a "natural" death after a fulfilled life, may well be a difference worth fighting for with all instinctual energy. Not those who die, but those who die before they must and want to die, those who die in agony and pain, are the great indictment against civilization. They also testify to the unredeemable guilt of mankind. Their death arouses the painful awareness that it was unnecessary, that it could be otherwise. It takes all the institutions and values of a repressive order to pacify the bad conscience of this guilt. Once again, the deep connection between the death instinct and the sense of guilt becomes apparent. The silent "professional agreement" with the fact of death and disease is perhaps one of the most widespread expressions of the death instinct -- or, rather, of its social usefulness. In a repressive civilization, death itself becomes an instrument of repression. Whether death is feared as constant threat, or glorified as supreme sacrifice, or accepted as fate, the education for consent to death introduces an element of surrender into life from the beginning -- surrender and submission. It stifles "utopian" efforts. The powers that be have a deep affinity to death; death is a token of unfreedom, of defeat. Theology and philosophy today compete with each other in celebrating death as an existential category: perverting a biological fact into an ontological essence, they bestow transcendental blessing on the guilt of mankind which they help to perpetuate -- they betray the promise of utopia."
— Herbert Marcuse (Eros and Civilization: A Philosophical Inquiry into Freud)


"The so-called consumer society and the politics of corporate capitalism have created a second nature of man which ties him libidinally and aggressively to the commodity form. The need for possessing, consuming, handling and constantly renewing the gadgets, devices, instruments, engines, offered to and imposed upon the people, for using these wares even at the danger of one’s own destruction, has become a “biological” need."
— Herbert Marcuse


"Inasmuch as art preserves, with the promise of happiness, the memory of the goal that failed, it can enter, as a 'regulative idea,' the desperate struggle for changing the world. Against all fetishism of the productive forces, against the continued enslavement of individuals by the objective conditions (which remain those of domination), art represents the ultimate goal of all revolutions: the freedom and happiness of the individual."
— Herbert Marcuse (The Aesthetic Dimension: Toward a Critique of Marxist Aesthetics)


"If the worker and his boss enjoy the same television program and visit the same resort places, if the typist is as attractively made up as the daughter of her employer, if the Negro owns a Cadillac, if they all read the same newspaper, then this assimilation indicates not the disappearance of classes, but the extent to which the needs and satisfactions that serve the preservation of the Establishment are shared by the underlying population."
— Herbert Marcuse (One-dimensional Man: Studies in the Ideology of Advanced Industrial Society)


"Not every problem someone has with his girlfriend is necessarily due to the capitalist mode of production."
— Herbert Marcuse


"The strains and stresses suffered by the individual in society are grounded in the normal functioning of that society (and of the individual!) rather than in its disturbances and diseases."
— Herbert Marcuse


"By virtue of the way it has organized its technological base, contemporary industrial society tends to be totalitarian. For "totalitarian" is not only a terroristic political coordination of society, but also a non-terroristic economic-technical coordination which operates through the manipulation of needs by vested interests."
— Herbert Marcuse (One-Dimensional Man: Studies in the Ideology of Advanced Industrial Society)


"The people that once bestowed commands, consulships, legions, and all else, now concerns itself no more, and longs eagerly for just two things: bread and circuses!"
— Herbert Marcuse


"The intellectual is called on the carpet... Don't you conceal something? You talk a language which is suspect. You don't talk like the rest of us, like the man in the street, but rather like a foreigner who does not belong here. We have to cut you down to size, expose your tricks, purge you."
— Herbert Marcuse
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 Sep 11, 2011 7:23 pm

.

Image

Mumbo Jumbo

Mumbo Jumbo is a 1972 novel by African-American author Ishmael Reed. Literary critic Harold Bloom cited the novel as one of the 500 most important books in the Western canon.

Text

Set in 1920s New York City, the novel depicts the struggles of "The Wallflower Order," an international conspiracy dedicated to monotheism and control, against the "Jes Grew" virus, a personification of ragtime, jazz, polytheism, and freedom. The Wallflower Order is said to work in concert with the Knights Templar Order to prevent people from dancing, to end the dance crazes spreading among black people (who are referred to in the novel as "Jes Grew Carriers" or "J.G.C.s").

Historical, social, and political events mingle freely with fictional inventions. The United States' occupation of Haiti, attempts by whites to suppress jazz music, and the widespread belief that president Warren Harding had black ancestry are mingled with a plot in which the novel's hero, an elderly Harlem houngan named PaPa LaBas, searches for a mysterious book that has disappeared with black militant Abdul Sufi Hamid (whose name reflects that of the Harlem streetcorner radical preacher Sufi Abdul Hamid, a.k.a Eugene Brown, an early black convert to Islam), as a group of radicals plans to return museum treasures looted from ancient Egypt to Africa, and the Atonists within the Wallflower Order are trying to locate and train the perfect "Talking Android," a black man who will renounce African American culture in favor of European American culture. One of the supporting characters, an ally of Papa La Bas, is Black Herman (Bejamin Rucker, 1892-1934), an actual African-American stage magician and root doctor. Another touch of realism is the inclusion of a mysterious ocean liner that is part of the Black Star Line, a shipping line incorporated by Marcus Garvey, who organized the United Negro Improvement Association. Portions of the action take place at the "Villa Lewaro" mansion built by Madame C. J. Walker overlooking the Hudson River and at the Harlem townhouse of her daughter A'Lelia Walker, known as "The Dark Tower", located at 136th Street near Lenox Avenue. Other famous people who appear in the novel include the dance instructor Irene Castle, and the Harlem renaissance authors James Weldon Johnson, Claude McKay, Wallace Thurman, Countee Cullen, W. E. B. DuBois, and a veiled reference to Malcolm X.

Background

Mumbo Jumbo draws freely on conspiracy theory, hoodoo, and voodoo traditions, as well as the Afrocentric theories of Garvey and the occult author Henri Gamache, especially Gamache's theory that the Biblical prophet Moses was black. The book's title is explained by a quote from the first edition of the American Heritage Dictionary deriving the phrase from Mandingo mā-mā-gyo-mbō meaning a "magician who makes the troubled spirits of ancestors go away."

MUMBO JUMBO by Ishmael Reed

Duke Ellington writes in his libretto to “The Drum is a Woman:”

Rhythm came from Africa to America.
Do you know what it does to you?
Exactly what it’s supposed to do.


The narrative of Mumbo Jumbo concerns itself with the ‘Jes Grew plague’ that sweeps the nation, putting the roar into the ‘Roaring 20’s,’ that giddy time when all the buttoned-up conceptions of the staid pre-war Western World came undone all at once, with a soundtrack of Ragtime. When asked about the origins of the sudden explosion of Ragtime music and dance, an unnamed witness shrugged and said “It jes grew!”

“The Jes Grew epidemic was unlike physical plagues. Actually Jes Grew was an anti-plague. Some plagues caused the body to waste away; Jes Grew enlivened the host. Other plagues were accompanied by bad air (malaria). Jes Grew victims said that the air was as clear as they had ever seen it and that there was the aroma of roses and perfumes which had never before enticed their nostrils. Some plagues arise from decomposing animals, but Jes Grew is electric as life and is characterized by ebullience and ecstasy. Terrible plagues were due to the wrath of God; but Jes Grew is the delight of the gods.” (6)

Needless to say, this alarming outbreak had to be put down, and quick. The forces of decency and sobriety and ‘Western Civilization’ turn to the Knights Templar to lead the covert countercharge. PaPa LaBas, a Harlem Houngan Voodoo Priest and proprietor of the Mumbo Jumbo Cathedral, foils them at every step. The protracted occupationn of Haiti by the U.S. during this period also plays an important part in the story.

At the surface of the narrative is a fast-paced comic thriller. But at its center is a brilliant and mischievous retelling of the suppression of humankind’s seed spiritual tradition from Africa, and the irony that slavery brought that sleeping serpent across the ocean and awakened her in new and surprising ways.

Ishmael Reed and the Psychic Epidemic
June 19, 2011


Image
“In times of social turblulence men like you abandon reason
and fall back on Mumbo Jumbo.”


“I was there,” PaPa LaBas declares, “a private eye practicing in my Neo-HooDoo therapy center named by my critics Mumbo Jumbo Kathedral….I was a jacklegged detective of the metaphysical who was on the case, and in 1920 there was a crucial case.”

Published in 1972, Ishmael Reed’s novel Mumbo Jumbo triangulates between New Orleans, New York City, and Haiti, with a long excursion into the mythology and history of ancient Egypt. Reed (born in 1938) takes aim at white cultural superiority and white cultural entitlement. As the novel opens, a “psychic epidemic” called Jes Grew is sweeping through the American South, headed toward New York. Originally a reference to the ragtime music of Scott Joplin and others (music that “jes’ grew”), Reed’s Jes Grew is an umbrella for all types of African-based art, including jazz, blues, and popular dances like the Cakewalk, along with the work of black painters and black writers.

Jes Grew, the Something or Other that led Charlie Parker to scale the Everests of the Chord. Riff fly skid dip soar and gave his Alto Godspeed. Jes Grew that touched John Coltrane’s Tenor; that tinged the voice of Otis Redding…

At the risk of gravely oversimplifying matters, Mumbo Jumbo is cast as an eternal struggle between Apollonian and Dionysian forces, between the empirical and the occult. It posits a lifeless, fearful white culture, based upon “the Classics, the achievements of mankind which began in Greece,” ruthlessly dominating a vibrant and sensual black culture originating in the northern Africa of ancient Egypt. In one of the book’s more amusing digressions, a small group of devotees make plans to liberate all non-Western art from American and European museums and repatriate the objects to their original countries. (The Metropolitan Museum of Art is referred to as the Center for Art Detention because of all the non-white art held in captivity there.) But just as Jes Grew threatens to overtake New York and the entire nation in with its contagious rhythm, a mysterious group called the Wallflower Order, descended from the Knights Templar, arises to defend white civilization against “the black tide of mud,” as Freud called such occultism.

Image

Unfortunately, Jes Grew is lacking the one element required for its continued survival: a crucial text written in ancient Egypt, handed down through the ages, and now missing. PaPa LaBas’ job is to find this Text before Jes Grew is once again suppressed by the white man. His Grail-like search ultimately points to the Text being hidden beneath the dance floor of Harlem’s famous Cotton Club, but by the end of the novel we learn that the Text has been maliciously burned by its last owner.

Is this the end of Jes Grew?
Jes Grew has no end and no beginning. It even precedes that little ball that exploded 1000000000s of years ago and led to what we are now. Jes Grew may even have caused the ball to explode. We will miss it for a while but it will come back, and when it returns we will see that it never left. You see, life will never end; there really is no end to life, if anything goes it will be death. Jes Grew is life.


Image
George Herriman, frame from Krazy Kat
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 Sep 11, 2011 7:56 pm

Kinda long and the music is variable
but I like the first couple of segments especially...


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 Sep 11, 2011 9:35 pm

http://www.babylonisburning.net/?p=316

Babylon Is
Burning

. . . a radar screen for paranormal phenomena in
teaching, learning, and higher education



Notes on a Political History of the Zombie (Part 1)
Posted on April 4th, 2011

Image

The birth of the zombie in U.S. mass culture begins with White Zombie, the 1932 movie featuring Bela Lugosi. Lugosi plays a zombifier named “Murder Legendre” (a moniker full of grammatological possibilities). By 1932, American cinema had begun a serious romance with the monster movie: Dracula with Lon Chaney, Sr., had appeared in 1930; Boris Karloff would feature as Frankenstein’s monster in 1931; and, a year after White Zombie, King Kong would swing on the Empire State Building, Manhattan’s most famous avatar of the now-imploded Art Deco 1920s. The monster movie’s popularity in the early 1930s – - one of the most chaotic and anxious moments in the nation’s history – - parallels the rise of the gangster movie and, in another medium, the emergence of the proletarian novel, each engrossed with the power and violence of social difference.

The genealogy of the zombie in American mass culture extends, however, a tad bit beyond 1932. The concept of the “zombie” – - a malevolently resurrected corpse – - traveled across the Atlantic with enslaved Africans. ‘Though relatively obscure in the U.S., the zombie became a common folkloric motif across the Caribbean.

The etymology of “zombie” is confused: it derives either from African languages or, as Elsie Clews Parsons, an American feminist and anthropologist, conjectured in 1928, from a pidginization of “les ombres,” French for “the shadows.” In either case, like its referent, the word bears testament to a long history of linguistic and cultural creolization.

Image

Parsons’ article, appearing in a French journal of American Studies, marks also the first appearance of the “zombie” in the official discourse of folklore and anthropology. What Parsons notes, most interestingly, is the notion of the zombie as a nightmarish recurrence of slavery: ”Stories in my note books tell what happens when you appeal to the ganga to kill somebody in order to enslave his spirit to you or make him a zombi (“fai” zombi) to work for you. . . In one story the zombi becomes a gardener. Night and day he works for his master, and he catches pilferers.”

In Haitian folklore, the zombie is a human reduced to pure labor. Recall, also, that the first actual zombies we see in White Zombie are workers in Legendre’s sugar mill – - shuffling silently forward to dump baskets of cane into the mill’s grindstone. Amidst the strikes, evictions, marches, and riots of the early 1930s, it’s not too far-fetched to see the movie’s zombies as part of an emerging, national-populist drama: the zombie master who reduces humans to abject bodies and labor is a capitalist, evil and european-accented to boot! From the factory-owner’s perspective, zombies are the perfect workers; they labor without protest, without food, without rest. The message to proletarian viewers is slightly different, if no less true: capitalism wants to kill us!

Image

Labor, enslavement, exploitation: these are some key of the contexts for the folkloric zombie.

But, the arrival of the zombie in anthropology and cinema depends on one other central context. In 1915, United States troops invaded and occupied Haiti. The American government commandeered Haiti’s central bank and customs houses, diverting close to half of the national income to American and French interests. Resistance to American occupation was, for several years, fierce and widespread: 2,000 Haitians were killed in one general uprising in 1918. In response, the American military built concentration camps and rebuilt Haiti’s roads to improve military communication and transport. The occupation lasted until 1934, when the newly-elected F.D.R. pulled out the last U.S. Marine.

For 20 years, however, American soldiers, civilians, businessmen, and other factotums of the occupation came into direct and indirect contract with Haitian culture. The occupation opened up a cultural conduit between white America and black Caribbean folk culture – - an exchange exhaustively riffed in Ishmael Reed’s 1972 novel, Mumbo Jumbo. One of Reed’s characters lies in the bathtub reading and reflecting on the day’s New York Sun: ”What was this about doughboy zombies? The tabs were becoming outrageous . . . Recently 1 of the reports had sneaked into a big house chamber and emerged with a picture of a woman undergoing execution – - ghastly but fun. The picture showed a zombie Marine surrounded by men in white coats.” Voudou, houngans, loas, and zombies – - all of these forces, unleashed by the U.S. occupation, feed the “Jes Grew” virus, Reed’s metaphor for the black expressivity, incarnated in the novel as jazz, that threatens to over-run white America and its repressed, protestant culture.

Image

Reed’s novelistic imagining of the afro-diasporic role in U.S. mass culture is not just fictional. A bit of data mining reveals that “zombie” (or its variant – - “zombi”) only starts appearing in U.S. books around 1920, shortly after the U.S. occupation. ”Zombie” really starts taking off in the early 1930s – - probably thanks in part to White Zombie and its several 1930s and 40s Hollywood successors.

Image

Thus, the U.S. occupation of Haiti adds another important context to the popular cultural birth of the zombie: imperialism and the attendant cultural flows (and racialized anxieties) set in motion by the violent engagement between the U.S. and Haiti.

In a decade, the 1930s, of wide and deep struggle against American capitalism (from the general strikes that rocked San Francisco, Minneapolis, and Toledo in 1934 to birth of the United Auto Workers and beyond), the zombie joined an army of monsters (ranging from Kong to Dillinger) that fascinated Americans, each serving as a figure of fear and fascination, each embodying an unstable amalgam of rage and desire. In the 1930s, Legendre’s slaves were on the march . . . their shouts filled the streets of Detroit, Union Square in New York City, and the fields of California’s Central Valley.



How to explain, then, the resurgence of enslaved, mindless bodies on today’s movie, television, and computer screens? Our two historical contexts – - labor and imperialism – - should prove crucial to understanding our current fascination with the zombie. One major shift in the zombie genre – - the figure of the zombie master and his enchanted slaves giving way to the terror of swarming and endlessly multiplying, out-of-control zombies – - underscores the genealogy of zombies and capitalism even as it disrupts and complicates this relation. The “many-headed Hydra” of zombie power re-emerges under new conditions and within new struggles . . . .
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 Sep 11, 2011 9:44 pm

Image
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 Sep 11, 2011 10:45 pm

http://www.anarchiststudies.org/node/313

Between Infoshops and Insurrection

U.S. Anarchism, Movement Building, and the Racial Order

By Joel Olson


This is a slightly revised version of a chapter from the new book Contemporary Anarchist Studies, edited by Randall Amster, Luis Fernandez, etc. (Routledge 2009). Joel Olson teaches political theory at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff and has been around anarchist circles in the United States for many years.



Anarchism has always had a hard time dealing with race. In its classical era from the time of Proudhon in the 1840s to Goldman in the 1930s, it sought to inspire the working class to rise up against the church, the state, and capitalism. This focus on “god, government, and gold” was revolutionary, but it didn’t quite know how to confront the racial order in the United States. Most U.S. anarchist organizations and activists opposed racism in principle, but they tended to assume that it was a byproduct of class exploitation. That is, they thought that racism was a tool the bosses used to divide the working class, a tool that would disappear once capitalism was abolished. They appealed for racial unity against the bosses but they never analyzed white supremacy as a relatively autonomous form of power in its own right.

Unfortunately, contemporary anarchism (which dates roughly from Bookchin to Zerzan) has not done much better. It has expanded the classical era’s critique of class domination to a critique of hierarchy and all forms of oppression, including race. Yet with a few exceptions, the contemporary American anarchist scene still has not analyzed race as a form of power in its own right, or as a potential source of solidarity. As a consequence, anarchism remains a largely white ideology in the U.S.

Despite this troublesome tradition, I argue that anarchist theory has the intellectual resources to develop a powerful theory of racial oppression as well as strategies to fight it, but first it must confront two obstacles placed in front of it by the contemporary American anarchist scene. First, it must overcome an analysis of white supremacy that understands racism as but one “hierarchy” among others. Racial oppression is not simply one of many forms of domination; it has played a central role in the development of capitalism in the United States. As a result, struggles against racial oppression have a strategic centrality that other struggles lack.

Second, it must reject the current U.S. anarchist scene’s “infoshops or insurrection” approach to politics and instead focus on movement building. Organizing working class movements, which was so central to the classical anarchist tradition, has given way to creating “autonomous zones” like infoshops, art spaces, affinity groups, and collectives on the one hand, and glorifying protests, riots, and sabotage on the other. But in the infoshops and insurrection approaches, the vital work of building movements falls through the middle.

In a class society, politics is fundamentally a struggle for hegemony, or a struggle to define what Antonio Gramsci calls the “common sense” of a society. In the United States, white supremacy has been the central means of maintaining capitalism as “common sense.” Building mass movements against the racial order, then, is the way in which a new hegemony, an “anarchist common sense,” can be created. But in building that common sense, I argue that contemporary American anarchism should look less toward Europe and more toward the struggles of peoples of color in their own back yard for historical lessons and inspiration.

Hierarchy, hegemony, and white supremacy

The intellectual framework of most of contemporary American anarchism rests on a critique of hierarchy. Murray Bookchin, perhaps the most important theorist of the concept, defines hierarchy as “a complex system of command and obedience in which elites enjoy varying degrees of control over their subordinates” (Bookchin 1982, 4). Capitalism, organized religion, and the state are important forms of hierarchy, but the concept includes other relations of domination such as of “the young by the old, of women by men, of one ethnic group by another, of ‘masses’ by bureaucrats, … of countryside by town, and in a more subtle psychological sense, of body by mind, of spirit by a shallow instrumental rationality, and of nature by society and technology” (4). Hierarchy pervades our social relations and reaches into our psyche, thereby “percolating into virtually every realm of experience” (63). The critique of hierarchy, Bookchin argues, is more expansive and radical than the Marxist critique of capitalism or the classical anarchist critique of the state because it “poses the need to alter every thread of the social fabric, including the way we experience reality, before we can truly live in harmony with each other and with the natural world” (Bookchin 1986, 22-23).

This analysis of hierarchy broadened contemporary anarchism into a critique of all forms of oppression, including capitalism, the state, organized religion, patriarchy, heterosexism, anthropocentrism, racism, and more. The political task of contemporary anarchism, then, is to attack all forms of oppression, not just a “main” one like capitalism or the state, because without an attack on hierarchy itself, other forms of oppression will not necessarily wither away after the “main” one has been destroyed.[1]

This critique of what is sometimes called “class reductionism” is powerful, for while patriarchy is surely connected to capitalism, for example, it can hardly be reduced to it. Despite this advantage, however, the anarchist critique of all forms of oppression fails to distinguish among those forms of oppression that have been more significant than others to the structuring of U.S. society. In other words, the critique of hierarchy in general lacks the ability to explain how various forms of hierarchy are themselves hierarchically organized. It correctly insists that no one form of oppression is morally “worse” than another. But this does not mean that all forms of oppression play an equal role in shaping the social structure. The American state, for example, was not built on animal cruelty or child abuse, however pervasive and heinous these forms of domination are. Rather, as I will argue below, it was built on white supremacy, which has shaped nearly every other form of oppression in the United States, including class, gender, religion, and the state (and animal cruelty and child abuse). Understanding white supremacy should therefore be central to any American anarchist theory, and developing political programs to fight it should be a central component of anarchist strategy, even if racism is not morally “more evil” than another forms of oppression.

The critique of hierarchy, in other words, confuses a moral condemnation of all forms of oppression with a political and strategic analysis of how power functions in the United States. It resists the notion that in certain historical contexts, certain forms of hierarchy play a more central role in shaping society than do others. It assumes that because all forms of oppression are evil and interconnected that fighting any form of oppression will have the same revolutionary impact. For this reason, it assumes that there is no more need to fight racial discrimination than, say, vivisection, since both are equally evil and interconnected forms of domination.

But as the great theorist W.E.B. Du Bois shows in his classic Black Reconstruction, the primary reason for the failure of the development of a significant anti-capitalist movement in the United States is white supremacy. Rather than uniting with Black workers to overthrow the ruling class and build a new society, as classical anarchist and communist theory predicts, white workers throughout American history have chosen to side with capital. Through a tacit but nonetheless real agreement, the white working class ensures the continuous and relatively undisturbed accumulation of capital by policing the rest of the working class rather than uniting with it. In exchange, white workers receive racial privileges, largely paid for by capitalists and guaranteed by the democratic political system. Du Bois calls these privileges “the public and psychological wages” of whiteness:

"It must be remembered that the white group of laborers, while they received a low wage, were compensated in part by a sort of public and psychological wage. They were given public deference and titles of courtesy because they were white. They were admitted freely with all classes of white people to public functions, public parks, and the best schools. The police were drawn from their ranks, and the courts, dependent upon their votes, treated them with such leniency as to encourage lawlessness. Their vote selected public officials, and while this had small effect upon the economic situation, it had great effect upon their personal treatment and the deference shown them." (Pp. 700-701)

At the time of the publication of Black Reconstruction in 1935, these “wages” included the right to vote, exclusive access to the best jobs, an expectation of higher wages and better benefits, the capacity to sit on juries, the right to enjoy public accommodations, and the right to consider oneself the equal of any other. Today they include, in part, the right to the lowest mortgage rates, the right to decent treatment by the police, the right to feel relatively immune from criminal prosecution, the right to assumes one’s success is due entirely to one’s own effort, the right to declare that institutionalized racial discrimination is over, and the right to be a full citizen in a liberal democratic state. These wages undermine class-consciousness among those who receive them because they create an interest in and expectation of favored treatment within the capitalist system rather than outside of it.

The racial order in the United States, then, is essentially a cross-class alliance between capital and one section of the working class. (I make this argument in detail in my book The Abolition of White Democracy). The group that makes up this alliance is defined as “white.” It acts like a club: its members enjoy certain privileges, so that the poorest, most wretched members share, in certain respects, a status higher than that of the most esteemed persons excluded from it (Ignatiev and Garvey 1996). Membership in the white “club” is dynamic and determined by existing membership. Richard Wright once said, “Negroes are Negroes because they are treated like Negroes” (Wright 1957, 148). Similarly, whites are whites because they are treated like whites. The treatment one receives in a racial order defines one’s race rather than the other way around: you are not privileged because you are white; you are white because you are privileged. Slaves and their descendants have typically been the antithesis of this club, but various other groups have occupied the subordinate position in the racial binary, including Native Americans, Latinos/as, Chinese Americans, and others. Some, such as Irish and Jewish immigrants, started out in the subordinate category but over time successfully became white (Ignatiev 1995, Brodkin 1999). Others, such as Mexican American elites in California in the nineteenth century, started out as white but lost their superior status and were thrown into the not-white group (Almaguer 1994).

This system of racial oppression has been central to the maintenance of capitalist hegemony in the United States. If, as Marx and Engels argue in the Communist Manifesto, capitalism tends to bring workers together by teaching them how to cooperate, and if this cooperation has revolutionary tendencies (“what the bourgeoisie produces, above all, are its own gravediggers”), then capitalists need to break up the very cooperation that their system of production creates. [2] Now, different societies have developed different ways of disrupting class solidarity, often by giving advantage to one set of workers over others. Perhaps in Turkey it’s through the subordination of the Kurds, perhaps in Saudi Arabia it’s through the subordination of women, perhaps in Bolivia it’s through the subordination of the indigenous population, perhaps in Western Europe it’s through social democracy. In the United States, it has been through the racial order. The wages of whiteness have undermined the solidarity that the working class otherwise develops daily in its activities. It has fundamentally shaped other hierarchies, such as gender, ethnicity, sexuality, and religion, refracting them through its prism. In so doing, it has contributed to making capitalism seem like “common sense,” even to many workers (particularly white ones) who stumble under its burdens.

The racial order, then, is not merely one form of hierarchy among others. It is a form of hierarchy that shapes and organizes the others in order to ensure capitalist accumulation. Morally, it is not more evil than other forms of domination, but politically it has played a more central role in organizing American society. Strategically speaking, then, one would think that it would be a central target of American anarchist analysis and strategy. Curiously, though, this has not been the case.

Between infoshops and insurrection

It is surprising how little thought the contemporary American anarchist scene has given to strategy. Broadly speaking, it upholds two loose models that it presents as strategies and repeats over and over with little self-reflection or criticism. I call these models infoshops and insurrection.

An infoshop is a space where people can learn about radical ideas, where radicals can meet other radicals, and where political work (such as meetings, public forums, fundraisers, etc.) can get done. In the infoshop strategy, infoshops and other “autonomous zones” model the free society. Building “free spaces” inspires others to spontaneously create their own, spreading “counterinstitutions” throughout society to the point where they become so numerous that they overwhelm the powers that be. The very creation of anarchist free spaces has revolutionary implications, their proponents argue, because it can lead to the “organic” (i.e. spontaneous, undirected, nonhierarchical) spreading of such spaces throughout society in a way that eventually challenges the state.

An insurrection is the armed uprising of the people. According to the insurrection strategy, anarchists acting in affinity groups or other small informal organizations can engage in actions that encourage spontaneous uprisings in various sectors of society. As localized insurrections grow and spread, they combine into a full-scale revolution that overthrows the state and capital and makes possible the creation of a free society. [3]

Infoshops serve very important functions and any movement needs such spaces. Likewise, insurrection is a focal event in any revolution, for it turns the patient organizing of the movement and the boiling anger of the people into an explosive confrontation with the state. The problem is when infoshops and insurrection get taken as revolutionary strategies in themselves rather than as part of a broader revolutionary movement. In the infoshops model, autonomous spaces become the movement rather than serving it. In the insurrection model, spontaneous upheaval replaces the movement by equating insurrection with revolution rather than seeing it as but one part of the revolutionary process. The infoshops and insurrection models, in other words, both misunderstand the process of social transformation. Radical change may be initiated by spontaneous revolts that are supported by subterranean free spaces, but these revolts are almost always the product of movement building.

Social movements are central to radical change. The classical anarchists understood this, for they were very concerned to build working class movements, such as Bakunin’s participation in the International Working Men’s Association, Berkman and Goldman’s support for striking workers, Lucy Parson’s work in the International Working People’s Association, and the Wobblies’ call for “One Big Union.” To be sure, they also built free spaces and engaged in “propaganda by the deed,” but these were not their sole or even dominant activities. They did them in order to build the anarchist movement, not as a substitute for movement building.

Yet surprisingly much of the contemporary anarchist scene has abandoned movement building. In fact, the infoshops and insurrection models both seem to be designed, in part, to avoid the slow, difficult, but absolutely necessary work of building mass movements. Indeed, anarchist publications like Green Anarchy are explicit about this, deriding movement building as inherently authoritarian.

A revolution is not an infoshop, or an insurrection, or creating a temporary autonomous zone, or engaging in sabotage; it cannot be so easy, so “organic,” so absent of political struggle. A revolution is an actual historical event whereby one class overthrows another and (in the anarchist ideal) thereby makes it possible to abolish all forms of oppression. Such revolutions are the product of mass movements: a large group of people organized in struggle against the state and/or other institutions of power to achieve their ends. When movements become powerful enough, when they sufficiently weaken elites, and when fortune is on their side, they lead to an insurrection, and then perhaps a revolution. Yet in much of the anarchist scene today, building free spaces and/or creating disorder are regarded as the movement itself rather than components of one. Neither the infoshops nor insurrection models build movements that can express the organized power of the working class. Thus, the necessary, difficult, slow, and inspiring process of building movements falls through the cracks between sabotage and the autonomous zone.

The strategy of building autonomous zones or engaging in direct action with small affinity groups that are divorced from social movements assumes that radicals can start the revolution. But revolutionaries don’t make revolutions. Millions of ordinary and oppressed people do. Anarchist theory and practice today provides little sense of how these people are going to be part of the process, other than to create their own “free spaces” or to spontaneously join the festivals of upheaval. Ironically, then, the infoshops and insurrection approaches lead many anarchists to take an elitist approach to politics, one in which anarchists “show the way” for the people to follow, never realizing that throughout history, revolutionaries (including anarchists) have always been trying to catch up to the people, not the other way around.

Movement building and the racial order

Which brings us back to the racial order. The abandonment of movement building by the bulk of the contemporary American anarchist scene has led it to ignore the most important and radical political tradition in the United States: the Black freedom movements against slavery, segregation, and other forms of racial oppression.

The intellectual tradition of American anarchism has always looked more toward Europe(and sometimes Mexico) than the United States. American anarchists know more about the Paris Commune, the Kronstadt rebellion, the Mexican Revolution, the Spanish Civil War, Paris 1968, the German Autonomen, and the Zapatista uprising in Chiapas than they do about the abolitionist movement, Reconstruction, the Sharecroppers Union, the civil rights movement, or the Black/Brown/Red power movements. It’s not that American anarchists and history are ignored—Haymarket, Berkman, Parsons, de Cleyre, Goldman, Bookchin, and Zerzan all have their place in the anarchist pantheon—but these persons and events are curiously detached from an understanding of the social conditions that produced them, especially the racial order that has dominated U.S. history. (One consequence of this European focus, I suspect, is that it has contributed to the predominantly white demographic of the contemporary anarchist scene.)

The ignorance of Black freedom movements is so profound that even anarchistic tendencies within them get ignored. Nat Turner led a slave uprising in 1831 that killed over fifty whites and struck terror throughout the South; it should clearly count as one of the most important insurrections in American history. Historians often describe William Lloyd Garrison, a leader of the abolitionist movement, as a “Christian Anarchist” (e.g. Perry 1973), yet he is almost never included in anarchist-produced histories. The Black-led Reconstruction government in South Carolina from 1868-1874, which Du Bois dubbed the “South Carolina Commune,” did far more toward building socialism than the Paris Commune in 1871 ever did. Ella Baker’s anti-authoritarian critique of Martin Luther King Jr. encouraged young civil rights workers to create their own autonomous and directly democratic organization, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), arguably the most important direct action civil rights group. Further, the racial consciousness produced by these struggles has often been broader, radical, and international than the consciousness produced by other U.S. struggles, even if it describes itself as “nationalist” (See Robin Kelley’s great book Freedom Dreams for more on this). Yet these persons and events curiously form no part of the anarchist scene’s historical tradition. [4]

In sum, the Black freedom struggles have been the most revolutionary tradition in American history yet the anarchist scene is all but unaware of it. I suggest that there is more to learn about anarchism in the U.S. from Harriet Tubman, Abby Kelley, Nate Shaw, Malcolm X, W.E.B. Du Bois, Ella Baker, Fannie Lou Hamer, James Forman, Angela Davis and Assata Shakur than from Proudhoun, Kropotkin, Bakunin, Berkman or Goldman. There is more to learn from abolitionism than Haymarket, more from Reconstruction than the Spanish Civil War, more from the current social conditions of Black America than the global South. To see this, however, requires modifying the critique of hierarchy so that it can explain how forms of domination are themselves organized. It requires abandoning the infoshops and insurrection models for a commitment to building movements. It requires looking to Mississippi and New Orleans more than Russia or Paris.

This is not to say that American anarchism has been completely silent on race. The anarchist critique of white supremacy began in the 1980s and ‘90s, with the work of Black anarchists such as Kuwasi Balagoon and Lorenzo Komboa Ervin, the journal Race Traitor (which was sympathetic to the anarchist scene and did much to develop it intellectually regarding race), and anarchist organizations such as Love and Rage, Black Autonomy, Anarchist People of Color, and the anarchist-influenced Bring the Ruckus. Not coincidentally, these organizations also tend or tended to emphasize movement building rather than infoshops or insurrection. It is this tradition that influences my analysis here. But it is hardly a dominant perspective in the anarchist scene today.

After the Berlin Wall

When the Berlin Wall fell in 1989 followed by the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, many anarchists were confident that anarchism would fill the void left by state communism and once again become the dominant ideological challenge to liberalism like it was before the Russian Revolution. This confidence, even exuberance, was on display throughout the U.S. anarchist scene in publications such as Anarchy, Fifth Estate, and Profane Existence; in the creation of new organizations such as the Network of Anarchist Collectives; and in the burst of anarchist infoshops opening up in Chicago, Minneapolis, San Francisco, D.C., New York, and elsewhere.

It was an exciting time. Yet anarchism never filled the void. It never captured the hearts and minds of ordinary people. A similar optimism followed the uprising in Seattle in 1999. Anarchists again confidently predicted the emergence of a new, powerful movement. Yet once again, it didn’t happen. Today anarchism in the U.S. is in about the same place it was in 1989: a static ideology and a loose scene of largely white twenty-somethings, kept together by occasional gatherings, short-lived collectives, the underground music scene, and a handful of magazines and websites.

What went wrong in 1989 and 1999? Why hasn’t anarchism filled the void left by the collapse of communism? Why hasn’t anarchism grown as a movement and a philosophy? Most of the answer, no doubt, lies in the fact that anarchists grossly underestimated the power of capitalism and liberalism. All socialist ideologies lost popularity with the fall of the Soviet Union, since there no longer seemed to be a viable, “actually existing” alternative to capitalism. Capitalism and liberalism appeared invincible and the world system seemed to be at “the end of history.” September 11, 2001, brought a new antagonist to global capital—religious fundamentalism—but it hardly represents a libertarian alternative. World events, in other words, smothered libertarian socialism between neoliberalism and fundamentalism.

But part of the problem, I have suggested, lies with anarchism itself. The failure to develop a theory of U.S. history that recognizes the centrality of racial oppression, combined with a related failure to concentrate on building mass movements, has contributed to anarchism’s continued marginalization.

But what if this was to change? What if American anarchists went from building infoshops and plotting insurrections to building movements, particularly movements against the racial order? (They could still build free spaces and encourage insurrection, of course, but these efforts would be part of a broader strategy rather than strategies in themselves.) What if anarchists, instead of concentrating on creating “autonomous zones” on the U.S.-Mexico border, as some have tried to do, worked to build movements in resistance to anti-immigrant laws?

What if anarchists, instead of planning (largely ineffective) clandestine direct actions with small affinity groups, worked to build movements against the police, who are at the forefront of maintaining the color line? What if anarchists, in addition to supporting jailed comrades, worked with family members of incarcerated people to organize against prisons? What if anarchists stopped settling for autonomous zones and furtive direct actions and focused on undermining the cross-class alliance and on changing the “common sense” of this society?

The scene might just build a movement.


References

Almaguer, T. (1994) Racial Fault Lines: the historical origins of white supremacy in California,
Berkeley: University of California Press.
Bookchin, M. (1982) The Ecology of Freedom: the emergence and dissolution of hierarchy, Palo Alto: Cheshire.
——— (1986) The Modern Crisis, Philadelphia: New Society.
Brodkin, K. (1999) How Jews Became White Folks and What That Says About Race in America, Brunswick: Rutgers University Press.
Du Bois, W.E.B. (1992) Black Reconstruction in America 1860-1880, New York: Atheneum.
Forman, J. (1985) The Making of Black Revolutionaries, Seattle: University of Washington Press.
Gramsci, A. (1971) Selections from the Prison Notebooks, New York: International.
Ignatiev, N. (1995) How the Irish Became White, New York: Routledge.
Ignatiev, N. and J. Garvey (1996) Race Traitor, New York: Routledge.
Lowndes, Joe (1995) ‘The life of an anarchist labor organizer’, Free Society 2 (4). Available HTTP: < http://flag.blackened.net/liberty/parsonsl-bio.html> (accessed May 12, 2008).
Kelley, R. (2002) Freedom Dreams: the Black radical tradition, Boston: Beacon.
Olson, J. (2004) The Abolition of White Democracy, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Perry, L. (1973) Radical Abolitionism: anarchy and the government of God in antislavery thought, Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
Roediger, D. (1986) ‘Strange legacies: the Black International and Black America’, in Roediger, D. and F. Rosemont (eds.), Haymarket Scrapbook, Chicago: Kerr.
Thomas, P. (1980) Karl Marx and the Anarchists, London: Routledge.
Wright, R. (1957) White Man, Listen! Garden City: Doubleday.


Endnotes

1 The critique of hierarchy and “all forms of oppression” is so pervasive in North American anarchist thought that a supporting quote here hardly seems adequate. These two examples are representative: 1) “We actively struggle against all forms of oppression and domination, including patriarchy, racism, anthropocentrism and heterosexism. We recognize and actively work against these systems of oppression that co-exist with capitalism, as well as against the ecocide of the planet” (“Principles of the Anti-Capitalist Network of Montreal” [2007], http://montreal.resist.ca/en/principles ). 2) “We stand against all forms of oppression: imperialism, capitalism, white supremacy, patriarchy, fascism,
heterosexism/homophobia/transphobia and the domination of human over human & human over all living things including mother earth” (Revolutionary Autonomous Communities [Los Angeles] Mission Statement [2007], http://www.mediaisland.org/en/los-angel ... -statement). This perspective is also evident in the definitions of anarchism provided in numerous Anarchist FAQ sites. For examples, see “An Anarchist FAQ Page, version 12.2,” http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/1931/; “Anarchist Communism: An Introduction,” http://libcom.org/thought/anarchist-com ... roduction; “Anarchist FAQ,” http://www.infoshop.org/faq/secA1.html, and “Anarchy” at the
Green Anarchist Info Shop, http://www.greenanarchy.info/anarchy.php.

2 For those who believe that the Manifesto is not an appropriately “anarchist” source to cite here, I remind them that Bakunin translated the Manifesto into Russian and worked on a translation of Capital. For more on the complicated relationship between anarchism and Marx see Paul Thomas’s interesting book, Karl Marx and the Anarchists.

3 For examples of insurrectionary anarchism, see the magazines Willful Disobedience
(http://www.omnipresence.mahost.org/vbp.htm) and Killing King Abacus (http://www.geocities.com/kk_abacus/index.html).

4 Lucy Parsons and the Black Panthers tend to be the main links between Black struggles and American anarchists’ historical sense. Parsons, a militant anarchist organizer in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and possibly a former slave, is a problematic connection to the Black tradition because although she fought lynching and racial discrimination, she was not part of the Black community and often denied her Black identity. (She was married to a white man, Albert Parsons, so this denial may in part have been to evade anti-miscegenation laws. See Lowndes
1995 and Roediger 1986.) Many anarchists fetishize the Panthers because they seem to fit both the infoshops and insurrection models (i.e. men and women with guns serving breakfast to Black children), but this position tends to idealize the Panthers rather than critically evaluate and integrate their experience into the anarchist tradition.
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 Sep 12, 2011 3:39 pm

http://emlund.wordpress.com/2010/02/05/ ... gan-trade/
What’s mine is mine, now give me yours: how the American mindset fuels the illegal organ trade

FEBRUARY 5, 2010 BY EMLUND


Image


In “Life for Sale”, an aptly named seminar on bioethical issues, we’re discussing the illegal trade of human organs. Recently we read an article from the Journal of Human Rights written by Nancy Scheper-Hughes, a medical anthropology professor at UC Berkley. In her article “Rotten trade: millennial capitalism, human values and global justice in organ trafficking” she cited several modern trends that have converged to cause the unprecedented growth of the illegal organ trade. Recent improvements in communication and transplant technologies (most notably the anti-rejection drug, Cyclosporin) have allowed for the success of a globalized tissue-based economy. Illegal organ-traffickers, generally nicknamed the “body mafia”, have jumped at the chance to profit from the desperate demand for viable organs. Business is booming. Capitalist entrepreneurialism has succeeded in commodifying body parts in a highly lucrative fashion, but the operation has unacceptable ethical ramifications.

The insufficient supply of organs in America, in addition to the shocking cost of legally obtained organs (roughly $200,000) has forced many Americans to look elsewhere. On the black market, a kidney or partial-liver transplant are available for a fraction of the cost. But where do these life-saving organs come from? They come from people living in a level of poverty which is utterly unimaginable to Western minds. Out of desperation, these people agree to sell their organs for a nominal cost (from the Western view), but often times they never see a dime of it. This exploitation is possible because their stories are seldom told and even more rarely cared about.

Luckily for Americans who need a cheap(er) kidney, the “body mafia” is there to act as a the middle man in transaction. The recipients are saved from the gruesome details and can go on to live happy, healthy lives complete with the creature comforts that Americans not only enjoy, but feel entitled to. Ethical objectors to the illicit industry are quick to demonize the traffickers that run such operations and blame foreign governments that turn a blind-eye to these activities. Efforts to find a solution focus on shutting down unethical operations, but perhaps they should be directed closer to home. Scheper-Hughes and other vehement objectors don’t seem to see what I consider the obvious cause of this travesty against humanity. The illegal trade in organs is only profitable because there is such a high demand in affluent nations. If countries could meet the demand legally and within their own borders, the “rotten trade” would immediately dry up.

The root of the problem is the capitalist philosophy of absolute, personal ownership. This “mine” mentality has such a strong hold on the American mind that we value our possessions more than we value human life. Sixty-two percent of licensed Americans would sooner let compatriots die on waiting-lists than check “Donor” on their DMV application. In fact, nineteen of them died yesterday (organdonor.gov). Another interesting (and frustrating) statistic about donor-ship in America: more than thirty-percent of voluntary donors never become actual donors because their families intervene and reverse the decision after the individual’s death. In effect, they would rather support the exploitation of underprivileged people than give up ownership of their loved ones organs after they die. As the pro-donation slogan goes; don’t take your organs to Heaven, God knows we need them here. American selfishness is a major cause of this ethical dilemma, not the “body mafia.” They are merely a mechanism; they’re taking advantage of a lucrative market. The more confounding part is that this “selfishness” is often defended (and accepted) as a a religious imperative, but I cannot imagine any formulation of the Divine who would endorse the privatization of flesh over humanitarianism. The American mentality is driven by an overwhelming sense of entitlement to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Our “rights” ultimately deprive other people of theirs.


Response to:

Scheper-Hughes, N. (2003). Rotten trade: millenial capitalism, human values and global justice in organs trafficking. The Journal of Human Rights, 2(2), 197-226
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 Sep 12, 2011 10:27 pm

Cross-posting to the Tantra-Induced Delusional Syndrome ("TIDS") thread

http://www.tikkun.org/tikkundaily/2011/ ... he-divine/

Yoga for War: The Politics of the Divine

by: Be Scofield on August 9th, 2011

Image


It takes a special type of warrior to drop bombs on someone. You have to be able to cultivate a certain amount of mental clarity, presence, focus and inner calm. That’s why for some, yoga is the perfect tool to help get the job done.

In August, 2006 Fit Yoga Magazine featured on their front cover a picture of two naval aviators practicing yoga on a battleship. What pose were they in? Of course Virabadrasana 2, aka warrior pose. At the time even the editor of magazine admitted that it was a “little shocking,” but on second glance she realized that “on their faces their serene smiles relayed a sense of inner calm.”
Image

According to Retired Adm. Tom Steffens the Navy Seals dig yoga too, “The ability to stay focused on something, whether on breathing or on the yoga practice, and not be drawn off course, that has a lot of connection to the military,” he said. “In our SEAL basic training, there are many things that are yoga-like in nature.” And in March 2011 the Military officially added yoga and “resting” to the required physical training regiment all in the effort to “better prepare soldiers for the rigors of combat.”

If you’re not in the Military and don’t have any plans to join up anytime soon, no worries. Just tune to the Pentagon channel’s “Fit For Duty” which is “a show by the military, for the military.” Major Lisa Lourey will teach you all the yoga you need to know to become a highly trained killing machine. It’s my top choice for online asana.
Image

Yoga has also found a home in another surprising place; the highest echelons of corporate America. You know, the big wigs who defrauded people of millions. Bloomberg featured an article about yoga instructor Lauren Imparato titled, “Princeton Grad Quits Morgan Stanley to Teach Yoga to Bankers.” It states, “At Morgan Stanley’s fixed-income group, Lauren Imparato wore power suits and sold currencies to hedge funds in Europe, Asia and Latin America. Now she spends her days in form-fitting Lululemon pants, teaching yoga to former Wall Street colleagues…Imparato’s two weekly classes have attracted traders and analysts from Merrill Lynch & Co., Barclays Capital Inc., Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs.”

Does any of this upset your yogic sensibilities? Do you think there should be no OM in the office? No bakasana on the battleship? No hero pose in boot camp? Isn’t yoga about peace, compassion and love?

Image

I highlight these examples not because I think yoga doesn’t belong in the army, but rather to question an assumption many yoga and spiritual practitioners make. It’s the belief that spiritual liberation is inherently socially or culturally revolutionary. World-renowned yoga teacher Donna Farhi expresses this idea in the documentary YogaWoman. She states, “Yoga is one of the most politically subversive practices that any person, male or female could do in our time.” In other words, spiritual/psychological/physical transformation is politically subversive. I understand and appreciate how beneficial spiritual practice can be to transform the mind, body and spirit. I know yoga improves lives everyday. It has profoundly changed mine. However, yoga, like other popular spiritualities as they are mostly taught in the West, reflects a cultural obsession with the self, one which is rooted in furthering self-interest. This is in many ways due to an emphasis on an individual and privatized self brought to you by a happy marriage of Western psychology, spirituality and capitalism. Furthermore, as the military and corporate examples above illustrate, yoga or any individual spiritual practice will reflect the cultural and political interests of both the practitioners and the dominant power structures. They aren’t inherently politically subversive. Richard King explains, “The use of an idea such as ’spirituality’ is always bound up with political questions, even when the term is defined in apparently apolitical terms (in which case it supports the status quo). In employing the world, it is important to identify which ideological concerns are being supported.”

This emphasis on the individual is echoed strongly amongst the conscious lifestyle, wellness and new age spirituality circles. While “politically subversive” may not be the common expression for spiritual practices, many people in these communities believe that the transformation of inner states of being, either individually or collectively is capable of changing the world. This is reflected in Eckhart Tolle’s “A New Earth,” a book that supposedly describes a path to a more peaceful future. For Tolle, transforming the ego and inner consciousness is the best place to address the world’s problems, “A new heaven is the emergence of a transformed state of human consciousness, and a new earth is its reflection in the physical realm.” Some downplay the need for transformation and claim that only the power of the mind is required to change the world. There is even a “Center for Subtle Activism,” called the Gaiafield project. What is subtle activism? David Nicol describes it as “activities of spirit or consciousness primarily intended to support collective healing and social change.” The organization Common Passion, which recruits people for global meditations and prayers claims, “With a rigorous Western approach to practical application of Eastern wisdom, world peace may well be within our reach.” They believe they can create social harmony through “science” and “faith-based applications of collective consciousness.” It’s like The Secret meets the Peace Corps. They just use the power of their minds to visualize world peace and bam! it’s done!
Image

But what if, as Nonviolent Communication founder Marshal Rosenberg states, these types of privatized, mind/body centered spiritual practices merely lead people to “be so calm and accepting and loving that they tolerate the dangerous structures?” If you think about it, the powers that be would be absolutely delighted if we all believed yoga and global prayer were the most politically subversive practices.

The Politics of the Divine

What is the nature of the divine? Do you think opening to Divine Consciousness and Oneness can transform social/political consciousness? If you experience a profound spiritual state do you think it would shift your perspective or beliefs about war, economic justice or human rights ? Can an inner state of bliss turn you into an activist? Will it make you a better activist? Is God, by nature, politically subversive? Can consciousness be used to change the world?
Image

It’s difficult to admit but the universe will treat everyone equally regardless of their political, social or cultural views. Thus, spiritual transformation is morally and politically neutral. No matter how good or evil we are, the benefits of spiritual liberation that are bestowed upon us are all the same. Our conceptions of mindfulness, awakening and spiritual liberation are entirely dependent upon our cultural frame of interpretation. I know you might think that the divine is an anti-war, hybrid car loving, kombucha drinking burning man regular. But, sorry to say, God is not on “our” side. Thus, tapping into the Divine Consciousness won’t change political beliefs and thus won’t affect the pressing social issues of the day. It won’t turn an arch-Republican into a left-wing socialist. The pro-life extremist can also pray, meditate and cultivate states of mindfulness before attacking abortion doctors. Even if the ego is dissolved through practice, the greater awareness to relate to people will still be mediated by the fact that racism and sexism are institutionalized in our culture. In fact ’spirituality’ is rather easily incorporated into any institution as a new regime of thought control, whether it be market capitalism, government or militarism.

Image

If the divine were truly politically subversive and could be experienced via yoga could it be incorporated into the military industrial complex? Why wouldn’t it change the hearts and minds of the air force bombers? How could Goldman Sachs bankers practice yoga and simultaneously defraud people of millions? If any sort of spiritual practice were politically subversive wouldn’t connecting to our highest self mean having our consciousness changed on some political level? When something like yoga and meditation is proudly incorporated into the U.S. Military, Navy Seals and corporate America it is pretty safe to say that it is relatively benign in the department of political subversion.

More evidence that the divine is politically neutral is found in the large population of spiritual practitioners in America. Think about all of the white, middle and upper class people who have been practicing yoga, meditating, doing visualizations, OMing and chanting in the West now for decades. Has it made them more aware of injustice? More concerned about white privilege or racism? Better educated about poverty? Has all of the practicing subverted anything political? No. What about when people come together to transform the collective consciousness and change the world in the name of peace, harmony and oneness? What about efforts to raise the planetary vibration? Have they worked? Many of these collective consciousness raising efforts originate in the U.S. but yet we are still in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya. Over one million people have died because of this. We also remain Israel’s largest supporter. On numerous quality of life indicators the U.S. ranks at the bottom of industrialized nations. Elsewhere, famine, war and catastrophic suffering can be found throughout the globe. How powerful is “coherent consciousness” and what has it done to address the worst injustices on the planet? If it works why bother with social activism at all? Besides, there are a lot more fundamentalist Christians praying for and visualizing a conservative agenda. Do the liberal and conservative collective consciousnesses cancel each other out?
Image

Furthermore, we should remember that spiritual practices can also empower people to cause harm and support the status quo of any given society. For example, yoga assists the bombers in being more precise with their targeting. Their body awareness, concentration and presence all increased as a result. It gives the Goldman Sachs banker more clarity when trying to figure out how to steal money. Imagine a KKK group who incorporated yoga and meditation. Would it subvert their racism? Change their political consciousness? Would any spiritual practice? No. Rather, because of their cultural context it would merely reinforce their own social and political views. It would make them more mentally and physically stronger. And yet KKK members would still express the compassion and kindness gained on the mat to their loved ones. Likewise, Eugene de Kock, the police chief in South Africa known as ‘prime evil’ for his role in kidnapping, torturing and murdering hundreds of anti-apartheid activists went home to his family every day and expressed love, care and compassion to them. What I’m arguing here, and this may seem radical, is that cultural context shapes one’s understanding of spiritual transformation. I believe wholeheartedly that Eugene de Kock could have practiced yoga, meditated and connected to the divine but because a cruel system had become normalized to him any spiritual insights would be seen through his own socio-cultural lens. Likewise, you and I are part of larger systems, many of which are incredibly damaging to the planet and people. We, along with air force bomber pilots, racists, pro-life extremists, corporate crooks and (you fill in the blank) can all experience spiritual transformation and remain oblivious to the dangers of our surrounding culture. This is why it is so important to understand the limitations of spiritual practice in efforts for social change.

I think it best, therefore, to view spiritual practice as only politically subversive as something like psychotherapy. Connecting to the divine is often a transformative and renewing experience, but merely growing developmentally or awakening to deeper states of being won’t subvert the political structures or change political consciousness.

And finally, while spiritual practices like yoga can help you de-stress, center and cultivate compassion it won’t make you a better, more informed activist on matters of social justice. Yes, self-care and spiritual practice can be vitally important for many social activists and I strongly support this pairing. Finding stillness and inner calm in your day can positively benefit your life and work for social change. By all means cultivate loving kindness, compassion and generosity. We need lots more of this on the planet. However, becoming a more aware, just and informed activist only occurs when a different kind of consciousness is raised; political.

Justice or Presence?

“Why, one wonders is dissatisfaction with social injustice and a willingness to resist exploitation not seen as a sign of ’spiritual intelligence’?” - Richard King

Marshal Rosenberg, founder of Nonviolent Communication offers an important critique of what’s found in popular spirituality today.
Unless we as social change agents come from a certain spirituality, we’re likely to create more harm than good…spirituality can be reactionary if we get people to just be so calm and accepting and loving that they tolerate the dangerous structures. The spirituality that we need to develop for social change is one that mobilizes us for social change. It doesn’t just enable us to sit there and enjoy the world no matter what. It creates a quality of action that mobilizes us into action. Unless our spiritual development has this kind of quality, I don’t think we can create the kind of social change I would like to see.
[emphasis added]
Image

The activist, writer and spiritual teacher Starhawk also recognizes the limitations of a privatized spirituality. She states, “Transforming the inner landscape is only a first step. Unless we change the structures of the culture, we will mirror them again and again: we will be caught in a constant battle to avoid being molded again and again into an image of domination.” [emphasis added]

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. also knew this. His last years were spent challenging militarism, economic exploitation and racism. When he was assassinated he was just days away from leading a nationwide effort to shut down the capital of Washington D.C. until capitalism as he knew was radically transformed. They were going to clog the bridges, jam the streets and set up camp in the capital. He wanted guaranteed incomes, jobs and housing. The plan was to be as disruptive and disturbing as violent riots while being nonviolent. He said, “We must demonstrate, teach and preach until the very foundations of our nation shake.”

Imagine if there were places like Omega Center and Spirit Rock or community organizations which instead of being only about a privatized spirituality were dedicated to unmasking the dominant power structures and teaching people how to resist them. These places would prioritize justice over presence and uncover the political and ideological forces that shape our notions of spirituality. Low-cost workshops, retreats and trainings would be offered in the spirit of the Highlander Folk School, a civil rights and labor organizing center where Rosa Parks and Dr. King briefly studied. In the true spirit of interdependence and solidarity as is reflected in many of the world’s religions the center(s) would empower individuals to collectively address racism, the prison industrial complex, poverty, militarism, patriarchy, environmental injustices and more. These systems of domination keep us separate, and thus dismantling them is a spiritual priority. Dr. King said it best when he stated, “True peace is not merely the absence of tension, it is the presence of justice.”
Image


I leave you with Thich Nhat Hanh’s interpretation of the second precept of generosity.

“Aware of the suffering caused by exploitation, social injustice, stealing, and oppression, I vow to cultivate loving kindness and learn ways to work for the well-being of people, animals, plants and minerals. I vow to practice generosity by sharing my time, energy and material resources with those who are in real need.”




Be Scofield is a certified yoga instructor, founder of http://www.godblessthewholeworld.org and Dr. King scholar. He writes for Tikkun Magazine, Alternet.org and the Religious Left. Be is studying to be an interfaith minister at the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, where he is teaching a graduate course called “Dr. King and Empire.”
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 Sep 13, 2011 11:08 am

Image
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 Sep 14, 2011 12:40 am

Wayne Price: Insurrectional Anarchism vs. Class-Struggle Anarchism

2010-11-15



There has been a spurt of interest in a small radical book titled "The Coming Insurrection" ("TCI"), with authorship attributed to the "Invisible Committee" (IC). It was originally published in France in 2007. That country's police cited it as evidence in a trial of "the Tarnaq 9," radicals who were accused of planning sabotage. The French Interior Minister called it a "manual for terrorism" (quoted on p. 5). A U.S. edition got an unlikely boost by the far-right tv talk show clown Glen Beck. He has repeatedly identified it as a manual for a take-over of the U.S. by the left, by which he means everyone from the mildest liberal Democrats leftward. "This [is a] dangerous leftist book....You should read it to know what is coming and be ready when it does" (Beck, 2009). The interest of many on the left has been piqued; Michael Moore is reported to have read it.

From the perspective of revolutionary-libertarian socialism (class-struggle anarchism), I believe that many things are wrong with this pamphlet. But it is right on some very big things. That is a major part of its attraction, despite its opague style (the authors have studied French radical philosophy and it shows). The IC members say that, on a world scale, our society is morally rotten and structurally in the deepest of crises. They denounce this society in every way and oppose all reformist programs for trying to improve it at the margins. They say that a total change is necessary and that this can only be achieved through some sort of revolution. Their goals are the right goals: a classless, stateless, ecologically-balanced, decentralized, and self-managed world. These views are well outside the usual range of acceptable political conversation. Unfortunately, I believe that the tactics and strategy which they propose are mistaken and unlikely to achieve their correct goals.


In "Black Flame," Michael Schmidt and Lucien van der Walt review the history of the mainstream of the anarchist movement-of what is often referred to as anarchist-communism. They describe two main strategies within the broad anarchist tradition. "The first strategy, insurrectionist anarchism, argues that reforms are illusory and organized mass movements are incompatible with anarchism, and emphasizes armed action-propaganda by the deed-against the ruling class and its institutions as the primary means of evoking a spontaneous revolutionary upsurge" (2009; p. 123). Historically a minority trend in anarchism, this is probably what most people think of as "anarchism."

"The second strategy-what we refer to, for lack of a better term, as mass anarchism...stresses the view that only mass movement can create a revolutionary change in society, that such movements are typically built through struggles around immediate issues and reforms (...) and that anarchists must participate in such movements to radicalize and transform them into levers of revolutionary change" (same; p. 134). I prefer to call this second strategy by the more widely used term, "class-struggle anarchism." (This is a discussion of broad political trends. Individual anarchists are not so sharply divided into "insurrectionists" or "class-struggle" types. Whatever their labels, their activities are likely to overlap with each other.)

Terms may be confusing. By "insurrection," most people mean a revolutionary uprising by the mass of people to overturn the ruling class and smash its state. By this definition, it is the class-struggle anarchists who are working for an insurrection. On the other hand, the so-called insurrectionists are not clearly for an inurrection--a popular uprising--but are mainly interested in rebellious activities beinc carried out by themselves, a revolutionary minority. As we shall see, "TCI" is especially ambiguous about wanting a popular insurrection. However, I will stick with the usual political labels.

Actually the unnamed authors of this book do not explicitly identify with "anarchism," which they mention negatively. They prefer the label of "communism." Very likely they have been influenced by autonomous trends derived from Marxism, although they do not identify with "Marxism" either. I think that is safe to include them in the tradition of "insurrectionist anarchism." Their advocacy of decentralization is typically anarchist rather than Marxist. In any case, by now there has been so much overlap and interaction between anarchism and libertarian trends in Marxism, that it is not possible (or relevant) to draw a sharp line between them.

Opposition to Working Class Organizations

According to "The Coming Insurection," the unions are the immediate enemy. "The first obstacle every social movement faces, long before the police proper, are the unions..." (p. 121). This view blurs distinctions among (1) the workers, who are misdirected by the unions but who get definite benefits from them; (2) the unions themselves as organizations which are created by the workers; and (3) the union officialdom, which is an agent of the capitalist class within the workers' organizations. In other words, the workers and unions and bureaucrats are seen as one bloc, which is exactly how they are seen by the bureaucrats (and their reformist supporters).

Belonging to unions generally gives workers higher wages and better working conditions. This is something the Invisable Comittee ignores and would not care about anyway. We might expect the IC to at least care that striking workers can shut down society as can no other section of society-but they do not care about this either. "...Strikes have usually traded the prospect of revolution for a return to normalcy" (p. 107). "Usually," yes, except for the unusual times when strikes have been part of revolutions. Instead of organizing among workers, the IC advises its readers to find "hustles" and ways to scam the system outside of paid work. "The important thing is to cultivate and spread this necessary disposition towards fraud..." (p. 104).

At one point it was common on the far-left to deride the unions as solely agents of the capitalists. Supposedly the unions' only function was to control the workers in the interests of the capitalist class. This view has been disproven by history. The bosses turn on the unions when times get tough--as they have since the end of the post-WWII boom (around 1970). The capitalists now oppose the power of unions, force givebacks and cuts in contracts, and fight tooth and nail against the establishment of new unions. U.S. unions have gone from 33% of the private workforce to about 6%. Clearly, the capitalist class believes that - on balance - it is better for them to do without unions. The capitalists find the labor bureaucracy to be useful to them, but--on balance--the capitalists have concluded that unions bring more benefits to the workers than to the bourgeoisie. And they are right.

The IC's opposition to unions and, in fact, to the working class, is supported by a theory that there is no longer much of a working class. "...Workers have become superfluous. Gains in productivity, ...mechanization, automated and digital production have so progressed that they have almost reduced to zero the quantity of living labor necessary to the manufacture of any product..." (p. 46). This wild exaggeration leads to seeing work as mainly imposed by the capitalists in order to control the population, not primarily to exploit the workers and to accumulate surplus value.

Were this true, then we no longer live under capitalism. "...Capital had to sacrifice itself as a wage relation in order to impose itself as a social relation" (p. 91). In Marx's opinion, capitalism is nothing but the capital/labor relationship (the "wage relation"); therefore this would be the end of capitalism, while still some sort of new oppression. Without a capitalist class which buys the workers' labor power, there is no modern working class (no "proletariat"). Therefore, for "TCI" there is no longer a need to focus on working class struggles. (From my point of view, class struggles interact with nonclass struggles, such as over gender, race, nationality, age, etc.).

Can Reforms be Won, While Rejecting Reformism?

According to the "Black Flame" authors, "...insurrectionist anarchism is impossiblist, in that it views reforms, however won, as futile..." (Schmidt & van der Walt, 2009; p. 124). But class-struggle, mass, anarchists think that impossiblism means standing apart from the rest of working people. It means looking down on them for their desires for good jobs, decent incomes and housing, an end to racial or sexual discrimination, other democratic rights, ending wars, and safety from ecological catastrophe.

"The Coming Insurrection" expresses contempt for such, limited, reform struggles. Of struggles for jobs, it says, "Excuse us if we don't give a fuck" (p. 44). The danger of economic crisis and mass joblessness "...moves us about as much as a Latin mass" (p. 63).

They contemptuously reject those who warn of coming ecological and energy disasters. "...This whole 'catastrophe,' which they so noisily inform us about...may concern us, but it doesn't touch us" (pp. 73-74). "What makes the [ecological] crisis desirable is that in the crisis the environment ceases to be the environment" (p. 81). Desirable?

By contrast, "...mass anarchism is possiblist, believing that it is both possible and desirable to force concessions from the ruling classes..." (Schmidt & van der Walt, 2009; p. 124). We believe that reforms may be advocated as part of a revolutionary, nonreformist, strategy. My one qualification of this view is that these limited gains can only be won for a brief period of time. The economy will get worse--and other disasters will increase, such as the spread of nuclear weapons and global warming. As a result, reforms become harder and harder to win, harder to carry out, and harder to continue under the counterattack from the right.

The issue is not whether some limited gains can be won for a time. They can, and the fight for them is necesssary for building a revolutionary movement (as Schmidt and van der Walt write). But the issue is whether it is possible to win the kind of changes which are necessary to prevent eventual total disaster. It is not possible. (This important point is not made in "Black Flame.")

Opposition to All Democratic Organizations

The Invisible Committee's rejection of popular, mass, organization, is not limited to a rejection of unions. They say that they often "cross paths with organizations - political, labor, humanitarian, community associations, etc...." (p. 99) and find good people there. "But the promise of the encounter can only be realized outside the organization and, unavoidably, at odds with it" (p. 100).

Similarly, they call to "abolish general assemblies" (p. 121). There is a long history of popular insurrections which have created neighborhood assemblies, town councils, workplace committees, factory councils, soviets, shoras, and various forms of direct, face-to-face, forms of communal democracy. The IC members not only reject any form of delegated federation of such assemblies but the popular assemblies themselves.

A mass struggle requires decisions about mass actions. But the IC especially rejects the idea of democratic decision-making through discussion and voting. Instead they have a mystical fantasy of individuals pooling information and then "...the decision will occur to us rather than being made by us" (p. 124). Such a fantasy is authoritarian, highly likely to be hijacked by cliques and charismatic leaders.

We class-struggle anarchists usually make a distinction between two types of organization. There are the large, popular, organizations, such as unions, community groups, or (in revolutionary periods) workers' and/or neighborhood assemblies. These are heterogeneous, composed of people with many opinions. Then there are the narrower, politically-revolutionary, type of organization, formed around a set of ideas and goals. These are formed by the minority of the population which has come to see the need for revolution and wishes to spread its ideas among the as-yet-unrevolutionary majority. They include both anarchist federations and Leninist parties--the anarchist groups are not "parties" because they do not aim to take power, either through elections or revolutions.

"The Coming Insurrection" rejects both mass and minority organizations. "Organizations are obstacles to organizing ourselves" (p. 15). It does not see the need for a dual-organizational approach, because it does not see a problem in that only a minority is for revolution.

On the contrary, it insists, "Everyone agrees. It's about to explode" (p. 9). "The feeling of imminent collapse is everywhere so strong these days..." (p. 105). Actually, everyone does not agree. Those who do are at least as likely to be for the far-right as for the far-left. Which is why Glen Beck promotes this book. However, in "TCI" there is no discussion of the dangers of the far-right, not to speak of out-and-out fascism. The closest it gets is "...we expect a surge of police work being done by the population itself - everything from snitching to occasional participation in citizens' militias" (p. 115). But this is immediately followed by a discussion of police infiltration and provocation; the danger of attacks by armed right-wing "citizen militias" is dropped.

The crisis of our society will lead (is leading) to a decline in the moderate political middle and the growth of the extremes. In the U.S., conservative Republicans speak of the need for "Second Amendment remedies" if they cannot take power through elections. Posing as heirs to the U.S. Revolution, they speak of the possible need to violently overthrow bourgeois democracy, as the "founding fathers" overthrew the British monarchy.

To counter this, libertarian-socialist revolutionaries need to participate in large popular organizations such as unions and community groups. We need to organize ourselves, as part of the process of popular self-organization. Instead of mass, democratic, self-organization, "TCI" advocates "...a diffuse, effective, guerrilla war that restores us to our ungovernability, our primordial unruliness....This same lack of discipline figures so prominently among the recognized military virtues of resistence fighters" (pp. 110-111). The members of the Invisible Committee would do well to read accounts of Makhno's anarchist guerrilla army in 1918 Ukraine, or Durruti's anarchist milita column during the Spanish revolution, or any other account of guerilla warfare or underground resistance, before spreading such idiocy. There is no revolutionary process without democratic self-discipline and self-organization.

What Does the IC Think is to be Done?

As opposed to what it is against, what does "The Coming Insurrection" advocate positively? It rejects organization, but says, "We have to get organized" (p. 95). This will supposedly be done through "communes." "Communes" are an expanded version of what has traditionally been called "affinity groups" or "collectives." "Communes come into being when people find each other, get on with each other, and decide on a common path...." (p. 101). Communes will grow everywhere and take over everything. "In every factory, every street, every village, every school...a multiplicity of communes...will displace the institutions of society: family, school, union, sports club, etc." (pp. 101-102). Communes will stay in touch with each other (I can hardly say "coordinate themselves") by traveling members. To "TCI," the revolution essentially is the spread and integration of communes. "An insurrectional surge may be nothing more than a multiplication of communes..." (p. 111).

The communes will do a number of things but central to the strategy is "sabotage." This means "...maximum damage...breaking the machines or hindering their functions....The technical infrastructure of the metropolis is vulnerable...and these can be attacked....How can...an electrical network be rendered useless? How can one find the weak points in computer networks, or scramble radio waves and fill screens with white noise? ...A certain use of fire....'Fucking it all up' will serve..." (pp. 111-112). Roads will be blocked. Food and medicine and other goods would cease to circulate. (As already mentioned, the Invisible Committee does not seem interested in the power of the working class to shut down the capitalist economy through mass strikes.)

If carried out, the widespread use of technical destruction, as advocated in "The Coming Insurrection," would cause great suffering. This does not seem to bother "TCI." If anything, this seems to be the goal. After insurrectionists bring down capitalist society through sabotage and chaos, it will be followed by "communism," or so they think. "The interruption of the flow of commodities...liberate potentials for self-organization..." (p. 119). More likely, left-caused mass sabotage would result in wide-spread hatred of these "communists" who deliberately caused so much suffering. There woud be a demand for a strong fascist state to provide "order."

"Insurrection" without Revolution

While the French police have labelled the IC as "terrorists," "TCI" does not advocate assassinating public officials nor exploding bombs in crowded places. Instead it advocates the destruction of property through wide-spread sabotage. But, if carried out, this would cause at least as much suffering - and possibly deaths - as any "terrorism."

Their attitude toward violence is confusing. They declare, "There is no such thing as a peaceful insurrection. Weapons are necessary..." (p. 100). This is immediately followed by a call for rebels to have weapons - but not to use the weapons! "An insurrection is more about taking up arms and maintaining an 'armed presence' than it is about armed struggle" (same). In a revolutionary situation, they expect the army to be called out. Then the people could mingle with the army and win it over to the insurrection, without firing a shot! "Against the army, the only victory is political....A massive crowd would be needed to challenge the army, invading its ranks and fraternizing with the soliders" (pp.128 & 130). I do not dispute that the armed forces - sons and daughters of the working class - can and should be won over through "political" means. But there is likely to be a core of officers, "lifers," and rightists who will need to be physically suppressed if they use force against the people.

Revolutionary class-struggle anarchists believe that the capitalist class must be overthrown and the state and other capitalist institutions need to be dismantled. They need to be replaced with federated councils. The IC does not believe this. With all their talk of "insurrection," their view is closer to the gradualist-reformist view of peacefully replacing capitalism and the state through alternative institutions. "...Wherever the economy is blocked...it is important to invest as little as possible in overthrowing the authorities. They must be dismissed with the most scrupulous indifference and derision....Power is no longer concentrated in one point....Anyone who defeats it locally sends a planetary shock wave through the networks" (p. 131).

The "Tarnaq 9" were arrested in France and accused of planning to sabotage the overhead electric lines of the national railroad. They had been living in the small rural town of Tarnaq, growing their own food, running a co-op and a store, and generally helping local people. Except for the - alleged - attempt to sabotage the trains they were simply following the nonviolent, reformist, strategy of dropping out of the big cities and mainstream institutions to gradually build alternate institutions. There is nothing bad about such activities. But they are not a strategy for overthrowing the state, capitalism, and all other oppressions. Power really is concentrated and it is very strong. It will have to be confronted by the organized people - in a real insurrection. (For further discussion of the distinction between revolutionary, class-struggle, anarchism and gradualist, alternate-institution, strategies, see Price 2009.)

The Greek Insurrection

These are important and very practical issues. In 2008, rebellion broke out in Greece after a youth was shot by a cop (in the context of the beginning of the Great Recession). There was a virtual national insurrection among young people, from high schoolers, to college students, to young workers and unemployed. Anarchists and other libertarian socialists had a major influence on this youth rebellion, especially including those of the insurrectionist trend.

Youth are the cutting edge of any revolution. But, while vitally important, by themselves alone they do not have the leverage of the working class. Unfortunately, Greek anarchists did not have the same influence among unionized workers as they did among college students. The big unions are still controlled by the Socialist Party, by the Communist Party, and even by Conservatives. Pressure by the workers forced the unions to engage in demonstrations and in limited, symbolic, mass strikes, but no more. Big sections of industry had wildcat strikes. Radicalized workers occupied the headquarters of the largest union to protest its lack of support to the rebellion. This was good, but more was needed.

In Greece and everywhere else, there is no alternative to revolutionary-libertarian socialists sinking roots in the working class and their unions. We need to spread a revolutionary program and to organize against the reformist bureaucracies. Greek class-struggle anarchists have been trying to do this for some time. Whether they will succeed is the key question for whether the Greek revolution will win.

Revolutionary class-struggle anarchists agree with the insurrectionists' rejection of capitalism and its state. They are our comrades, fighting the same enemy, for the same goals. But we do not agree t with their analysis and strategy. Growing food in rural alternate communities is no replacement for a class-struggle approach, neither is having rebellions which are limited to isolated young people. What we need is not insurrectionism but revolution.


Source URL: http://anarchistnews.org/?q=node/12729

Links:
[1] http://anarchistnews.org/?q=taxonomy/term/3
[2] http://anarchistnews.org/?q=taxonomy/term/1
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 Sounder » Wed Sep 14, 2011 7:50 am

Wayne Price wrote...
More likely, left-caused mass sabotage would result in wide-spread hatred of these "communists" who deliberately caused so much suffering. There would be a demand for a strong fascist state to provide "order."


The TCI strikes me as a 'state' produced document designed to both incite fools and to paint 'leftists' as property destroying haters.

Thanks for this thread AD.
All these things will continue as long as coercion remains a central element of our mentality.
Sounder
 
Posts: 4054
Joined: Thu Nov 09, 2006 8:49 am
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Wed Sep 14, 2011 12:52 pm

http://rt.com/news/facebook-american-go ... ntrol-535/

Facebook vs US establishment: who controls whom?

14 September, 2011


Image
U.S. President Barack Obama (L) talks with Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg (R)
during a town hall style meeting at Facebook headquarters.



As Facebook continues to hire current and former White House employees to enhance its lobby in state structures, concerns over the privacy policies and security practices of the world’s largest social networking site are on the rise.

The man behind the US $750 million site, Mark Zuckerberg, appears to be hatching a fresh scheme to establish reliable links with both the Congress and the White House, dropping any pretence of party preferences.

A whole team of advisors from Republican and Democrat camps have joined the ranks of Zuckerberg’s army ready to push, pull and protect the company’s interests at any given level of the American bureaucratic hierarchy.

Facebook shares key positions with White House

At first, hirings of former top civil servants were few and far between, occurring only about once a year. This was the deal back in September 2008 when Ted Ulloyt, a George W. Bush loyalist, was appointed to vice president and general counsel, reports The Washington Post.

Two years later in June 2010, Marne Levine, a member of President Barack Obama’s staff, was hired to guide the social network’s policy issues from Washington.

The current year has been seen a remarkable number of prominent government figures entering the Facebook corporation.

In May 2011, Facebook called a former aide to President George W. Bush – the Republican Joel Kaplan – to head its Washington office.

In June this year, a former spokesman for President Bill Clinton’s administration, Joe Lockhart, was recruited to head Facebook’s communications team.

President Obama’s special assistant for legislative affairs (who was also Vice President Biden’s former deputy chief of staff) Louisa Terrel is now to define Facebook’s public policy, a job she once did for Yahoo.

Sheryl Sandberg, who used to work in the Treasury Department under Barack Obama’s Economic Adviser Lawrence Summers, is now employed as Faceboook’s chief operating officer.

A new senior policy adviser and director of privacy, Erin Egan, will come to Facebook in October. She is currently co-chair at Covington & Burling’s global privacy and data security, a company ranked as being in the top ten for its privacy practices.

Only last week, Zuckerberg introduced President Clinton’s chief of staff, Erskine Bowles, to Facebook’s board.

All these people are to ensure that Facebook remains the industry leader, obsessed with the data security and privacy safety of its hundreds of millions of clients.

At the same time, to an unbiased observer, the processes going on in the internet technology giant cannot but resemble putting a highly-successful company under full governmental control.

Considering the unprecedented prospects the project opens in the field of global data collection, it appears only natural that the American government should promote its top people to key positions of responsibility with regard to Facebook’s data security.

But RT guest Steve Rambam, founder and CEO of Pallorium Inc., an international online investigative service, has stated openly that companies like Facebook, Google or MySpace are “aggregating data on each of us bit by bit and before you know it, your entire life is on a disk.”

Europe enforces its own rules

In Europe, Facebook’s position appears somewhat shaky after it emerged that it had been used to organize some of the violence that erupted in London at the beginning of August.

Despite active lobbying – the company hired former MEP Erika Mann as spokesperson for all EU institutions – the American giant is to appear before a British Home Affairs Select Committee on “policing large-scale disorder.”

Facebook will not be alone: Twitter and BlackBerry-maker Research in Motion will stand alongside it to face the music over riots in the UK and the role these three technology companies played in the disorder, allegedly providing rioters with the means to organize and plan choreographed disorder and looting.

But as predicted in August, the rioters’ trust in BlackBerry’s encrypted messaging has already backfired. BlackBerry maker Research in Motion appears to be fully co-operating with British detectives investigating the disorder and there is little doubt that Facebook and Twitter will follow suit.



View the interview- extremely valuable for those concerned about their privacy- here
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 Sep 14, 2011 4:08 pm

http://veganideal.org/content/pay-more- ... ?page=show

'Pay More': The High Cost of Class Bias in Food Politics

Submitted by Ida on Sat, 08/29/2009


As a poor person who has experienced food insecurity, I find many mainstream writings on food politics hard to accept as creditable. At times I find the professional middle class norms and assumptions agonizing to read. While sometimes writers make trivializing and token references to differences of class, race, sex and citizen status, these superficial acknowledgments are patronizing and tend to marginalize and perpetuate the ways the food system affects the lives of the poor and working class, people of color, women and im/migrants. The fact that these commentators ignore the experience of those of us most oppressed by our food system is too infrequently questioned.

A class-conscious look at the writings of best-selling author Michael Pollan can help illustrate the practical harms that class-biased food advocacy can have on poor and hungry people. Pollan's writings on food politics are rooted in his own privileged position as a professional upper-middle class White man. Much of Pollan's class and race bias is hidden under a voice that depicts his own privileged experience as normal and universal. He thus specifically writes for other class-privileged Whites and it is not much of a surprise that many of his affluent White readers don't question what is oftentimes their own experience as well.

Who Pays and Who Profits from Higher Prices

One of the most explicit examples of Pollan's class bias is his repeated praise of rising costs in food, particularly healthful, whole foods. In "Unhappy Meals," an influential food essay published in The New York Times Magazine, Pollan gives a list of recommendations for how we should eat. Number five on Pollan's list: "Pay more, eat less." Pollan admits, "Not everyone can afford to eat well in America, which is shameful," but he then goes on to say that "most of us can" and claims that high food prices are actually a benefit to those who can't even afford them. He writes, "Paying more for food well grown in good soils — whether certified organic or not — will contribute not only to your health ... but also to the health of others who might not themselves be able to afford that sort of food."

Pollan's class bias might be lost on those who share his bias. But those of us who are poor or have experienced food insecurity know that the problem isn't simply that food is too cheap. Pollan says, "Americans spend, on average, less than 10 percent of their income on food, down from 24 percent in 1947, and less than the citizens of any other nation." But this figure marginalizes those of us who pay an above average percentage of our income on food. In Obesity Discrimination, Dale-Marie Bryan writes:

A report from the American Dietetic Association says eating healthy foods may cost too much for many families. With only so much to spend on food, they buy what will fill them up. Often, that is not the foods that are healthiest. The report also says families would have to spend from 43 to 70 cents of every dollar to buy the amount of fresh fruits and vegetables they are supposed to have. That's OK for higher-income families. But poor families might not be able to do it.


Sure, Pollan calls our experience of food insecurity "shameful," but then treats it as insignificant. As Mark Winnie, founder of the Community Food Security Coalition and author of Closing the Food Gap, says Pollan "offered no suggestion as to how that shame could be erased." The subtext of assuming "most of us" are privileged is to treat the rest as a "them" — that is, "us" with class privilege needn't worry about "them" who experience poverty and food insecurity. Worse yet, Pollan insists that paying more for food will trickle down to benefit those whom he admits are denied access to the same higher-priced foods. In other words, "us" need not worry about "them," and "us" can be further reassured that simply paying more for food will take care of "them."

Mark Winnie is not the only food security advocate who works with poor and hungry communities who has called out Pollan on his class bias. Joel Berg, executive director of the New York City Coalition Against Hunger and author of All You Can Eat, challenges how Pollan and other "high-profile food activists" gloat about the global rise in food prices that leave hundreds of millions world-wide hungry or starving.

In the article "Some Good News on Food Prices," Pollan told a reporter from The New York Times, "Higher food prices level the playing field for sustainable food that doesn't rely on fossil fuels." Again, Pollan dismisses how higher prices exacerbates the existing oppression of the food system. Berg replied in his book:
In other words, he predicted that, because processed, mass-produced foods would become just as expensive as organic, locally produced foods, consumers would make better food choices. But even if nonorganic processed foods did become as expensive as organic foods ... Pollan still cavalierly overlooks the reality that price hikes on either type of food place severe pressure on struggling families.


Pollan's pay more, trickle down argument assumes paying more will help struggling producers and farm workers. This suggests a simplistic direct relationship where the costs of food to consumers are assumed to be directly proportional to the cost of production — a socialist ideal that doesn't currently exist. But Pollan is mistaken to frame the food system as a symbiotic balance between producers and consumers when he assumes that if consumers pay more then producers will have more to invest in production. Unfortunately, this argument completely ignores how our food system actually operates under capitalism. Between the supposedly symbiotic producers and consumers are those who buy cheap, sell dear: the capitalists. And it is these people in the owning class, whom Raj Patel calls the "the waist of the food system hour glass," who truly benefit from Pollan's demand that we pay more for our food.

A typical example of this owning class includes the executives and shareholders of Whole Foods Market. As Winnie points out, "Paying more for the best doesn't seem to be a particularly tough challenge these days." Winnie cites an New York Times article that reports Whole Foods Market "has built an empire ... by capitalizing on the willingness of consumers to pay more for organic and natural foods." He also cites a retail price survey of twenty-one supermarkets that found Whole Foods was not only "more expensive than any of the other stores but was actually 30 percent higher than the next-highest-priced store."

Blaming the Targets of Class/Food-Based Oppression

Before Pollan's insistence on supporting higher prices in his "Unhappy Meal" article, he wrote a letter to John Mackey, the diehard capitalist co-founder and CEO of Whole Foods Market. In the letter, Pollan exudes class-based scorn for the poor. He reviles poor consumers who don't have access to Whole Foods Market as "dumb beasts" driven merely by "the narrowest conception of our self-interest." Pollan goes on to blame these consumers for "the debased industrial food chain" and everything associated with it from environmental destruction, to the exploitation of other animals, to failing public health.

In contrast to poor consumers, Pollan praises Whole Foods Market's high prices for cultivating an affluent customer-base that he characterizes as nothing less than selfless, democratic champions of the world. In contrast to his class-based stereotype of poor consumers as indiscriminate, selfish, inhuman and driven by base desires, Pollan claims the affluent Whole Foods consumer "takes a broader view of his interests, understands that spending more on higher-quality food is worth it on so many levels, and who treats his food purchases as a kind of vote for a better world." (I think it's significant that Pollan uses the male pronoun to identify his archetypal affluent consumer as an intelligent, selfless, rational human, driven by a desire for a better society — given that women are disproportionately poor and hungry.)

Of course, Pollan isn't the only popular food writer to blame the targets of poverty and food insecurity. In a New York Times op-ed, food activist Dan Barber expressed the same sort of class-bass contempt for poor consumers, whom he calls "financially pinched." According to Barber, these poor consumers simply "opt for the cheapest" and "least healthful" foods. He characterizes this group as merely too lazy to "cook their own," and the "lowest common denominator" responsible for dragging down the entire food industry. In many ways, Barber is simply echoing the same stereotypes about poor people.

In the same article quoting Pollan as saying higher prices "level the playing field," the reporter also asked affluent food writer and celebrity chef Alice Waters what poor consumers who lack access to food because of price hikes should do. Waters said the food insecure should "make a sacrifice on the cell phone or the third pair of Nike shoes." Again, poor consumers are stereotyped as irrational, self-indulgent consumers who can't understand their own best interests. (For a little perspective, an affluent customer drops $60 to $95 on a single meal at Waters' upscale Chez Panisse restaurant in Berkeley, California — which is nearly the average Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefit a poor person will receive for an entire month.) As Berg points out:

Pollan, Barber, and Waters alike seem oblivious to the harsh truth that, for many Americans, rising food prices threaten their ability to afford food at all. Even though most food activists are well-intentioned and understandably disturbed by the trend of increasing domination by just a handful of food conglomerates, they often display glaring class bias.


Like Pollan, these other affluent food activists rely on class-based stereotypes to vilify the poor and hungry in ways that suggest the poor and hungry have only themselves to blame. This class bias, which blames oppressed groups for the faults of the corporate-driven food industry, distracts attention away from the oppressive way our food system is structured around class privilege.

Class assumptions play a fundamental role in the trend towards focusing on privatized, individual actions as the solution. It is simply assumed that affluent consumers make better choices because they are better people, not because of their class privilege. Likewise, poor consumers are assumed to make poor choices not because they lack access to better choices, but because they lack sufficient moral integrity. Inevitably this leads to calls that we "vote with our dollars" by acting as rational individuals in the marketplace, as opposed to mobilizing collective social movements that focus on changing interlocking systems of oppression.

Class Disenfranchisement and the Widening Food Gap


The whole point of Pollan's letter denouncing the vices of poor consumers and extolling the virtues Whole Foods Market's affluent base was to urge the supermarket chain to sell more locally produced food. Mark Winnie, whose own organization insists a "stable local agricultural base is key to a community responsive food system," explains the class bias in how Pollan's push for local food under supermarket control offers little in terms of increasing accessibility to these options for the targets of poverty and food insecurity, and is actually counterproductive:

But rather than worry about the effect of high prices on lower- and even middle-income consumers, Whole Foods has turned its attention to local farms, in whom, at the behest of Pollan and others, the chain is going to invest $10 million to make them "Whole Foods-ready." While this may strengthen local agriculture and bring the average Whole Foods shopper a wee bit closer to "local food," it will do nothing for the low-income mom who is riding the bus to the Wal-Mart on the outskirts of town. Given that there is a growing shortage of Farmers, Whole Foods' actions may even be harmful to low-income interests by causing what I call the "Greenwich effect." As soon as the housewives in very upscale Greenwich, Connecticut, organized a farmers' market, farmers left the hard-pressed urban markets faster than spinach bolting in July. In the same way, the continual push by affluent shoppers and the nation's retail bastions of naturalness to procure local and organic food will only increase prices and widen the food gap between them and lower-income shoppers.


As a veteran food justice advocate with over three-decades of experience in connecting local producers with poor and hungry consumers, Wennie knows a thing or two about what he calls the "Greenwich effect." He recognizes how — with the push of supermarkets like Whole Foods Market and food writers like Pollan — supporting a food system that privileges affluent consumers without concern for poor and hungry people results in devastating effects that exacerbate poverty and food insecurity.

Raj Patel outlines the reality of the role Whole Foods Market plays in the food system as an exploiter of both producers and consumers alike, and in so doing reveals Pollan's class bias in omitting the full costs of a "pay more" mentality. In the conclusion to Stuffed and Starved, Patel writes:

From Whole Foods to Wal-Mart, retail giant ethics can only be paid from their excess profits and, no matter what the public relations department says, it is the shareholders who pay the piper. Supermarkets, like all corporations at the waist of the food system hour glass, oblige consumer desires only so far as they are profitable. They operate on the strict market principle one dollar, one vote. They won't, therefore, address needs where there are no dollars to be found. ... And this is where a retail vision of ethical shopping falls short of the vision of food sovereignty. In the US, the supermarket chain that has put itself at the forefront of corporate social responsibility has been Whole Foods. The company's executives tout their mission as 'No. 1, to change the way the world eats, and No. 2, to create a workplace based on love and respect'. It's certainly true that more and more of the world finds its food in supermarkets — and that Whole Foods is contributing to this global transformation. But to change the way the world eats requires not just a commitment to providing local food, but also the empowerment of society's poorest members to be able to afford to eat differently. Whole Foods, other wise known as 'Whole Pay Check', certainly encourages us to pay more for our food, but it's far from clear that the extra charge makes its way to those who need it most. For this to happen would demand a profound and political change all along the food system.


So while Pollan claims that those who pay more "vote for a better world," Patel speaks of the poor who, because they lack money, are disenfranchised under our food system. The poor are left disempowered while the dollar-based "voting" power of affluent consumers drives up prices for the healthiest of foods. In practice, the "better world" that Pollan and other higher-prices, vote-with-your-dollars advocates are promoting is one where the gap between the poor and the affluent increases, thereby making healthful, whole foods all the more inaccessible to those most targeted by poverty and food insecurity. This in turn results in other devastating effects by further increasing the enormous class-based gap in health, resulting in more poor people going hungry and/or suffering diabetes, hypertension and other dietary related diseases associated with the effects of a second class diet.

Not Just Class: Other Oppressive Costs of Paying More


Food justice is only possible when we take into consideration all the ways our food system intersects with other forms of oppression. While I focused above on class, it is equally essential that we pay close attention to how oppression targeting people based on race, sex, citizenship status, age, ability, geography, species, and other factors as it relates to our food system. Here is a brief sample of other ways people are harmed by demands that they pay more:

Race: The redlining of access to healthy, affordable foods is a persistent problem in the existing U.S. food system. Communities of color, particularly Black and Latino communities, tend to have less access to healthful, whole foods. For instance, in their book Food Fight, Dr. Kelly D. Brownell and Katherine Battle Horgen note that predominantly White communities have four times more supermarkets than predominantly Black communities. Since supermarkets offer more healthy foods at cheaper prices, this means communities of color not only have less access to healthy foods, but they in fact are already paying more for so-called "cheap" processed foods than when the same items are offered in White communities.

Sex: Women are disproportionately poor and hungry — Joel Berg notes in All You Can Eat that women are 41% more likely to be poor than men. Women who are mothers are also primarily responsible for children, another large portion of the poor and hungry. And women are also more likely to become poor than men after a divorce. So it is no surprise that single mothers and their children are more likely to be poor and hungry. (Note that women of color, particularly Black and Latina mothers, tend to be the primary targets of backlash against the poor and hungry. Since the Regan administration, the sexist-racist-classist stereotype of the "welfare queen" has been used as a persistent tool for cutting social programs that provide poor and hungry people with access to healthy foods.)

Age: Poor children and elderly people are likely to be food insecure and are particularly vulnerable to higher prices for food. Obviously if single mothers are more likely to be poor and hungry, it is a given that their children will be as well. Elderly people living on fixed incomes are extremely vulnerable to higher prices. Not only do they have to deal with the rising cost of food with no additional income to compensate, they also have increasing housing and often medical costs as well.

Citizenship Status: Immigrants and migrants who come to work in the United States tend to hold jobs that do not pay a living wage. Even when they reside in the U.S. with proper documentation, they have less access to social programs like WIC and SNAP. In her book Targeted, Deepa Fernandes notes how the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act "all but halted social services available to undocumented and documented immigrants, including health care and food stamps" (emphasis hers). Many im/migrant workers and families send money back to relatives in the Global South, further limiting their budget for food. And given the type of hazardous work many im/migrants perform, they may have medical expenses that they are forced to pay out of pocket.

Ability: People who are disabled or chronically ill are also constrained in their ability to pay more for food. A disability or illness can prohibit someone from earning an income through work either due to direct impairment or as a result of discrimination. Additionally, these people are likely to have higher medical expenses and be denied medical coverage. It is far too common for people to be forced to choose between paying for food or medicine.

This is not meant to be an exhaustive list of all the ways other oppressed groups are affected by higher prices for healthy food, but it should be evident from these examples that since many people already pay such a high cost for the high prices associated with healthy foods, insisting that they pay more only makes a bad situation worse.

There's No Food Justice Without Social Justice


Paying higher prices is not the solution to our existing food system. In order to make the food system just we have to make it work for everyone, particularly those most oppressed by the current system. For instance, we need to center the reality of all people who are poor or food insecure. Eliminating poverty and class-based oppression needs to be an integral part of our food justice advocacy. This means ensuring that all jobs pay a living wage and everyone who needs it is covered by social programs that make healthy foods accessible and affordable. Similarly, racism, sexism, ageism, nationalism, ableism and the effects of all other forms of oppression on our food system and the inaccessibility of healthy foods need to be considered and dealt with. We won't make the food system just or democratic simply by "voting with our dollars" for the highest priced foods. But we can create a just food system if we make it part of our work to organize a broader mobilization for social justice.
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 Sep 14, 2011 4:43 pm

http://veganideal.org/content/garden-model-change

The Garden: A Model for Change

Submitted by Ida on Tue, 09/15/2009


Image

I highly recommend watching Scott Hamilton Kennedy's documentary The Garden. This film brilliantly illustrates the following concrete realities as they are experienced by oppressed communities within the United States:

It shows how the existing power structure is poorly suited to serving the interests of oppressed peoples.

It shows how the existing power structure works extremely well at serving the interests of the owning-class.

It shows how the existing power structure is bolstered by White supremacy.


In other words, this documentary is a sad testament to the dominance of a capitalist, White supremacist power structure masquerading as a democracy.

But it's not all negative. The South Central Farmers overcome some incredible odds and demonstrate through their living example that a different world is possible. After all, more than a decade of collectively cultivating 14 acres of vibrant, nourishing plant life in the concrete sea of L.A.'s most infamous ghetto has a great deal of meaning and significance that cannot easily be bulldozed out of existence.

Lessons From the Garden

I'm personally inspired by this film to think in new ways about what we can do to reverse and transform the process of privatization that is currently increasing the deprivation experienced by oppressed communities. I'm better able to envision a movement working to transform the existing power structure so that new institutions are put in place to facilitate the de-privatization of land and redistributing it back to the landless for an equitable distribution of the Earth's resources. Of course, such movements are already underway around the world, the most obvious being Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra – the Landless Workers' Movement in Brazil.

This is not even a new concept for the vegan movement. The American Vegan Society has said that veganism includes an equitable distribution of the Earth's resources. The vegan-based Movement for Compassionate Living talks about promoting "a land-based society where as much of our food and resources as possible are produced locally." And in her book Why Vegan: The Ethics of Eating & the Need for Change, Kath Clement says:

It is in fact the ghastly pseudo-logic of economics which has produced starvation in a world of plenty. Surely we need to bring human and environmental factors into the equation. Our true resources lie not in gold bullion and "future markets" but in the richness of the land and the skill of the people.

Indeed, in contrast to a model based on markets and consumerism, I believe it is models like that represented by the South Central Farmers and their community garden – models based on land and the collective skills of people – with which the vegan movement can best align our ideals. Let's take the seeds The Garden provides us and use them to grow a world of new possibilities.



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