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MacCruiskeen » Thu Oct 16, 2014 5:31 pm wrote:http://novaramedia.com/
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This discussion is really great, especially the second half of it (from about 35 minutes on) after they've worked up some momentum:
http://novaramedia.com/2012/07/the-refu ... lls-cop-2/
Paolo Virno (discussed):
http://www.generation-online.org/c/fcmultitude3.htm
Debord/Spectacle, full text english pdf:
http://www.antiworld.se/project/referen ... ctacle.pdf
tangential:
http://www.telesurtv.net/english/opinio ... -0025.html
http://www.commondreams.org/views/2014/ ... capitalism
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Website of james butler, one of the prime movers of the novara website/radio station:
http://piercepenniless.wordpress.com/
[...] Fordism, not neoliberalism, was the exception to capitalist rule. Both before and after this short-lived period of relative prosperity, precarity remained the norm. Whatever stability and prosperity were achieved during the auferious era of capitalism, they were built upon ecologically devastating consumer lifestyles, neocolonial exploitation of the “Third World,” a racialized underclass and the exploitation of women in the home. They also depended on cheap fossil fuels, easy access to credit and an explosive urbanization process, all of which are growth factors impossible to reproduce today. Although these benefits were never extended to more than a fraction of the world’s population, they were and still are the primary justification for global capitalism.
Precarity is a recurrent and defining feature of life under capitalism. What is distinctive about precarity, in its present form, is that it started out as a takeover of the insurrectionist desires and democratic excess unleashed in the late 60s and 70s. The hot decade of the 70s witnessed [...]
http://thedisorderofthings.com/2013/10/ ... sser-work/
We need to challenge the hegemonic ‘common sense’ of market relations, of competitive individualism, of private gain, the denigration of ‘the public’, and much else besides
The existing economic vocabulary is one of the roots of the elite’s ability to maintain the straitjacket we are in, argues Doreen Massey. We need to challenge the current terms of debate and establish a new political terrain.
http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolic ... ign=buffer
A Room She Never Slept In: The Murder Of Dorothy Kilgallen
by RAZFX 2015-01-18 – 10:21:27
http://lookingglass.blog.co.uk/2015/01/ ... -19986140/
Keywords for the Age of Austerity
John Patrick Leary is Assistant Professor of English at Wayne State University. I write about literature, history, and politics in the United States and Latin America. On this blog you can find "Keywords for the Age of Austerity" and some of my past writing.
Suggest an austerity keyword via the "Ask me anything" link or via twitter @johnpatleary.
“Keywords for the Age of Austerity” is an occasional series on the vocabulary of inequality. Certain words, as Raymond Williams wrote in his classic Keywords, bind together ways of seeing culture and society. These shared meanings change over time, shaping and reflecting the society in which they are made. Some of the words I will consider here are old, seemingly innocent terms that have acquired a particular fashion or developed a particular new meaning in recent years; others are recent coinages. All of them relate to affinity for hierarchy and a celebration of the virtues of competition, "the marketplace," and the virtual technologies of our time. This series will explore the historical meanings embedded in these words as well as the new meanings that our age has given them.
Published on February 10, 2016 Comments 15
Now we are One…
One year ago today five (as we then were) longtime Guardian readers who were being repeatedly censored in and banished from the ironically titled “Comment is Free” sections, got together to create an outlet where they could express themselves freely.
We started with no hopes of a large audience, and mostly we were posting for ourselves, for other censored users of CiF and for the record. To begin with we were getting just a few hundred visitors a week, if that. But – astonishingly – we seemed to strike a chord with many people out there, and our visitors quite quickly began to increase beyond anything we had imagined possible. By early April we were getting thousands – sometimes tens of thousands – of people a day coming to our small website. Those numbers received a large hit when we were forced to re-locate but they recovered, and – thanks in part to the support of wonderful websites like Russian Insider (who have shared so much of our material) and Media Lens – we are a small but thriving voice in the alternate media.
OffG has assumed a place in the lives of the three remaining original founders – and our regular contributors – we could never have foreseen 12 months ago. It’s been hard -even exhausting – work. We are still entirely unfunded and 100% voluntary, so everything we do has to be slotted around work and family and other considerations. There’s been a lot less free time, but the journey has been fascinating, and well worth it.
We take it as an achievement that the Guardian has recently made it clear it will ban people from commenting if they link to OffG, because we make – in their own words – “statements of fact regarding our journalists credibility.”
You see. It’s official. The Graun no longer has any time for statements of fact.
They just spoil the narrative.
We’re not sure which of our Guardian critiques finally pushed them to this. But we like to think it was our portrait of their star Russia Analyst Luke Harding. The man who called Berezovsky “Mr Banana” in order to foil the FSB.
Thanks to all of you out there who support us with your contributions, and your readership. It’s because enough people care about freedom of opinion, suppressed narratives and media integrity that sites such as ours can thrive. Let’s hope we can keep going and thriving for another year.
Happy Birthday to us.
http://off-guardian.org/
The Peacock's Tail
Essays on Mathematics and Culture
About:
“The equation on the page of his scribbler began to spread out a widening tail, eyed and starred like a peacock’s; and, when the eyes and stars of its indices had been eliminated, began slowly to fold itself together again. The indices appearing and disappearing were eyes opening and closing; the eyes opening and closing were stars being born and being quenched.”
- from the novel A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce (1916)
https://pavlopoulos.wordpress.com/about/
Iamwhomiam » Sat Feb 13, 2016 9:31 pm wrote:Sorry to tell you this Mac, but the lookingglass blog is no more. As of Dec. 16.
I was really looking forward to reading this:
http://lookingglass.blog.co.uk/2015/01/18/in-a-room-she-never-slept-in-the-murder-of-dorothy-kilgallen-19986140/
Richard Raznikov retweeted
Smita Narula @SmitaNarula 13. Dec. 2014
Last words of 7 lives. #MillionsMarchNYC #BlackLivesMater #ICantBreathe
Greg Guma / Maverick Media
Media and society in the age of uncertainty / ARCHIVE (2008-2016)
http://muckraker-gg.blogspot.de/2009/09 ... yssey.html
MacCruiskeen » Tue Apr 18, 2017 7:21 pm wrote:Greg Guma / Maverick Media
Media and society in the age of uncertainty / ARCHIVE (2008-2016)
http://muckraker-gg.blogspot.de/2009/09 ... yssey.html
Since Einstein's breakthrough the scientific community has been rocked by a variety of new theories involving space-time possibilities, fundamental energies, self-organizing biogravitational fields, and the relation of consciousness to gravity. Perhaps the most revolutionary of the new theories is that consciousness is the hidden variable in the structure of matter itself. Relativity theory and quantum mechanics have thus brought science back to ideas explored two thousand years ago by Parmenides, and subsequently refined by the philosophy of Berkeley, the astronomy of James Jeans, and the work of Whitehead. The ultimate basis of being, they imply, is not sensory material but rather an ideal principle of form.
http://muckraker-gg.blogspot.com/2010/0 ... ainty.html
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