What is a globalist? The working definition thread

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Re: What is a globalist? The working definition thread

Postby American Dream » Sat Aug 25, 2018 7:11 am

http://newpol.org/content/globalists-vs ... tionalists

Globalists vs. Internationalists


by Ayan Meer August 24, 2018

ImageQuinn Slobodian. Globalists: The End of Empire and the Birth of Neoliberalism. Harvard University Press, 2018. 381pp.

Neoliberalism is dead, if it ever existed at all. Centrists and so-called moderates dismiss it as nothing more than a slur bandied around by leftists. On the left on the other hand, neoliberalism is at times portrayed as mere free market fundamentalism, or simply as a return to capitalism as it was intended, before the post-war social democratic hiatus. Thatcher and Reagan, the thinking goes, along with Milton Friedman and his “Chicago Boys”, wanted to unleash the full power of free markets’ self-regulating force.

These stories have had a long life, but they might be misleading caricatures, or at best tell only a very partial story, as Quinn Slobodian’s sweeping intellectual history of neoliberalism illustrates. Globalists is the work of an historian that relishes the opportunity to excavate, like an archaeologist, the fossils of an idea. In this genealogy of neoliberalism, a sweeping travelogue meandering through European intellectual history from the interwar period onwards, the roots are not to be found in a resurgent West’s fear of Soviet Communism during the Cold War, claims Slobodian, but rather in the more gentile central Europe of the late 1920s. The Austro-Hungarian empire has collapsed, and in a continent of new nations, a group of economists sees in this “world of walls” a menace to an international market that should lead to convergence across nations. Always the magnanimous one, economist Ludwig von Mises envisions, as recounted in the book, a world in which European workers earn less, but also in which “Hindus and coolies” would earn more.

Slobodian defines neoliberalism as an ideology devoted to finding extra-economic ways to protect the global economic order, to encase—rather than to unleash—market dogmas in a solid international institutional and juridical edifice. They formulate the idea that the realm of dominium, property rights, should be more important than imperium—a country’s sovereignty. Governments should act as gardeners, Hayek would write, tending to the flows of capital and trade, keeping the environment ideal for markets to thrive. Hayek’s garden would be protected by regulating structures, “establishments which are the result of human action, but not the execution of any human design”, in the words of 18th century philosopher Adam Ferguson. Scholars of neoliberalism, from Michel Foucault to Loïc Wacquant, had long understood that it operated as a reconfiguration—rather than a retreat—of the state. Slobodian’s book however adds a historical perspective, detailing how this ideological battle was waged through a clear strategy of lobbying in international institutional settings, pushing newly decolonized countries to relinquish economic nationalism, “kicking away the ladder” that had allowed the West to develop. One of the more interesting conceptualizations Slobodian credits to neoliberals in his book is the notion of “xenos rights” of capital, namely the “rights to safe passage and unmolested ownership of their property and capital, regardless of the territory.”

The term “neoliberalism” itself was coined through much debate at the Walter Lippmann Colloqium, organized in Paris in 1938, and it might have been helpful for readers of Slobodian’s book to learn more about one of the conveners, philosopher Louis Rougier, if only because his perspective is central to understanding the Franco-German roots of neoliberalism. At the heart of his thought and of that 1938 meeting is the idea that laissez-faire economics—i.e. Manchester Liberalism—and planisme were two sides of the same medal: “mystical doctrines”, as he would define them. Channeling ordoliberals, Rougier would write that “constructive liberalism implies a juridical order in which free competition would be enshrined, a juridical order in which the formation of trusts would become impossible, just as much as trade union tyranny, which imposes employment and salary conditions contrary to the balance of the labor market.” Rougier’s intellectual history almost mirrors Wilhelm Röpke’s, to whom Slobodian dedicates many pages. Röpke, a committed culturalist and racist, supported apartheid South Africa in the name of his belief in the fundamental difference between races, and the superiority of European civilization (sic) over Africans. Rougier collaborated with the Vichy regime during World War II, reason for which he would be barred from attending the first meeting of the Société du Mont Pélerin—founded by Röpke and Hayek—in 1947. He would later join in the 1970s Alain de Benoist’s GRECE, a neo-fascist and culturalist European group of intellectuals, to whom our contemporary nativist right owes a significant intellectual debt.

The trajectories of people like Röpke and Rougier hint to an unresolved tension amongst neoliberals, and one that Slobodian does not linger on enough, arguably. How come people that share a similar vision of the global economy—across a similar spectrum, at the very least—differ so much in their view of the world? How can neoliberalism make room for both Wilhelm Röpke and someone like Pascal Lamy, director-general of the WTO from 2005 to 2013, and who could not even remotely be suspected of harboring racial supremacist ideas? How come amongst neoliberals, equally committed to a free and encased global market, some are so attached to national sovereignty, like Brexit ideologue Douglas Carswell or Alternative for Germany’s Alice Weidel, while others, like European Union MP Guy Verhofstadt or philanthro-capitalist George Soros long for a post-national world? Perhaps an answer to this question also lies in the evolution of neoliberalism in Europe.

In Slobodian’s book in fact, neoliberals appear as somewhat uninterested in liberal democracy. Their main concern is the defense and securing of dominium rights over the fluctuations of politics played out on national stages. However, for a particular school of neoliberalism emerging in France, liberal democracy appears quite clearly as the condition of realization of a free market economy. They could be labeled the “idealist” branch of neoliberalism, covering their economic ideology with a veneer of high-minded liberal values. The Fondation Saint-Simon, a think tank started around historian Pierre Rosanvallon and economist Alain Minc in 1981 illustrated this evolution. Minc would coin the term of “circle of reason” to describe themselves, and more broadly the neoliberals across the right and left that were committed to their agenda. In recent years, this distinction between French and German ordoliberalism was seen in the EU’s reaction to the Greek government’s resistance in 2015. For both Emmanuel Macron and Wolfgang Schaüble, respectively finance ministers of France and Germany at the time, the outcome of the crisis would have been the same from the start: the submission of Greece to EU’s supra-national rules. Whereas Schaüble took the part of the bad cop, proudly showcasing his ordo-intransigence, Macron could play the good cop, covering the submission and impoverishment of the Greeks in the honey-tongued language of European liberal values. “We cannot let elections affect economic policy”, Schaüble would tell Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis during their first Eurogroup meeting, channeling the book’s cast of characters.

By situating the neoliberal movement as a globalist one, intent on creating a fully integrated world economy shielded from political change, one can see through Slobodian’s book the specter of the nativist backlash we have witnessed in recent years. Far-right movements have rebranded themselves as those more likely to protect people from the globalists—those that break walls and want to bring to the West “the standards of life of Hindus and coolies”, to circle back to Mises’ earlier words. Neoliberal globalists are coherent, claim the Steve Bannons and Marine Le Pens of the world: they want xenos rights of capital, which impoverish national economies; they also defend xenos rights of immigrants, who change national cultures and replace native populations (sic). The populist right contrasts to that a return to idealized national economies of the past, a shattering of the international juridical apparatuses encasing global market flows, to protect people from globalization. There is an apparent pernicious coherence in their reasoning.

Although the author does not enter into contemporary political debates, his book can be read as a defense of the nation against neoliberal policies. If neoliberalism places dominium rights over imperium, countering it will mean flipping that hierarchy and replacing at the center of political life the rule of the state over property and capital rights. This does not have to be a sclerotic statist and nationalist imperium. For Spinoza, as defined in his Tractatus Politicus, imperium is nothing more than “the right determined by the power of the multitude.” The first step against neoliberal hegemony might be to shatter the preeminence of dominium.

However, whenever one tries to theorize the nation from the left and to appropriate it as an emancipatory political unit, many within its ranks raise an eyebrow. Going down that line, they say, you will play perfectly into the hands of the nationalists. They have more experience with that form. Granted, the horrors of 20th century nationalism in Europe have made Europeans weary of any claim about nations. But the most radical decolonial movements are not averse to embracing that category, in Africa or South America. The greatest ideological victory of neoliberals might very well be the idea that any attempt to break the encasing of markets in an oppressive global order is, regardless of conditions, a reactionary and conservative move. Seen that way, there is, indeed, no alternative.

Yet the nation does not have to be a nativist nightmare. The populist rights think it is coherent in choosing to curb all xenos rights—of both capital and humans. A vision of the nation by the left would grant unalienable xenos rights to human beings, freedom of movement and settlement for all those wishing to do so. This way, no risks of confusion with the crypto-fascists, who pretend to defend the downtrodden as long as they have the right name or the right passport, only to foster conflicts between people that would have every interest in uniting politically. These unalienable xenos rights for humans would have to go along with a serious dismantling of the inalienability of Hayek’s xenos rights for capital. Disentangling freedom of human movement from the freedom of capital movement could be a way to free ourselves from the liberal capitalist mindset, which treats every human as capital.

This would have the beneficial consequence of stopping the political blackmail that consists in capital pitting regions of the world against each other in a race to the bottom. Economist Dani Rodrik theorized at the end of the last century the “trilemma” of international political economy: one can only have two out of national sovereignty, global economic integration, and democratic government. But as Slobodian’s book makes clear, global economic integration in its neoliberal form cannot allow for democracy, because it is precisely predicated on protecting the market from democracies.

Political constructivism beyond the nation-state is possible, but history shows that upheavals of that magnitude, namely changing people’s perspective of their communities of belonging and purpose, is usually a long and violent process. With which political resources could we organize a truly democratic global government, and in how much time? Those suffering the effects of neoliberalism across the world do not have that much time. This is why one is forced to sneer at suggestions like some recently seen in the media, suggesting the imminent demise of nation-states. The hope could instead be to have inter-national movements, where the convergence of standards of living does not happen at the lowest common denominator for the majority, as Ludwig von Mises would have wanted. Internationalism, in this sense, becomes the true opposition to globalism. There is nothing mystical about this nation, it is just the perimeter on which collective sovereignty is exercised, just one product of historical contingency like others. But the one that seems to be at this historical juncture the most useful in effecting progressive change in the world. The question then becomes how to organize inter-national rules and inter-national solidarity, an effort in building true internationalism for everyone—not just globalism for elites.
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Re: What is a globalist? The working definition thread

Postby American Dream » Tue Oct 09, 2018 6:36 am

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Re: What is a globalist? The working definition thread

Postby JackRiddler » Wed Oct 10, 2018 9:59 am

I like Quinn Slobodian.

I don't agree "neoliberalism is dead." This is a terminological debate but important. Of David Harvey's definitions (all of which apply), the most accurate is that neoliberalism (ascendant, as opposed to as an ideology) is the decision to resume class war within the capitalist sphere in response to the 1970s crisis. It is a strategy and fully adaptable. Marketization of body and soul, ROI ueber alles, individual market value as virtue, permanent maximum possible suppression of wages at every turn through many tactics, intensified state authoritarianism and inflexibility in response to popular economic movements, openness to fascism over even old-style social democratic left (because "unaffordable"), privatization as response to every problem, disaster capitalist exploitation of every crisis manifestation, and enclosure and commodification of everything not previously commodified continue through each phase. I think in the Anglosphere and West the phases are identifiable as initial struggle to gain hegemony through crisis (70s), conservative neoliberalism (Thatcher/Reagan), capture of social democracy (Clinton/Blair and really the whole EU), and in the 21st C. U.S. a kind of kayfabe in which two neoliberal parties play at being globalist or nationalist, "conservative" or identity-liberal, deregulatory or regulatory (but the latter always as determined by business, see ACA & Dodd-Frank). Trump brings an extreme crisis response and skew to fascist solutions, but intensifies the real primacy of class war, ROI ueber alles, and market value as virtue. He is a product of neoliberalism (going back to the 70s) and intensifies it. The boss is always right, please the boss and you will get ahead. If you look at the economic strategy, it's all about "countries should act as gardeners," doing whatever is possible to attract capital. At the top globalism is a debate about what's best for capitalism counterbalanced against maintaining the stability of capitalist states.

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Re: What is a globalist? The working definition thread

Postby JackRiddler » Fri Oct 19, 2018 2:39 pm

Henry Giroux wrote:Some liberals and leftists think neoliberalism is dead. Not sure what planet they are living on. In the age of Trump, neoliberalism is on steroids. Many people think that because neoliberalism failed entirely on its false trickle down promises, especially given the economic crisis of 2008, that it is dead. What they really mean is that it was exposed for the lies it produced in order to legitimate the misery it produced and the wealth and power it further concentrated in the hands of the financial elite. Unfortunately, the economic crisis was not matched by a crisis of ideas/legitimacy. Remember, the neoliberal elite got bailed out. They didn't fail, they got rejuvenated as it was made clear that the political state had become the corporate state and the latter has reached it high point under the ultimate neoliberal, Trump. Under Trump, neoliberalism is having a field day. Think about the tax cuts for the ultra rich, the endless deregulations, the attack on the safety net and social provisions. Neoliberalism is far from dead, It just doesn't care what people think about the damage it does, especially under Trump. Actually neoliberalism has set the stage for merging with elements of fascism and as I have argued recently has produced what I call neoliberal fascism. See:

https://truthout.org/articles/neolibera ... f-history/

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Re: What is a globalist? The working definition thread

Postby American Dream » Wed Oct 24, 2018 8:19 am

The real definitions of “globalist” and “nationalist”

By Ana Campoy October 23, 2018

Image
A nationalist in Texas.

Donald Trump had a vocabulary lesson for the thousands of supporters who gathered at a Houston rally yesterday for Ted Cruz, Texas’s candidate for the US Senate. He defined two terms: globalist and nationalist.

America is winning again. America is respected again because we are putting America first. We’re putting America first. It hasn’t happened in a lot of decades. We’re putting them first. We’re taking care of ourselves for a change folks… But radical Democrats want to turn back the clock… for the rule of corrupt, power-hungry, globalists. You know what a globalist is? You know what a globalist is? A globalist is a person that wants the globe to do well, frankly, not caring about our country so much.

And you know what, we can’t have that. You know they have a word. It sort of became old-fashioned. It’s called a nationalist, and I say really, we’re not supposed to use that word. You know what I am? I’m a nationalist, okay? I’m a nationalist. Nationalist. Nothing wrong. Use that word. Use that word.


The crowd responded with an enthusiastic chant of “USA, USA, USA, USA, USA, USA.”

But there’s a lot more behind those words than the simple definitions provided by Trump. Here’s a more in-depth look at their meaning.

“Globalist”

On the surface, the term could be taken as a stand-in for “globalization supporter.” Its origin, however, is more problematic.

It can be tracked back the Second World War. Though it was first used by a historian to describe Adolf Hitler’s expansionist ambitions, “globalist” soon started acquiring anti-Semitic connotations, according to The Atlantic. For example, in 1943, an isolationist Republican politician used”globalist” to describe colleagues who were advocating for taking in European refugees; his speech was later published in full by a group that sought to “preserve America as a Christian Nation being conscious of the fact that there is a highly organized campaign to substitute Jewish tradition for Christian tradition.”

The terms retains some of its ant-Semitic roots, experts say.


Continues: https://qz.com/1433675/how-trump-define ... tionalist/
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Re: What is a globalist? The working definition thread

Postby JackRiddler » Wed Oct 24, 2018 10:41 am

It can be tracked back the Second World War. Though it was first used by a historian to describe Adolf Hitler’s expansionist ambitions, “globalist” soon started acquiring anti-Semitic connotations, according to The Atlantic. For example, in 1943, an isolationist Republican politician used”globalist” to describe colleagues who were advocating for taking in European refugees; his speech was later published in full by a group that sought to “preserve America as a Christian Nation being conscious of the fact that there is a highly organized campaign to substitute Jewish tradition for Christian tradition.”

The terms retains some of its ant-Semitic roots, experts say.


Experts say, eh?

This is true also of the following words: plutocrat/plutocracy, liberal/liberalism, communist/-ism, international/-ism, etc. Don't use them or experts might say it about you!

This is both factually true and, as an argument in 2018, nonsensical or at any rate insufficient. There are many reasons why one might use the term and NOT be at all referring to Jews. The more recent history is that globalization became a banner for next-stage capitalist development in the 1990s. Anti-capitalists were boxed in as "anti-globalization," implying they can't see the big picture and are provincial. Some responded by saying they were for a different globalization (e.g., "globalization from below") but not "globalists," which as with Slobodian was a term for the Davos/WTO/IMF/etc approach. "Globalists" was kind of a way of weakening the positive power (at the time) or inevitability implied by the term "globalization." I first saw "globalist" (re)introduced by Ulrich Beck (he made a show of it) precisely so as to solve this rhetorical conundrum, or so he thought. Go ahead and decide his motive was anti-Semitic, I don't know, maybe he secretly was, you never know with Germans amirite? I always found it inadequate to the task, and based in a false understanding of the system and also of how rhetoric works, as if finding the right word is all that is needed. I find the term IS used by suspect characters, but mostly not. I also find that it's useless because it lacks precision and accuracy.

The correct response in the first place was to say that "globalization" was just a cover for a brutal new neoliberal stage of capitalism, which was already the world system. "Globalization" was the new cover for standardizing state economic policies so as to increase exploitation of working people, and of course for imperialist activity generally. The focus should have always remained on capitalism and imperialism, and I think that is more the case today on the left; and "globalization" has indeed become a right-wing way of identifying an enemy that isn't capitalism but conveniently foreign, whether or not it also includes or exploits anti-Semitic belief.

The current right-wing nationalists are of course all for their own kind of globalization. Capital and trade (under bilateral agreements) should have power to move across borders. People should be restricted. Repressive policies should apply worldwide. They're really the next logical stage in neoliberal globalization and austerity politics, given that it was never going to work to bring prosperity as advertised and was always going to produce backlash. It's a way of disciplining and harnessing the backlash to support more of the same while waving flags and stomping on otherized, in the West "otherwized" mainly meaning brown people (or, for the majority, letting others and especially the state stomp on brown people while they affect to ignore it).

Here's Slobodian making the latter point about the new right-wing.

www.nytimes.com

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/22/opin ... ation.html

Trump, Populists and the Rise of Right-Wing Globalization

The president and the far right want to keep the free movement of goods and money, but not of people.

By Quinn Slobodian

Mr. Slobodian is the author of “Globalists: The End of Empire and the Birth of Neoliberalism.”

Oct. 22, 2018


President Trump with Robert Lighthizer, the United States trade representative, at the White House in October.CreditCreditAl Drago for The New York Times
In a recent speech at the United Nations, President Trump railed against “the ideology of globalism” and “unelected, unaccountable global bureaucracy.”

For those of us who came of age in the 1990s, there was an eerie sense of déjà vu. Then, too, there were protests against global institutions insulated from democratic decision-making. In the most iconic confrontation, my college classmates helped scupper the World Trade Organization meeting in Seattle in 1999.

The movement called for “alter-globalization” — a different kind of globalization more attentive to labor and minority rights, the environment and economic equality. Two decades later, traces of that movement are hard to find. But something surprising has happened in the meantime. A new version of alter-globalization has won — from the right.

We often hear that world politics is divided between open versus closed societies, between globalists and nationalists. But these analyses obscure the real challenge to the status quo.

President Trump and the far right preach not the end of globalization, but their own strain of it, not its abandonment but an alternative form. They want robust trade and financial flows, but they draw a hard line against certain kinds of migration. The story is not one of open versus closed, but of the right cherry-picking aspects of globalization while rejecting others. Goods and money will remain free, but people won’t.

The current United States trade war is a case in point. Commentators lament that Mr. Trump is tearing up “the rules America itself created more than 80 years ago” and conjure up visions of the 1930s, when nations and empires dreamed of total self-sufficiency. Yet they overlook the fact that the actions of the president and his influential trade representative Robert Lighthizer betray no desire to withdraw from the world market.

Quite the opposite. The express effort is to use unilateral action to bully other countries, China in particular, into better market access for American products. The point of comparison is not the dreams of economic self-sufficiency of the 1930s but Ronald Reagan’s assault on Japanese competition in the 1980s. “The basic philosophy that we have is that we want free trade without barriers,” Mr. Lighthizer explained to Congress in August.

In Britain, the Brexit campaign was built on the demand to “take back control” and fear-mongering about refugees and immigrants. Withdrawal from the world economy was never on the program. On the contrary, the Brexiteers championed a pivot from the European economy to the global one unfettered by the regulations of Brussels and the European Court of Justice. Almost all negotiations since the vote to leave have been in pursuit of a vision in which the free flow of goods and money across the channel can be preserved while labor migration can be squelched. A recent report from British and American think tanks close to the Brexiteers proposes a new free trade agreement between the two countries that could act as an embryonic World Trade Organization 2.0 that would target more directly Chinese state subsidies for industries and the lingering state-provided social services like the National Health Service.

The pattern of right-wing alter-globalization is repeated in Germany and Austria, where the Alternative for Germany and the Austrian Freedom Party have recently recorded electoral wins. Neither party proposes national self-sufficiency or economic withdrawal. In their programs, the rejection of economic globalization is highly selective. The European Union is condemned, but the language demanding increased trade and competitiveness is entirely mainstream. The Alternative for Germany takes fiscal conservatism to an absurd degree with criminal charges demanded for policymakers who overspend. Both parties call for no inheritance tax and burdensome regulations, even as they make new promises for social spending.

Free market capitalism is not rejected but anchored more deeply in conservative family structures and in a group identity defined against an Islamic threat from the East. Several of the Alternative for Germany’s leaders are also members in a society named after Friedrich Hayek, often seen as the arch-thinker of free-market globalism.

Even the alt-right, usually seen as the epitome of the fortress mentality of separatist survivalism, contains significant strains of alter-globalization. Some of the alt-right’s most prominent figures, from Richard Spencer to Christopher Cantwell (better known as the “crying Nazi” from the 2017 Charlottesville, Va., protest), have expressed their sympathies for the radical form of libertarianism known as anarcho-capitalism.

Many people on the alt-right — including the premier anarcho-capitalist thinker, the German economist Hans-Hermann Hoppe — believe that cultural homogeneity is a precondition for socio-economic order. Mr. Hoppe envisions a dissolution of the current world map of states into thousands of tiny units the size of Hong Kong, Andorra and Monaco without representative government and ruled only by private contract.

Like Hong Kong and Singapore, these zones would not be isolated but hyper-connected, nodes for the flow of finance and trade ruled not by democracy (which would cease to exist) but market power with disputes settled through private arbitration. No human rights would exist beyond the private rights codified in contract and policed through private security forces. As Mr. Hoppe argues, the alt-right and identitarian vision of “a place for every race” need not conflict with a global division of labor. None of this need disrupt commercial exchange and the international division of labor. As Mr. Hoppe wrote, “not even the most exclusive form of segregationism has anything to do with a rejection of free trade.” The maxim would be: separate but global.

The varieties of right-wing alter-globalization differ significantly in degrees of horror. What they share is a rejection not of the “postwar international order” — as many pundits fruitlessly argue — but of the order of the 1990s. In the cross hairs are the products of that decade, above all, the crown jewels of neoliberal globalism: the W.T.O., the European Union and Nafta (which was recently renegotiated and renamed).

The right’s alter-globalizers unite in a condemnation of the structures of multilateral governance that emerged from that decade along with their implication that democracy and capitalism were twins joined at the reported “end of history.”

Instead, in a forthright embrace of inegalitarianism, they question the ability of every country and every population to practice democratic capitalism and, in many cases, propose a departure from status quo democratic capitalism themselves.

The idea that openness is under attack is too vague. The formula of right-wing alter-globalization is: yes to free finance and free trade. No to free migration, democracy, multilateralism and human equality.

Quinn Slobodian, a history professor at Wellesley College, is the author of “Globalists: The End of Empire and the Birth of Neoliberalism.”



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Re: What is a globalist? The working definition thread

Postby American Dream » Wed Oct 24, 2018 11:08 am

I do feel that there is something important about Judeophobia in terms of the deployment of the term "Globalist" as slur by reactionary nationalists. JFREJ is generally good at putting these sorts of things in context:


Understanding antisemitism


Examples of these false narratives today

The false association of Jews and money does not preclude a legitimate critique of capital or
capitalists—banks, the real estate industry, or other financial actors. But all too often, people
fail to separate the two. We see this expressed subtly when people in labor and housing justice
coalitions say “my Jewish landlord” (especially if the landlords are visibly observant Jews) or
“my Jewish employer.” They may not be explicitly anti-Jewish, but the fact that they mentioned
“Jewishness” at all is a sign of how anti-Jewish sentiment is insidiously connected to wealth,
greed, and control in the American consciousness. (How many times have you heard someone
complain about a Presbyterian landlord or a Lutheran employer?) Jews who are slumlords, bad
bosses, and racist bureaucrats aren’t that way because they’re Jewish. Like people from every
ethnic group, they are participating in a system of racialized capitalist exploitation. In order
for our movements to build effective anti-racist, working-class-based coalitions and actions,
Jews who oppress must be challenged because of their roles in that system, not because of their
Jewishness.

The slippage from economic misery to blaming the Jews is an easy one to make, given that these
ideas about Jews (dirty, greedy, conspiratorial) pervade Western culture. On the political left we
have a strong sense of how capital accumulation and the misdeeds of the wealthy do, in fact,
decimate our communities and undermine our global health and wellness. They are indeed oppressive,
corrosive forces. But while the 1% gather in places like Davos, TED conferences and Burning Man to exchange ideas and business cards, it is not a conspiracy—by Jews or anyone
else. All of this is the structural functioning of capitalism in all its racialized, gendered and imperialist
dimensions. To put it another way, antisemitism frames the function of capitalism as a
problem of human or communal mischief rather than as intrinsic to capitalism itself. Capitalism
isn’t oppressive because Jews are ruining it; capitalism is oppressive because capitalism is
oppressive. The left cannot allow itself to slip into condoning or repeating the same lies that go
back to Medieval Europe and get refreshed and re-seeded by propaganda such as The Protocols
or else we will find ourselves in the same moral fog as the right.

On the campaign trail, Donald Trump occasionally offered legitimate criticisms of the role of
offshoring and Wall Street speculation. But his final campaign ad, which featured Jewish financiers (George Soros, Lloyd Blankfein) and Federal Reserve Chairperson Janet Yellen (also
Jewish), suggests covert antisemitic conspiracy instead of actual economic critique. This is nefarious
not only because it leads to violence, such as recent threats against Jewish community
centers and other Jewish institutions, but because it provides simplistic and facile answers (Jewish
control! Jewish greed!)


More: https://jfrej.org/wp-content/uploads/20 ... 2017-1.pdf
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Re: What is a globalist? The working definition thread

Postby Sounder » Wed Oct 24, 2018 6:48 pm

A Globalist is an extreme racist that feeds on destroying any community voice and heritage so as to be able to asset strip any given patch on Earth.

All the race baiting is a dodge and cover for the Globalists own racism.
All these things will continue as long as coercion remains a central element of our mentality.
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Re: What is a globalist? The working definition thread

Postby JackRiddler » Wed Oct 24, 2018 10:13 pm

Sounder » Wed Oct 24, 2018 5:48 pm wrote:A Globalist is an extreme racist that feeds on destroying any community voice and heritage so as to be able to asset strip any given patch on Earth.

All the race baiting is a dodge and cover for the Globalists own racism.


Aha, there's the other extreme paying a visit, except, well, way more extreme. Sounder presents the ill-constructed "globalists" as absolutely a real and delimited thing, but more than this: it is the only true evil in the world. It is employed as the apex bogeyman to exonerate the thousand racist-provincial national-revanchist fantasy-nostalgiac bully-boy intellectual-hating women-controlling fascist sprouts of our time, from Trump to Orban to Modi to Duterte, all of them also fierce defenders of private property as long as it exceeds a certain level of wealth. (Fuck small-timers if they're in the way. But if they're not, let them wave the flag.)

Meanwhile the majority of real-existing capitalist ruling classes will choose to support the fascists every time, rather than allow any form of social justice to return as a value. Bolsonaro winning in Brazil? Wall Street loves it! Oh sorry, was that too empirical an observation? Bolsonaro, Mr. "Brazilian Heritage" (insofar as this refers to dictatorship and torture), is of course promising to massively expand the "strip-mining" of the Amazon, with profits for any investor from anywhere. And he will be applauded as a great nationalist making his country great again by the likes of Trump. Therein lies the reality of your "globalists" (transnational capitalist ruling classes) and their "nationalist" enemies, engaging in the usual collaboration whenever the crunchpoint comes. This is the deadliest of all kayfabes.
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Re: What is a globalist? The working definition thread

Postby American Dream » Thu Oct 25, 2018 2:22 am

I tend to think of the "globalists" as members of a socio-economic class with some sort of defining criteria. Sounds like they may be as much or more a cabal, like a secret society with a membership roll that one can discover.
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Re: What is a globalist? The working definition thread

Postby Sounder » Thu Oct 25, 2018 4:44 am

Jack wrote...
Sounder presents the ill-constructed "globalists" as absolutely a real and delimited thing, but more than this:


This sounds like add copy, wait there is more. Anyway, as anybody that pays attention knows, our main source of issues IMO (not evil), is our use of a split model of reality that has the effect of encouraging manipulation and extremism.

Manipulators may love it, but the large majority that are committed to fellowship do not.

The rest of it, I have no problem, Globalists and Nationalists, they are both fascistic haters of the idea of individual self determination.
AD wrote...
I tend to think of the "globalists" as members of a socio-economic class with some sort of defining criteria. Sounds like they may be as much or more a cabal, like a secret society with a membership roll that one can discover.


How about you let me say what I think rather than you telling me what I think. I do wonder what you think as being a defining criteria for Globalists.
All these things will continue as long as coercion remains a central element of our mentality.
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Re: What is a globalist? The working definition thread

Postby Sounder » Thu Oct 25, 2018 6:03 am

Sounder » Wed Oct 24, 2018 5:48 pm wrote:
A Globalist is an extreme racist that feeds on destroying any community voice and heritage so as to be able to asset strip any given patch on Earth.

All the race baiting is a dodge and cover for the Globalists own racism.




Aha, there's the other extreme paying a visit, except, well, way more extreme.


Huh, you don't challenge what is written, because it is true. How is it that what is said here 'represents' anything 'extreme', let alone the opinion of a 'nationalist', that you try so hard to paint me as being?

Truth is, when folk are uprooted from their cultural heritage, cognitive dissonance increases along with other social dysfunctions, creating situations where it becomes hard to think straight and easy to manipulate the various bundles of reactive mind blather.

Dat my friends is money. Fuck up folks authentic relations to reality, then sell then a substitute and call it human progress. Welcome to our technocratic wonderland, where the 'smart' people are only strip mining this or that patch of Earth strictly for the betterment of humanity.
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Re: What is a globalist? The working definition thread

Postby American Dream » Thu Oct 25, 2018 8:40 am

The term reactionary nationalist is important as it links individual ideology not only to Trump but also to the world-wide tendency of nationalist strongmen and xenophobes which is quickly becoming a global problem.
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Re: What is a globalist? The working definition thread

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Oct 25, 2018 9:16 am

.

I hope my posts above have made it clear that after some thought I don't find the term very useful at all any more. There is capitalism. It has always been transnational and expansive, wherever it is found. It has always had a tendency to melt all that was solid into air. It has always produced ruling classes that were dependent on home states (and their militaries) and on regional labor forces. Even when these ruling classes were not always rooted in local notions of nation, they were always nationally based, of necessity, and more often than not have tended to join in nationalism (or other belief systems based on territorial sovereignty) rather than play in grand international ideas. I believe this to be true today as well, in large part because of capitalism's intimate relationship to war as the ultimate decider and enforcer.

Through conquest and colonization, the capitalist growth emerging from Europe began to achieve a global scale starting about 500 years ago. Its dynamics have seen the rise and fall of a series of top-dog imperial nations and competitors or "great powers," some of which have controlled vast overseas holdings by various means, from settler colonialism or military rule to colonialism by debt and socioeconomic domination. The dynamics of this as a system have expanded marketization until it has become dominant everywhere, and imposed a global division of labor that usually functions as a single ecology of people, commodities and transport across semi-autonomous regions. Within this, the systemic expressions in each country and region vary from systems of near-total forced labor and primitive extraction (alongside impoverished majorities considered surplus) to mixed and sophisticated distributions of "prosperity."

From the mid to late 19th century forward, the world can be described as globalized under capitalism. This stimulated the rise of particular international institutions and legal structures, which have evolved through various crises into a kind of incomplete global regulation consisting of different kinds of institutions that do not necessarily pursue the same goals. The international and transnational institutions that consistently work and have power are those that work on behalf of capital accumulation and with the backing of the main power states. They are financial institutions generally based in the known major financial centers, serving pools of often plundered capital distributed around the offshore galaxy; and a set of structured, state-founded and largely corporate-run enforcement institutions such as WTO, IMF, etc., to which we can add the imperial militaries and alliance systems.

In the present phase, capitalism as a system has required neoliberalism in each nation-state as a condition of surviving in the competition that capitalism engenders. This arises from observable dynamics and many in the ruling class understand it better than most others, and seek to serve, regulate and profit from the development. The dynamic once initiated creates a nation-by-nation standardization of policy and society along neoliberal lines. The empire-nations and their transnational institutions of capitalism (such as IMF and Pentagon) force this aggressively on countries that for whatever reason resist (some of them because they are closed dictatorships).

The main descriptor for all this is capitalism. The ruling classes in all this are capital at the helm of state formations, always with transnational interests. The mistaken terminology discussed in this thread for the main part fails to describe this accurately, and I have come to eschew it.

.
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Re: What is a globalist? The working definition thread

Postby Elvis » Thu Oct 25, 2018 12:22 pm

The connotations are unavoidable: the other day I asked a Trumper to look at an income graph that illustrated the ongoing and increasing capitalist rake-off of middle and working class wealth.

Trumper response: "I don't look at graphs—the globalists put out disinformation to say whatever they want!"

In their next hyperventilation, they tell you that capitalism is the only system that's ever really worked. MAGA!
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