#15881

tears posted:

any good books with spaceships in them?


check this out
https://tinyurl.com/hwhrudl

#15882
reading that Graeber jobs article and i doubt even his new book could be more embarrassingly stupid / out of touch than writing that there was "an apparently infinite demand for specialists in corporate law" in 2013. Hey cheese whiz, maybe whatever class background allowed your buddy to become a poet indie rock vocalist with a kid on the way also got him a job at a "prominent New York firm" during an employment crisis in the field? Nah I'm sure it was "infinite demand", now let's find out what this galaxy brain genius thinks about the world economy
#15883
here's a review of Graeber's new book

and it turns out yeah, Graeber is allergic to researching employment data before trying to write about jobs:

Graeber draws a line through the service sector itself: “The proportion of the workforce made up of actual waiters, barbers, salesclerks and the like,” he hallucinates, is “really quite small.”



lol

#15884
graeber was extremely mad online about that review yesterday, reacting exclusively to stuff in the first paragraph
#15885
Looks like David Grabber isn’t Marxist andconstantly erases class. That’s wild
#15886
[account deactivated]
#15887

cars posted:

here's a review of Graeber's new book

and it turns out yeah, Graeber is allergic to researching employment data before trying to write about jobs:



Graeber draws a line through the service sector itself: “The proportion of the workforce made up of actual waiters, barbers, salesclerks and the like,” he hallucinates, is “really quite small.”



lol





He culls examples from the “great deal of online discussion” generated, he tells us, by his initial piece, while also soliciting confirmation from his Twitter following.


Oh my god his research data is just reading Retail Is Hell threads lmfao. If there wasn't a class component to being a Celebrity Leftist Intellectual (hello Sam) we would all be rolling in cash by now just summarizing shit that happens online.

Also we've found it, the definitive identification of the US hamster wheel left:

Graeber’s conceptual schema is imprecise and elusive, and it seems so almost by design.

#15888
I don’t get it? Why not just read Marx and be humble
#15889
Debt the first 5000 years has aged very poorly as well, the hype around it here among other places is embarrassing in hindsight (tbf it was babyfinland and other reactionaries who no longer post). When I knew nothing about the history of money it was like the book to read but even a cursory knowledge reveals it's just restating the chartalist theory of money with the only original part being a bunch of wild overstatements and silly anarchist asides. I'm starting to wonder if any of his work is legitimate or if anarchist anthropologists are allowed to exist for anti-communist reasons.

This is his colleague at yale and another anarchist anthropologist who's work is useless and derivative

On graduation, James C. Scott received a Rotary International Fellowship to study in Burma, where he was recruited by an American student activist who had become an anti-communist organizer for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). Scott agreed to do reporting for the agency and at the end of his fellowship a post in the Paris office of the National Student Association, which accepted CIA money and direction in working against communist-controlled global student movements over the next few years



Hmm...

#15890
i for one am shocked and appalled that dab grabber turn out to be a huge dumb ass.
#15891

Ruzbihan posted:

Looks like David Grabber isn’t Marxist andconstantly erases class. That’s wild



his analysis methods are gonna be terrible obviously but i'm honestly a little surprised if he did the dumb kid / cokehead grad student tactic of just ignoring publicly available numbers that might wreck his thesis. he could've at least tried to bullshit them into fitting his argument, he knows how to find employment by category

#15892
[account deactivated]
#15893

babyhueypnewton posted:

Debt the first 5000 years has aged very poorly as well, the hype around it here among other places is embarrassing in hindsight (tbf it was babyfinland and other reactionaries who no longer post). When I knew nothing about the history of money it was like the book to read but even a cursory knowledge reveals it's just restating the chartalist theory of money with the only original part being a bunch of wild overstatements and silly anarchist asides. I'm starting to wonder if any of his work is legitimate or if anarchist anthropologists are allowed to exist for anti-communist reasons.

This is his colleague at yale and another anarchist anthropologist who's work is useless and derivative

On graduation, James C. Scott received a Rotary International Fellowship to study in Burma, where he was recruited by an American student activist who had become an anti-communist organizer for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). Scott agreed to do reporting for the agency and at the end of his fellowship a post in the Paris office of the National Student Association, which accepted CIA money and direction in working against communist-controlled global student movements over the next few years



Hmm...



i found debt 5000 revelatory at the time but i cant imagine revisiting it

#15894

cars posted:

his analysis methods are gonna be terrible obviously but i'm honestly a little surprised if he did the dumb kid / cokehead grad student tactic of just ignoring publicly available numbers that might wreck his thesis. he could've at least tried to bullshit them into fitting his argument, he knows how to find employment by category


No I agree for sure, I just saw the opening for a 10 year old or whatever “joke”, and hit the post button excitedly like a trained gibbon.

Edited by Ruzbihan ()

#15895
I've been reading Hitler's American model and it's pretty good. The author is a little too timid in stressing the connections and of course it's nothing super new to anyone who knows even a little about the United $nakes actual history, but it is wild to read about all these Nazis wonking out over US race laws--there is one section that talks about how during the early years of the regime a lot of thought the US "one drop" race laws and the actual imprisonment of people for marrying outside of the race were TOO severe. It's impossible to fully catalog the grotesqueness of this country
#15896
It’s a shame the book apparently sucks so much because it’s a really interesting topic. From what I can tell (and I haven’t read it, just a few reviews and the original essay back when it came out—I may be wrong) he provides a variety of very different definitions of “bullshit job”, never settling on one. I think there are three distinct types of jobs that fall under these definitions, with two subcategories for type 1:

1. Jobs that are unnecessary, even under capitalism.
. a. Jobs that are productive from the firm’s perspective but amount to attempts to cut the firm a larger slice of a fixed pie (Example: most marketing jobs).
. b. Jobs that are productive from some internal manager’s perspective, but undercut the firm (This seems to be the class Graeber is most incensed by—unnecessary bureaucrats, among others.)
2. Jobs that are necessary under capitalism, but not necessary under socialism. (Example: most contract lawyers).
3. Jobs that are necessary under any feasible, functional mode of production, but have a bureaucratic or managerial character, or otherwise feature a remove from the direct act of production (Example: managers, analysts).

There are important differences between 1 and 2—jobs under 1 are unequivocal indictments of existing capitalism and are possible targets for reformists, jobs under 2 are in a very different rhetorical space—convincing someone that they’re bullshit requires openness to socialism, lest they be dismissed as “the cost of doing business”. 3 represent false positives for (some of) his definitions.

His failure to tease out the differences between 1 and 2 pose a problem for his most aphoristic definition: jobs where it wouldn’t matter if they all disappeared. This definition corresponds exactly to 1, but doesn’t cover 2 at all. He seems to talk a lot about the uselessness of business law, but if you suddenly eliminated contract law in a capitalist country the economy would fall apart. Capitalism devolves production decisions to individuals encouraged to be selfish and pitted against one another in ruthless competition—not just with peer businesses but with other links in the supply chain, consumers, and workers. Without a legal framework to punish defection, most business agreements--from wage contracts to supplier deals--would be reneged on, and companies would have to fall back on less effectual (and more violent) organizational structures. An economy based on cooperation can get away with less tortuous rules, but that economy requires many more changes than simply getting rid of lawyers.

The other major definition, something along the lines of the classical definition of productive labor—work that creates capital goods--with some allowances made for other forms of physical labor, puts group 3 in the “bullshit” category. Graeber’s not a big fan of bureaucracy—surprise!—and it seems like his position really boils down to a reflexive dismissal of any job that carries its stink. However, some form of information gathering, analysis, and “management” (not necessarily under that word or with the same baggage) is necessary for any sufficiently complex productive enterprise to function well, regardless of the mode of production. The effort cost of sharing information between all members of organization increases with the square of the number of people (actually n(n-1), but whatever), so at a certain point it’s unavoidable that tasks related to collecting information, identifying problems, and directing production will be concentrated in a small group of individuals, and in sufficiently large and complex settings multiple layers of “management” may be needed. This doesn’t need to correspond to a class difference or be exploitative, but totally unstructured workplaces don’t generally work beyond a certain scale and complexity. Given the technological changes of the last few decades and the shift in the composition of labor in the core, we could expect an increase in the number of managers and the time spent collecting, inputting, and analyzing data and forms to have increased even in the absence of “bullshit” jobs.

None of which is to say that these jobs don’t exist. I think every category of “bullshit” job Graeber identifies does exist. But it doesn’t seem like he’s contributed much to our understanding of how prevalent they are. As Cars mentioned, he could have answered some of these questions just by looking at SOC/NAICS crosstabs of employment data. That would get you categories 2 and 1a, which you can identify by industry or occupation (marketers, finance, lobbying, etc.). That’s useful information, but I think the pointlessness of these jobs and their prominence in the economy pretty is well established and widely known at this point—no new insights there.

What you couldn’t get with that sort of basic analysis, and what would make a really interesting book, is a deep dive into 1b—pointless jobs created by the internal politics of capitalist firms. These jobs absolutely exist, but it’s very difficult to identify them from headline employment numbers, much less from armchair musings and convenience samples of your friends on Twitter. Individuals involved in data collection/form filling may be providing valuable (to the firm) information used to make pivotal decisions, or they may be filling hard drives with files no one reads. Assistants may have sinecures provided by a boss who just wants minions, or they may perform a variety of valuable (again, to the firm) functions. You need to get in very close to identify which is which. Given that Graeber is an anthropologist, I’d hoped he would have done the footwork and worked through some organizations top to bottom, interviewing workers and connecting the dots to figure this out.

Even if he didn’t want to do all the legwork himself, there’s a huge literature from business anthropologists and business sociologists that looks at exactly these issues in granular detail. While these papers are obviously funded by capital and written for CEOs and shareholders, they contain a huge trove of qualitative and quantitative data about pointless jobs, and since they’re written with the aim of improving profits by “trimming the fat”, they don’t ignore or minimize these problems. Repurposing and synthesizing that literature from a left perspective would be really valuable, and was what I was hoping this book would be.
#15897

Chthonic_Goat_666 posted:

i found debt 5000 revelatory at the time but i cant imagine revisiting it



#15898

cars posted:

here's a review of Graeber's new bookand it turns out yeah, Graeber is allergic to researching employment data before trying to write about jobs:

Graeber draws a line through the service sector itself: “The proportion of the workforce made up of actual waiters, barbers, salesclerks and the like,” he hallucinates, is “really quite small.”



lol



thats a good review and im gonna read the same author's stuff on automation now

#15899
reading "boys in zink". very good but very heavy.
#15900
[account deactivated]
#15901

ghostpinballer posted:

reading "boys in zink". very good but very heavy.




#15902

Aspie_Muslim_Economist_ posted:



I’m curious about how far Graeber’s allergy to quantitative analysis extends here. My current job is something that would almost certainly necessarily exist after transition to socialism, but there would probably be a lot fewer people shunted into it because of the evaporation of the current collection of firms competing, with heinous inefficiency, to do the same thing. It seems to me like this would apply to a lot of jobs, and so much the better.

But I think you’ve put your finger on something that may explain why Graeber isn’t inclined to go deeper into the data, if I’m reading you right: one reason he may not be able to address effectively the sort of jobs that are useful in action, but “useless” in current numbers, is because he won’t advance a strong idea of a future state for society.

I can see how that would lead to trying to support or condemn jobs on their qualities alone, or on what sector of industry currently houses them, but given the overwhelming movement toward farming out job roles to firms that provide the same long-term services to clients all over the market, it seems kind of nuts to look at where the job sits as the main way to determine its qualities... not to mention that finance skims the cream under capitalism, sometimes including integrating recent developments in methods and technology first because they have money to burn on that, so some jobs that overwhelmingly adhere to financial firms right now may end up keeping or growing their numbers under socialism rather than reducing them.

#15903
[account deactivated]
#15904

Aspie_Muslim_Economist_ posted:



he actually does sort of come down to a specific definition of a bullshit job, and its a pretty weak one. its in essence any job where the person doing it themself believes it to be useless, without any productive or social benefit. he kind of just asserts that it makes sense as a definition, because a person has all sorts of incentive to believe their job is worthwhile, so if someone does not than its a good argument for it being a bullshit job. he then has to do some acrobatics to include such jobs as middle managers, who will never admit that they are useless, and forces him to fall back on anecdotal evidence, where the handful of corporate lawyers he knows personally tell him privately that their jobs are worthless and they know it. it also gets funky with administrative assistant jobs who do the work of their superior; is their job bullshit, or are they productive and its their boss's job that is bullshit because they aren't actually doing anything?

the closest thing he has to a quantitative analysis, beyond folks sending him shit on twitter and through email, is a single yougov poll where something like 32% of britons say their job is pointless and another 17% dont know. this is really the crux of why its a bad book, although i think its more because he wants it to be a popular sensation rather than a dry academic text. its about 25% anecdotes from the obviously highly educated people he interacts with over the internet so its a primarily middle class/managerial/professional jobs analysis.

personally, when i think of bullshit jobs the example that jumps to mind is the guy standing on the side of the road waving an arrow sign trying to get you to go to cricket mobile or wherever, often in a silly costume. its turning a human being into a signpost. this is humiliating and degrading but it beats starving to death/being evicted/having your parole revoked. this kind of job isnt really addressed by the book.

in essence, this paragraph from the above review:

In fact, since the 1970s, the advanced economies of the “West” have seen a dizzying expansion of low-wage, low-skill employment across the board, not least in retail and restaurants, but especially in healthcare and education. A recent Bureau of Labor Statistics report on the fastest growing occupations in the US offers a sobering correction to Graeber’s tableau of do-nothing “salaried paper pushers:” personal care aides, home health aides, “combined food preparation and serving workers, including fast food,” retail salespersons, nursing assistants, customer service representatives, restaurant cooks, medical assistants, and “janitors and cleaners, except maids and housekeeping cleaners.” Eleven of the fifteen occupations require no college degree, most no formal education at all. The median pay for most is $25,000 annually, or less.10 This is the “current regime of work,” for those who have eyes to see. It is a world in which a sizable share of employment in the putatively rich countries takes the form of poorly-paid work tending to the sick and the young, making and serving cheap food to other poor people, or cleaning offices, warehouses, and hotel rooms, after the salaried paper-pushers are off the clock.



ironically enough, graeber thinks that none of these are bullshit jobs - he instead calls them shit jobs, which are not the subject of the book nor really addressed that much. he even repeatedly cites a friend who quit a bullshit, highly paid office job to be a cleaner, who ends up finding much more satisfaction in it because theres something measurable in cleaning something dirty.

by focusing on managerial and professional class jobs, his ultimate conclusion, which is an argument for universal basic income, falls somewhat flat. deputy assistant directors for quality control or whatnot would likely still prefer their jobs for the social status and high income that they provide, rather than living a comfortable if comparatively meager existence off of a ubi while they build model trains or whatever, so ubi would likely do little to trim the fat of the kinds of jobs he focuses on. he brings in an analogy to bdsm, because the humiliation of a manager/employee relationship is similar, but theres no "safe word" where the employee can put an end to the degradation. he argues a ubi would provide that safe word: i quit, and thats ok because i dont need this job to survive. the irony, of course, is that most of his bullshit job examples have that. its called having a high enough salary to save and live somewhat comfortably while you look for other work - not the same lifestyle you enjoy from your high salary, but still not really starving

#15905
That definition seems to include everyone with chronic depression or just plain old-fashioned ennui. How many useful people would evaluate themselves or their current roles as useless but lack the perspective to evaluate themselves accurately? Probably a lot.
#15906
And do people on the Lockheed Martin fabrication line think of their jobs as useless or even as other than "creating value"
#15907
ah, the overpaid first worlder parasites suffering from ennui, the most revolutionary subject in history
#15908
Yeah if he’s really concerned about bureaucratic make work jobs that could be completely liquidated while materially improving billions of lives it would be the entire countrysize US military apparatus. I haven’t read the book but I’m sure as a principled anarchist that Graeber devotes many chapters to the need to destroy the Miltary industrial complex
#15909
i think most people here would say "they were all bad!!!" but as someone who enjoyed a lot of his other work this one is really a turd. it reads like exactly what you would expect an out of touch humanities professor to write. he doesn't seem to get how useful productive blue collar nor white collar jobs actually work, he just wants to say haha kill lawyers or whatever. pass
#15910
oh man, i forgot about how he addresses the Troops. he makes passing reference to how they are in an untouchable position, with them being the only jobs that nobody can criticize. he then tosses out some hideous anecdotal evidence about how troops on bases do humanitarian type work in the surrounding communities. this was initially a self-conscious goodwill effort to improve their relations with the populations they occupied that predictably failed. however, they kept doing them because the troops who took part really liked them. he essentially argues that most troops really wanted to join the peace corps but were prevented because of lack of college degrees. yes, that's right. they're all just do-gooders who were stuck becoming guns-for-hire in the service imperialism
#15911
that's all interesting. there really does seem to be a definitional problem where there are political economic reasons why any particular job exists within a system in motion and therefore no possible way to say it doesn't have a function. that seems like something an anthropologist should immediately grasp. he would have to be arguing that these particular jobs exist because of capitalist superstition, but no anthropologist would suggest that superstitition has no social function. i don't know much about this though. i would guess there's an additional problem that capitalist institutions necessarily depend on prediction and not direct function anyway. like a lot of jobs exist because of momentum within organizations that find themselves otherwise meeting their goals. organizations try to manipulate their internal culture and take big guesses about the direction of the market, which means that someone's particular job might seem useless to them but they are being swept forward by managers for some overarching organizational reason. as others have said, though, that sort of thing is ruthlessly studied by management science. one of the main reasons why managers hate unions is that they build in this sort of momentum around the patterns of life instead of the needs of the market - rooted families with lives instead of just units of production.
#15912

cars posted:

Aspie_Muslim_Economist_ posted:

But I think you’ve put your finger on something that may explain why Graeber isn’t inclined to go deeper into the data, if I’m reading you right: one reason he may not be able to address effectively the sort of jobs that are useful in action, but “useless” in current numbers, is because he won’t advance a strong idea of a future state for society.


I think that's an intrinsic challenge with this sort of analysis--it really depends on the counterfactual. The most straightforward thing would be to look at historical and existing socialist states
and see what roles they are able eliminate, but obviously Graeber has no interest in valorizing any real world state, and it would undermine his thesis.

TG posted:

Aspie_Muslim_Economist_ posted:

he actually does sort of come down to a specific definition of a bullshit job, and its a pretty weak one. its in essence any job where the person doing it themself believes it to be useless, without any productive or social benefit. he kind of just asserts that it makes sense as a definition, because a person has all sorts of incentive to believe their job is worthwhile, so if someone does not than its a good argument for it being a bullshit job.


Yeah, I elided that definition because it's so hard to interpret. He himself constantly points out the distinction between "bullshit" and "shit" jobs--explicitly because people confuse them! But if that's such a common error to make, why would you take answers to "do you have a bullshit job?" at face value? I would guess responses have much more to do with alienation and exploitation than they do with the net social value of that person's labor, however you want to define that.

getfiscal posted:

that's all interesting. there really does seem to be a definitional problem where there are political economic reasons why any particular job exists within a system in motion and therefore no possible way to say it doesn't have a function.


I think you can make some headway by focusing on a firm's putative goal of making profits and seeing how the organizational structure fails from that perspective, and I think that's essentially how capital is oriented with regard to these sort of "useless" jobs. Graeber seems to posit a static world where middle managers carve out fiefdoms and enserf their employees. I don't think that's really wrong, but it's not a new phenomenon and it's a dynamic, dialectical process. When times are good or the upper management is lax, these sorts of internal cultures develop, but eventually the company changes hands, they hire a new CEO, or the upper management brings in McKinsey. In each case, the new decision maker is chosen precisely because they're an outsider who only cares about profits and has no interest or investment in the internal politics of the firm, and they hollow out these structures with massive firings and reorganization.

That's why I think Graeber's big idea that capital is intentionally recapitulating feudalism at the expense of profits is so wrongheaded. He seems to think that they're in harmony because employing and co-opting the bottom the PMC is necessary to prevent revolution. But even if that were in the interest of the capitalist class as a whole, the way capital actually interfaces with middle management would-be barons is the opposite--they're in fundamental tension. These dalliances hurt the bottom line, and however much a manager might like to lord over a team of useless flunkies, shareholders do not care. If I'm a shareholder, perhaps providing sinecures for college educated office workers makes capitalism more stable, but 99.99% of those benefits accrue to other capitalists, so why should I be so charitable? It seems like Graeber literally anthropomorphizes capital as a rational, unitary will coordinating every CEO and shareholder.

#15913
so this is essentially a Dilbert book then
#15914
Does anyone know of any general typological/historical surveys of the bourgeois revolutions of Europe, a la Anderson’s study of Absolutist Europe? Anderson wrote in his intro to Lineages that he had TWO forthcoming studies of “the great bourgeois revolutions, from the Revolt of the Netherlands to the Unification of Germany”, never published Also, any other typological studies of Asian social formations (or even socialist ones! If it even exists) would be cool as hell too
#15915
i finished the first book in that series like a week ago and as a dumb person i didnt understand or remember much lol

now i am reading ten myths about israel by ilan pappe and it s cool so far
#15916

dimashq posted:

Does anyone know of any general typological/historical surveys of the bourgeois revolutions of Europe, a la Anderson’s study of Absolutist Europe?


https://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php?threadid=3856068

#15917
while looking into deleauze influenced sdf operations in gaza i came across this interview.

1/2/3

provides some insight into military culture and recent genealogy of different design practices. there are some interesting examples along the way.

the same topic is developed a bit more in his white paper here from a recent ibm military and intelligence conference.

i really dig this sort of stuff so if you somehow have access to proceedings from these kinda conferences please pm.
#15918
This thing about the heroes who were the Rosenbergs: https://www.fbi.gov/history/famous-cases/atom-spy-caserosenbergs

This little anecdote about Greenglass made me laugh:

David Greenglass reportedly had come under the influence of his sister when he was about 12 years old and when the 19-year-old Ethel was being courted by Julius Rosenberg. At first David opposed the efforts of Ethel and Julius to convert him to communism and disliked Julius, but after Julius brought David a chemistry set, the two became very friendly and Julius was able to influence David considerably.

#15919
*smiling and nodding as i check on my shed full of chemistry sets*
#15920
handing out chemistry sets to the neighborhood kids with the sakai pamphlet tucked into the packaging