blinkandwheeze posted:the bourgeois-liberal left is "the left" as such when it is a sole dominant tendency. we all do this when talking about the left in the developed world today. when people decry the lapse of the u.s. left into liberalism or whatever it's not a confusion of categories, it's just colloquial rhetoric
i get all of this, what i'm trying to say is i think this is frankly an arrogant point of view and it's part of the problem. i disagree with the notion that a vital and effective left is waiting to be (re)born on the bourgeois plane and gifted downwards. there's nothing interesting or novel about such a plea as far as i'm concerned.
i don't find his argument novel either but that's also why i found it uncontroversial
blinkandwheeze posted:i'm not sure what the alternative you would suggest is. of course a discourse fostered through the leadership of proletarianised and lumpen sectors would be preferable but fascism has risen in the provincial sectors of the developed world because this discourse doesn't exist.
define "provincial sectors"
Nov 3 I flew to Europe for a Eurotrip type tour. Not a guide or packaged deal, just going around by myself. I paid for half of the trip with the wages I earned over the last two years, my dad paid for the other half. I am 19, I guess that is normal starting college and all. (Before that I worked for my dad's company part time, so I guess you could say he paid for all of it, lol).
I did France and then Italy and then Greece next. I am an Ancap so I wanted to see anarchists in these places. Yes, I know they are different kinds of "anarchists" and not really full anarchists like us. I went to an anarchist book store in Italy and it had a lot of English books, but no Rothbard or Ancap. Like I said, I expected that, not a surprise.
I went to Greece, which everyone knows is famous for its revolutionary anarchism, its economic crisis and everything going on right now. Here I found directions for a local anarchist center. I went and didn't see anybody, but it was covered in graffiti, mostly in Greek so I couldn't read it. Whatever, I started taking pictures. Then some people came out and confronted me.
This should have been my first warning sign something was not right, because photography is not a crime. They were not violent, but they were not friendly, like asking who I was, what I wanted. They all spoke good English actually. Not uncommon in Greece. I said I was a tourist and an anarchist and I just wanted to take pictures. Then they got friendly and told me I should have asked first (but pictures are no NAP violation so I don't know why, but I didn't say anything) and they invited me inside.
We hung out for a while and smoked hash (there is no good dank in Europe as you might find out like in Cali, everyone smokes hash with tobacco which isn't as cool as it sounds). We started talking about politics and anarchism. I was trying to talk about the state, they were like yeah no doubt the state was bad. But they wanted to talk about capitalism, capitalism this and that. This is when we started to get into a debate.
I told them that what they called capitalism is different from the free market. They said capitalism is free markets. And I said I agreed. That is what I am saying. Real capitalism is free markets. And they said yes, that is what we are trying to get rid of. And I said no, but we don't even have that right now. We need more free markets. And everyone at the same time was like "nooo" we are anarchists, we are against capitalism. Anarchists oppose capitalism.
And I said but not anarcho-capitalists. Anarcho-capitalists are the anarchists who support capitalism. I had a fanny pack (yeah, lame I know) for my camera and in that I had this yellow and black bowtie (also super lame, it was a joke but I wasnt wearing it). And I said look, these are the Ancap colors, yellow and black, like versus the communist red and black. Well, these guys had a lot of red and black in the building already so I thought they would get it.
I think that is when it started to get a really bad vibe, really tense in the air. The free market thing was funny, we disagreed but I think they thought I was just confused. Everyone was uncomfortable now. Then someone said markets wont work with democracy. And I said exactly, that's it, democracy is against anarchism. And they kind of agreed, and said yes, we don't have real democracy, just governments, and we needed more democracy. I said no, we need less democracy, democracy is the enemy. And we need to end democracy to have anarchy. Then they were all like "noooo" again. You know that thing people do in groups when everyone all says "nooo" or expresses some disapproval at the same time.
And one of them said "but we do want to stop democracy" and then they kind of spoke back and forth in Greek. I didn't really understand it. And they asked me what I meant.
So I said okay, I had the floor, I was going to tell them about ancapism. And I tried to explain to them some Rothbard and Hoppe. I said the natural order in anarchy is that the best rise to the top, the market picks who is the best. They compete and are peaceful. They said what do we want instead of anarchy. I said we want private owners to own their own land and businesses, and to employ people. They said that is what we have now. I said no, it would be even better. One of the guys said it was like feudalism. And I said it is not feudalism.
Eventually one of the guys spoke up and I thought he was Greek, but he spoke English perfectly so he may have not been. He said he knew what anarcho-capitalism was and that we were basically fascists. He asked me if I thought everything should be private. And I said yes. And he asked me if I thought people were unequal. And I told him yes. And that not everyone would have equal rights. I said everyone has the right to own property and not be done aggression against. But that not everyone had to be treated equally by the owners. He said what about immigrants and racism. And I said that would not happen in a free market, but yes property owners could be racist if they wanted to. They had to respect property.
Then he called me a fascist again, and someone else said I was a fascist. And then they basically all started shouting fascist at me, and one of them grabbed me by the wrists. They pulled me out the door, it was up three floors, and basically drug me down the stairs on my back. It hurt really bad and I remember yelling "you're breaking the NAP" and things like that. "Stop initiating force against me." Then they kicked me around on the ground in the hallway, before they took my camera and threw me outside. I was crying and stuff, I just sat there. I was in shock because it was so sudden. Looking back there were warning signs though.
I think they felt bad for me and gave the camera back, but when I looked later they stole the memory card with all of my Greek photos.
So they initiated force and theft. They broke the NAP. I knew the left anarchists were not real anarchists, but I never knew they would do something that bad.
I wasnt seriously hurt, just kicked around a little, lots of bruises and little cuts. I am fine guys so don't worry. Just needed to share.
c_man posted:about ecofascism
The UK's Soil Association was founded by far-right eugenicist Gerard Wallop.
...Jorian Jenks
Jorian Jenks
Jorian Jenks
come back tpaine
postcapitalism. i was interested because i wanted to know why mr mason didn't think capitalism could start up another kondratieff wave. i was disappointed with his explanation, but a more sophisticated marxist could probably do something with it. the rest of the book was garbage. however, he presented a very basic model of how information technology is going to fuck up the value of pretty much every single commodity. i think this was correct, but it applies more generally to automation.
how will capitalism end: i thought the introduction and first chapter of this book was interesting as hell, even if i disagree with the 'secular stagnation' thesis. he certainly lays out a depressing vision of our trajectory, assuming we don't have a socialist revolution. the author clearly has sympathy for keynesianism, but he shows that it isn't going to be a way out of the current crisis capitalism was in. there was some other interesting, 'sociological' stuff i guess, about changes in consumer society. like how fordism had mass assembled identical cars, but then in the 80s car manufacturers allowed consumers to customize them and shit or whatever. i'm going to start his 'buying time' to follow up on that & the european debt crisis.
planet of the slums: u already know. go read this book if you haven't.
a very unproductive month of reading. oh well. after i read buying time, im going to read cities under siege, violent borders, and vertical.
anyway, to update - ive been reading a bull semen catalogue
Belphegor posted:which translations of Hegel's 'phenomenology of spirit' do people read?
best one I've found is Capital by Karl Marx
tears posted:is cities under siege worth reading?
i will tell u at some point in the near future. someone in the guardian called it fearmongering, so it must be good.
cars posted:Belphegor posted:
which translations of Hegel's 'phenomenology of spirit' do people read?
best one I've found is Capital by Karl Marx
I tried that but the translator kept translating the word 'geist' as 'bolts of linen'
I'm reading the new PSL book, Women Fight Back.
Belphegor posted:which translations of Hegel's 'phenomenology of spirit' do people read?
read Hegel's Science of Logic instead imo
Clausewitz: War may be a thing which sometimes is more war, sometimes less
Lenin: Dialectics
Currently reading
Clausewitz – On War
this owns so much
Walter Darnell jacobs – Frunze: The Soviet Clausewitz 1885-1925
This sucks but its the only english language book on Frunze I could find
A bunch of articles on clausewitz and war and marxism like this one:
Lenin and Clausewitz: The Militarization of Marxism, 1914-1921
Also attn Marlax69: I read the first 100 pages of Cities under siege, it was a lot worse than I expected, I wanted a book about cities under siege, but instead the duder who wrote it seemed more concerned with showing off how much pomo wank he'd read. That and he needed an editor to cross out half the words. Maybe ill go back and finish it later.
And I also picked up various old af books that talk about old wars:
Livy – The War with Hannibal
Caesar – The Civil War
Caesar – Gallic War
Thucydides – The History of the Peloponnesian War
Tacitus – The Annals of Imperial Rome
Suetonius – The Twelve Caesars
Looking forward to endlessly putting off reading them
war
w a r
tears posted:been doing lots of reading about doing war
Currently reading
Clausewitz – On War
this owns so much
Walter Darnell jacobs – Frunze: The Soviet Clausewitz 1885-1925
This sucks but its the only english language book on Frunze I could find
A bunch of articles on clausewitz and war and marxism like this one:
Lenin and Clausewitz: The Militarization of Marxism, 1914-1921
Also attn Marlax69: I read the first 100 pages of Cities under siege, it was a lot worse than I expected, I wanted a book about cities under siege, but instead the duder who wrote it seemed more concerned with showing off how much pomo wank he'd read. That and he needed an editor to cross out half the words. Maybe ill go back and finish it later.
And I also picked up various old af books that talk about old wars:
Livy – The War with Hannibal
Caesar – The Civil War
Caesar – Gallic War
Thucydides – The History of the Peloponnesian War
Tacitus – The Annals of Imperial Rome
Suetonius – The Twelve Caesars
Looking forward to endlessly putting off reading them
war
w a r
yes yes, but what is it good for?
drcat posted:i read this today https://hueypnewtongunclub.org/about
i think those guys are transphobic & hoteps or whatever
sign me up in the babyhueypnewtongunclub
spectralmarx posted:Galloway talks to a douchebag about Australian education and turn away from post-Marxism of Laclau et al http://www.boundary2.org/2017/04/alexander-r-galloway-an-interview-with-mckenzie-wark/
That person really needs to read Divided World, Divided Class instead of all this junk about cyborgs.
babyhueypnewton posted:spectralmarx posted:Galloway talks to a douchebag about Australian education and turn away from post-Marxism of Laclau et al http://www.boundary2.org/2017/04/alexander-r-galloway-an-interview-with-mckenzie-wark/
That person really needs to read Divided World, Divided Class instead of all this junk about cyborgs.
book unironically called gamer theory O_o
gyrofry posted:Belphegor posted:which translations of Hegel's 'phenomenology of spirit' do people read?
read Hegel's Science of Logic instead imo
yeah thats good. also the lecture collections known as aesthetics and philosophy of history which help show why marx was needed. phenomenology of spirit is imo what they give to college freshmen to convince them not to read any more hegel or marx etc
The Insurrection of the Bourgeoisie
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=b5GeEzBKGsQ
The Coup d'état
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=d4I5LZbNbZs
Popular Power
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=B_psW1O0WIk
kruki posted:hey, does anyone of you know a book about soviet archaeology or at least concerning study of history in the ussr? i'm writing a thing for uni about it and recommendations would be appreciated
bhpn coincidentally asked a very similar question about a month back:
https://rhizzone.net/forum/topic/182/?page=359#post-341893
tears posted this:
https://www.academia.edu/944081/Marxism
I have "Archaeology in the USSR" (1955, translation from 1961) by A.L Mongait which has a pretty decent intro chapter.
"Soviet archaeology : schools, trends, and history" by Klejn is non-marxist but the first ~30 pages are available for free on google books. You can use it for important names etc for further research. Klejn mentions V.F Gening and A.D Pryakhin as contemporaries who have both written books in the 1980s on soviet archaeology in "the spirit of official Soviet ideology". whether these books have ever been translated or not idk (probably not)
Edited by Chthonic_Goat_666 ()
kruki posted:too bad it isn't available in full online
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