well that's the extent of my participation in this thread
methlabretriever posted:i think that's their goal, right? The West however seems to have begun to change their stance wrt to ISIS and has begun to damage/destroy their oil infrastructure. I dunno how much that makes a difference considering The West needs ISIS to prop-up the Global Bourgeoisie's rate of profit. so i guess ISIS will probably be around for sometime
there is no transnational capitalist class
Urbandale posted:methlabretriever posted:i think that's their goal, right? The West however seems to have begun to change their stance wrt to ISIS and has begun to damage/destroy their oil infrastructure. I dunno how much that makes a difference considering The West needs ISIS to prop-up the Global Bourgeoisie's rate of profit. so i guess ISIS will probably be around for sometime
there is no transnational capitalist class
how so?
Regardless, you can't bomb that kind of money laundering potential, whether there's any infrastructure left or not
methlabretriever posted:Urbandale posted:methlabretriever posted:i think that's their goal, right? The West however seems to have begun to change their stance wrt to ISIS and has begun to damage/destroy their oil infrastructure. I dunno how much that makes a difference considering The West needs ISIS to prop-up the Global Bourgeoisie's rate of profit. so i guess ISIS will probably be around for sometime
there is no transnational capitalist class
how so?
"As Boron points out with respect to the world’s 200 largest multinational corporations, '96 percent…have their headquarters in only eight countries, are legally registered as incorporated companies of eight countries; and their boards of directors sit in eight countries of metropolitan capital. Less than 2 percent of their boards of directors’ members are non-nationals…. Their reach is global, but their property and their owners have a clear national base.' "
http://monthlyreview.org/2015/07/01/the-new-imperialism-of-globalized-monopoly-finance-capital/
http://chicago.suntimes.com/news/7/71/1139761/campus-quiet-u-c-reacts-threat
A University of Illinois at Chicago student threatened online to shoot 16 individuals at the University of Chicago — one for each time Laquan McDonald was shot — which resulted in U. of C. classes being cancelled Monday.
But when investigators searched the off-campus residence of the UIC student, no gun was found,
Urbandale posted:re: TNCC the biggest counterexamples i can think of are the quite significant divisions between imperialist states regarding the iraq war and ukrainian civil war. imperialist rivalries between france, germany, and the us/uk seem pretty obvious to me
Not the mention the sui generis case of Japan.
Urbandale posted:re: TNCC the biggest counterexamples i can think of are the quite significant divisions between imperialist states regarding the iraq war and ukrainian civil war. imperialist rivalries between france, germany, and the us/uk seem pretty obvious to me
of course there's divisions. i don't think it's fully singular at this time, however as the contradictions deepen, the trend is clearly in that direction. i think the global bourgeoisie would eventually have to unite against the global proletariat lest they their class position.
Urbandale posted:re: TNCC the biggest counterexamples i can think of are the quite significant divisions between imperialist states regarding the iraq war and ukrainian civil war. imperialist rivalries between france, germany, and the us/uk seem pretty obvious to me
hrmmm. you're right. rich people do disagree sometimes
methlabretriever posted:Urbandale posted:re: TNCC the biggest counterexamples i can think of are the quite significant divisions between imperialist states regarding the iraq war and ukrainian civil war. imperialist rivalries between france, germany, and the us/uk seem pretty obvious to me
of course there's divisions. i don't think it's fully singular at this time, however as the contradictions deepen, the trend is clearly in that direction. i think the global bourgeoisie would eventually have to unite against the global proletariat lest they their class position.
that sure is an unfalsifiable argument youre touting there. what are characteristics of this group and how do they oppose both national and comprador bourgeois?
Urbandale posted:methlabretriever posted:Urbandale posted:re: TNCC the biggest counterexamples i can think of are the quite significant divisions between imperialist states regarding the iraq war and ukrainian civil war. imperialist rivalries between france, germany, and the us/uk seem pretty obvious to me
of course there's divisions. i don't think it's fully singular at this time, however as the contradictions deepen, the trend is clearly in that direction. i think the global bourgeoisie would eventually have to unite against the global proletariat lest they their class position.
that sure is an unfalsifiable argument youre touting there. what are characteristics of this group and how do they oppose both national and comprador bourgeois?
which group?
Same tune, different song, in the case of business relationships among the capitalists of tight knit religious communities (i.e. 18th century Quakers).
Neither of those cases would be examples of what you are gesturing towards, however.
Edited by RedMaistre ()
methlabretriever posted:i think that's their goal, right? The West however seems to have begun to change their stance wrt to ISIS and has begun to damage/destroy their oil infrastructure.
Guess Why The U.S. Is Not (Seriously) Bombing ISIS's Oil Business
The U.S. did not start bombing the Islamic State's oil infrastructure and oil distribution system until the Russian president Putin shamed U.S. President Obama at the G20. Putin showed around satellite pictures of huge oil truck assemblies waiting in the desert to be filled. These were through 13 month of bombing left completely unmolested by U.S. air strikes. The U.S. then bombed a bit and claimed to have destroyed 116 waiting oil trucks while the Russians claimed to have destroyed over 1,000.
So far I have found four reason given to explain why the U.S. did not bomb, and does not seriously bomb, the oil truck convoys.
Civilian casualties:
The Obama administration has also balked at attacking the Islamic State’s fleet of tanker trucks — its main distribution network — fearing civilian casualties.
A former CIA director says concerns about environmental impact have prevented the White House from bombing oil wells that finance the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS).
“We didn’t go after oil wells, actually hitting oil wells that ISIS controls, because we didn’t want to do environmental damage, and we didn’t want to destroy that infrastructure,” Michael Morell said Tuesday on PBS’s “Charlie Rose.”
Long-term economic damage to Iraq and Syria:
In the aftermath of the attacks in Paris this month, the United States has more aggressively targeted the militants’ oil production and smuggling operations, which it had held off from doing for fear of inflicting long-term damage to the Iraqi and Syrian economies.
Regime change in Syria has precedence
Just think of it: IS has killed American nationals and yet the Pentagon has been ordered to handle the IS with kid gloves! President Barack Obama waxes eloquently about his determination to “degrade and destroy” the IS, but the Pentagon is under instructions not to disrupt the IS’ oil trade! This is cold-blooded statecraft. Obama probably knows all about the Turkish elite’s flourishing business, but then, he has uses for Erdogan, too. Simply put, the regime change agenda in Syria got precedence over cutting off the IS’s funding sources.
Three of the above four reasons were given by the Obama administration or its proxies, one by an astute observer, Guess which of those reasons is the real one.
methlabretriever posted:which group?
the TNCC obviously. your argument requires this group to be an identifiable class-as-such, with elements distinguishing them from national capitalists at the very least and likely compradors. they are supposed to stride across borders, imposing their will on state actors that disobey them. Petrol's example of the TPP agreement could be something you could point at to signal that this class exists, but unfortunately for you the primary beneficiaries of the TPP are the united states and a handful of australian/japanese/s korean companies large enough to participate.
Crow posted:methlabretriever posted:i think that's their goal, right? The West however seems to have begun to change their stance wrt to ISIS and has begun to damage/destroy their oil infrastructure.
i know, that's an old article. they just started bombing isis` oil infrastructure recently
Urbandale posted:methlabretriever posted:which group?
the TNCC obviously. your argument requires this group to be an identifiable
oh no, they prefer secrecy (with good reason!)
class-as-such, with elements distinguishing them from national capitalists at the very least and likely compradors.
what? why do they have to be distinguished?
they are supposed to stride across borders, imposing their will on state actors that disobey them.
idunno if they are "supposed" to do that, but that's what they do
Petrol's example of the TPP agreement could be something you could point at to signal that this class exists,
methlabretriever posted:Urbandale posted:methlabretriever posted:which group?
the TNCC obviously. your argument requires this group to be an identifiable
oh no, they prefer secrecy (with good reason!)
class-as-such, with elements distinguishing them from national capitalists at the very least and likely compradors.
what? why do they have to be distinguished?
they are supposed to stride across borders, imposing their will on state actors that disobey them.
idunno if they are "supposed" to do that, but that's what they do
Petrol's example of the TPP agreement could be something you could point at to signal that this class exists,
alright dude, youre gonna have to start reading for comprehension here and start actually addressing things. 'they prefer secrecy' isnt a good argument because im asking you what about the TNCC distinguishes them from other groupings (like national and comprador) of capitalists. im asking you 'why they have to be distinguished' because in order to argue that they exist you have to argue their uniqueness, their difference from other groupings of capitalists. im asking you what their defining features are, what makes them different from other groups.you have to have these answers in order to even begin to make the claim that they exist. ive asked this in multiple posts at this point and all you seem to be able to do is stand there scratching your head
Edited by Urbandale ()
c_man posted:i thought this piece did a good job describing the way in which the heads of global corporations are largely based in a very small number of countries
this is another thing, foster's work barely supports the argument that the TNCC actually exists. it is very easy to look at multinationals as pursuing their own policies, yes, but its obvious that they arent transnational themselves. where do they base their operations out of? luxembourg, australia, the us. where do they extract labor from most directly? china, indonesia, the philippines.
As Balibar says:
The privileged status of the nation form derives from the fact that, locally, that form made it possible (at least for an entire historical period) for struggles between heterogeneous classes to be controlled and for not only a "capitalist class" but the bourgeoisies proper to emerge from these—state bourgeoisies both capable of political, economic and cultural hegemony and produced by that hegemony.
If the nation is no longer capable of regulating, either through law or through politics, the actions of corporations and their ideological character, than the nation only exists in the way that other modernist categories exist in the postmodern era: as a nightmare weighing on the brains of the living. Nations still exist of course, but they are no longer capable of becoming the site of class struggle. In Greece, the people no longer want to live in the old way and the upper classes cannot carry on in the old way but this appears to make no difference to the political power of the Greek 'imagined community' within their nation-state.
Thus the question is not "are corporations still beholden to national power?" It is instead "has neoliberal capital made the concept of 'nation' obsolete?" I would say not yet, but to deny that this is a trend is to wish that the politics of the 20th century can be applied verbatim.
Urbandale posted:c_man posted:i thought this piece did a good job describing the way in which the heads of global corporations are largely based in a very small number of countries
this is another thing, foster's work barely supports the argument that the TNCC actually exists. it is very easy to look at multinationals as pursuing their own policies, yes, but its obvious that they arent transnational themselves. where do they base their operations out of? luxembourg, australia, the us. where do they extract labor from most directly? china, indonesia, the philippines.
tbh i think the piece is largely critical of the concept of a TNCC by making that exact point and relating it to imperialism. Nike and Walmart having extensive supply chains in china doesn't make the concept of the nation state meaningless any more than the british empire ruling india did. sure it affects the operation of the states but the distinctions between them still have a great deal of importance.
babyhueypnewton posted:To say that a transnational capitalist class doesn't exist because it is territoriality rooted is to entirely to miss the point.
I didn't make this claim though, my argument is that the TNCC doesnt exist because capitalists still base their decisions around the profitability able to be garnered in individual/small groups of nationstates. if the TNCC was a thing youd have had french corporations that fit into this category supporting their counterparts in america when the iraq war was occurring. instead they boycotted and were kept completely out of the very lucrative rebuilding process.
i realize this example isnt great cuz you dont actually need something like this and even if you did they could just be comprador capitalists but in the absence of a specific example being posited as proof that it exists its the best i can come up with off the cuff
babyhueypnewton posted:Transnationalism doesn't mean that corporations exist as floating numbers on a computer but that corporations are no longer part of the nation-state as the site of overdetermination. A nation is not simply a piece of land, nor even a legal structure, but an imagined community that structures itself through repressive and ideological functions. A nation-state not only represses people or implants false consciousness but is part of the very relations of production by regulating the reproduction of the bourgeois itself (through law, money, primitive accumulation, immigration, etc).
As Balibar says:
The privileged status of the nation form derives from the fact that, locally, that form made it possible (at least for an entire historical period) for struggles between heterogeneous classes to be controlled and for not only a "capitalist class" but the bourgeoisies proper to emerge from these—state bourgeoisies both capable of political, economic and cultural hegemony and produced by that hegemony.
i was going to strike this out of my quote for this post but i decided not to so i could say explicitly that i agree with all of this
babyhueypnewton posted:If the nation is no longer capable of regulating, either through law or through politics, the actions of corporations and their ideological character, than the nation only exists in the way that other modernist categories exist in the postmodern era: as a nightmare weighing on the brains of the living. Nations still exist of course, but they are no longer capable of becoming the site of class struggle. In Greece, the people no longer want to live in the old way and the upper classes cannot carry on in the old way but this appears to make no difference to the political power of the Greek 'imagined community' within their nation-state.
and yet it did and does. the 'old way' wasnt maintained in greece, severe austerity was imposed to the benefit of primarily german banks at the expense of french and greek ones.this isnt a particularly new process in greece or anything, pasok has been steadily doing this for decades, but it was certainly an acceleration.
babyhueypnewton posted:Thus the question is not "are corporations still beholden to national power?" It is instead "has neoliberal capital made the concept of 'nation' obsolete?" I would say not yet, but to deny that this is a trend is to wish that the politics of the 20th century can be applied verbatim.
wheres the trend? so far there havent been any examples posed other than trade deals (the TPP was specifically mentioned) and trade deals hardly fit the character of this class supposedly existing. corporations being able to sue countries is hardly a new phenomenon, and the primary nation under attack from the TPP is of course china, the most important enemy of the supposedly-obsolete united states. we should be hardly surprised that the US (and its pacific allies to a lesser extent) is acting as the strong-arm on behalf of largely US corporations to oppose strictly-domestic legality.
Edited by Urbandale ()
RedMaistre posted:"As Boron points out with respect to the world’s 200 largest multinational corporations, '96 percent…have their headquarters in only eight countries, are legally registered as incorporated companies of eight countries; and their boards of directors sit in eight countries of metropolitan capital. Less than 2 percent of their boards of directors’ members are non-nationals…. Their reach is global, but their property and their owners have a clear national base.' "
http://monthlyreview.org/2015/07/01/the-new-imperialism-of-globalized-monopoly-finance-capital/
oh shit i missed that you posted the same thing yesterday -.-
c_man posted:Urbandale posted:c_man posted:i thought this piece did a good job describing the way in which the heads of global corporations are largely based in a very small number of countries
this is another thing, foster's work barely supports the argument that the TNCC actually exists. it is very easy to look at multinationals as pursuing their own policies, yes, but its obvious that they arent transnational themselves. where do they base their operations out of? luxembourg, australia, the us. where do they extract labor from most directly? china, indonesia, the philippines.
tbh i think the piece is largely critical of the concept of a TNCC by making that exact point and relating it to imperialism. Nike and Walmart having extensive supply chains in china doesn't make the concept of the nation state meaningless any more than the british empire ruling india did. sure it affects the operation of the states but the distinctions between them still have a great deal of importance.
yeah i agree with your reading of the piece, i just thought the intent in posting it was as support for the existence of the TNCC.
also for those at home who are finding this a pretty esoteric discussion this is a barebones but decent introduction to the concept
methlabretriever posted:Crow posted:methlabretriever posted:i think that's their goal, right? The West however seems to have begun to change their stance wrt to ISIS and has begun to damage/destroy their oil infrastructure.
i know, that's an old article. they just started bombing isis` oil infrastructure recently
"I have found four reason given to explain why the U.S. did not bomb, and does not seriously bomb, the oil truck convoys.
Civilian casualties:
The Obama administration has also balked at attacking the Islamic State’s fleet of tanker trucks — its main distribution network — fearing civilian casualties.
Environmental damage:
A former CIA director says concerns about environmental impact have prevented the White House from bombing oil wells that finance the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS).
“We didn’t go after oil wells, actually hitting oil wells that ISIS controls, because we didn’t want to do environmental damage, and we didn’t want to destroy that infrastructure,” Michael Morell said Tuesday on PBS’s “Charlie Rose.”
Long-term economic damage to Iraq and Syria
In the aftermath of the attacks in Paris this month, the United States has more aggressively targeted the militants’ oil production and smuggling operations, which it had held off from doing for fear of inflicting long-term damage to the Iraqi and Syrian economies.
Regime change in Syria has precedence
Just think of it: IS has killed American nationals and yet the Pentagon has been ordered to handle the IS with kid gloves! President Barack Obama waxes eloquently about his determination to “degrade and destroy” the IS, but the Pentagon is under instructions not to disrupt the IS’ oil trade! This is cold-blooded statecraft. Obama probably knows all about the Turkish elite’s flourishing business, but then, he has uses for Erdogan, too. Simply put, the regime change agenda in Syria got precedence over cutting off the IS’s funding sources.
Three of the above four reasons were given by the Obama administration or its proxies, one by an astute observer, Guess which of those reasons is the real one...."
http://www.moonofalabama.org/2015/11/guess-why-the-us-isnt-seriously-bombing-the-islamic-states-oil-business.html
https://archive.is/yrRCS
Israel buys most oil smuggled from ISIS territory - report
Israel has become the main buyer for oil from ISIS controlled territory, reports "al-Araby al-Jadeed."
Kurdish and Turkish smugglers are transporting oil from ISIS controlled territory in Syria and Iraq and selling it to Israel, according to several reports in the Arab and Russian media. An estimated 20,000-40,000 barrels of oil are produced daily in ISIS controlled territory generating $1-1.5 million daily profit for the terrorist organization.
The oil is extracted from Dir A-Zur in Syria and two fields in Iraq and transported to the Kurdish city of Zakhu in a triangle of land near the borders of Syria, Iraq and Turkey. Israeli and Turkish mediators come to the city and when prices are agreed, the oil is smuggled to the Turkish city of Silop marked as originating from Kurdish regions of Iraq and sold for $15-18 per barrel (WTI and Brent Crude currently sell for $41 and $45 per barrel) to the Israeli mediator, a man in his 50s with dual Greek-Israeli citizenship known as Dr. Farid. He transports the oil via several Turkish ports and then onto other ports, with Israel among the main destinations.