Archive of the @jacobinmag article on Die Linke, deleted prob due to suggesting they not be so "pure" on immigration https://t.co/5zTZaM71ZY
— The Specter of Scott (@OakScott) February 12, 2017
Edited by RedMaistre ()
boy oh boy do i love purchasing large amounnts of JacobinMag. wait a minute... JacobinMag fucking sucks. this stuff is no good..!! Fuck !!!
— Dril Greaves (@DrilGreaves) February 15, 2017
Holy shit. Even for Jacobin. https://t.co/x6vHAT3tPH pic.twitter.com/9LYglYq3jN
— Crypto Cuttlefish (@cuttlefish_btc) June 26, 2017
cars posted:like all former rhizzone posters, real subtle is now very famous online.
Oh, former! I've been screwing this up pretty bad...
Petrol posted:it's a shit article (he can't help but start with a reference to "stalin's gulags" right up front) but everyone has misread the victims of communism reference somewhat because it's in a paragraph of examples of right wingers freaking out about a resurgence of socialist sentiment among young people. i mean, even referencing them without mocking and/or explicitly denouncing them is bad, but that crypto cuttlefish tweet is dumb
yeah
glomper_stomper posted:considering the article is a flagrant apology to cold warriors on behalf of the current generation of "democratic socialists", i think there's more to it than just some uncritical acceptance of victims of communism as anything more than a neo-nazi front.
i think someone read a pretty bad article and got primed to misread a sentence in it as worse than it really is
cars posted:i think someone read a pretty bad article and got primed to misread a sentence in it as worse than it really is
i dont see anything there that suggests that sunkara sees VoC as anything beyond a presumably respectable right wing source, which he is perfectly fine with engaging with in good faith
e: to be clear, i dont think the VoC passage is particularly worse than the opening thing about gulags
Edited by c_man ()
swampman posted:Consider the audience who reads the NYT out of a desire to be informed.
swampman posted:Consider the audience who reads the NYT out of a desire to be informed. How would they know that Sunkara is not either in agreement with VoCMF, or treating it "neutrally" as legitimate group with legitimate concerns? When in reality it's the worst kind of revisionist scum, at the direct service of the modern neo-Nazi movement. Sunkara agrees that communism had all these victims, otherwise they'd have posted a source that was awful on its face like Stormfront, or have noted that VoCMF posts grotesque lies. It shows that Sunkara, head of the social democrats, either has not read enough to understand why the VoCMF is bullshit, or knows and doesn't care.
i mean, i agree, but it's not like NYT op-eds get published without going through a bunch of editors, and at the risk of defending him even more, it's quite possible he contextualised the VoC reference and it got cut out. the best option, of course, would be to have never mentioned them at all, but sunkara is at best a big dingus
Petrol posted:i mean, i agree, but it's not like NYT op-eds get published without going through a bunch of editors, and at the risk of defending him even more, it's quite possible he contextualised the VoC reference and it got cut out. the best option, of course, would be to have never mentioned them at all, but sunkara is at best a big dingus
i think the best option might be to not publish in the NYT at all
c_man posted:i think the best option might be to not publish
inthe NYT at all
AZ_IZ_OT posted:Look like an absolute dumbass trying to get free press from vultures while preserving enough cash to manage your own flock of moron children
awww now i've got that warm fuzzy nostalgia feeling
We have begun the humiliating process of justifying our continued presence at The New York Times. We take some solace in the fact that we have been assured repeatedly that copy editors are highly respected here.
But after living more than a year and a half under a cloud of uncertainty about our jobs, a cruelly drawn-out period in which we suspended major financial arrangements and life decisions, and carried an ever-growing kernel of fear;
After we were compared to dogs urinating on fire hydrants when we edited stories, in an internal report that called for the elimination of "low-value editing" and made it all but clear which stages of editing this referred to — so much so that it became a running joke among the copy desks for months ("How's the low-value editing going in your section today?") — along with the report's implication that copy editing was merely finding "easily identifiable errors, such as spelling and grammar mistakes";
After some of us were recruited for "editing tests" to streamline the process, or, as it turned out, figure out how to make our own jobs obsolete;
After enduring a newsroom-wide copy-editing overhaul last year that consolidated the desks, transformed the scope of our duties and confused a whole lot of reporters and section editors (but ultimately made us think we would at least keep our jobs);
After learning that this new setup would be undone just months after it was put in place, with the whiplash announcement that our jobs would simply be eliminated;
After we were told that to remain employed, we would have to apply for new "strong editor" positions meant to be a hybrid of the two types of editors at The Times, backfielders and copy editors, and realized only copy editors had to be reevaluated categorically;
After we were told that this "restructuring" would also reduce our numbers by more than half;
After completing a first round of interviews, some held by interviewers who clearly had not even read our résumés and cover letters, and competing against the very colleagues we are leaning on in these times;
After we heard that The Times would soon go on a hiring spree, just as it gets ready to shed jobs, and thought to ourselves that it is particularly ruthless to talk about all the others you intend to court as you break up with someone;
After all of this and more — we are finding it difficult to feel respected.
https://jacobin.com/2022/11/mao-zedong-wang-fanxi-communist-party-china/ posted:In the 1920s, China’s Communist Party retreated from the cities to the countryside to wage a protracted guerrilla war. This long separation from the Chinese working class fostered an autocratic culture that went on to shape the party’s rule over China.
keywords: trotskyism
lo posted:https://jacobin.com/2022/11/mao-zedong-wang-fanxi-communist-party-china/ posted:In the 1920s, China’s Communist Party retreated from the cities to the countryside to wage a protracted guerrilla war. This long separation from the Chinese working class fostered an autocratic culture that went on to shape the party’s rule over China.
keywords: trotskyism
Oh darn! If only they hadnt waged protracted guerrilla war from the countryside! Then they would have failed so, so nobly...
realsubtle posted:i swear im not trying to do these double posts...
the site wants you to post more. Hi realsubtle and welcome back from twitter superstardom
cars posted:realsubtle posted:i swear im not trying to do these double posts...
the site wants you to post more. Hi realsubtle and welcome back from twitter superstardom
realsubtle posted:i swear im not trying to do these double posts...
double post on purpose it's funny, accidently doing it.. gross