I was saddened today to hear of the death of David Graeber. I read his book on debt about four or five years ago, it is a very interesting and well-written book. I haven't read any other book of his, but I have enjoyed several essays and always found myself in agreement with him on recent political happenings. He always struck me as an affable person in interviews, and it is particularly sad given his age of 59.
David Graeber
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Yes indeed. I haven't (yet) read the book on debt, but the "bullshit jobs" essay and its later expansion into a book constitute I think some of the most clear-sighted and important political writing in the current era. The philosophical essay "Revolution in Reverse" is also something I find myself returning to:
Right and Left political perspectives are founded, above all, on different assumptions about the ultimate realities of power. The Right is rooted in a political ontology of violence, where being realistic means taking into account the forces of destruction. In reply the Left has consistently proposed variations on a political ontology of the imagination, in which the forces that are seen as the ultimate realities that need to be taken into account are those (forces of production, creativity…) that bring things into being.
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The simultaneous embrace of markets, and of rules and regulations, represents the soul of what’s sometimes called “centrism.” It’s a decidedly unlovely combination. Nobody truly likes it. But the talking classes had reached an absolute consensus that no politicians who departed significantly from it could possibly win elections. Labour’s left-wing leader, Jeremy Corbyn, was thus declared “unelectable.” Former leader Tony Blair even openly stated that he would rather see his own party defeated than come into power on Corbyn’s leftist platform. But if the results of the 2019 election mean anything, they reveal an overwhelming rejection of centrism. The center of British politics has become a smoldering pit.
This is an excellent article that I'm reading for the first time...
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Originally posted by Joseph K View Posthttps://www.nybooks.com/daily/2020/0...JKNgXeuXgVSPdU
This is an excellent article that I'm reading for the first time...
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Originally posted by Joseph K View Posthttps://www.nybooks.com/daily/2020/0...JKNgXeuXgVSPdU
This is an excellent article that I'm reading for the first time...
Basically, middle-of-the-road, or centrist politics, retains popular legitimacy for as long as capitalism can be re-modelled in ways accordant with representative parliamentary democracy - which is how the ruling class maintains social peace. From the American New Deal through to the rise of Thatcher/Reaganomics this was achieved by means of mixed economics, with the profits generating sectors backed up (a) by law, (b) welfare nets including social security and (in Britain) the NHS, and (c) judicious taxation. But by the latter stage the ruling class had become ideologically split as to its views on the working class: were they there to be the primary agency of profitability, which meant keeping the masses under control, if necessary at the whim of dictat from on high; or were they to be courted in their other role as consumers? Natural gravitational tendencies within the ebb and flow of capitalist economics would ordinarily predispose those at the top to keep the whip handle close to hand in the event of uppitiness from the lower orders, but a new factor had now entered the equation, one that meant you had to take account of the desires of those whose spending power was now a determining force in driving the machine, and so the permissive wing of conservatism that had always governed the behaviour of many who lived in castles and stately homes or on private islands, notwithstanding the puritan middle class ethics that had contributed in the successful building of Victorian Britain, and which had trickled down to help inform the cultural ethos of the 1960s and '70s, was to be given full rein: dictators of fashion and popular mores could always bludgeon over-indulgence in the "wrong" quarters with the threat and then the reality of mass unemployment when the tide turned, as it inevitably would, and, should that fail, there were always blacks, foreigners, or choose your otherwise most easily identifiable scapegoat to appeal for support. This is not to disparage the cultural liberalisations of the 1960s and '70s but to point out the nefarious purposes to which they were vulnerable.
As the writer says, centrist politics have failed in most if not all post-WW2 advanced economies, though he doesn't enter into underlying causes; what he does accurately highlight are the pecularities of Ango-centric cultural milieu that distinguish the kind of populisms, borne of anti-bureaucratic frustrations, from their manifestations in countries which knuckled down to the new, middle-of-the-road postwar order.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View Post‘To save the world, we’re going to have to stop working’
https://www.bigissue.com/latest/envi...8hevIJlN9exyC0Last edited by Serial_Apologist; 07-12-20, 17:42.
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