The time for new global organizations to confront global capitalism?
May 22 @ 15:30 -16:30 (Eastern)
In English
Zoom : https://zoom.us/j/92339561019
Overall the panel was real bad, Torkil's bit starts at just before 35 minutes. In the Q&A Torkil advocates for the universality of protracted people's war and says that the first world needs to look at anti-Vietnam resistance struggles within the core as examples of how to make a positive impact on liberation struggles in the periphery.
Edited by pogfan1996 ()
pogfan1996 posted:says that the first world needs to look at anti-Vietnam resistance struggles within the core as examples of how to make a positive impact on liberation struggles in the periphery.
having looked Very Carefully at the history of anti-Vietnam resistance struggles within the core I must assume he means examples of what not to do... right?
pogfan1996 posted:Based on his history I think he is recommending direct action to hurt the imperial war machine and not making flower headbands
What I meant was, having looked at how poorly leftist direct action groups and deserter soldier organizations performed in the west, even with the advantages of support from the soviet union, diplomatic safe harbor in sweden and elsewhere, etc, my impression of them is not very good. There were some truly excellent examples of organizing in that era creating a pipeline to impede the war machine by diverting and sabotaging recruitment, like antiwar organizers in Japan that took enormous risks to encourage desertion and smuggle soldiers away before they even reached southeast Asia, but I guess I don't really consider that part of the imperial core during the time period? I'm definitely interested in counterexamples of effective organizing from the west in the era, I'm not claiming expertise here. My initial reaction was just some dissonance because the orgs I have read about in that period were unfortunately pretty clownish. And I'm not even blaming them, because they were absolutely targeted by extremely aggressive cointelpro sabotage, but I just don't see their unfortunate political trajectories as good examples to follow.
I guess I should watch it for myself because I assume he gives concrete examples that I'd appreciate, instead of leaning on my own vague impressions.
pogfan1996 posted:Overall the panel was real bad, Torkil's bit starts at just before 35 minutes. In the Q&A Torkil advocates for the universality of protracted people's war and says that the first world needs to look at anti-Vietnam resistance struggles within the core as examples of how to make a positive impact on liberation struggles in the periphery.
Someone at King 5 read settlers apparently, though it still molly coddles the settlers.
WATCH: French President Emmanuel Macron is slapped in the face while greeting people; 2 people arrested pic.twitter.com/GdDftzSn2X
— BNO News (@BNONews) June 8, 2021
liceo posted:
Funniest interview ever featuring classic hits like “do you have a soul” and “are you a killer” and “Mr Putin that’s what we call whataboutism”
Here’s the transcript:
http://en.kremlin.ru/events/president/news/65861
My favorite parts:
Keir Simmons: Yeah. You are a religious man. President Biden is saying he told you to your face, ”You don't have a soul.“ (Laughter.)
Vladimir Putin: I do not remember this. ”Something is wrong with my memory.“
Keir Simmons: He says it was about 10 years ago when he was vice president.
Vladimir Putin: Well, he probably has good memory. I do not rule this out, but I don't remember this.
Vladimir Putin: Some defence. During the USSR era, Gorbachev, who is still, thank God, with us, got a promise, a verbal promise that there would be no NATO expansion to the east. Where is that…
Keir Simmons: Where is that…
Vladimir Putin: …promise? Two ways of expansion.
Keir Simmons: Where is that written down? Where is that promise written down?
Vladimir Putin: Right, right. Well done. Correct. You’ve got a point. Got you good. Well, congratulations.
Keir Simmons: Moving on, the Biden administration has said that at your summit they will bring up the case of two US prisoners in Russia, Paul Whelan and Trevor Reed. They are two former Marines. Trevor Reed is suffering from COVID in prison. Why don't you release them ahead of the summit? Wouldn't that show goodwill?
Vladimir Putin: I know that we have certain US citizens who are in prison, have been convicted, found guilty. But if one considers the number of Russian Federation citizens who are in US prisons, then these numbers don't even compare. They cannot be compared. The United States has made a habit in the last few years of catching Russian Federation citizens in third countries and take them to back to the US in violation of all international legal norms and put them in prison.
Keir Simmons: It’s just that there's a limited amount of time, Mr President. Unless we can have more time, I'd be very happy to have to keep going for another 30 minutes.
Vladimir Putin: I determine the time here, so don't worry about time. Your guy, the Marine, he's just a drunk and a troublemaker. As they say here, he got himself shitfaced and started a fight. Among other things, he hit a cop. It's nothing. It's just a common crime. There is nothing to it.
As far as possible negotiations on the subject, sure it can be talked about. Obviously we'll raise the matter of our citizens who are in prison in the US. Yes, it can be a specific conversation. Sure. We're happy to do it although it doesn't seem that the US administration has raised that matter. But we're prepared to do that.
Our pilot Yaroshenko has been in prison in the US for a good, I don't know how many years, 15, maybe 20 years. And there also the problem seems to be a common crime. We could and should talk about it. We haven't been talking about this, but we could. If the US side is prepared to discuss it, so are we.
Keir Simmons: So his family will find that incredibly distressing to hear you talk about him that way. It does sound though as if you would consider some kind of a prisoner swap.
Vladimir Putin: There is nothing offensive about it. He got drunk on vodka and started a fight. He fought a cop. There is nothing offensive about it. These things happen in life. There is nothing horrible about it. It happens to our men as well. Somebody gulps down some vodka and starts a fight. So you violate the law, you go to prison. What would have happened if he'd fought a cop, if he'd hit a cop in your country? He would have been shot dead on that spot, and that’s the end of it. Isn't that the case?
We are proud to present our speakers for Let a Hundred Flowers Bloom, a roundtable discussion on the Chinese Communist Party’s relationship to the Global South today.
— Institute for Nationalist Studies (@ins_ph) July 22, 2021
July 23, 2021, 2:00PM (GMT+8)
Sign-up: https://t.co/gXP5Q8k7uR
This will also be streamed on our FB page.#1NS pic.twitter.com/7gQThhLL9k
Edited by Themselves ()
found pleasant youtube channel of a german guy building contraptions in the woods