http://web.archive.org/web/20210407001427/https://brownpoliticalreview.org/2021/03/the-origins-of-a-distinguished-diplomatic-career-and-the-u-s-china-fight-for-primacy-bpr-interviews-ambassador-chas-freeman/
Sam Kolitch: What is the root cause of the United States’ desire to confront China?
Chas Freeman: I think the rudimentary driver of the United States’ confrontation with China is psychology, not strategy. We became the world’s largest economy sometime in the 1870s. That’s 150 years ago. Now we’ve either already been eclipsed, or we’re about to be eclipsed, by China. So we’re afraid of not being number one and we’ve decided that we will hamstring the rise of China. No one on the American side has described where this confrontation is supposed to take us—it’s just an end in itself. Also, we have exercised military primacy in the Asia-Pacific region since 1945. Now, we confront the return of China to wealth and power in the region. And our position in the Asia-Pacific is precarious. What does that mean? It means that we object to things like China’s anti-access and area denial weapon system (A2/AD), otherwise known as defense. The Chinese now can stop us from running through their defenses. So this is a threat: we’re not all-powerful anymore. We are in danger of losing primacy.
But there’s not much evidence of China wanting to replace us. They are displacing us in some spheres because they’re big and growing and successful. Do they want to take on our global dominion and hegemony role? No, but we assert that they do. We posit that China thinks and behaves like us: “We had Manifest Destiny and it took us across the Pacific to the Philippines. Therefore, China must have a Monroe Doctrine and Manifest Destiny in mind.” This is wrong. Things don’t work like that. So I would argue that we have inhaled our own propaganda, and we are living in the appropriately stoned state that that produces.
c_man posted:im reading about statistics
well i'm getting to the heart of the matter and reading the statistics themselves.
re: other posts:
chas freeman owns. i like this interview w/ him:
https://theanalysis.news/interviews/bidens-china-policy-a-more-polite-trump-amb-chas-freeman/
http://ml-review.ca/aml/MLRB/Sultan-Galiyev-FINAL.htm
dizastar posted:im readin Sultan Galiev, le père de la révolution tiers-mondiste (sultan galiev, father of third worldist revolution).
a translation of this would be insanely cool ive been curious about this book for years!! practically no english literature of any depth available on him
marknat posted:he was purged by Stalin for pan-turanist conspiracy, wasnt he?
http://ml-review.ca/aml/MLRB/Sultan-Galiyev-FINAL.htm
not surprising one bit hahaha
Argentine Marxist Nestor Kohan explains how Mirsaid Sultan-Galiev developed early Third Worldist communist thought and influenced g.South communist revolutionaries. Third Worldism is a g.South ideology, this is undisputed. Watch from min 7.20. https://t.co/WovincIZnP
— ANTICONQUISTA (@ANTICONQUISTA) April 11, 2021
https://anticonquista.com/2018/04/26/urban-guerrilla-warfare-the-second-wave-of-third-world-revolution/
liceo posted:this is one of the best websites i have ever looked at.
https://www.foundalis.com/
definitely click on every single link that he has because they all stay in-house lmfao
An Open Letter to My Northern Neighbors
Dear nationals who insist to call yourselves — and only yourselves — “Macedonians”:
Why do you deny this right from me?
I am a Macedonian. At least, that’s what I want to call myself. I was born in Greek Macedonia, specifically in the city of Edessa, and so I identify myself as follows: an Edessian, a Macedonian, a Greek, a Balkan, and a European. Do I have this right? Do you grant me this right?
Aren’t you the champions of the idea that people must have the right to determine by themselves what they want to be called? Yes, right? Then why do you deny that I, too, am a Macedonian?
dizastar posted:im readin Sultan Galiev, le père de la révolution tiers-mondiste (sultan galiev, father of third worldist revolution). history book surrounding sultan galiev, his theory of national liberation and his relation towards the CPSU. I just started it but i feel like its gonna be an important read to me, its never been translated into english and i dont know if theres much reading material about him in english so i'm even thinking about translating it for my pals at tHE rHizzonE and compiling it into a thread. poster parenti if u read this and you're interested i could scan it and we'd divide the chapters in half for translation work
The book is available on libgen already, so there's no need for a scan (http://libgen.rs/book/index.php?md5=ADF9A632C43EB4CAF1774407D030219D) -- a translation would be extremely valuable however, as there's not much of his work been translated beyond excerpts and the like, and a full book on him is missing (albeit the book "Muslim National Communism in the Soviet Union: A Revolutionary Strategy for the Colonial World" discusses him extensively, and is very good)
Sunday posted:i am reading about the first world war, as an event it was very bad, tragic in fact, but the book i am reading about it is very good,
i will hopefully finish this soon and go mad asap
cars posted:seems like a great and not terrible idea to ascribe an absurd caricature point of view to all "Cuban communists" en masse because of this Web site you don't like. also to insult that entire group under the pretense that you've deduced the cause of their unified hive-mind opinion, again as dictated by this one Web site you read.
You're right I'm being a bit dramatic, I really mean the people who edit the wiki. I'll back away from typing some statement about the general ideological state of Cuba and simply say that a good amount of the editors of the wiki are of a radical liberal flavor but who knows how many people in Cuba even care about it. I was also being a bit dramatic when I called it more anti-communist than Wikipedia, there's definitely many things on there you would never read on Wikipedia. The North Korea article for example is positive, although brief. Ignore the my more dramatic statements but I just really don't like that website.
SlovenianCuisine posted:cars posted:seems like a great and not terrible idea to ascribe an absurd caricature point of view to all "Cuban communists" en masse because of this Web site you don't like. also to insult that entire group under the pretense that you've deduced the cause of their unified hive-mind opinion, again as dictated by this one Web site you read.
You're right I'm being a bit dramatic, I really mean the people who edit the wiki. I'll back away from typing some statement about the general ideological state of Cuba and simply say that a good amount of the editors of the wiki are of a radical liberal flavor but who knows how many people in Cuba even care about it. I was also being a bit dramatic when I called it more anti-communist than Wikipedia, there's definitely many things on there you would never read on Wikipedia. The North Korea article for example is positive, although brief. Ignore the my more dramatic statements but I just really don't like that website.
i cant read, but it looks like that article is almost unchanged from when it was first written in 2011, with the main reference being microsoft encarta 2008. it was the 3rd article the creating user made, preceded by "Mula" and "Bombardeos atómicos sobre Hiroshima y Nagasaki," and succeeded by "Banda de hermanos," mel gibson's "Corazón valiente," "El Pacífico (miniserie de 2010)," "Camelot (serie de televisión)," "El último de los Mohicanos (Película)" and "Constantine" featuring keanu reaves. their last activity was in 2014, creating the article for robert youngs "Vampire Circus"
hth
ribaraca posted:if anyone has any recommendations for books on yugoslavian history...
BannedThought recently added a section on Yugoslavia, but there's no books on it's collapse unfortunately
ribaraca posted:I'm currently reading a terrible book on yugoslavia which unsurprisingly gets worse and worse the more it talks about the communist party (its this one https://www.palgrave.com/gp/book/9781403915665 , chose it at random on account of being the only vaguely decent overview i could find). a cursory search here didn't turn up any results for me, so im curious if anyone has any recommendations for books on yugoslavian history, including more specialized ones like to kill a nation or one's concerning regional/proximally neighboring history more generally
First Do No Harm: Humanitarian Intervention and the Destruction of Yugoslavia by David N. Gibbs is quite good
https://www.marxists.org/subject/africa/rodney-walter/works/peoplespowernodictator.htm
cars posted:do you have the Fanshen where the title is written in the Star Trek font? possibly the most powerful Fanshen
i don't think so but my copy does have this cover which i think looks cool