https://lux-magazine.com/article/our-animals-ourselves/
Three weeks ago, few Venezuelans knew Juan Guaidó’s name. Today, the 35-year-old is the international face of Venezuelan protest. More than a dozen countries have officially backed Guidó’s claim to be his country’s interim president and tens of thousands of people have turned out on the streets to support him.
After years of economic crisis and repression under Nicolás Maduro’s authoritarian regime, politicians and the public have rallied around Guiado, who is leader of the opposition-held parliament, which was stripped of its powers in 2017. On Jan. 23, he was sworn in as acting president on the basis that Maduro’s second term was illegitimate and that the constitution says the parliament leader must take charge in a power vacuum. In the week since, Guaidó has appointed members of a parallel government and persuaded the U.S. to impose crippling sanctions that will make it harder and harder for Maduro to cling to power.
third one is the funniest, because iirc that's what his detractors call him; it means "guided," which is pretty ace nameplay
yes, there were mistakes and contradictions along the way, but revolution is messy business and back-seating every moment just comes across as utopian. this guy is either a trot or a lib that just needs to accept that he wants a social democracy.
it's kind of funny because just a few years ago i was going through an anti-revisionist phase and it took some time to realize hey, these are experiments happening in an imperialist world with a wide variety of cultural backgrounds and material conditions, have some understanding
Edit: lol of course
William Hinton posted:Lack of strategic consensus has had an incalculable influence on the reconstruction of China since 1949. The right and left swings that constantly distorted policy in the post-land-reform period were nothing new, but in the absence of consensus the swings tended to be far more extreme and far more destructive than they had before. Foot-dragging by an important section of the leadership that disagreed on strategic goals often served to undermine and slow down political initiatives. But by taking the opposite tack, these leaders could, if they felt like it, speed up those initiatives and carry them to extremes for the sole purpose of discrediting not only the initiatives themselves, but the overall direction of the movement. Once ultraleft errors make radical programs look absurd, the substitution of conservative alternatives becomes easy. Whether or not anyone ever consciously carried out such devious manurers, objectively the ball clearly bounded that way.
JohnBeige posted:currently reading the leaked supposed Alito decision regarding overturning roe v wade
How well does it hang together as a legal argument
littlegreenpills posted:How well does it hang together as a legal argument
probably less well than the people who made it
Edited by winebaby ()
winebaby posted:I left a copy of Cyclonopedia on my desk and now my partner has been ripping on the title for two days straight. "Are you enjoying Mindograms: Pescaterian Spaceship Relations?" Also the person at book store, whom I know, acted like ordering/buying it was a symptom of crisis. Fifty pages in, do not recommend.
cyclonopedia is cool imo, and your partner sounds rude as heck!
lo posted:winebaby posted:I left a copy of Cyclonopedia on my desk and now my partner has been ripping on the title for two days straight. "Are you enjoying Mindograms: Pescaterian Spaceship Relations?" Also the person at book store, whom I know, acted like ordering/buying it was a symptom of crisis. Fifty pages in, do not recommend.
cyclonopedia is cool imo, and your partner sounds rude as heck!
sorry, I also think it is cool, it's the mockery of my peers that i cannot endure
cars posted:my workplace sent out an email to everyone today saying that the corporate office is retroactively celebrating April as Arab American Heritage month and therefore they would like to “determine the population” of “Arab Americans” or those with “Middle East and North African (MENA) ancestry” in the company through self-reporting. ok
lmao
Populares posted:Bought Das Kapital volumes 1-3. Trip report a decade from now.
Capital is a good read, might be important someday.
winebaby posted:
i love cyclonopedia but that's a brutal own lol
edit:
tears posted:reading about how the economy has gone wild in 2022
i've been trying to a sense of what's going on, especially with inflation, but to little avail. these two articles are the most useful i've come across, but if you have anything else along these lines please let me know
articles:
https://thenextrecession.wordpress.com/2022/05/09/inflation-wages-versus-profits/
https://www.phenomenalworld.org/analysis/controlled-prices/
Edited by radical_dave ()
Edited by Constantignoble ()
radical_dave posted:edit:
tears posted:reading about how the economy has gone wild in 2022
i've been trying to a sense of what's going on, especially with inflation, but to little avail. these two articles are the most useful i've come across, but if you have anything else along these lines please let me know
articles:
https://thenextrecession.wordpress.com/2022/05/09/inflation-wages-versus-profits/
https://www.phenomenalworld.org/analysis/controlled-prices/
a few things:
https://critiqueofcrisistheory.wordpress.com/global-economic-and-financial-war-erupts/
https://critiqueofcrisistheory.wordpress.com/covids-long-economic-shadow/
https://critiqueofcrisistheory.wordpress.com/economic-prospects/
tony norfield: twitter dot come: StubbornFacts
cars posted:ty for shenfan posting lo.
i'm here to chew bubblegum and make posts about maoism, and i'm completely out of bubblegum
https://centerforaninformedamerica.com/newsletter-38/ posted:If Stalin had in fact purged the Red Army of its best officers, if he had “betrayed the revolution” by purging all the party loyalists, then the conquest of the USSR would have proven to be the easy victory that it was scheduled to be. Instead, it was precisely because the Soviet Union did what the European nations failed to do – purged their army of fascist ‘fifth columnists’ prepared to sell out the Russian people – that the Red Army triumphed rather than sitting the war out.
Without the purges, the Red Army would have fallen apart, as previous foes of the Nazi war machine had done, unable to withstand the Nazi blitzkrieg. Were the purges brutal? Probably so. Were there excesses? Undoubtedly. But would the outcome of World War II, and the last sixty years of human history, have been much different without them? Undeniably.
As Party official Georgi Malenkov noted: “In the light of the war and its results, we perceive in all its magnitude the importance of that implacable struggle which over a period of many years our Party waged against every brand of enemy of Marxism-Leninism … the Party in good time destroyed all possibility of the appearance of a ‘fifth column’ in the U.S.S.R., and prepared the country politically for active defence. It will be easily understood that if this had not been done in time, we should, during the war, have found ourselves under fire from the front and the rear, and might have lost the war.”
So the purges achieved the desired result, but were they necessary, or was there another option? I don’t have an answer for that, but I do know this: Western intelligence agencies are remarkably skilled, now as then, at structuring the game so that it is a no-win situation for the opponent.
...
So if I have this right, this is basically what happened: Stalin was convinced that there were elements within his administration, likely working in collusion with Western interests, who were plotting against him, and just days before evidence of that plot was to be aired at trial, Stalin just happened to die. Immediately thereafter, all charges were quickly dropped against all the accused conspirators. The brave soul who felled the beast, if he was in fact assassinated, was rewarded by being sent before a firing squad. One of the men who had denied medical treatment to the fallen leader, and then lied repeatedly about it, and then arranged for Beria’s execution, rose up to assume Stalin’s throne. This same man quickly “tempered Soviet hostility,” which really means that he began working with the very same Western interests that Stalin had so feared. From the time of Stalin’s death, the new breed of Soviet leaders began covertly converting the Soviet Union to a capitalist system, while they and their Washington counterparts continued for forty more years to pretend as though the two nations were still ideological rivals. However, no one should conclude from any of that there ever was any actual plot to do away with Stalin.
marknat posted:Great coincidence lo, what do you think about programmed to kill? I started reading it yesterday its pretty batshit insane, but im kind of convinced
i haven't really read it yet, i skimmed bits and pieces a while ago but need to actually dive in at some point. the impression i got is that many of the links between serial killers and CIA mkultra stuff seem reasonable enough, but he seems to be pushing the idea that mkultra techniques can do basically sci fi things to the mind which i am not so sure of. but i don't really have a full opinion yet because i haven't properly read it. it seems like the book covers like a million things that could all have books of their own written about them as well
My impression of PTK was that he left most of the “how” up to the interpretation of the reader. By covering the highlights and most suspicious aspects of case after case I think he achieves the goal of making the reader feel like “there must be some conspiracy going on here.” I am partial to agreeing with that sentiment - but with hindsight feel somewhat underwhelmed on what was actually outlined. My memory is that it mostly breaks down to being “serial killers aren't a real category and cases claimed to be such are actually connected to organized crime/drugs, done by cult activity/groups killing people, corrupt police using one scapegoat to clean up old unsolved crimes, and/or something more nefarious connected to the feds/the rich/politicians/etc.”
I’m currently reading all the Elric of Melnibone stories. Even if they are pulp, hack and slash fantasy I’m finding them infinity more compelling, interesting, human even than any modern fantasy I’ve tried (and given up on) to read in recent years.
I’m also working my way through some introductory review/summary kind of books on permaculture/sustainable agriculture. Any recommendations for good books on the subject would be welcome.
Edited by solidar ()