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	<title>The End of Capitalism &#187; Economic Crisis</title>
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		<title>What is Capitalism?</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 03 Feb 2012 05:50:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>alex</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Yesterday I had the honor of speaking alongside George Caffentzis to answer the question, &#8220;What is Capitalism?&#8221;  Certainly this is one of the core questions of our era, as millions of people are becoming politicized during the unending economic crisis and looking for an analysis that can explain what is happening to them. In order [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=endofcapitalism.com&amp;blog=1762754&amp;post=1905&amp;subd=endofcapitalism&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Yesterday I had the honor of speaking alongside George Caffentzis to answer the question, &#8220;What is Capitalism?&#8221;  Certainly this is one of the core questions of our era, as millions of people are becoming politicized during the unending economic crisis and looking for an analysis that can explain what is happening to them. In order to make a better world, we first need to define the system that dominates the current one, and that is capitalism.</p>
<p>Yesterday&#8217;s packed event was the first in <a href="http://www.facebook.com/OccupyPhiladelphia" target="_blank">Occupy Philadelphia</a>&#8216;s ten-part educational series &#8220;Dissecting Capitalism.&#8221;  It was audio and video recorded, the audio is already online <a href="http://lavazone.org/dissecting_capitalism_at_lava" target="_blank">HERE</a>.  Listen in!</p>
<p>Below is the outline I created for my talk (downloadable <a href="http://www.scribd.com/doc/80329674/What-is-Capitalism-Outline-2-1-2012" target="_blank">HERE</a>). I tried to bring a holistic analysis of the system that could be understandable by the average person, but still contain a nuanced perspective of all the ways capitalism has screwed us over and screwed over our planet.  I&#8217;ll be fleshing this out over the next several days to revamp the &#8220;What is Capitalism?&#8221; section of the website. [alex]</p>
<p align="CENTER"><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:x-large;"><strong>What is Capitalism?</strong></span></span></p>
<p align="CENTER">“<span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;"><strong>Know Your Enemy” – Rage Against the Machine</strong></span></span></p>
<p align="CENTER"><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;"><strong>2/1/2012 – LAVA</strong></span></span></p>
<p align="CENTER"><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;"><strong>Alex Knight, <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com">endofcapitalism.com</a></strong></span></span></p>
<ol>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><strong>Capitalism is a Global System of Abuse</strong></span>
<ol>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Common Sense Radicalism – speak to the core issue in a way everyone can emotionally understand</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">How does it feel to live in a capitalist system? Like an abusive relationship. </span></span>
<ol type="i">
<li>“<span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">The problem that has no name.”</span></span></li>
</ol>
</li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Social and ecological trauma </span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">BP Oil Disaster demonstrates system&#8217;s logic: </span></span><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">profit over all, total lack of accountability</span></span></li>
</ol>
</li>
</ol>
<ol start="2">
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><strong>Power, Abuse, Resistance<a href="http://endofcapitalism.files.wordpress.com/2012/02/capitalist_system_pyramid_war19oct10.jpeg"><img class="alignright  wp-image-1906" title="capitalist_system_pyramid_war19oct10" src="http://endofcapitalism.files.wordpress.com/2012/02/capitalist_system_pyramid_war19oct10.jpeg?w=247&#038;h=437" alt="" width="247" height="437" /></a></strong></span>
<ol>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Power-Over and Power-With</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Internalized Oppression vs. Inherent Need for Self-determination</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Systems of Abuse/Oppression: Patriarchy, White Supremacy, Class</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Some Features of Class Societies:</span></span>
<ol type="i">
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Inequality – the few benefit at the expense of the many</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Economic production disconnected from human need</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Forced labor – slavery, wage slavery</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">State violence – punishment, repression</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Warfare, Conquest</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Propaganda</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Unsustainable ecological abuse</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Popular resistance</span></span></li>
</ol>
</li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Capitalism is the most advanced Class Society</span></span></li>
</ol>
</li>
</ol>
<ol start="3">
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><strong>Capitalism: Pyramid of Accumulation</strong></span>
<ol>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Financial Speculation</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Commodity Trading, Commodities</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Wage Labor, Wage Labor, Wage Labor</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;"><em>Enclosures: the largest, but invisible part of the iceberg</em></span></span>
<ol type="i">
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;"><em>any energy, resources or labor taken by force or without just compensation</em></span></span></li>
</ol>
</li>
</ol>
</li>
</ol>
<ol start="4">
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><strong>Stages of Capitalism: 1492 – Present</strong></span>
<ol>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;"><span id="more-1905"></span>Mercantile Capitalism (1492-1793)</span></span>
<ol type="i">
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Land Enclosures – displacement of European small farmers</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Colonization, Genocide</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Slavery</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Witch Hunts – attack on women</span></span></li>
</ol>
</li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Industrial Capitalism (1793-1971)</span></span>
<ol type="i">
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Fossil fuel</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Mechanized production – Richard Arkwright&#8217;s steam-powered factories</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">World War</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Welfare state – rising living standards in the Global North</span></span></li>
</ol>
</li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Neoliberalism (1971-2008)</span></span>
<ol type="i">
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Globalization – industry moves to the Global South, elimination of all trade barriers</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Privatization/Deregulation – attack on welfare, rise of nonprofit industrial complex, prison industrial complex, “Structural Adjustment”</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Computerization – extreme isolation of the individual</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Astronomical Debt – rise of credit card industry, student loans, housing bubble</span></span></li>
</ol>
</li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Zombie Capitalism? (2008-Present)</span></span>
<ol type="i">
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Neoliberalism is dead. Yet it walks amongst us?</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Bailouts are life support to the tune of $12 Trillion</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Austerity = cannibalism – foreclosures, unemployment, cutting services, wages, benefits, retirement, etc. destroy the basis for the massive consumption propping up the global economy</span></span></li>
</ol>
</li>
</ol>
</li>
</ol>
<ol start="5">
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><strong>The Addiction Dilemma</strong></span>
<ol>
<li>“<span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Leave it with me and it will kill me. Take it from me and I will die.” </span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Self-Hatred is the psychological norm under capitalism</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Addiction is a response to Trauma – stress, abuse, deprivation and displacement</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">A social disease, not a personal failing</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Self-destruction vs. self-sufficiency</span></span></li>
</ol>
</li>
</ol>
<ol start="6">
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><strong>The Need for Growth</strong></span>
<ol>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">The system&#8217;s greatest strength is also its greatest weakness</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Inevitability of Crisis – the Shark</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">The Profit Motive and the necessity of a return</span></span></li>
</ol>
</li>
</ol>
<p><a href="http://endofcapitalism.files.wordpress.com/2012/02/capitalism_firm_grip_on_wheel.gif"><img class="aligncenter  wp-image-1909" title="capitalism_firm_grip_on_wheel" src="http://endofcapitalism.files.wordpress.com/2012/02/capitalism_firm_grip_on_wheel.gif?w=315&#038;h=237" alt="" width="315" height="237" /></a></p>
<ol start="7">
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><strong>The End of Capitalism</strong></span>
<ol>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Ecological Limits to Growth: peak oil, peak uranium, peak water, peak food, peak transport, etc.</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Social Limits: resistance of everyday people, everywhere. Arab Spring, Occupy, Chinese workers.</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Recovery, Relapse, or Revolution?</span></span></li>
</ol>
</li>
</ol>
<p><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><strong>Recommended Readings:</strong></span></p>
<ul>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Federici, Silvia. </span></span><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2009/11/05/who-were-the-witches-patriarchal-terror-and-the-creation-of-capitalism/"><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;"><em>Caliban and the Witch: Women, The Body and Primitive Accumulation</em></span></span></a><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">. Autonomedia 2004.</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Freire, Paulo. </span></span><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;"><em>Pedagogy of the Oppressed</em></span></span><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">. 1967.</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Heinberg, Richard. </span></span><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;"><em>The End of Growth</em></span></span><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">. New Society 2011.</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Klein, Naomi. </span></span><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2009/07/21/review-of-the-shock-doctrine-the-rise-of-disaster-capitalism/"><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;"><em>The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism</em></span></span></a><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">. 2007.</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Maté, Gabor. </span></span><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;"><em>In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts: Close Encounters with Addiction</em></span></span><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">. 2008.</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Mies, Maria. </span></span><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;"><em>Patriarchy and Accumulation on a World Scale</em></span></span><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">. Zed Books 1986.</span></span></li>
<li><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:small;">Turbulence. <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/01/06/zombie-liberalism-and-the-breakdown-of-the-middle-ground-of-capitalism/">“Life in Limbo?”</a> Vol. 5, December 2009. www.turbulence.org.uk</span></span></li>
</ul>
<p><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:x-small;">Alex Knight is the editor of </span></span><span style="color:#000080;"><span style="text-decoration:underline;"><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/" target="_blank"><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:x-small;">endofcapitalism.com</span></span></a></span></span><span style="font-family:URW Gothic L,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size:x-small;"> and is writing the coincidentally named book &#8220;The End of Capitalism,&#8221; which argues that the global capitalist system is breaking down due to ecological and social limits to growth, and we are transitioning to a noncapitalist future. Alex was active in the new Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) from 2006-2009, and now spends most of his time organizing with the wonderful people of Occupy Philadelphia.</span></span></p>
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		<title>Occupy Wall St. Rediscovers the Radical Imagination</title>
		<link>http://endofcapitalism.com/2011/09/26/occupy-wall-st-rediscovers-the-radical-imagination/</link>
		<comments>http://endofcapitalism.com/2011/09/26/occupy-wall-st-rediscovers-the-radical-imagination/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Sep 2011 17:43:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>alex</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Capitalism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Class]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Democracy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Economic Crisis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Empire]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Global Justice Movement]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Resistance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Video]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://endofcapitalism.com/?p=1861</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A timely and valuable article by one of the facilitators of the Occupy Wall St. process, David Graeber. I was there for the occupation&#8217;s humble beginnings last Saturday, but since then it has become a sensation among the conscious and concerned population of this country. Why? Because finally there is an ongoing, unignorable, and vibrant [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=endofcapitalism.com&amp;blog=1762754&amp;post=1861&amp;subd=endofcapitalism&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A timely and valuable article by one of the facilitators of the <a href="https://occupywallst.org/" target="_blank">Occupy Wall St.</a> process, David Graeber. I was there for the occupation&#8217;s humble beginnings last Saturday, but since then it has become a sensation among the conscious and concerned population of this country. Why? Because finally there is an ongoing, unignorable, and vibrant manifestation against the Wall St. crooks who quite blatantly stole trillions of dollars from us.</p>
<p>Whether the occupation on Lower Manhattan lasts, or grows, or dies in the coming weeks, the global upheaval will continue and become an ever-present feature of the 21st Century. Our theory is that capitalism has entered a crisis from which it will never recover. The youth can feel it, we know we have no future within the existing system. The only question is, what alternative models can we move to, when everything feels so bleak?</p>
<span style="text-align:center; display: block;"><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2011/09/26/occupy-wall-st-rediscovers-the-radical-imagination/"><img src="http://img.youtube.com/vi/OwWInp75ua0/2.jpg" alt="" /></a></span>
<p>The Wall St. occupiers have followed the examples of Egypt, Greece, and Spain in using the direct democratic process of the &#8220;general assembly.&#8221; This means thousands of young people are having their first exhilarating taste of their voice being part of the actual exercise of power &#8211; participating in a movement.  In truth, this is our best hope, so spread it and bring that exhilaration to your friends and family.</p>
<p>If we have a general assembly in every town, every workplace, every school, then capitalism is over for real. [alex]</p>
<h4>&#8220;Occupy Wall St. Rediscovers the Radical Imagination&#8221;</h4>
<p>by David Graeber</p>
<p>Originally published the <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2011/sep/25/occupy-wall-street-protest" target="_blank">The Guardian UK</a>, September 25, 2011.</p>
<div id="attachment_1862" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 356px"><a href="http://davidscameracraft.blogspot.com/2011/09/occupy-wall-street-march-violence.html"><img class="size-full wp-image-1862 " title="occupy wall st" src="http://endofcapitalism.files.wordpress.com/2011/09/occupy-wall-st.jpg?w=490" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Youth of the multiracial working class - always at the front of things. Police arrested over 80 people during this 9/24 march, and pepper sprayed more. Photo by davids camera craft</p></div>
<p>The young people protesting in Wall Street and beyond reject this vain economic order. They have come to reclaim the future.</p>
<p>Why are people occupying Wall Street? Why has the occupation – <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/blog/2011/sep/25/occupywallstreet-occupy-wall-street-protests">despite the latest police crackdown</a> – sent out sparks across America, within days, inspiring hundreds of people to send pizzas, money, equipment and, now, to start their own movements called OccupyChicago, OccupyFlorida, in OccupyDenver or OccupyLA?</p>
<p>There are obvious reasons. We are watching the beginnings of the defiant self-assertion of a new generation of Americans, a generation who are looking forward to finishing their education with no jobs, no future, but still saddled with enormous and unforgivable debt. Most, I found, were of working-class or otherwise modest backgrounds, kids who did exactly what they were told they should: studied, got into college, and are now not just being punished for it, but humiliated – faced with a life of being treated as deadbeats, moral reprobates.</p>
<p>Is it really surprising they would like to have a word with the financial magnates who stole their future?</p>
<p>Just as in Europe, we are seeing the results of colossal social failure. The occupiers are the very sort of people, brimming with ideas, whose energies a healthy society would be marshaling to improve life for everyone. Instead, they are using it to envision ways to bring the whole system down.<span id="more-1861"></span></p>
<p>But the ultimate failure here is of imagination. What we are witnessing can also be seen as a demand to finally have a conversation we were all supposed to have back in 2008. There was a moment, after the near-collapse of the world&#8217;s financial architecture, when anything seemed possible.</p>
<p>Everything we&#8217;d been told for the last decade turned out to be a lie. Markets did not run themselves; creators of financial instruments were not infallible geniuses; and debts did not really need to be repaid – in fact, money itself was revealed to be a political instrument, trillions of dollars of which could be whisked in or out of existence overnight if governments or central banks required it. Even the Economist was running headlines like &#8220;Capitalism: Was it a Good Idea?&#8221;</p>
<p>It seemed the time had come to rethink everything: the very nature of markets, money, debt; to ask what an &#8220;economy&#8221; is actually for. This lasted perhaps two weeks. Then, in one of the most colossal failures of nerve in history, we all collectively clapped our hands over our ears and tried to put things back as close as possible to the way they&#8217;d been before.</p>
<p>Perhaps, it&#8217;s not surprising. It&#8217;s becoming increasingly obvious that the real priority of those running the world for the last few decades has not been creating a viable form of capitalism, but rather, convincing us all that the current form of capitalism is the only conceivable economic system, so its flaws are irrelevant. As a result, we&#8217;re all sitting around dumbfounded as the whole apparatus falls apart.</p>
<p>What we&#8217;ve learned now is that the economic crisis of the 1970s never really went away. It was fobbed off by cheap credit at home and massive plunder abroad – the latter, in the name of the &#8220;third world debt crisis&#8221;. But the global south fought back. The <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alter-globalization#Alter-Globalization_as_a_Social_Movement">&#8220;alter-globalisation movement&#8221;</a>, was in the end, successful: the IMF has been driven out of East Asia and Latin America, just as it is now being driven from the Middle East. As a result, the debt crisis has come home to Europe and North America, replete with the exact same approach: declare a financial crisis, appoint supposedly neutral technocrats to manage it, and then engage in an orgy of plunder in the name of &#8220;austerity&#8221;.</p>
<p>The form of resistance that has emerged looks remarkably similar to the old global justice movement, too: we see the rejection of old-fashioned party politics, the same embrace of radical diversity, the same emphasis on inventing new forms of democracy from below. What&#8217;s different is largely the target: where in 2000, it was directed at the power of unprecedented new planetary bureaucracies (the WTO, IMF, World Bank, Nafta), institutions with no democratic accountability, which existed only to serve the interests of transnational capital; now, it is at the entire political classes of countries like Greece, Spain and, now, the US – for exactly the same reason. This is why protesters are often hesitant even to issue formal demands, since that might imply recognising the legitimacy of the politicians against whom they are ranged.</p>
<p>When the history is finally written, though, it&#8217;s likely all of this tumult – beginning with the Arab Spring – will be remembered as the opening salvo in a wave of negotiations over the dissolution of the American Empire. Thirty years of relentless prioritising of propaganda over substance, and snuffing out anything that might look like a political basis for opposition, might make the prospects for the young protesters look bleak; and it&#8217;s clear that the rich are determined to seize as large a share of the spoils as remain, tossing a whole generation of young people to the wolves in order to do so. But history is not on their side.</p>
<p>We might do well to consider the collapse of the European colonial empires. It certainly did not lead to the rich successfully grabbing all the cookies, but to the creation of the modern welfare state. We don&#8217;t know precisely what will come out of this round. But if the occupiers finally manage to break the 30-year stranglehold that has been placed on the human imagination, as in those first weeks after September 2008, everything will once again be on the table – and the occupiers of Wall Street and other cities around the US will have done us the greatest favour anyone possibly can.</p>
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		<title>Capitalism is a Form of Patriarchy</title>
		<link>http://endofcapitalism.com/2011/03/13/capitalism-is-a-form-of-patriarchy/</link>
		<comments>http://endofcapitalism.com/2011/03/13/capitalism-is-a-form-of-patriarchy/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 13 Mar 2011 23:11:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>alex</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Capitalism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Economic Crisis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Egypt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Patriarchy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philly]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Yesterday I went to a &#8220;Mother&#8217;s March&#8221; here in Philadelphia, organized by Global Women&#8217;s Strike, on the occasion of International Women&#8217;s Day (March 8), which was established in 1911. The message of the march was &#8220;Invest in Caring, Not Killing,&#8221; and drew attention to the absurd budget cuts that our new Governor has proposed here [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=endofcapitalism.com&amp;blog=1762754&amp;post=1817&amp;subd=endofcapitalism&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
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<p>Yesterday I went to a &#8220;Mother&#8217;s March&#8221; here in Philadelphia, organized by <a href="http://globalwomenstrike.net/" target="_blank">Global Women&#8217;s Strike</a>, on the occasion of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Women%27s_Day" target="_blank">International Women&#8217;s Day</a> (March 8), which was established in 1911.</p>
<div id="attachment_1819" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 363px"><a href="http://www.demotix.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/large_610x456_scaled/photos/Mothers-March-International-Womens-Day-San-Francisco_616467.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-1819  " title="Mothers-March" src="http://endofcapitalism.files.wordpress.com/2011/03/mothers-march.jpg?w=490" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">The Mother&#039;s March in San Francisco, March 8 2011.</p></div>
<p>The message of the march was &#8220;Invest in Caring, Not Killing,&#8221; and drew attention to the absurd budget cuts that our new Governor has proposed here in Pennsylvania, similar to what is going on in Wisconsin, as well as at the federal level as right-wing idealogues are given positions of power. The intention of these cuts appears to be to punish poor and working class families, especially women, for the failures of Wall St. So we see teacher&#8217;s unions under attack, as if teachers caused the stock market to crash?</p>
<p><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selma_James" target="_blank">Selma James</a>, the author of the excellent article below, was founder of the Wages for Housework campaign in the 1970s, which brought attention to the fact that women&#8217;s labor is systematically unpaid, unrecognized, and undervalued. The same message, of putting resources and value into the caring and nurturing work that upholds the entire society, rather than into destructive activities such as wars and bailouts for the rich, continues to motivate the Global Women&#8217;s Strike today.</p>
<p>Last week Silvia Federici, author of <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2009/11/05/who-were-the-witches-patriarchal-terror-and-the-creation-of-capitalism/" target="_blank">Caliban and the Witch</a>, spoke in Philadelphia on many of these themes, and how the attack on women has been a key part of the structure of capitalism since its origin 500 years ago in the fires of the European witch burnings. Silvia&#8217;s work has opened my eyes to the ways in which capitalism is dependent on the division between (predominantly male) paid labor and (predominantly female) unpaid labor, which she calls the realms of production and reproduction. It turns out that capitalist profits could not be made if women&#8217;s labor was valued the same way as men&#8217;s &#8211; taking care of children, the elderly, and men&#8217;s emotions just isn&#8217;t very profitable, even though it is absolutely essential to society.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s also important to recognize that the unpaid labor holding up capitalism goes far beyond housework, to slavery, prison labor, the self-disciplining of the body, and the theft of resources and destruction of ecosystems that result from capitalist exploitation of Mother Earth.</p>
<p>I hope to upload the video or audio of Silvia&#8217;s inspiring events in the coming days. In the meantime, check out this article by Selma James.</p>
<p>alex</p>
<h4>International Women&#8217;s Day: how rapidly things change</h4>
<p><strong>by Selma James</strong></p>
<p><strong>March 8, 2011</strong></p>
<p><strong>Originally published by <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/mar/08/international-womens-day-sexual-division" target="_blank">The Guardian</a>. </strong></p>
<p>A century ago <a href="http://www.internationalwomensday.com/">International Women&#8217;s Day</a> was associated with peace, and women&#8217;s and girls&#8217; sweated labour –  which votes for women were to deal with. Not a celebration, but a  mobilisation. And because it was born among factory workers, it had  class, real class. Later it came to celebrate women&#8217;s autonomy, but  changed its class base and lost its edge. This centenary must mark a new  beginning.</p>
<p>We live in revolutionary times. We don&#8217;t need to be in  North Africa or the Middle East to be infected by the hope of change.  Enough to witness on TV the woman who, veiled in black from head to  foot, led chants in Cairo&#8217;s Tahrir Square, routing sexism and  Islamophobia in one unexpected blow. She and the millions moving  together have shaken us from our provincialism, and shown us how rapidly  things can change. Women in Egypt have called for a million women to  occupy Tahrir Square today. Who would have predicted that a month ago?</p>
<p>Feminism  has tended to narrow its concerns to what is unquestionably about  women: abortion, childcare, rape, prostitution, pay equity. But that can  separate us from a wider and deeper women&#8217;s movement. In Bahrain, for  example, women lead the struggle for &#8220;jobs, housing, clean water, peace  and justice&#8221; – as well as every demand we share.</p>
<p>The revolution is spreading.<span id="more-1817"></span> Scott Walker, the Tea Party&#8217;s <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2011/feb/26/wisconsin-republicans">state governor in Wisconsin, aims to destroy state workers&#8217; collective bargaining rights</a>.  As in Britain, most employees and service users attacked by the cuts  are women. A male colleague told demonstrators who had occupied the  state capitol: &#8220;The administration made a calculation that the men would  not support the women. Now they know otherwise.&#8221; He ended his speech  with the phrase on everyone&#8217;s lips: &#8220;Fight like an Egyptian!&#8221;</p>
<p>Now  we know the Tea Party is after women, what will women&#8217;s organisations do  about it? The only one anywhere near is a long-time fighting network of  welfare mothers. Wisconsin in the 90s led on &#8220;<a href="http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2006-07-17-welfare-reform-cover_x.htm">welfare reform</a>&#8221; – the blueprint for UK cuts. Welfare mothers remember that few stood with them then.</p>
<p>It  has not always been easy to pull up women&#8217;s neglected interests from  beneath the &#8220;general cause&#8221;. The best way is to ask the women who often  shout unheard: the single mothers, the teachers, the nurses, the sex  workers, the care workers, the asylum seekers, the pensioners. But as  feminists, our hearing and our focus are corrupted when we concentrate  on getting women into the corridors of power. Recently the UK government  warned big companies that they must <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/12560121">&#8220;double the number of women in boardrooms&#8221;</a> – while it increases the poverty of women and of children. Will we  allow that? Or can we turn this around and demand the money from  corporations and banks for women, children and all who need it?</p>
<p>Such  a turnaround presumes a return of feminism to class. Not the restricted  concepts of the 70s, but a new definition that begins with women  internationally – from Bahrain to Palestine, from Haiti to Pakistan,  where women fight for survival and justice after earthquakes, floods,  coups and occupations.</p>
<p>How do we deal with the fact that our  biology is an encumbrance for Alan Sugar, who wants to question women  job applicants about their parental intentions? It&#8217;s even an  embarrassment for some paid to represent us. When a trade union equality  worker was asked to endorse our IWD event, she wrote back: &#8220;Is it just  me – or [is] the &#8216;Mothers march&#8217; banner … disturb[ing]?&#8221;</p>
<p>Many  feminists have become convinced that we can only escape romanticised  visions of maternal slavery by denying we are mothers at all. To be a  financially independent individual as well as (or instead of) a mother,  we have traded away the social power that comes from recognition of the  contribution of motherhood – the making of the human race, the creation  of the labour force. Marching as mothers we transform the attitude to  that work: from a social liability to the social contribution that it  is. In this way, we help put all women in a stronger position to demand  wages and working conditions that take account of the caring work most  of us are already doing, whether we&#8217;re mothers or not.</p>
<p>New  boldness allows us to face what Marx and Engels called &#8220;our real  conditions of life and our relations with our kind&#8221;. Women refusing to  be trapped at home, and demanding that men not be trapped out of home,  takes us immediately beyond the market, which only considers work that  leads to profit for others, not to equity nor to happiness nor even to  survival.</p>
<p>To undermine once and for all the sexual division of  labour, we – women and men – must aim to work less. We can then begin  where we all began, with children. What do they need? First of all,  adults (not just parents) who love them and work to make a relationship  with them. That is after all what caring is. We need time for this.  Prime time.</p>
<p>We cannot be punished for our involvement in this  civilising life process. Nor can we allow men to be excluded from it. So  this International Women&#8217;s Day, we must at least consider claiming the  money from banks and wars to pay for the society of carers that only we  together can devise. Taking the lead of the women in Tahrir Square, we  can change the world.</p>
<p>• Selma James is organiser of the Global Women&#8217;s Strike <a href="http://globalwomenstrike.net/events/international-women%E2%80%99s-week-mothering-sunday-mothers-march">Mothers March</a></p>
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		<title>Zombie-Marxism Part 2: What Marx Got Right</title>
		<link>http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/11/04/zombie-marxism-part-2-what-marx-got-right/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 04 Nov 2010 16:06:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>alex</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Asia]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Also published by Countercurrents and The Rag Blog. Why Marxism Has Failed, and Why Zombie-Marxism Cannot Die Or My Rocky Relationship with Grampa Karl by Alex Knight, endofcapitalism.com Part 2 – November 4, 2010 This is part of an essay critiquing the philosophy of Karl Marx for its relevance to 21st century anti-capitalism. The main thrust [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=endofcapitalism.com&amp;blog=1762754&amp;post=1753&amp;subd=endofcapitalism&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Also published by <a href="http://countercurrents.org/knight051110.htm" target="_blank">Countercurrents</a> and <a href="http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2010/11/alex-knight-zombie-marxism-ii-what-marx.html" target="_blank">The Rag Blog</a>.</p>
<h4>Why Marxism Has Failed, and Why Zombie-Marxism Cannot Die<br />
Or My Rocky Relationship with Grampa Karl</h4>
<p><strong>by Alex Knight, endofcapitalism.com</strong><br />
<strong>Part 2 – November 4, 2010</strong><br />
<em>This is part of an essay critiquing the philosophy of Karl Marx for its relevance to 21st century anti-capitalism. The main thrust of the essay is to encourage living common-sense radicalism, as opposed to the automatic reproduction of zombie ideas which have lost connection to current reality. Karl Marx was no prophet. But neither can we reject him. We have to go beyond him, and bring him with us. I believe it is only on such a basis, with a critical appraisal of Marx, that the Left can become ideologically relevant to today’s rapidly evolving political circumstances. [Click here for <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/10/29/why-marxism-has-failed-and-why-zombie-marxism-cannot-die-part-1/" target="_blank">Part 1</a>.]</em></p>
<div id="attachment_1754" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 265px"><a href="http://endofcapitalism.files.wordpress.com/2010/11/karl-marx.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-1754" title="karl-marx" src="http://endofcapitalism.files.wordpress.com/2010/11/karl-marx.jpg?w=490" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">A brilliant, critical mind in his own time. Not infallible.</p></div>
<h4>What Marx Got Right</h4>
<p>Boiling down all of Karl Marx’s writings into a handful of key contributions is fated to produce an incomplete list, but here are the 5 that immediately come to my mind: <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/11/4/zombie-marxism-part-2-what-marx-got-right/#class">1. Class Analysis</a>, <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/11/4/zombie-marxism-part-2-what-marx-got-right/#base">2. Base and Superstructure</a>, <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/11/4/zombie-marxism-part-2-what-marx-got-right/#alienation">3. Alienation of Labor</a>, <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/11/4/zombie-marxism-part-2-what-marx-got-right/#crisis">4. Need for Growth, Inevitability of Crisis</a>, and <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/11/4/zombie-marxism-part-2-what-marx-got-right/#world-view">5. A Counter-Hegemonic World-view</a>.</p>
<p>(It must be noted that many of these insights were not the unique inspiration of Marx’s brain, but were ideas bubbling up in the European working class movements of the 18th and 19th centuries, which was the political context that educated Marx. Further, Marx’s lifelong collaborator, Friedrich Engels, undoubtedly contributed significantly to Marx’s ideas, although Marx remained the primary theorist.)</p>
<h4><a name="class"></a>1. Class Analysis</h4>
<p>In the opening lines of the “Communist Manifesto” (1848), Marx thunders, &#8220;The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles.&#8221;</p>
<p>In other words, as long as society has been divided into rich and poor, ruler and enslaved, oppressor and oppressed, capitalist and worker, there have been relentless efforts amongst the powerful to maintain and increase their power, and correspondingly, constant struggles from the poor and oppressed to escape their bondage. This insight appears to be common sense, but it is systematically hidden from mainstream society. People do not choose to be poor or oppressed, although the rich would like us to believe otherwise. The powerless are kept that way by those in power. And they are struggling to end that poverty and oppression, to the best of their individual and collective ability.</p>
<p>The Manifesto elaborates Marx&#8217;s class framework under capitalism:</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“Our epoch&#8230; possesses this distinctive feature: it has simplified class antagonisms: Society as a whole is more and more splitting up into two great hostile camps&#8230;: Bourgeoisie and Proletariat” (Marx-Engels Reader 474).</p>
<p>Marx relayed the words “bourgeoisie” and “proletariat” directly from the French working class movement he encountered in his 1844 exile in Paris, when he briefly ran with the likes of “anarchist” theorist Pierre-Joseph Proudhon. Marx himself <a href="http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1852/letters/52_03_05-ab.htm">reminds us</a>, “No credit is due to me for discovering the existence of classes in modern society or the struggle between them.” Class analysis pre-dated Marx by many decades. Yet he articulated the class divisions of capitalist society quite clearly.</p>
<p>The “bourgeoisie” are those who own and control the “means of production,” or basically, the land, factories and machines that make up the economy. Today we know them as the Donald Trumps, the Warren Buffets, etc., although most of the ruling class tries to avoid public scrutiny. In short, the ruling class in capitalism are the wealthy elite, who exert control over society (and government) through their dollars.</p>
<p>Opposing them is the “proletariat,” which Marx defines as “the modern working class &#8211; a class of labourers who live only so long as they find work, and who find work only so long as their labour increases capital” (479). The working class for Marx is everybody who has to work for a wage and sell their labor in order to survive.</p>
<p>The divide between the bourgeoisie and proletariat as seen by Marx impacts society in deep and rarely understood ways. However, it is clear that as the rich rule society, they design it for their own benefit through politics, the media, the school system, etc. Inevitably, through &#8220;trickle up&#8221; economics, the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. As the class conflict worsens, for Marx there can only be one solution — revolution:</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">&#8220;This revolution is necessary not only because the ruling class cannot be overthrown in any other way, but also because the class overthrowing it can only in a revolution succeed in ridding itself of all the muck of ages and become fitted to found society anew” (193, &#8220;The German Ideology&#8221; 1845).</p>
<p>How could it happen? Marx rightly answers, “the emancipation of the working classes must be conquered by the working classes themselves.”<span id="more-1753"></span></p>
<p>This proclamation comes from the <a href="http://www.marxists.org/history/international/iwma/documents/1864/rules.htm">Preamble </a>(1864) of the International Workingmen’s Association, also known as the First International. The International, which Marx helped found, was an organization made up of workers and their allies from across Europe, and a few from outside it. The International’s goal was the solidarity of workers across national boundaries, becoming united and empowered to lay siege to the capitalist system. Through “class consciousness,” the workers would become aware of their “historic mission,” and through organization, they would build the means to accomplish it.</p>
<p>The key is that Marx believed that change would come from below. It was impossible to decree communism from above. This explains Marx’s slogan, still just as relevant today if not for the gendered language, “Working men of all countries, Unite!”</p>
<p>Today, workers in China are perhaps the most successful practitioners of Marx’s class analysis. As China has opened itself up to Western corporations to take advantage of extremely low wages, China over the last 20 years has transformed itself into the sweatshop of the world. Workers make just a few cents per hour, work up to 12-15 hours per day, and are often forbidden from taking bathroom breaks. With<em> literally </em>nothing to lose, class struggle must appear to be a viable option for these exploited millions. And they have seized the opportunity. Organizing independently of the Communist Party’s official labor union, Chinese workers have self-organized thousands of massive strikes in the past few years. In the words of <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/08/25/the-most-inspiring-news-story-of-the-year-the-chinese-workers-movement/">Johann Hari</a>, “Wildcat unions have sprung up, organized by text message, demanding higher wages, a humane work environment, and the right to organize freely. Millions of young workers across the country are blockading their factories and chanting ‘there are no human rights here!’ and ‘we want freedom!’”</p>
<p>What if working men and women of the United States were to join in solidarity with the Chinese workers currently rebelling against totalitarian abuse? What if the primary consuming nation and the primary producing nation had to contend with a united, powerful anti-capitalist movement? It could create a force with the power to bring the entire capitalist system to its knees.</p>
<h4><a name="base"></a>2. Base and Superstructure</h4>
<p><em>&#8220;High on my own list of Marx&#8217;s important insights was the understanding that economics cannot be separated from politics.&#8221; &#8211; Roger Baker, &#8220;<a href="http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2010/08/roger-baker-is-marx-still-relevant.html">Is Marx Still Relevant?</a>&#8220;</em></p>
<p>Marx locates economics as the motive force of history. Marx called this the “materialist conception of history,” as opposed to the idealist conception of history as articulated by the earlier German philosopher, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hegel">G.W.F. Hegel</a>. Marx, who had been a member of the “Young Hegelians” while attending university, famously “stood Hegel on his head.” Instead of the material world being an extension of the ideas in people&#8217;s heads, Marx saw ideas as reflections of material reality, chiefly the economic “relations of production.”</p>
<p>History, for Marx, can best be explained in the context of the evolution and development of human economy. In an early letter (1846), he explains:</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“Assume a particular state of development in the productive faculties of man and you will get a particular form of commerce and consumption. Assume particular stages of development in production, commerce and consumption and you will have a corresponding social constitution, a corresponding organisation of the family, of orders or of classes, in a word, a corresponding civil society” (Marx-Engels Reader 136-7).</p>
<p>Marx therefore separates the economic “base” (or &#8220;foundation&#8221;) from a social, political, and ideological “superstructure” built on top of it. He elaborated this more fully in <a href="http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1859/critique-pol-economy/index.htm">A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy</a> (1859):</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“The totality of these relations of production constitutes the economic structure of society, the real foundation, on which arises a legal and political superstructure, and to which correspond definite forms of consciousness. The mode of production of material life conditions the general process of social, political, and intellectual life. It is not the consciousness of men that determines their existence, but their social existence that determines their consciousness.”</p>
<p>Debates over the extent of Marx’s economic determinism have raged since his death, but Engels clarified his and Marx&#8217;s framework in an 1890 letter:</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“According to the materialist conception of history, the <em>ultimately</em> determining element in history is the production and reproduction of real life. More than this neither Marx nor I have ever asserted. Hence if somebody twists this into saying that the economic element is the <em>only</em> determining one, he transforms that proposition into a meaningless, abstract, senseless phrase. The economic situation is the basis, but the various elements of the superstructure: political forms of the class struggle and its results, to wit: constitutions established by the victorious class after a successful battle, etc., juridical forms, and then even the reflexes of all these actual struggles in the brains of the participants, political, juristic, philosophical theories, religious views and their further development into systems of dogmas, also exercise their influence upon the course of the historical struggles and in many cases preponderate in determining their<em> form</em>&#8230;<br />
<em>We make our history ourselves, but, in the first place, under very definite assumptions and conditions </em>(emphasis added). Among these the economic ones are ultimately decisive. But the political ones, etc., and indeed even the traditions which haunt human minds also play a part, although not the decisive one&#8221; (Marx-Engels Reader 760-2).<sup><a href="#footnotes" target="_blank">1</a></sup></p>
<p>The core of Marx and Engels’ argument appears self-evident. Agricultural societies worship crop-related gods, and create social structures such that divide people into Lord and peasant. Industrial societies worship technology and money, and create classes such as financier and worker. What good would it have done for an Egyptian pharaoh to attempt to create something like the Internet, if the economic means (microchips, factories, wage labor, international banking) didn’t exist? Or, more precisely, how would the pharaoh have <em>conceived</em> of the Internet without these material conditions existing in front of him?</p>
<p>The concept of base and superstructure has many useful applications. For example, Marx articulated in his essay “The German Ideology”, that those in power materially can also exert ideological control over the rest of society. “The ideas of the ruling class are in every epoch the ruling ideas, i.e. the class which is the ruling <em>material</em> force of society, is at the same time its ruling <em>intellectual</em> force” (M-ER 172). Today we know this as propaganda and brainwashing.</p>
<p>Building off these ideas, later Marxists such as Antonio Gramsci developed a critique of “hegemony” &#8211; the dominance of one group of people, or one ideology, based on consent and persuasion, rather than by brute force. In other words, hegemony means the oppressed accept their oppression, internalizing and perhaps even outwardly arguing for the mythology of their rulers. People are much easier to rule if they believe it is for their own good.</p>
<p>Hegemony is a highly relevant idea to our situation today, especially in the United States where the population is thoroughly indoctrinated with the mythology of capitalism &#8211; seeing the system as positive and liberating, rather than violent and destructive as it actually is.</p>
<p>However, if the base of the American economy continues to deteriorate as it has, Marx would suggest the superstructure is sure to follow, and revolutionary change is perhaps not far around the corner.</p>
<h4><a name="alienation"></a>3. Alienation of Labor</h4>
<p>At the core of Karl Marx’s extensive critique of capitalism is his critique of the alienation of labor.</p>
<p>Marx used to spend weeks on end at the library, thoroughly researching the findings of the major economic theorists of capitalism. One of his important discoveries was Adam Smith’s “labor theory of value,” which posits that the value of a commodity is proportional to the quantity of human labor used to create it. A highly complex product, such as a space shuttle, is valuable (or expensive) in part because of the thousands of work-hours spent by hundreds of workers in the construction of its parts and their assembly. Whereas constructing a wheel-barrow is significantly less labor-intensive, it is therefore worth less money.</p>
<p>Marx extrapolated from this theory, showing that because labor produces everything of value (along with what nature provides), the entire system of capitalist accumulation is sustained by profiting off the backs of workers.</p>
<p>The focal argument of <em>Capital, Volume 1 </em>(1867), is that there would be no capital if not for the exploitation of labor. Marx coins the phrase “surplus value” to show that workers produce a higher value of goods for their bosses than they receive for themselves in wages. In effect, the worker only gets paid for working half a day, which is the amount of pay needed to keep him or her alive, yet he or she works a full day. What they produce in the second half of the day is therefore pure profit for their employer. “The rate of surplus-value is an exact expression for the degree of exploitation of labour-power by capital, or of the labourer by the capitalist” (<a href="http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1867-c1/ch09.htm">Chapter IX</a>).</p>
<p>Marx hereby creates the fascinating distinction between the worker&#8217;s &#8220;living labor,&#8221; and the machines, commodities and wealth (capital) created by that living labor, called “accumulated labor” or &#8220;dead labor.&#8221; While the worker produces surplus value for capital, giving the capitalist an incentive to keep the worker hard at work, the worker&#8217;s life diminishes in direct proportion to the work performed. This exploitation is the basis of the entire system: “[W]hat is the growth of productive capital? Growth of the power of accumulated labour over living labour. Growth of the domination of the bourgeoisie over the working class” (Marx-Engels Reader 210).</p>
<p>I believe &#8220;<a href="http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1844/manuscripts/labour.htm">Alienated Labour</a>,&#8221; written as part of the &#8220;Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844,&#8221; is Marx&#8217;s most enduring and relevant essay. It originally went unpublished and was only re-discovered in the 20th century, influencing the &#8220;New Left&#8221; of the 1960s, which was largely concerned with the pervasive alienation of modern consumer capitalism.</p>
<p>In the essay, Marx elaborates on the distinction between the worker’s active labor and the <em>product</em> of his or her labor:</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“The worker becomes all the poorer the more wealth he produces, the more his production increases in power and range. The worker becomes an ever cheaper commodity the more commodities he creates. With the <em>increasing value </em>of the world of things proceeds in direct proportion the <em>devaluation</em> of the world of men. Labor produces not only commodities; it produces itself and the worker as a <em>commodity</em>” (M-ER 71).</p>
<p>The alienation of labor therefore emerges from the reality that under capitalism, human beings are reduced to commodities, whose value is expressed through wage labor. For most of us, survival is impossible without pimping ourselves out to the highest bidding employer. Unfortunately, when we sell ourselves for a wage, we also give up power over what we do with our time. What we produce is not under our control or discretion. Our work activity and its product are therefore alien to us.</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“[T]he worker is related to the <em>product of his labor </em>as to an <em>alien</em> object. For on this premise it is clear that the more the worker spends himself, the more powerful becomes the alien world of objects which he creates over-against himself, the poorer he himself – his inner world – becomes, the less belongs to him as his own” (72).</p>
<p>Because the wage worker is disempowered in the process of work, their labor gives birth not to a world in their own, human, image but to a world in the image of capital. It is an alien world, full of meaningless commodities, but very little humanity. Humanity has been conscripted into the wage labor process, against its will. Workers themselves are ever being produced, as humans who have lost touch with their &#8220;intrinsic nature.&#8221;</p>
<p>The essay&#8217;s climax is prompted by Marx’s question, “What, then, constitutes the alienation of labor?”</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“First, the fact that labor is <em>external</em> to the worker, i.e., it does not belong to his intrinsic nature; that in his work, therefore, he does not affirm himself but denies himself, does not feel content but unhappy, does not develop freely his physical and mental energy but mortifies his body and ruins his mind. The worker therefore only feels himself outside his work, and in his work feels outside himself&#8230; His labor is therefore not voluntary, but coerced; it is <em>forced labor</em>. It is therefore not the satisfaction of a need; it is merely a <em>means</em> to satisfy needs external to it. Its alien character emerges clearly in the fact that as soon as no physical or other compulsion exists, labor is shunned like the plague&#8230;<br />
Lastly, the external character of labor for the worker appears in the fact that it is not his own, but someone else’s, that it does not belong to him, that in it he belongs, not to himself, but to another&#8230; As a result, therefore, man (the worker) only feels himself freely active in his animal functions – eating, drinking, procreating, or at most in his dwelling and in dressing-up, etc.; and in his human functions he no longer feels himself to be anything but an animal“ (74).</p>
<p>This is Marx at his most human, and therefore his most relevant. This passage resonates because it speaks directly to our concrete needs, which are not only economic, but mental, emotional, and spiritual. Marx is articulating something core here &#8211; the work we do for our bosses creates their profits, but it makes us miserable in the process. We create commodities and services which are not our own, which are not designed for our concrete needs but based solely on the demands of the market, and as a result, we are alienated from our own humanity. If we did not need wages to survive, we could just as easily quit our worthless, meaningless jobs. Unfortunately, the joke is on us. With each hour of work that deadens our souls, we give more life and power to the very “alien world of objects” that oppresses us.<sup><a href="#footnotes" target="_blank">2</a></sup></p>
<p>The phrase “Work sucks” therefore becomes literal. Our lives are sucked out of us by the vampire of capital.</p>
<h4><a name="crisis"></a>4. Need for Growth, Inevitability of Crisis</h4>
<p>Why does work have to suck in a capitalist society? For the simple reason of the profit motive. By exploiting workers, the system creates profit, and therefore grows. Growth is capitalism’s <em>raison d’etre </em>— reason for being. Without growth, capitalism would wither and die.</p>
<p>In <em>Capital Vol. 1</em>, Marx lays out his “General Formula of Capital”: <strong>M—C—M’. </strong>M=money, C=commodities, M’=more money (Marx Engels Reader 336).</p>
<p>The formula indicates that on the micro level, capital is nothing but the movement of money into a larger amount of money, producing profit. Marx explains this endless movement of money as the inner workings of the system:</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“Value&#8230; becomes value in process, money in process, and, as such, <em>capital</em>. It comes out of circulation, enters into it again, preserves and multiplies itself within its circuit, comes back out of it with expanded bulk, and begins the same round ever afresh” (335).</p>
<p>Thus, capital is like a shark &#8211; it must keep moving in order to breathe. If it were to sit still, it would quickly suffocate. Only by constantly finding and exploiting investment opportunities can capital accumulate, and thereby, survive. This ever-present need to grow therefore compels each individual capitalist to maximize profit.</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“The expansion of value, which is the objective basis or main-spring of the circulation M—C—M, becomes [the capitalist’s] subjective aim, and it is only in so far as the appropriation of ever more and more wealth in the abstract becomes the sole motive of his operations, that he functions as a capitalist, that is, as <em>capital personified and endowed with consciousness and a will</em> (emphasis added)&#8230; The restless never-ending process of profit-making alone is what he aims at” (334).</p>
<p>Here Marx explains that capital’s need for growth determines the actions of each individual capitalist, such as a wealthy financier, or the modern example, a multinational corporation. In Marx’s brilliant language we can therefore understand Wal-Mart or Sony as “capital personified.” Their one and only motive is to profit, to grow. All other considerations, ecological or social, are essentially irrelevant.</p>
<p>Suppose a capitalist/corporation failed to create growth, either mistakenly, or somehow purposely abdicated their role in the system. What would happen? Very simply, capital would work its way around them. Another capitalist would come along, a competitor, to take advantage of the situation, and inevitably put the first capitalist out of business. Marx names this competition between capitalists “the industrial battlefield.”<sup><a href="#3" target="_blank">3</a></sup></p>
<p>This war of competition makes it impossible to simply blame BP, British Petroleum, for its shoddy safety standards which led to the poisoning of the Gulf. If BP prioritized safety over profit, the company would lose a competitive edge to its rivals, Exxon-Mobil or Chevron-Texaco. It is only by obeying the command of capital to constantly grow or die, that a capitalist survives. <em>The entire system must be indicted</em> — &#8220;hate the game, not the player.&#8221;</p>
<p>As each capitalist serves his master and performs the ritual of profit-making, the system as a whole also necessarily expands “on an ever more gigantic scale” (214). This systemic expansion is famously described in the Communist Manifesto:</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“The need for a constantly expanding market for its products chases the bourgeoisie over the whole surface of the globe. It must nestle everywhere, settle everywhere, establish connexions everywhere&#8230; The cheap prices of its commodities are the heavy artillery with which it batters down all Chinese walls&#8230; It compels all nations, on pain of extinction, to adopt the bourgeois mode of production” (476-7).</p>
<p>As each capitalist battles for resources, labor, and markets for its goods, every community, every nation, and eventually the entire planet itself, is consumed. Capital therefore creates a global system, organized by the incessant requirement of accumulation. The entire system must grow.</p>
<p>Should capitalism ever cease growing, a crisis would necessarily develop. Investors would cease making investments for fear that they would not get a return. Businesses would cut back, laying off workers, which has the effect of reducing consumer demand. Without a friendly investment environment, things can rapidly enter a downward spiral. And as Marx emphasized, this happens over and over again, through “the commercial crises that by their periodical return put on its trial, each time more threateningly, the existence of the entire bourgeois society” (478).</p>
<p>As Marxist professor David Harvey likes to <a href="http://davidharvey.org/2010/08/the-enigma-of-capital-and-the-crisis-this-time/">quote</a>, Marx states in the “Grundrisse” (1857) that capital cannot &#8220;abide&#8221; limits. Any limit which would stand in the system’s path must be transcended or circumvented in some way to keep the accumulation of capital alive and well. Can this accumulation continue forever? Clearly it cannot. Because we live on a finite planet, the idea of an ever-increasing system of production and consumption is absurd on its face. At some point the <em>limits to growth</em> will be reached.</p>
<p>Marx seemed to sense these limits instinctively in &#8220;Wage Labour and Capital&#8221; (1847):</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“Finally, as the capitalists are compelled&#8230; to exploit the already existing gigantic means of production on a larger scale and to set in motion all the mainsprings of credit to this end, there is a corresponding increase in industrial earthquakes&#8230; [Crises] become more frequent and more violent, if only because, as the mass of production, and consequently the need for extended markets, grows, the world market becomes more and more contracted, <em>fewer and fewer markets remain available for exploitation</em> (emphasis added), since every preceding crisis has subjected to world trade a market hitherto unconquered or only superficially exploited” (217).</p>
<p>When will capitalism hit the limits to growth? The answer is, in my opinion, quite soon. As David Harvey <a href="http://davidharvey.org/2010/08/the-enigma-of-capital-and-the-crisis-this-time/">states</a> dispassionately, “There are abundant signs that capital accumulation is at an historical inflexion point where sustaining a compound rate of growth is becoming increasingly problematic.”</p>
<p>Speaking directly to this question, I propose the <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/23/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-2a/">End of Capitalism Theory</a> to suggest that at this moment in history, no great new sources of wealth remain to be conquered. We are near or at the global peak of oil production, and the planet is having increased difficulty sustaining the ecological damage produced by capitalist production and waste. These ecological limits are joined by the social limits to growth, manifest in people’s resistance to capitalism all over the world. The aforementioned Chinese workers’ movement is only the most dramatic example. From Bolivia to Greece to the schools of California, more and more people are rejecting the alienating and dehumanizing roles that capitalism forces them into, and by standing up for themselves are placing limits on the ability of the system to increase its power over them — to grow.</p>
<p>It is natural to try to make sense of the extremely broad and deep crisis we are living through. As the crisis has dragged on over the last few years, sales of Marx’s <em>Capital</em> have <a href="http://socialisteconomicbulletin.blogspot.com/2010/08/sales-of-marxs-capital-increase-by-1000.html">skyrocketed</a>. I suspect people are looking for an explanation for why capitalism has failed. The End of Capitalism Theory is one attempt at an explanation. I encourage others to come forward.</p>
<h4><a name="world-view"></a>5. A Counter-Hegemonic World-view</h4>
<p>The name of Karl Marx endures to this day as virtually synonymous with anti-capitalism. In contrast to the hegemonic world-view of capitalism, which sees itself as essentially a meritocracy where people are rewarded for hard work and receive what they deserve, Marx outlined a theory of capitalism that was grounded in exploitation and destruction. This critique formed the basis of an entirely new narrative, a new story about ourselves and our world.</p>
<p>While the core elements of Marx’s narrative were largely spelled out by the working class movement of Europe he immersed himself in, Marx was the transcriber. He put the story of European workers on paper, and adding his own philosophical learnings, deepened and elaborated the story so that these workers’ struggle became emblematic of the dilemma of capitalist development as a whole.</p>
<p>Marx’s “scientific socialism” was distinguished from the approach of other European socialists by his reaching for the big picture. It wasn’t enough to criticize capitalism, Marx felt it was necessary to describe, with as much precision as possible, the conditions that enabled it to exist and which would enable its destruction. In so doing, Marx constructed a <em>counter-hegemonic world-view</em>, a way of seeing the world which was complete enough in itself that it could seriously rival the dominant capitalist explanation of reality.</p>
<p>I want to highlight three aspects of Marx’s world-view that make it so enduring. First, his story gives us meaning and a place in history. Second, it gives us direction and purpose. Third, it is brilliantly told, with poetic and even mystical language weaved alongside the densest of political economic writing.</p>
<p><strong>Meaning</strong></p>
<p>Every good story reveals to us something about ourselves. The really <em>great</em> stories — the ones which captivate people for centuries or even millennia — are the ones that provide answers to life’s most fundamental questions: “Who are we?” and “Why are we here?”</p>
<p>Marx’s philosophical education with the Young Hegelians gave him the drive to search for answers to these fundamental questions, as well as the critical tools to deconstruct the popular narratives of the day. He pursued fellow German philosopher Feuerbach in discarding the Christian narrative that predominated in his time, asserting that God was not the creator of humanity, but rather that the inverse was true. Humanity had created God, projecting him into the heavens from our own hopes and fears.</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“In direct contrast to German philosophy which descends from heaven to earth, here we ascend from earth to heaven. That is to say, we do not set out from what men say, imagine, conceive, nor from men as narrated, thought of, imagined, conceived, in order to arrive at men in the flesh. We set out from real, active men, and on the basis of their real life-process we demonstrate the development of the ideological reflexes and echoes of this life-process&#8230; Life is not determined by consciousness, but consciousness by life” (Marx-Engels Reader 154-5, “The German Ideology”).</p>
<p>For Marx, then, we lead our own lives as earthly beings. However, we do not start with a blank slate, because we are also <em>historical beings</em>, the inheritors of the past. This past is brought down to us not only in terms of stories and myths, but especially in terms of material activity.</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“History is nothing but the succession of the separate generations, each of which exploits the materials, the capital funds, the productive forces handed down to it by all preceding generations, and thus, on the one hand, continues the traditional activity in completely changed circumstances and, on the other, modifies the old circumstances with a completely changed activity” (172).</p>
<p><em>Who we are</em>, according to Marx, is the descendants of thousands of generations of human-kind and the care-takers of that living legacy, which for Marx is especially an economic (or “productive”) legacy.<sup><a href="#4" target="_blank">4</a></sup> What can be accomplished by the current generation is necessarily a function of the machines, tools, social structures, etc. that our ancestors leave us.</p>
<p>Marx adds an interesting plot-twist when he specifies that in this era of capitalism we are living in unique circumstances which distinguish our present era from all human history. From the &#8220;Communist Manifesto&#8221;:</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“The bourgeoisie, during its rule of scarce one hundred years, has created more massive and more colossal productive forces than have all preceding generations together. Subjection of Nature’s forces to man, machinery, application of chemistry to industry and agriculture, steam-navigation, railways, electric telegraphs, clearing of whole continents for cultivation, canalisation of rivers, whole populations conjured out of the ground — what earlier century had even a presentiment that such productive forces slumbered in the lap of social labour?” (477).</p>
<p>Given that our generation sits atop this dramatic expansion of ‘productive forces,’ it now falls to us to decide what to do with such historic power. Marx makes clear that we have a special responsibility to fulfill.</p>
<p><strong>Purpose</strong></p>
<p>In the Marxist narrative, life’s purpose is encapsulated as “class struggle.”  As mentioned earlier, Marx sees history as a centuries-long battle to overcome class divisions:</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“In the earlier epochs of history, we find almost everywhere a complicated arrangement of society into various orders, a manifold gradation of social rank. In ancient Rome we have patricians, knights, plebeians, slaves; in the Middle Ages, feudal lords, vassals, guild-masters, journeymen, apprentices, serfs&#8230; The modern bourgeois society that has sprouted from the ruins of feudal society has not done away with class antagonisms. It has but established new classes, new conditions of oppression, new forms of struggle in place of the old ones” (474, &#8220;Communist Manifesto&#8221;).</p>
<p>Our capitalist era is special not only because of the massive growth of the economy, but also because of the unique and unparalleled class inequality between “bourgeoisie” and “proletariat.” In particular, the proletarians are the protagonists of Marx’s story, who carry within them the seed of a new world.</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“A class is called forth, which has to bear all the burdens of society without enjoying its advantages, which, ousted from society, is forced into the most decided antagonism to all other classes; a class which forms the majority of all members of society, and from which emanates the consciousness of the necessity of a fundamental revolution, the communist consciousness” (192-3, &#8220;The German Ideology&#8221;).</p>
<p>Marx assigns the proletarians the role of liberating not only themselves as a class, but of putting an end to class <em>as such</em>. This is accomplished first through the “ever-expanding union of the workers,” who wage an economic struggle against the capitalists and build their power, and finally through <em>communist revolution</em>. According to Marx, this revolution fulfills the proletarians’ &#8220;historic role.&#8221;</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“[The communist revolution] does away with<em> labour</em>, and abolishes the rule of all classes with the classes themselves, because it is carried through by the class which no longer counts as a class in society, is not recognised as a class, and is in itself the expression of the dissolution of all classes, nationalities, etc., within present society” (193).</p>
<p>Now the narrative reaches its climax. After thousands of years of bondage, the opportunity to put an end to human oppression once and for all is now approaching. Due to the twin emergence of highly developed “productive forces” which offer the possibility of abolishing “material want,” alongside a massive and desperate proletariat, the conditions are ripe, for the first time, for the final victory of the working class. And if the workers are able to liberate themselves, they will likewise liberate all of humanity.</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“In the place of the old bourgeois society, with its classes and class antagonisms, we shall have an association, in which the free development of each is the condition for the free development of all” (491).</p>
<p>A communist society would be established to provide for each individual, each community, and each nation, to develop themselves freely, rather than being slaves to the market. And this is how Marx’s story ends:</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“[Communism] is the solution of the riddle of history and knows itself to be this solution” (Bottomore 155, &#8220;Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844&#8243;).</p>
<p><strong>Poetry</strong></p>
<p>The strength of Marx’s narrative is not only that it gives us a meaning that transcends our individual lives to include our common, human, legacy. Nor is limited to providing us with a purpose and mission, so that we can see ourselves as historical actors. The final piece of the puzzle for Marx’s successful story is his poetry, as reflected in passages such as this:</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“The proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains. They have a world to win” (500).</p>
<p>For a writer of philosophy and political economy, which is typically the densest and most technical prose, Marx consistently displays a poetic sensibility. His words often have a beauty and an art; they conjure up images that help the reader appreciate the fantastic nature of the story Marx is weaving. Here is one of his most famous sections from the &#8220;Communist Manifesto&#8221;:</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“Constant revolutionising of production, uninterrupted disturbance of all social conditions, everlasting uncertainty and agitation distinguish the bourgeois epoch from all earlier ones. All fixed, fast-frozen relations&#8230; are swept away, all new-formed ones become antiquated before they can ossify. All that is solid melts into air, all that is holy is profaned, and man is at last compelled to face with sober senses, his real conditions of life” (476).</p>
<p>Much of Marx’s poetry takes the form of <em>dialectics</em>. <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dialectics" target="_blank">Dialectics</a>, which formed much of Hegel’s thought and interest, are a way of thinking about contradicting forces opposing one another within a larger whole, whose contradictions transform that larger whole into something different. These transformations occur through &#8220;negations,&#8221; as opposites overtake one another. Dialectical thought can be traced back to the ancient Greeks, and is embedded in much Eastern philosophy and religion as well. For example, the Yin and Yang of Taoism represents a whole which contains opposites in contradiction.</p>
<p>Marx was fascinated by the complexity of dialectical thought. Turning to a random page, I can pick many passages to display his interest. Here is another from the &#8220;Communist Manifesto&#8221;:</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“In bourgeois society, therefore, the past dominates the present; in Communist society, the present dominates the past. In bourgeois society capital is independent and has individuality, while the living person is dependent and has no individuality” (485).</p>
<p>In this excerpt, Marx expounds two dialectics: the past vs. the present, both of which exist together in the now, and capital vs. the living person, both of which strive for independence.</p>
<p>The darkness and mystery which surround dialectical ideas grab hold of our imagination, making the impossible appear possible. There is a <em>mystical</em> quality to these ideas. Like television, Marx’s writing both disturbs and fascinates &#8211; the complexity of thought pushes the reader away at the same time that its dynamism draws them in.</p>
<p>Here is one of Marx’s most brilliant and memorable uses of dialectics, his attack on the division of labor and specialization:</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“[A]s long as a cleavage exists between the particular and the common interest, as long, therefore, as activity is not voluntarily, but naturally, divided, man’s own deed becomes an alien power opposed to him, which enslaves him instead of being controlled by him. For as soon as the distribution of labour comes into being, each man has a particular, exclusive sphere of activity, which is forced upon him and from which he cannot escape. He is a hunter, a fisherman, a shepherd, or a critical critic, and must remain so if he does not want to lose his means of livelihood; while in communist society, where nobody has one exclusive sphere of activity but each can become accomplished in any branch he wishes, society regulates the general production and thus makes it possible for me to do one thing today and another tomorrow, to hunt in the morning, fish in the afternoon, rear cattle in the evening, criticise after dinner, just as I have a mind, without ever becoming hunter, fisherman, shepherd or critic” (160, &#8220;The German Ideology&#8221;).</p>
<p>Poetry takes Marx’s narrative to its most important destination &#8211; the human heart. Readers are drawn in by the language and internalize this story as their own &#8211; seeing themselves for the first time in relation to the historic moment in which we live, and the historic mission with which Marx presents us. This power to reach hearts and minds is the reason Marx’s world-view was able to become counter-hegemonic, and actually challenge the capitalist claim on reality.</p>
<p>However, with this power there is also a danger. As reality is ever-changing, a world-view can either continue to develop and remain relevant, or it can become static and outdated by failing to adapt. The very fascination that a narrative wields can also distract its adherents from asking difficult questions that would breathe new life into the framework. By defending its weaknesses, one facilitates the narrative remaining hegemonic, but saps it of the potential to evolve and incorporate new, critical perspectives. In the short-term, the narrative survives, but in the long-term, it decays.</p>
<p>The Marxist world-view has fallen victim to this very dynamic. As organs of the narrative have lost circulation with reality and gangrened, they have not been amputated, but allowed to persist as parasites on the elements of Marx’s ideas that remain alive.</p>
<p>Yet, responsibility for today’s Zombie-Marxism cannot be placed entirely on the shoulders of his followers; we must trace the origins of this horror back to the misconceptions in Karl Marx&#8217;s writings. The next section of the essay will explore those misconceptions.</p>
<p>Here is an outline of the entire essay. Check back soon for more!</p>
<ul>
<li><strong><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/10/29/why-marxism-has-failed-and-why-zombie-marxism-cannot-die-part-1/">Introduction</a></strong></li>
<li><strong><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/10/29/why-marxism-has-failed-and-why-zombie-marxism-cannot-die-part-1/#encounter">My Encounter with Grampa Karl</a></strong></li>
<li><strong><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/11/4/zombie-marxism-part-2-what-marx-got-right/">What Marx Got Right</a></strong>
<ol>
<li><strong><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/11/4/zombie-marxism-part-2-what-marx-got-right/#class">Class Analysis</a></strong></li>
<li><strong><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/11/4/zombie-marxism-part-2-what-marx-got-right/#base">Base and Superstructure</a></strong></li>
<li><strong><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/11/4/zombie-marxism-part-2-what-marx-got-right/#alienation">Alienation of Labor</a></strong></li>
<li><strong><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/11/4/zombie-marxism-part-2-what-marx-got-right/#crisis">Need for Growth, Inevitability of Crisis</a></strong></li>
<li><strong><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/11/4/zombie-marxism-part-2-what-marx-got-right/#world-view">A Counter-Hegemonic World-view</a></strong></li>
</ol>
</li>
<li><strong><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2011/09/19/zombie-marxism-part-3-1-what-marx-got-wrong-linear-march-of-history/">What Marx Got Wrong</a> </strong>
<ol>
<li><strong><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2011/09/19/zombie-marxism-part-3-1-what-marx-got-wrong-linear-march-of-history/#march">Linear March of History</a></strong></li>
<li><strong>Europe as Liberator</strong></li>
<li><strong>Mysticism of the Proletariat</strong></li>
<li><strong>The State</strong></li>
<li><strong>A Secular Dogma</strong></li>
</ol>
</li>
<li><strong>Hegemony over the Left</strong></li>
<li><strong>Zombie-Marxism and its Discontents</strong></li>
<li><strong>Conclusion: Beyond Marx, But Not Without Him</strong></li>
</ul>
<p><strong><a name="footnotes"></a>Footnotes</strong><br />
1. Engels adds this interesting note to the discussion of economic determinism: “Marx and I are ourselves partly to blame for the fact that the younger people sometimes lay more stress on the economic side than is due to it. We had to emphasise the main principles vis-a-vis our adversaries, who denied it, and we had not always the time, the place or the opportunity to allow the other elements involved in the interaction to come into their rights&#8230; And I cannot exempt many of the more recent ‘Marxists’ from this reproach, for the most amazing rubbish has been produced in this quarter, too” (Marx-Engels Reader 760-2).<br />
2. In “Wage Labour and Capital” (a speech delivered to German workers in 1847), Marx brilliantly expanded on the alienation of labor in terms of the division of labor caused by the development of machine industry. “The greater <em>division of labour</em> enables <em>one</em> worker to do the work of five, ten, or twenty; it therefore multiplies competition among the workers fivefold, tenfold and twentyfold. The workers do not only compete by one selling himself cheaper than another; they compete by one doing the work of five, ten, twenty&#8230; Further, as the division of labour increases, labour <em>is simplified</em>. The special skill of the worker becomes worthless. He becomes transformed into a simple, monotonous productive force&#8230; His labour becomes a labour that anyone can perform. Hence, competitors crowd upon him on all sides, and besides we remind the reader that the more simple and easily learned the labour is, the lower the cost of production needed to master it, the lower do wages sink, for, like the price of every other commodity, they are determined by the cost of production.<br />
<em>Therefore, as labour becomes more unsatisfying, more repulsive, competition increases and wages decrease</em>. The worker tries to keep up the amount of his wages by working more, whether by working longer hours or by producing more in one hour. Driven by want, therefore, he still further increases the evil effects of the division of labour. The result is that <em>the more he works the less wages he receives</em>, and for the simple reason that he competes to that extent with his fellow workers, hence makes them into so many competitors who offer themselves on just the same bad terms as he does himself, and therefore, in the last resort he <em>competes with himself, with himself as a member of the working class</em>.” (214-5).<br />
<a name="3"></a>3. Also in &#8220;Wage Labour and Capital,&#8221; Marx explains the strategy of this “industrial war of the capitalists among themselves”: <em>produce ever-growing quantities of increasingly cheap commodities</em>. “One capitalist can drive another from the field and capture his capital only by selling more cheaply. In order to be able to sell more cheaply without ruining himself, he must produce more cheaply, that is, raise the productive power of labour as much as possible. But the productive power of labour is raised, above all, by a <em>greater division of labour</em>, by a more universal introduction and continual improvement of <em>machinery</em>. The greater the labour army among whom labour is divided, the more gigantic the scale on which machinery is introduced, the more does the cost of production proportionately decrease, the more fruitful is labour [for the capitalist]. Hence, a general rivalry arises among the capitalists to increase the division of labour and machinery and to exploit them on the greatest possible scale.<br />
The more powerful and costly means of production that he has called into life enable him to sell his commodities more cheaply, they <em>compel </em>him, however, at the same time to <em>sell more commodities</em>, to conquer a much <em>larger</em> market for his commodities.” (211-2).<br />
Noting that profit for the capitalists is inversely proportional to the wages paid out to workers, he adds, “<em>this war has the peculiarity that its battles are won less by recruiting than by discharging the army of labour. The generals, the capitalists, compete with one another as to who can discharge the most soldiers of industry</em>” (215).<br />
<a name="4"></a>4. In a similar passage from an 1846 letter to one P.V. Annenkov, Marx explains: “Every succeeding generation finds itself in possession of the productive forces acquired by the previous generation, which serve it as the raw material for new production, <em>a coherence arises in human history</em> (emphasis added), a history of humanity takes shape which is all the more a history of humanity as the productive forces of man” (137).</p>
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		<title>Why Marxism Has Failed, And Why Zombie-Marxism Cannot Die &#8211; Part 1</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 29 Oct 2010 21:52:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>alex</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Also published by Countercurrents, OpEdNews and The Rag Blog. Why Marxism Has Failed, and Why Zombie-Marxism Cannot Die Or My Rocky Relationship with Grampa Karl by Alex Knight, endofcapitalism.com Part 1 &#8211; October 29, 2010 [Click to see Part 2] &#8220;The tradition of all dead generations weighs like a nightmare on the brains of the [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=endofcapitalism.com&amp;blog=1762754&amp;post=1738&amp;subd=endofcapitalism&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Also published by <a href="http://countercurrents.org/knight011110.htm" target="_blank">Countercurrents</a>, <a href="http://www.opednews.com/articles/Why-Marxism-Has-Failed-An-by-Alex-Knight-101102-75.html" target="_blank">OpEdNews</a> and <a href="http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2010/11/alex-knight-zombie-marxism-i-my-rocky.html" target="_blank">The Rag Blog</a>.</p>
<h4>Why Marxism Has Failed, and Why Zombie-Marxism Cannot Die<br />
Or My Rocky Relationship with Grampa Karl</h4>
<div id="attachment_1742" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 288px"><a href="http://endofcapitalism.files.wordpress.com/2010/10/zombiemarxism.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-1742" title="zombiemarxism" src="http://endofcapitalism.files.wordpress.com/2010/10/zombiemarxism.jpg?w=490" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Image by Germ Ross, artnoise.net</p></div>
<p><strong>by Alex Knight, endofcapitalism.com</strong><br />
<strong>Part 1 &#8211; October 29, 2010</strong></p>
<p><strong>[Click to see <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/11/4/zombie-marxism-part-2-what-marx-got-right/" target="_self">Part 2</a>]<br />
</strong></p>
<p><em>&#8220;The tradition of all dead generations weighs like a nightmare on the brains of the living.&#8221; &#8211; Karl Marx,</em> <a href="http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1852/18th-brumaire/ch01.htm">The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte</a><em>, 1852</em></p>
<p><em>&#8220;Once again the dead are walking in our midst &#8211; ironically, draped in the name of Marx, the man who tried to bury the dead of the nineteenth century.&#8221; &#8211; Murray Bookchin,</em> <a href="http://www.scribd.com/doc/33425756/91726-Listen-Marxist-Murray-Bookchin">Listen, Marxist!</a><em>, 1969</em></p>
<p>A specter is haunting the Left, the specter of Karl Marx.</p>
<p>In June, my friend Joanna and I presented a workshop at the<a href="http://ussf2010.org/"> 2010 US Social Forum</a>, an enormous convergence of progressive social movements from across the United States. The USSF is &#8220;more than a conference&#8221;, it&#8217;s a gathering of movements and thinkers to assess our historic moment of economic and ecological crisis, and generate strategies for moving towards &#8220;Another World&#8221;.</p>
<p>Our workshop, entitled &#8220;The End of Capitalism? At the Crossroads of Crisis and Sustainability&#8221;, was packed. A surprising number of people were both intrigued and supportive of our presentation that global capitalism is in a deep crisis because it faces ecological and social limits to growth, from peak oil to popular resistance around the wold. Participants eagerly discussed the proposal that the U.S. is approaching a crossroads with two paths out: one through neo-fascist attempts to restore the myth of the &#8220;American Dream&#8221; with attacks on Muslims, immigrants and other marginalized groups; the other, a path of realizing and deepening the core values of freedom, democracy, justice, sustainability and love.</p>
<p>Despite the lively audience, I knew that somewhere lurking in that cramped, overheated classroom was the unquestionable presence of Zombie-Marxism.<sup><a href="#footnotes" target="_blank">1</a></sup> And I knew it was only a matter of time until it showed itself and hungrily charged at our fresh anti-capitalist analysis in the name of Karl Marx&#8217;s high authority on the subject.</p>
<p>It happened during the question and answer period. A visibly agitated member of one of the dozens of small Marxist sectarian groups swarming these sorts of gatherings raised his hand to speak. I hesitated to call on him. I knew he wasn&#8217;t going to ask a question, but instead to speechify, to roll out a pre-rehearsed statement from his Party line. I called on others first, but his hand stayed in the air, sweat permeating his brow. Perhaps by mistake or perhaps from a feeling of guilt I gave him the nod to release what was incessantly welling up in his throat.</p>
<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t agree with this stuff about ecological limits to growth. Marx wrote in <em>Capital</em> that the system faces crisis because of fundamental cycles of stagnation that cause the falling rate of profit&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p>With the resurrection of Marx’s ancient wisdom, a dangerous infection was released into the discussion. Clear, rational thought, based on evaluating current circumstances and real-life issues in all their fluid complexities and contradictions, was threatened by an antiquated and stagnant dogma that single-mindedly sees all situations as excuses to reproduce itself in the minds of the young and vital.</p>
<p>Marx didn’t articulate his ideas because they appeared true in his time and place. No. The ideas are true because Marx said them. Such is the logic. If I didn’t act fast, the workshop could surrender the search for truth &#8211; to the search for brains.</p>
<p>I would have to cut this guy off and call on someone else. I knew better than to try to respond to his “question” &#8211; it would only tighten his grip on decades of certainty and derail the real conversation. Unfortunately, there is no way to slay a zombie. Regardless of the accuracy or firepower in your logic, zombie ideas will just keep coming. The only way out of an encounter with the undead is to escape.</p>
<p>I motioned my hand to signal &#8216;enough&#8217; and tried to raise my voice over his. &#8220;Thank you. OK, THANK you! Yes. Marx was a very smart dude. OK, next?&#8221;</p>
<p>Karl Marx was without a doubt one of the greatest European philosophers of the 19th century. In a context of rapid industrialization and growing inequality between rich and poor, Marx pinpointed capitalism as the source of this misery and spelled out his theory of historical materialism, which endures today as deeply relevant for understanding human society. He emphasized that capitalism arose from certain economic and social conditions, and therefore it will inevitably be made obsolete by a new way of life.</p>
<p>For me, what makes Marx&#8217;s work so powerful is that he told a compelling story about humanity and our purpose. It was a big-picture narrative of economy and society, oppression and liberation, set on a global stage. Marx constructed a new way of understanding the world &#8211; a new <em>world-view</em> &#8211; which gave meaning and direction to those disenchanted with the dominant capitalist belief system. And in crafting this world-view, Marx happened to do a pretty good job wielding the tools of philosophy, political economy and science, aiming to deconstruct how capitalism functions and disclose its contradictions, so that we might overcome it and create a better future.</p>
<p>Brilliant ideas flowed from this effort, including his analysis of class inequality, the concepts of “base” and “superstructure”, and the liberating theory of “alienated labor.” Marx also showed that the inner workings of capital live off economic growth, and if this growth is limited, crisis will ensue and throw the entire social order into jeopardy. For all these reasons, Marxist politics &#8211; the Marxist<em> story</em> &#8211; remains popular and relevant today.</p>
<p>But due to serious errors and ambiguities in Marx’s analysis, Marxism has failed to provide an accessible, coherent, and accurate theoretical framework to free the world of capitalist tyranny.<span id="more-1738"></span></p>
<p>I believe Marx’s foremost error was his propagation of the older philosopher Hegel’s linear march of history. This theory characterizes human society as constantly evolving to higher stages of development, such that each successive epoch is supposedly more “ideal” or “rational” than what came before. Marx’s carrying forward this deterministic narrative into the anti-capitalist struggle created the confusion that capitalism, although terrible, is a necessary &#8220;advance&#8221; that will create the conditions for a free society by the “development of productive forces.” This mistaken conception often put Marx, and his uncritical descendants, on the wrong side of history &#8211; arguing that in order to achieve the ideal of socialism or communism, countries first had to follow the Western European model of becoming capitalist first.</p>
<p>Hegel’s framework of linear progression blinded Marx to non-European, feminist, and ecological critiques of capital’s violent conquest of the world. Without this knowledge, Marx charted a flawed strategy for radical social change that missed the core of what human freedom is all about. Instead of vocally, unambiguously opposing European colonialism and the displacement of small farmers from their land, Marx construed the proletarianization of the world as a matter of capitalism &#8220;producing its own grave-diggers.” Focusing narrowly on the economic “misery” of capitalism and upholding the proletariat as the agent of history, Marx simplified the aims of the anti-capitalist project to a matter of the working class seizing state power to “increase the total of productive forces as rapidly as possible” (Marx-Engels Reader 490).</p>
<p>This mechanical focus on the hardships of workers led Marx to overlook the many other ways that capitalism threatens life on this planet, and therefore also the resistance coming from those outside his framework: peasants, indigenous cultures, women, youth, queer and trans people, students and intellectuals, immigrants, people of color, artists, and more.</p>
<p>Perhaps most urgently for our moment of climate meltdown, Marx’s view of capitalism as an “advance” blinded him to the ecological destruction that capitalism reaps on our planet, from deforestation to the extinction of species and so much more. Preoccupied with the “development of productive forces,” Marx predicted that communism would come about due to capitalism placing “fetters” on economic growth. Growth itself was perceived as inherently good, and the rational proletariat would advance it further than capital ever could. Following this logic to its conclusion, Marx <a href="http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1853/07/22.htm">praised</a> industrialization as creating the material conditions for the “scientific domination of natural agencies.”</p>
<p>Afflicted with these blindspots, the Marxist narrative was defenseless against repeated manipulations, and mutated into ideological cover for &#8220;Socialist&#8221; and &#8220;Communist&#8221; tyrants who have been chief enemies of human liberation. Where Marx’s doctrine didn’t fit the reality of social struggle, as in Russia, China, and every other country that has experienced a “Marxist” revolution, his disciples attempted to transcend reality in order to fit Marx’s doctrine, instead of transcending Marx’s ideas in order to fit reality. The results have been nothing short of nightmarish.</p>
<p>A zombie idea is an idea that has been demonstrably proven false by reality, which has expired in its usefulness, but which continues to reproduce itself by preying on real-live hopes and fears. A zombie idea cannot adapt to new conditions, it only decays. It lacks moral purpose, but will continue to lumber on, propelled by an insatiable hunger for as long as it can find unfortunate victims.</p>
<p>Sadly, disturbingly, much of Marxist thought today finds itself in such a state. With the collapse of the Soviet Union, the monstrosity of “actually existing” Marxism spectacularly failed to bury capitalism. Quite the contrary, it was shocked to find itself swept into the “dustbin of history.” Proven wrong, this dogma hasn’t stayed dead. Now a mockery of the living philosophy Marxism once was (and for some still is), Zombie-Marxism has continued to weigh heavy on the collective mind of the Left, for the simple reason that we haven&#8217;t turned a critical eye to Karl Marx&#8217;s body of work itself.</p>
<p>This essay is not meant to be an attack on any particular Marxist, or even on sectarian groups as a species of organization, but rather on a mindset, which uncritically carries forward Marx’s ideas into present circumstances where they no longer fit. Too often, Marx is invoked as an authority on subjects of which he was totally silent on. When Marx did make a statement related to a current issue, it is viewed as confirmation of his wisdom, rather than evaluated for the relative clarity or obscurity which it throws on our understanding of capitalism and revolutionary practice today.</p>
<p>We need to carry out an autopsy on the old man. There is much to be gained by reading Marx. But when we look to him for all the answers we transform him into a prophet and transform ourselves into a mindless herd. One hundred and fifty years after Marx’s major writings, it is beyond time to ask ourselves: <em>What did Marx get right?</em>, <em>What did he get wrong?</em>, and <em>Why has Marxism failed in practice?</em> Finally, how can we integrate Marx’s brilliance alongside the insights of many other necessary thinkers, to create a <em>common-sense radical</em> analysis, based not on ideological blueprints of the past, but on our lived conditions in 21st century late capitalism?</p>
<p>I was once infected with Zombie-Marxist ideas myself. I overcame this infection and freed my mind of such undead ideas, so I know it can be done. Of course, I am not the first, nor will I be the last, to raise these questions and attempt a critique of Marx. For example, in this essay I will draw from the feminist critique of Silvia Federici, the anti-Eurocentrism critiques of Edward Said and Russell Means, the ecological critique of Murray Bookchin, the anti-statist critiques of Mikhail Bakunin and Emma Goldman, the anti-dogmatic critique of Cornelius Castoriadis, and others. I offer my own perspective on the Marxist tradition in the hope that others find it useful, and to spark conversation on the need to constantly re-examine our assumptions. Marx himself wrote:</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">“The social revolution of the nineteenth century cannot draw its poetry from the past, but only from the future. It cannot begin with itself before it has stripped off all superstition in regard to the past” (M-ER 597).</p>
<p>In this era of capitalist crisis, when the entire system threatens to implode, new challenges, and new opportunities, are springing to life. To be relevant to our own century requires shedding the dead superstitions of the past, and facing the future with critical consciousness.</p>
<p>In this essay, I will first recount how I became a follower of “Grampa Karl”, and why I was eventually disillusioned. In the two following sections I will lay out my critique of Marx, limited to what I see as Marx’s five most enduring contributions and his five most debilitating mistakes. In the remaining parts of the essay I will explain how these theoretical failures led to “actually existing” Marxism &#8211; a monstrous dogma which dominated the revolutionary left for a century, and still perpetuates itself as an undead ideology even after mortifying two decades ago. Finally I will attempt to rescue Marx from the zombies haunting his legacy and situate him in what I call a <em>common-sense radical</em> perspective of living anti-capitalist politics, incorporating newer theoretical developments such as “de-growth,” “reproductive labor” and “transformative justice.”</p>
<h4><a name="encounter">My Encounter with Grampa Karl</a></h4>
<p>When I was 18, I read the book <a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=yNFN1OpnkBkC&amp;printsec=frontcover&amp;dq=fast+food+nation&amp;source=bl&amp;ots=l-lkrDax1-&amp;sig=gBzgL9GUKmpxpaNZGSQLfeBA-vk&amp;hl=en&amp;ei=-ELLTMbHL8Wt8Abd97H2AQ&amp;sa=X&amp;oi=book_result&amp;ct=result&amp;resnum=8&amp;ved=0CFUQ6AEwBw#v=onepage&amp;q&amp;f=false" target="_blank"><em>Fast Food Nation</em></a> by Eric Schlosser. The book famously declares “there’s shit in the meat.” <em>Fast Food Nation</em> exposes how factory farms, which produce the vast majority of meat for US consumption, are hell-holes where unsanitary and unsafe practices not only carry out unspeakable animal cruelty, not only endanger and exploit their workers (who are mostly undocumented immigrants), but also pump out enormous quantities of excrement-laden and potentially dangerous meat, which has even killed children with <em>E.coli</em>. And this is to say nothing about the “normal” health effects of ingesting fast food. The fast food industry is also directly responsible for the clear-cutting of the Amazon rainforest, as huge areas of the world’s most diverse ecosystem are burned down and replaced with ranches raising cattle for Americans’ burgers.</p>
<p>As Schlosser documents, the meat industry is well aware of their socially and ecologically destructive practices, but persists in them for the simple and undeniable reason of maximizing profit. The ongoing disaster has nothing to do with evil or immoral people &#8211; the system itself is responsible. Capitalism is feeding us shit and we’re “lovin’ it.”</p>
<p>Facing this truth was too much for my teenage apathy to withstand. My dispassionate ignorance of the world &#8211; cultivated by years of television and video games &#8211; was suddenly shattered on the grim rocks of reality. As my world-view lay in jagged pieces, I found myself overwhelmed with questions. “Is capitalism killing our planet?” “Why doesn’t anyone know about this?” “If they know, why don’t they ever talk about it?” “Is it wrong to think this way?” “Am I a Communist for asking these questions?”</p>
<p>I sank below waves of uncertainty and anguish. I thrashed about for any explanation of how this terrible reality could make sense. I clamored to know what I could do about it. Drowning in questions, I longed for answers.</p>
<p>Karl Marx presented me with the first solid ideas I could stand on. I read “Alienated Labor” and it gave me a name for the anguish I was experiencing. My hatred for my job did not mean there was something wrong with <em>me</em>, but that I was responding correctly to an alienating and exploitative situation. I wasn’t wrong; the system was wrong.</p>
<p>Feeling validated by the old man, I rapidly developed a strong affinity for his teachings. I read “The Communist Manifesto,” “The Civil War in France,” even “The Grundrisse.” Although the language was thick and foreign, I slowly waded through because my efforts were occasionally rewarded with profound nuggets of insight into my own world. I discovered a long and complex history of Marxist anti-capitalism.</p>
<p>I felt as though I had been mentally rescued. I had found an ideological home, from which I could launch criticisms of the capitalist system and encounter others who desired revolution. Marx was our guide, <em>my</em> guide. His story of class struggle gave me meaning and purpose, which is what I had been seeking.</p>
<p>In mainstream American society, Karl Marx is like an estranged grandfather who no one brings up in polite conversation. A long time ago there was a bitter falling out over politics and he stopped being invited to family functions &#8211; all the better because he wouldn’t be caught dead at those “bourgeois” ceremonies. If the subject of Grampa Karl ever does come up, it’s usually in the context of a ghost story meant to frighten and silence unpatriotic sentiments. For example, Glenn Beck says Marx is controlling our president and destroying the country. On the other hand, Grampa Karl does get some favorable mentions in the university, where the facade of liberal education is more important than any minor disturbance that the introduction of students to Marx’s obscure rantings is likely to produce.</p>
<p>When I became a follower of Grampa Karl, I knew I was distancing myself from the mainstream. If people realized I was consorting with that rabble-rouser they might have thought I was crazy or stupid, or both. I had no problem with that. Rather, I had such contempt for the dominant culture as it exists, that I relished the identity of outsider and rebel. Moreover, the old man had promised me it was only a matter of time before capitalism collapsed due to its internal contradictions. Time was on our side. I cherished my secret Marxist hope and laughed behind the back of bourgeois society.</p>
<p>But as time went on, Marx’s warts began to show. First, I noticed his almost-total silence on issues of ecology. Being motivated largely by my concern for capitalism’s apocalyptic approach to life on this planet, I strained to find even the slightest clues of environmental consciousness in Marx’s writings. Instead, I was confronted with the faulty notion of a linear development of history, with liberation equated with human domination of nature. It became increasingly apparent that Marx didn’t have all the answers for me. His analysis was trapped in another century, when industrialization still seemed like a good idea to people.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, I was not ready to abandon my political home just because I had such doubts. On the contrary, I clung all the more desperately to my mentor, seeking to prove him right and his critics, perhaps even myself, wrong. Looking back, I can locate in myself the attitude of one afflicted with Zombie-Marxism. If I didn’t understand what Marx was saying, it was because he was speaking to a higher truth that I couldn’t grasp. If Marx’s ideas were questionable, I hastened to silence the questions. Instead, I sought to dispose of them by returning to Marx’s writings and scouring for quotes or passages, no matter how tangential, which could be used to clobber those who dared to doubt the wisdom of Grampa Karl. I felt close to Marx as to a guardian &#8211; he had pulled me from confusion and provided me with clarity. Through him, the world made sense. Or at least I thought it did.</p>
<p>My questions didn’t ebb. I became disturbed by the company Marx was keeping. Leninists, Stalinists, Trotskyists, Maoists, and more, all swarming around him and treating his every word as gospel. Worse, they seemed to spend more energy feuding with each other than building the kind of movement we need to overturn capitalism. I attended the 2006 Left Forum in New York City and despaired at seeing the horde of Marxist sectarian grouplets denouncing one-another over petty ideological questions that had been irrelevant decades ago. Were these people engaged in the same project that Marx had given me?</p>
<p>My disappointment grew, so that when the anarchist critique finally reached me, I was ready to listen. Although it was plainly apparent to me that people like Lenin and Stalin had entirely distorted the liberatory potential in Marx and created something horrifying, the anarchists pointed to the errors of Marx’s ideology and method which paved the way for those distortions. No matter how smart someone is, they are bound to make mistakes, so labeling yourself an “ist” of someone’s name is to engage in the worship of an individual, which can only detour you from trusting your own feelings and thoughts. <em>How could someone know better than yourself what is hurting you and what you need to heal?</em></p>
<p>I saw this cult of personality in Venezuela, where I could not walk down the street, turn on the television, visit the beach or the mountains without seeing President Chavez’s name or face everywhere. This essay is no place to critique the policies of the Chavez government, which are complex and contain both positive and negative aspects, but the omnipresence of an uncritical <em>Chavismo</em> made me cringe on an emotional level, even if I firmly supported his government against the right-wing U.S.-funded opposition.</p>
<p>I felt betrayed by Marx. He should have known, and stated clearly, that politicians, no matter how progressive, cannot make revolution. It has to come from the bottom &#8211; from everyday people organized in social movements &#8211; fighting for their liberation. Marx’s “dictatorship of the proletariat” suddenly appeared to me as a pathetic joke. How did he not see how such an absurd idea would be exploited by opportunists? Disillusioned in Venezuela, I read Emma Goldman’s<em><a href="http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/Anarchist_Archives/goldman/disillusion/toc.html"> My Disillusionment in Russia</a></em> and parted ways with Marxism.</p>
<p>Even though Grampa Karl and I are no longer close comrades, Marx continues to influence my politics because there is much to value in his writings. A full recounting of his genius would be too difficult, but I will explore 5 key contributions of Marx that I believe remain relevant and useful insights today, during capitalism’s global crisis. Then I will follow this with what I see as the 5 most urgent failures in Marx’s analysis, from which spawned the Zombie-Marxism lurking in our midst today.</p>
<p>Karl Marx was no prophet. But neither can we reject him. We have to go beyond him, and bring him with us.<sup><a href="#footnotes" target="_blank">2</a></sup> I believe it is only on such a basis, with a critical appraisal of Marx, that the Left can become ideologically relevant to today’s rapidly evolving political circumstances.</p>
<p>Here is an outline of the entire essay. Check back soon for more!</p>
<ul>
<li><strong><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/10/29/why-marxism-has-failed-and-why-zombie-marxism-cannot-die-part-1/">Introduction</a></strong></li>
<li><strong><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/10/29/why-marxism-has-failed-and-why-zombie-marxism-cannot-die-part-1/#encounter">My Encounter with Grampa Karl</a></strong></li>
<li><strong><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/11/4/zombie-marxism-part-2-what-marx-got-right/">What Marx Got Right</a></strong>
<ol>
<li><strong><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/11/4/zombie-marxism-part-2-what-marx-got-right/#class">Class Analysis</a></strong></li>
<li><strong><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/11/4/zombie-marxism-part-2-what-marx-got-right/#base">Base and Superstructure</a></strong></li>
<li><strong><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/11/4/zombie-marxism-part-2-what-marx-got-right/#alienation">Alienation of Labor</a></strong></li>
<li><strong><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/11/4/zombie-marxism-part-2-what-marx-got-right/#crisis">Need for Growth, Inevitability of Crisis</a></strong></li>
<li><strong><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/11/4/zombie-marxism-part-2-what-marx-got-right/#world-view">A Counter-Hegemonic World-view</a></strong></li>
</ol>
</li>
<li><strong>What Marx Got Wrong </strong>
<ol>
<li><strong>Linear March of History</strong></li>
<li><strong>Europe as Liberator</strong></li>
<li><strong>Mysticism of the Proletariat</strong></li>
<li><strong>The State</strong></li>
<li><strong>A Secular Dogma</strong></li>
</ol>
</li>
<li><strong>Hegemony over the Left</strong></li>
<li><strong>Zombie-Marxism and its Discontents</strong></li>
<li><strong>Conclusion: Beyond Marx, But Not Without Him</strong></li>
</ul>
<p><strong><a name="footnotes">Footnotes</a></strong><br />
1. The idea of a zombie ideology was transmitted to me from <a href="http://turbulence.org.uk/">Turbulence</a> magazine and the “zombie-liberalism” they discuss as taking the place of neo-liberalism in the wonderful article <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/01/06/zombie-liberalism-and-the-breakdown-of-the-middle-ground-of-capitalism/">“Life in Limbo?”</a><br />
2. This framing comes to me through Ashanti Alston, the “Anarchist Panther,” and his excellent essay <a href="http://www.anarchistpanther.net/node/12">“Beyond Nationalism, But Not Without It.”</a></p>
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		<title>Take Back the Land, Give Root to Democracy</title>
		<link>http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/09/07/take-back-the-land-give-root-to-democracy/</link>
		<comments>http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/09/07/take-back-the-land-give-root-to-democracy/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 07 Sep 2010 22:55:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>alex</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Book Review]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Capitalism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Class]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Democracy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Economic Crisis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Enclosures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Housing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Land]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[New World]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Organizing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Resistance]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Also published by OpEdNews, Countercurrents, and The Rag Blog. Take Back the Land: Land, Gentrification and the Umoja Village Shantytown by Max Rameau Nia Press, 2008 Review by Alex Knight, endofcapitalism.com I first heard about a group called Take Back the Land, which was illegally moving homeless families into empty homes in Miami, in a study [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=endofcapitalism.com&amp;blog=1762754&amp;post=1716&amp;subd=endofcapitalism&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-1717" title="take back the land" src="http://endofcapitalism.files.wordpress.com/2010/09/take-back-the-land.jpg?w=199&#038;h=300" alt="" width="199" height="300" /><strong></strong></p>
<p>Also published by <a href="http://www.opednews.com/articles/Take-Back-the-Land-Give-R-by-Alex-Knight-100907-584.html" target="_blank">OpEdNews</a>, <a href="http://countercurrents.org/knight080910.htm" target="_blank">Countercurrents</a>, and <a href="http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2010/09/books-alex-knight-max-rameaus-take-back.html" target="_blank">The Rag Blog</a>.<strong><br />
</strong></p>
<p><strong>Take Back the Land: Land, Gentrification and the Umoja Village Shantytown<br />
</strong></p>
<p><strong>by Max Rameau</strong></p>
<p><strong>Nia Press, 2008</strong></p>
<p>Review by Alex Knight, endofcapitalism.com</p>
<p>I first heard about a group called <a href="http://takebacktheland.org/" target="_blank">Take Back the Land</a>, which was illegally moving homeless families into empty homes in Miami, in a study group about the Civil Rights movement and the grassroots organizing that made it so powerful. The reference was highly appropriate. In many ways, Take Back the Land is a direct heir of that bottom-up, Black self-empowerment, civil disobedient, movement-building tradition, and is one of the most inspiring examples of a group renewing and developing that tradition today.</p>
<p>In our moment of crisis and stagnation, here is a group full of creativity, improvisation, and highly potent political analysis. Through its actions, the group proclaims: &#8216;Families are being foreclosed on and kicked out onto the street? We&#8217;re not going to lobby Washington and hope for some crumbs to come down. We&#8217;ll take matters into our own hands and move people directly into homes!&#8217; This is precisely the spirit of direct action and participatory democracy that kick-started the Civil Rights movement, and the spirit that we need if we are to escape the human suffering that the elite are imposing on the poor and working class in this economic crisis.</p>
<p>Max Rameau, author of this book and a principal organizer in Take Back the Land Miami, came and spoke in Philadelphia a few months ago. I was struck not only by how charismatic and effective a speaker he was (something I could say about many smooth-talking political or corporate salesmen of our age), but by how Max was able to break down complex, abstract theoretical questions into common language that was easily understood. In this way, he demystifies politics and translates concepts usually reserved for academics or professionals in such a way that average, everyday people can take away something new and useful from the exchange. It&#8217;s clear that his primary goal is not an ego-trip to show off his brilliance, or to sell books and make money, but to do something much more difficult and meaningful: to spark movement to force the US government to recognize <em>housing as a human right</em>.</p>
<p>This book is written in that same frank style. In fact, it&#8217;s basically a how-to on grassroots housing organizing. It&#8217;s short &#8211; only 132 pages &#8211; but all you need to know is laid out here: the political context of Miami and nationally in terms of lack of affordable housing and gentrification that drives poor and Black people out of their homes, the strategic decisions and organizing that go into launching a new organization and campaign, the challenges and joys of working with homeless people, and the difficult and deceptive terrain of interacting with politicians, who are often agents of larger and more powerful corporate forces. Max Rameau just tells the story of his group, but in such a provocatively specific way. He explains to us exactly how things were done, who did them, who interfered and how, and he&#8217;s not at all afraid to name names.</p>
<p>The book centers on the incredible story of the Umoja Village, a shantytown built by Take Back the Land and allies on a vacant lot in a poor Black section of Miami. Because &#8220;In South Florida&#8230; local governments responded to the [housing] crisis by actively decreasing the number of low-income housing units&#8221; (pg. 23), Take Back the Land took the initiative to seize land and invite homeless people to take up residence there. The purpose of the action was not only to house people, an immediate need, but to draw attention to the crisis and to the government&#8217;s inaction, thereby hopefully shaming them into creating more low-income housing.<span id="more-1716"></span></p>
<p>In the long run, the group&#8217;s &#8220;Political Objectives&#8221; were as follows (72):<br />
&#8220;1. House and feed people<br />
2. Assert the right of the black community to control land in the black community.<br />
3. Build a new society.&#8221;</p>
<p>Even before the land seizure, much groundwork had been laid, including debating the strategy and politics of this type of action, discussing the possibility with allies and neighbors of the site, and trying to line up legal, fundraising, and other forms of support that would be necessary.  Citing a legal precedent that homeless people had a right to not be evicted from territory where their basic living needs were met, the group was able to dissuade the police from immediately evicting them once they did move onto the land.</p>
<p>Seeing the police cars back away without arresting anyone made a strong impression on the homeless and poor people moving onto this land. &#8220;This was a real, tangible victory that the people witnessed with their own eyes&#8221; (65).</p>
<p>With shanty homes and compost toilets built, the Umoja Village stood on the land for 6 months, and was self-organized by the homeless residents. Take Back the Land prioritized that their group, while inspiring and leading this takeover, would become increasingly unnecessary in the day-to-day operation of the shantytown, so that the residents had total control.  The self-empowerment of the homeless was one of the most inspiring aspects of this book.  You read about individuals who had been victims for decades, or their entire lives, and grappling with mental illness and/or drug addiction, becoming confident by working with one another and making the decisions that affect their lives.</p>
<p>&#8220;[W]e assert that the most marginal members of society are better qualified to run their &#8216;city&#8217; or &#8216;village&#8217; than the college educated elected official and bureaucrat. We not only asserted the proposition, we proved it as Umoja&#8217;s residents made real decisions about the rules of the Village and the manner in which it was run&#8221; (75).</p>
<p>Here is precisely the principle of participatory democracy that Ella Baker championed in the Civil Rights movement. Rather than turn for help to political elites, religious leaders, business leaders, or whomever, we can take matters into our own hands and manage our own affairs. Forget what passes for &#8220;American Democracy.&#8221; Real democracy is about &#8216;people power&#8217;. <em>Demos</em> in Greek means people, <em>cracy</em> means rule. Put it together &#8211; <em>Democracy: Rule by the people.</em></p>
<p>Unfortunately, true democracy is rarely tolerated by the U.S. corporate and governmental establishment, and that was the case in Miami. Shortly after the Umoja&#8217;s 6-month anniversary celebrations, a &#8220;suspicious&#8221; fire burned down the entire village. Before Max, the homeless residents, and allies could clear the wreckage and begin the process of rebuilding, the city of Miami sent in the police to permanently evict them from the land.</p>
<p>What follows the disastrous fire and eviction is perhaps the most intriguing section of the book. Take Back the Land, still trying to re-occupy the site, is approached by a &#8220;progressive&#8221; city councilperson, who offers to house all the homeless residents in a new low-income housing unit that Take Back the Land would develop. The group then has to debate whether to accept this deal, which would mean giving up some of their oppositional character against the government, in order to gain the immediate goal of moving people off the street and into homes.</p>
<p>The difficulty of this decision opens up an important question that all grassroots movements need to address at some point: whether to compromise with government/&#8221;the system&#8221; and receive tangible gains, or hold fast to ideals and principles and potentially miss some opportunities.  It is never an easy decision.</p>
<p>In Max&#8217;s words, &#8220;as the opposition, it is difficult for us to accept victory, even when we win. Virtually any settlement between us and our political targets can be interpreted as a sell out simply because there is an agreement or because those in power no longer stand against the demand. Consequently, we, as a movement, must clearly define what constitutes victory, particularly in the context of the US political and economic system&#8221; (118).</p>
<p>If the goal is to &#8220;Build a new society&#8221; and that necessitates sweeping away the existing order of oppression, how do you compromise with elites whose job is to uphold that very order? On the other hand, because those elites have the power to give you what you need, at least in the short term, how can you avoid accepting a deal when they agree to give you something you need?</p>
<p>Ultimately, it is a question about &#8220;revolutionary reforms&#8221; &#8211; theoretically a change in policy (reform) that leads to the empowerment of a movement, and therefore the ability to carry on further campaigns towards revolution. But what does that actually look like in a capitalist society that has successfully undercut and co-opted grassroots social movements for the last century or more, and which even more skillfully ignores and silences those movements so that they feel powerless and marginalized?</p>
<p>In a situation as desperate as our own, how do you avoid the temptation to work within the system, even if it means abandoning some of your political principles? And how do you stay true to those ideals while at the same time engaging that system to gain concrete victories?</p>
<p>I encourage all to read this book and discover how Take Back the Land wrestled with these and other pressing strategic questions. I hope it won&#8217;t be a &#8220;spoiler&#8221; to say that in the end the city of Miami betrayed the &#8220;deal&#8221; and the land was never restored, nor was there any new low-income housing construction. The government failed the public yet again.</p>
<p>The U.S. housing crisis has only gotten worse since this book was written in 2007, especially now that the economy has tanked. An estimated <a href="http://www.articlesnatch.com/Article/The-Number-Of-Foreclosures-Will-Rise-In-2010/929797" target="_blank">3.5 million homes will be foreclosed in 2010</a>, a 25% jump from 2009. The work of Take Back the Land therefore becomes increasingly relevant and inspiring. As Michael Moore&#8217;s latest film <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2009/10/16/anti-capitalism-goes-mainstream-review-of-capitalism-a-love-story/" target="_blank"><em>Capitalism: A Love Story</em></a> highlighted, the group has gone from taking over one piece of land to moving many homeless families into abandoned buildings throughout Miami. In this way, they have continued to make headlines and push the issue of housing as a human right.</p>
<p>&#8220;There is no way to sugarcoat the loss of Umoja Village. The land we controlled for just over six months is now out of our control, a tremendous defeat for the community and the movement. Our efforts to take full and legal control over the land also ended in failure. However, none should confuse the killing of a deal with the killing of a movement. Umoja not only forged a model for the adversarial takeover of land, but also established a potential conclusion to the struggle: community ownership of that land.&#8221; (130)</p>
<p>To solve the immense problems we face in this crisis, not just housing but unemployment, lack of health care, attacks on immigrants and Muslims, the endless wars, climate chaos, etc., requires active, confrontational, and creative social movements. Even more, it requires a return to Ella Baker&#8217;s principle of participatory democracy, the taking of power away from unsympathetic elites and into the hands of people who are directly affected by issues on the neighborhood level. Take Back the Land is a particularly striking example of a group hard at work pursuing this vision.</p>
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		<title>The Most Inspiring News Story of the Year: The Chinese Workers Movement</title>
		<link>http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/08/25/the-most-inspiring-news-story-of-the-year-the-chinese-workers-movement/</link>
		<comments>http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/08/25/the-most-inspiring-news-story-of-the-year-the-chinese-workers-movement/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Aug 2010 22:49:53 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>alex</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Asia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Capitalism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Class]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Consumerism]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Learning about the exploitation of the factory workers of China is important not only because, as Johann Hari describes, their brutish toil produces most of our cheap consumer goods in the West. As I argued in my recent interview (Part 2B: Social Limits and the Crisis), we have an even more important connection to these [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=endofcapitalism.com&amp;blog=1762754&amp;post=1690&amp;subd=endofcapitalism&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Learning about the exploitation of the factory workers of China is important not only because, as Johann Hari describes, their brutish toil produces most of our cheap consumer goods in the West. As I argued in my recent interview (<a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/26/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-2b/" target="_blank">Part 2B: Social Limits and the Crisis</a>), we have an even more important connection to these Chinese workers &#8211; the hope that their liberation offers the possibility of our own.</p>
<p>Organizing outside the Chinese Communist Party’s official union, workers have initiated a <a href="http://chinaworker.info/en/content/news/1134/" target="_blank">series of crippling strikes</a> that repeatedly shut down factories, among other forms of rebellion. They are openly defying the totalitarian state-capitalist government of China, as well as the Western corporations whose factories they are closing. And they are winning. Wages are being increased by 40, 60, even 100% at some plants.</p>
<p>If the Chinese workers&#8217; movement continues to disrupt the sweatshops pumping out our electronics and car parts, they could throw a wrench into the China-&gt;U.S. cheap goods conveyor belt that has carried global capitalist growth for more than a decade.  The destruction of this global trade alliance will not only free the Chinese workers from the abominable conditions Hari describes, but potentially free the entire planet from an economic system hell-bent on relentless growth and plunder.</p>
<div class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 486px"><a href="http://www.economist.com/node/16693333"><img title="Chineseworkers" src="http://www.economist.com/sites/default/files/images/images-magazine/2010/31/ld/201031ldp001.jpg" alt="" width="476" height="268" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">image from The Economist</p></div>
<p>In short, capitalism relies on China&#8217;s absurdly cheap labor for its profit margins. This unsanctioned frenzy of Chinese labor organizing is striking a blow in the heart of the system. More power to &#8216;em! We should support these workers however possible. [alex]</p>
<h4><a href="http://www.johannhari.com/2010/08/06/and-the-mist-inspiring-good-news-story-of-the-year-is" target="_blank">And the Most Inspiring Good News Story of the Year is&#8230;</a></h4>
<p><strong>by Johann Hari, August 6, 2010</strong></p>
<p>At first, this isn&#8217;t going to sound like a good news story, never mind one of the most inspiring stories in the world today. But trust me: it is.</p>
<p>Yan Li spent his life tweaking tiny bolts, on a production line, for the gadgets that make our lives zing and bling. He might have pushed a crucial component of the laptop I am writing this article on, or the mobile phone that will interrupt your reading of it. He was a typical 27-year old worker at the gigantic Foxconn factory in Shenzen, Southern China, which manufactures i-Pads and Playstations and mobile phone batteries.</p>
<p>Li was known to the company by his ID number: F3839667. He stood at a whirring line all day, every day, making the same tiny mechanical motion with his wrist, for 20 pence an hour. According to his family, sometimes his shifts lasted for 24 hours; sometimes they stretched to 35. If he had tried to form a free trade union to change these practices, he would have been imprisoned for twelve years. <a href="http://www.chinalaborwatch.org/articles/2010_06_03/index.php" target="_hplink">On the night of May 27th, after yet another marathon-shift, Li dropped dead. </a></p>
<p>Deaths from overwork are so common in Chinese factories they have a word for it: guolaosi. China Daily estimates 600,000 people are killed this way every year, mostly making goods for us. Li had never experienced any health problems, his family says, until he started this work schedule; Foxconn say he died of asthma and his death had nothing to do with them. The night Li died, <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/concern-over-human-cost-overshadows-ipad-launch-1983888.html" target="_hplink">yet another Foxconn worker committed suicide</a> &#8211; the tenth this year.</p>
<p>For two decades now, you and I have shopped until Chinese workers dropped. Business has bragged about the joys of the China Price. They have been less keen for us to see the Human Price. KYE Systems Corp run a typical factory in Donguan in southern mainland China, and one of their biggest clients is Microsoft &#8211; so <a href="http://www.nlcnet.org/reports?id=0034" target="_hplink">in 2009 the US National Labour Committee sent Chinese investigators undercover there.</a> On the first day a teenage worker whispered to them: &#8220;We are like prisoners here.&#8221;</p>
<p>The staff work and live in giant factory-cities that they almost never leave. Each room sleeps ten workers, and each dorm houses 5000. There are no showers; they are given a sponge to clean themselves with. A typical shift begins at 7.45am and ends at 10.55pm. Workers must report to their stations fifteen minutes ahead of schedule for a military-style drill: &#8220;Everybody, attention! Face left! Face right!&#8221; Once they begin, they are strictly forbidden from talking, listening to music, or going to the toilet. Anybody who breaks this rule is screamed at and made to clean the toilets as punishment. Then it&#8217;s back to the dorm.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s the human equivalent to battery farming. <span id="more-1690"></span>One worker said: &#8220;My job is to put rubber pads on the base of each computer mouse&#8230; This is a mind-numbing job. I am basically repeating the same motion over and over for over twelve hours a day.&#8221; At a nearby Meitai factory, which made keyboards for Microsoft, a worker said: &#8220;We&#8217;re really livestock and shouldn&#8217;t be called workers.&#8221; They are even banned from making their own food, or having sex. They live off the gruel and slop they are required to buy from the canteen, except on Fridays, when they are given a small chicken leg and foot, &#8220;to symbolize their improving life.&#8221;</p>
<p>Even as their work has propelled China towards being a super-power, these workers got less and less. <a href="http://www.economist.com/node/16693333" target="_hplink">Wages as a proportion of GDP fell in China every single year from 1983 to 2005.<br />
</a><br />
They can be treated this way because of a very specific kind of politics that has prevailed in China for two decades now. Very rich people are allowed to form into organizations &#8211; corporations &#8211; to ruthlessly advance their interests, but the rest of the population is forbidden by the secret police from banding together to create organizations to protect theirs. The political practices of Maoism were neatly transferred from communism to corporations: both regard human beings as dispensable instruments only there to serve economic ends.</p>
<p>We&#8217;ll never know the names of all the people who paid with their limbs, their lungs, or their lives for the goodies in my home and yours. Here&#8217;s just one: think of him as the Unknown Worker, standing for them all. <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/23/business/global/23labor.html?pagewanted=all" target="_hplink">Liu Pan</a> was a 17 year old operating a machine that made cards and cardboard that were sold on to big name Western corporations, including Disney. When he tried to clear its jammed machinery, he got pulled into it. His sister said: &#8220;When we got his body, his whole head was crushed. We couldn&#8217;t even see his eyes.&#8221;</p>
<p>So you might be thinking &#8211; was it a cruel joke to bill this as a good news story? Not at all. An epic rebellion has now begun in China against this abuse &#8211; and it is beginning to succeed. <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/aug/01/china-strikes-honda-workers-rights" target="_hplink">Across 126,000 Chinese factories, workers have refused to live like this any more.</a> Wildcat unions have sprung up, organized by text message, demanding higher wages, a humane work environment, and the right to organize freely. Millions of young workers across the country are blockading their factories and chanting &#8220;there are no human rights here!&#8221; and &#8220;we want freedom!&#8221; The suicides were a rebellion of despair; this is a rebellion of hope.</p>
<p>Last year, the Chinese dictatorship was so panicked by the widespread uprisings that <a href="http://johannhari.com/2010/06/14/we-shop-until-chinese-workers-drop" target="_hplink">they prepared an extraordinary step forward. </a>They drafted a new labor law that would allow workers to form and elect their own trade unions. It would plant seeds of democracy across China&#8217;s workplaces. <a href="http://www.fpif.org/articles/labor_rights_in_china" target="_hplink">Western corporations lobbied very hard against it</a>, saying it would create a &#8220;negative investment environment&#8221; &#8211; by which they mean smaller profits. Western governments obediently backed the corporations and opposed freedom and democracy for Chinese workers. So the law was whittled down and democracy stripped out.</p>
<p>It wasn&#8217;t enough. This year Chinese workers have risen even harder to demand a fair share of the prosperity they create. Now company after company is making massive concessions: pay rises of over 60 percent are being conceded. <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/aug/01/china-strikes-honda-workers-rights" target="_hplink">Even more crucially, officials in Guandong province, the manufacturing heartland of the country, have announced they are seriously considering allowing workers to elect their own representatives to carry out collective bargaining after all. </a></p>
<p>Just like last time, Western corporations and governments are lobbying frantically against this &#8211; and to keep the millions of Yan Lis stuck at their assembly lines into the 35th hour.</p>
<p>This isn&#8217;t a distant struggle: you are at its heart, whether you like it or not. There is an electrical extension cord running from your laptop and mobile and games console to the people like Yan Li and Liu Pan dying to make them. So you have to make a choice. You can passively let the corporations and governments speak for you in trying to beat these people back into semi-servitude &#8211; or you can side with the organizations here that support their cry for freedom, like <a href="http://www.nosweat.org.uk/" target="_hplink">No Sweat in Britain</a>, or t<a href="http://www.nlcnet.org/" target="_hplink">he National Labour Committee in the US</a>, by donating to them, or volunteering for their campaigns.</p>
<p>Yes, if this struggle succeeds, it will mean that we will have to pay a little more for some products, in exchange for the freedom and the lives of people like Yan Li and Liu Pan. But previous generations have made that choice. <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Bury-Chains-British-Struggle-Abolish/dp/0330485814" target="_hplink">After slavery was abolished in 1833, Britain&#8217;s GDP fell by 10 percent</a> &#8211; but they knew that cheap goods and fat profits made from flogging people until they broke were not worth having. Do we?</p>
<p><em>Johann Hari is a writer for the Independent. To read more of his articles, click <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/johann-hari/" target="_hplink">here</a> or <a href="http://www.johannhari.com/www.johannhari.com" target="_hplink">here</a>. </em></p>
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		<title>The Transformation of American Conservativism into a Neo-Fascist Movement</title>
		<link>http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/08/21/the-transformation-of-american-conservativism-into-a-neo-fascist-movement/</link>
		<comments>http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/08/21/the-transformation-of-american-conservativism-into-a-neo-fascist-movement/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 21 Aug 2010 06:24:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>alex</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Barack Obama]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[One of the most descriptive and disturbing articles I&#8217;ve yet read about the Tea Party and the rise of neo-fascist movement in the United States. Max Blumenthal does not name it fascism, but it&#8217;s clear to me that the &#8220;Take Back America&#8221; crowd are striving to purify the US and return it to a mythical [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=endofcapitalism.com&amp;blog=1762754&amp;post=1682&amp;subd=endofcapitalism&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>One of the most descriptive and disturbing articles I&#8217;ve yet read about the Tea Party and the rise of neo-fascist movement in the United States.  Max Blumenthal does not name it fascism, but it&#8217;s clear to me that the &#8220;Take Back America&#8221; crowd are striving to purify the US and return it to a mythical lost golden era, and they are not afraid to attack immigrants, Arabs, African Americans, queer folks, women, and anyone else that would deny their messianic mission of restoring white male supremacy.<br />
</em></p>
<p><em>The fabricated outrage over the so-called &#8220;<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZpT2Muxoo0" target="_blank">Ground Zero Mosque</a>&#8221; is only the latest in a long string of xenophobic lies to divide, distract, and diffuse the legitimate outrage of working class Americans. Glenn Beck and Sarah Palin are leading these poor Tea Party suckers to destroy everything they claim to want to protect.<br />
</em></p>
<p><em>Wearing a tri-corner hat does not make you a patriot. Speaking the truth, and challenging the forces of tyranny, that makes a patriot. The tyrants of today are the corporations and banks that own our country, the Pentagon and security apparatus that violently impose their will, and the lying media like Fox News and CNN that fill our heads with propaganda 24/7. In short, the Tea Party are the unwitting pawns of tyranny. </em></p>
<p><em>Only a powerful grassroots progressive movement can blunt their hatred and redirect the public&#8217;s outrage towards the capitalist system which has bankrupted us. [alex]</em></p>
<h4>Days of Rage &#8212; The Noxious Transformation of the Conservative Movement into a Rabid Fringe</h4>
<p><em>Crusading to restore a holy social order, Tea Partiers have promoted disorder. Claiming to protect democracy, they smashed windows of elected representatives.</em></p>
<div><em>By</em> <em><a title="View all stories by Max Blumenthal" href="http://www.veteranstoday.com/authors/6621/" target="_blank">Max Blumenthal</a> in <a href="http://www.alternet.org/story/147784/days_of_rage_--_the_noxious_transformation_of_the_conservative_movement_into_a_rabid_fringe_?page=entire" target="_blank">Alternet</a></em></div>
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<div>reclaimed from <a href="http://www.veteranstoday.com/2010/08/10/the-transformation-of-the-american-conservative-movement-into-fascism/" target="_blank">Veterans Today</a>.</div>
<div><strong>Editor’s Note</strong>: The following is the new epilogue from Max Blumenthal’s book, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00381B782?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=veteranstoday-20&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creative=390957&amp;creativeASIN=B00381B782" target="_blank">Republican Gomorrah</a>, now out in paperback (Basic/Nation Books, 2009).</div>
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<p><em><img class="alignleft" title="fascist-palin" src="http://www.veteranstoday.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/Fascist-Palin-and-Tea-Party-228x320.jpg" alt="" width="228" height="320" />“He will tell you that he wants a strong authority to take from him the crushing responsibility of thinking for himself. Since the Republic is weak, he is led to break the law out of love for obedience. But is it really strong authority that he wish? In reality he demands rigorous order for others, and for himself disorder without responsibility.” — Jean-Paul Sartre, “Anti-Semite and Jew” </em></p>
<p>I am not sure when I first detected the noxious fumes that would envelop the conservative movement in the Obama era. It might have been early on, in April 2009, when I visited a series of gun shows in rural California and Nevada. Perusing tables piled high with high-caliber semi-automatic weapons and chatting with anyone in my vicinity, I heard urgent warnings of mass roundups, concentration camps, and a socialist government in Washington. “These people that are purchasing these guns are people that are worried about what’s going on in this country,” a gun dealer told me outside a show in Reno. “Good luck Obama,” a young gun enthusiast remarked to me. “We outnumber him 100 to 1.” At this time, the Tea Party movement had not even registered on the national media’s radar.</p>
<p>In September 2009, I led a panel discussion about this book inside an auditorium filled with nearly 100 students and faculty at the University of California-Riverside. Beside me sat Jonathan Walton, an African-American professor of religious studies and prolific writer, and Mark Takano, an erudite, openly gay former Democratic congressional candidate and local community college trustee.</p>
<p>In the middle of our discussion, a dozen College Republicans stormed the front of the stage with signs denouncing me as a “left-wing hack” while a hysterical young man leaped from the crowd, blowing kisses mockingly at Takano while heckling Walton as a “racist.” Afterward, university police officers insisted on escorting me to my ride after the right-wing heckler attempted to follow me as he shouted threats.</p>
<p>Who was this stalker? Just a concerned citizen worried about taxes? His name was Ryan Sorba and he was an operative of a heavily funded national conservative youth outfit, the Intercollegiate Studies Institute. Besides founding dozens of Republican youth groups across the country, Sorba has devoted an exceptional amount of energy to his interest in homosexuals. His intellectual output consists of a tract titled The Born Gay Hoax, arguing that homosexuality is at once a curable disease and a bogus trend manufactured by academic leftists. Adding to his credentials, Sorba has a history of run-ins with the law, he explained when I called him about the order.</p>
<p>My encounter with this aggressive right-wing cadre seemed a strange, isolated event. But the hostility turned out to be symptomatic of the intensifying campaign to delegitimize President Obama and his allies in Congress. The Right’s days of rage were only beginning.<span id="more-1682"></span></p>
<p>Through his first year in office, Obama seemed oblivious to the threat of the far right. He campaigned against partisanship, declaring that there were “no red states” and no “conservative America.” Apparently, he thought it was merely a contrivance or myth that there were people who rejected science, demonized gays, assailed minority and women’s rights — or that they genuinely believed in what they said. Speaking of changing Washington, Obama seemed to think that the entire history of politics since the rise of Reagan and the Right and their strategies of polarization was not deeply rooted but a superficial problem attributable to certain “divisive” personalities, easily wiped away with gestures toward bipartisanship. His view of the parties was that they were simply mirror images sharing fundamental beliefs but separated by “partisans.” The skilled and devoted community organizer could bring them together.</p>
<p>Many of his supporters in the media, often part and parcel of political wars over the years, reinforced and amplified his innocence, proclaiming he was the one at last who could “bridge the partisan divide.” Andrew Sullivan, a disaffected conservative who once called critics of George W. Bush policies “fifth columnists” but now fervently supported Obama, wrote that the new president was destined to become “a liberal Reagan who can reunite America.” This optimism pervaded the Obama White House as the president and his aides sought out Republicans willing to vote for his programs. After all, why couldn’t we all just get along?</p>
<p>In his autobiographical book The Audacity of Hope, Obama highlighted a key component of his political strategy: “I serve as a blank screen on which people of vastly different political stripes project their own views.” Once he was elected, conservatives concluded that they could reverse Obama’s strength by transforming him into a human tableau for the most fearsome images they could conjure.</p>
<p>Obama’s multiracial background was crucial in cultivating resentment among the shock troops. Those who rejected Obama’s legitimacy to serve as president on the basis of his background gave birth to the “Birther” movement that sought to challenge his citizenship. The movement’s most visible figure, and therefore the most eccentric, was Orly Taitz, a dentist and self-trained lawyer who had immigrated from the former Soviet republican of Moldova to Israel before settling in the conservative bastion of Orange County, California. Convinced by claims on the far-right Web site WorldNetDaily that Obama planned to create a “civilian national security force,” Taitz told me she “realized that Obama was another Stalin–it’s a cross between Stalinist USSR and Hitler’s Germany.”</p>
<p>After becoming transfixed by online conspiracy theories claiming Obama’s family had forged his birth certificate in Hawaii, Taitz snapped into action. She filed a lawsuit in November 2008 with California Secretary of State Debra Bowen demanding an investigation into Obama’s eligibility to serve as president. Taitz’s plaintiff in the case was Wiley Drake, an Orange County radio preacher and former second vice president of the Southern Baptist Convention who once publicly prayed for Obama’s death. While her lawsuit went nowhere, and subsequent suits earned her angry rebukes from judges, Taitz became an instant media sensation, delivering heavily accented screeds against Obama before friendly interviewers from Sean Hannity to CNN’s Lou Dobbs, who Taitz called her “greatest supporter” and who was eventually fired as an indirect result of his hosting of her.</p>
<p>In March 2009, Texas Rep. Randy Neugebauer signed on to a Birther bill proposing that future presidential candidates must prove their citizenship before becoming eligible to campaign. The Birther movement had found its voice in government and made an indelible impact on the Republican grassroots. By June 2009, 28 percent of Republican respondents to a Kos/Research 2000 poll said they thought Obama wasn’t born in the United States, while 30 percent “weren’t sure.” “Obama should be in the Big House,” Taitz shrieked to me, “not the White House!”</p>
<p>When Obama announced health care reform as the first major initiative of his administration, the conservative movement activated a campaign of demonization — transformational politics — designed to turn Obama into the “Other,” making him seem as unfamiliar, and therefore as threatening, as possible. When the president urged the Congress to deliver a health care reform bill in 2009, the Right staged a living theater of political hatred, Obama’s dream of bipartisanship transformed into a nightmarish version of “Marat/Sade.” On September 12, 2009, tens of thousands of far-right activists belonging to a loose confederation of anti-government groups called the Tea Party Patriots converged on Washington’s National Mall for a giant protest against the Obama health care plan. The date was significant: Fox News’s top-ranked talk show host Glenn Beck had declared the birth of the “9-12 Project” to restore the sense of unity — and siege mentality — that Americans experienced on September 11, 2001. But this time, Obama — not Osama — was the enemy.</p>
<p>While covering the rally, I witnessed sign after sign declaring Obama a greater danger to America’s security than al-Qaida; demonstrators held images that juxtaposed Obama’s face with images of evildoers from Hitler to Pol Pot to Bin Laden; others carried signs questioning Obama’s status as a U.S. citizen. “We can fight al-Qaida, we can’t kill Obama,” said an aging demonstrator. Another told me, “Obama is the biggest Nazi in the world,” pointing to placards he had fashioned depicting Obama and House Majority Leader Nancy Pelosi in SS outfits. According to another activist, Obama’s agenda was similar to Hitler’s: “Hitler took over the banking industry, did he not? And Hitler had his own personal secret service police. [The community-organizing group] ACORN is an extension of that.”</p>
<p>The seemingly incongruous Tea Party propaganda recalled signs waved by right-wing Jewish settlers during rallies against Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and his support of the peace process, portraying him as an SS officer and as the French collaborator Marshall Petain. In 1995, amid the provocative atmosphere, a young right-wing Jewish zealot assassinated Rabin. The Israeli tragedy was a cautionary example of targeted hatred leading to violence.</p>
<p>Members of the Tea Party “Patriots” did not seem to care that their rhetoric was irrational, or that comparing Obama to Hitler and Stalin was contradictory and obviously hyperbolic. Their motives were entirely negative. By purging government of the multicultural evil that had seized power through illicit means (several activists told me they believed ACORN helped Obama steal the election), they were convinced that a mythical golden American yesteryear would return. They had no interest in building anything new or even articulating an agenda, much less discussing the merits of policies. The Tea Party’s primary concern was cultural purification — freedom from, not freedom to. Against the dark image of the president and his liberal allies, Tea Party activists defined themselves as the children of light. The racial subtext was always transparent.</p>
<p>The Tea Party’s strategy rested on a guerrilla campaign of chaos and sabotage designed not only to intimidate Democrats but also to disorient independent voters who might have supported health care reform. The Tea Partiers were convinced this would be an easy feat, since they believed the majority of the country was on their side — that they represented the “Real America.” At the 9-12 rally Matt Kibbe, one of the march organizers, told the crowd that ABC News was reporting that 1 million to 1.5 million people were in attendance, something ABC denied, saying “ABCNews.com reported an approximate figure of 60,000 to 70,000 protesters.” he name of a corporate-funded Beltway advocacy group, not the battle cry of Mel Gibson William Wallace in Braveheart.</p>
<p>Contrary to its image as a grassroots movement mobilized to stifle the machinations of Washington elites, the Tea Party movement was the creation of a constellation of industry-funded conservative groups with close Republican ties. The movement’s leading puppet-master was Dick Armey, who directed resources and talking points to the Tea Party “Patriots” from his Washington, D.C.-based advocacy group, FreedomWorks. Among the corporate clients of Armey’s lobbying firm, which he was forced to leave as a result of his involvement in the Tea Parties, was the pharmaceutical giant Bristol Myers Squibb, a company with a clear interest in defeating health care reform. (Armey’s other “real American” clients included the Marxist terror cult, People’s Mojahedin of Iran, which received funding and assistance from Saddam Hussein in order to launch terrorist strikes throughout the 1990′s against Iranian civilian targets.) Armey collected a consulting fee of $250,000 directly from FreedomWorks and $300,000 from allied astroturf front groups. FreedomWorks paid out much of its money to an assortment of Republican political consultants.</p>
<p>If Armey was the Tea Party king, Sarah Palin was eager to be crowned the Tea Party queen. Just days after Obama’s inauguration, Palin abruptly quit her job as Alaskan governor to vie for the honor. Palin’s motives for quitting became clear when she inked a lucrative deal to write her political memoir Going Rogue, signed on as a regular contributor to Fox News, and received $1 million an episode for a reality show on cable television, “Sarah Palin’s Alaska.” Palin’s book tour, which sent her through Middle America in a luxuriously outfitted bus, resembled both a presidential campaign and a traveling carnival.</p>
<p>Whether or not Palin intends to run for president, her growing media presence has magnified her influence within the Republican Party. Yet the ever-expanding Palin phenomenon was greeted with hostility by Republican politicos desperately seeking to expand the party’s base after the drubbing in 2008. Former McCain campaign manager Steve Schmidt warned that Palin’s nomination in 2012 would be “catastrophic” for the GOP. His doomsday prediction was backed by an October Gallup poll revealing her as one of the most polarizing and unpopular political figures in the country with a disapproval rating of over 50 percent. Unfortunately for Schmidt and other party pragmatists, those who approve of Palin represent the heartbeat of the Republican Party, its most fervent activists, and cannot be dissuaded from following her, even if she is leading the party off a cliff.</p>
<p>A November 2009 special congressional election in New York’s heavily Republican 23rd district was the first major test of Palin’s power. Along with a parade of nationally recognized conservatives, Palin endorsed Doug Hoffman, an unknown far-right third-party candidate closely allied with the Tea Party, helping to force a popular moderate Republican politician, Dede Scozzafava, from the race. In the end, Palin’s ideological purge in upstate New York led to an improbable Democratic victory, the first in that district in more than 100 years. After the disaster Palin and her allies claimed victory, insisting they had at least hastened the purge of ideologically impure Republicans from the party. She went on to endorse Rand Paul, the son of right-wing libertarian Rep. Ron Paul and a candidate in Kentucky’s GOP senatorial primary, while Dick Cheney went out of his way to endorse Rand’s regular Republican opponent, Trey Grayson, the Kentucky secretary of state.</p>
<p>Following the Tea Party script of avoiding social issues like abortion and gay marriage in order to obscure the large presence of the Christian Right within the movement’s ranks, the self-described “hardcore pro-lifer” Palin recast herself as a libertarian concerned primarily with issues of “economic freedom.” She claimed the Democratic “cap and trade” plan to limit carbon emissions would harm the livelihood of blue-collar workers, and she assailed health care reform as a Trojan Horse for “socialism” (though she admitted her family “used to hustle over the border” to take advantage of Canada’s single-payer health care system). But no Palin attack had as much effect as the one she blasted out on her Facebook page claiming the Obama health care plan included a provision for “death panels” that would recommend euthanasia for severely ill patients like her Down syndrome-afflicted son, Trig. With the click of a button, Palin transformed the tone of the health care debate from rancorous to poisonous.</p>
<p>The source of Palin’s “death panels” smear was a practiced propagandist, former New York Lieutenant Governor Betsy McCaughey. When President Bill Clinton introduced health care reform during his first term, McCaughey falsely claimed in an article published in the New Republic and widely circulated by Republicans, that the plan would force consumers to drop their private plans and buy into the government’s program (the article would go on to win a National Magazine Award and then be retracted years later by the New Republic’s editors). Now she was back in the spotlight, pushing a rumor that would be voted by the non-partisan fact-checking Web site Politifact.com as “the lie of 2009.” McCaughey’s latest innuendo was boosted by the cult of political crank Lyndon LaRouche, which mobilized to push the rumor into the mainstream.</p>
<p>In June 2009, one of LaRouche’s top lieutenants publicly confronted Ezekiel Emanuel, the National Institute of Health’s chief bioethicist and brother of White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel, accusing him of seeking to reintroduce Hitler’s T-4 program to kill the handicapped through health care reform. “President Obama has put in place a reform apparatus reviving the euthanasia of Hitler Germany in 1939, that began the genocide there,” LaRouche staffer Anton Chaitkin charged. Soon, LaRouche’s followers were on street corners around the country with posters depicting Obama with a Hitler moustache. At a town hall forum on health care reform hosted by Democratic Rep. Barney Frank, a LaRouche follower waved one of the Obama-as-Hitler posters and demanded, “Why do you continue to support a Nazi policy, as Obama has expressly supported this policy?”</p>
<p>Two months later, after Palin whispered the rumor on Facebook, prominent conservatives from former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich to ranking Senate Finance Committee member Charles Grassley parroted her claims before audiences of indignant Tea Partiers. Not to be outdone, Glenn Beck devoted an extended rant on his show to the reality of death panels. Echoing the LaRouche cultists, Beck accused Ezekiel Emanuel of “the devaluing of human life, putting a price on each individual.” He thundered, “The death panel is not a firing squad. Rationing is inevitable and they know it!”</p>
<p>The death panel rumor served a variety of functions, all useful to the movement, but not necessarily to the Republican Party. Most importantly, the rumor resonated both with hard-core libertarians who resented the very existence of the federal government and Christian Right activists who viewed the legalization of abortion as a slippery slope to government-sponsored euthanasia. The hysteria it engendered helped repair the rift exposed by the Terri Schiavo charade in 2005, when the evangelical conservative James Dobson publicly clashed with Armey, the libertarian leader, over the right of the government to interfere in a private family matter of life and death.</p>
<p>The slurring of Obama as a sort of sleeper agent crypto-Muslim helped bring the neoconservatives back into the fray. The new neo-con generation was led by Dick Cheney’s daughter, Liz, who founded an anti-Obama advocacy group, Keep America Safe, by leveraging donations from pro-Israel sources. Asked by CNN’s Larry King about the Birther movement that was challenging Obama’s status as an American citizen, Liz Cheney remarked, “One of the reasons you see people so concerned about this is people are uncomfortable with having for the first time ever, I think, a president who seems so reluctant to defend the nation overseas.” With the libertarians, Christian Right, and the neo-cons seated around the same table, united in resentment of the alien president, the conservative movement was whole again.</p>
<p>The experiments in “Terror Management Theory” of Sheldon Solomon, professor of psychology at Skidmore College, Jeff Greenberg, professor of psychologist at the Unviersity of Arizona, and Tom Pyszczynski, professor of psychology at the University of Colorado, have demonstrated the connection between fear of death and intensification of conservative attitudes. The findings help explain the effectiveness of the death panel rumor and insinuations by conservative figures that Obama was not truly American and somehow sympathetic to Islamic terrorists. Indeed, these seemingly irrational smears were guided by tactical reasoning, calculated to agitate voters with constant reminders of their own mortality. Whether or not Independents responded, the rhetoric of death kept the Tea Party crowd in a persistent state of panic and rage, ensuring a standing army ready to fan out to rallies and town halls at the first sign of liberal malfeasance.</p>
<p>Obama’s first year in office was marked by more than raucous protests; there were several disturbing murders committed by far-right extremists. In April 2009, a 22-year-old neo-Nazi wannabe named Richard Poplawsi mowed down a SWAT team of Pittsburgh cops, killing three. Poplawski’s best friend told reporters the young killer “grew angry recently over fears Obama would outlaw guns.” Later it was discovered that Poplawski had posted a video clip to a neo-Nazi Web site portraying Fox’s Glenn Beck contemplating the existence of concentration camps. (After a characteristically thorough investigation, Beck conceded they were not real.) On another occasion, the killer posted a video promoting Tea Party rallies. A month after the Pittsburgh bloodbath, Scott Roeder, a supporter of the militant anti-abortion group Operation Rescue, shot Dr. George Tiller to death while he prayed at his church in Wichita, Kansas. Tiller was declared fair game by the anti-abortion movement because of his role as Kansas’s only late-term abortion provider. During at least 28 episodes of Bill O’Reilly’s “O’Reilly Factor,” O’Reilly had referred to Tiller as “Tiller the baby killer,” a criminal guilty of “Nazi stuff.” “I wouldn’t want to be [Tiller] if there is a Judgment Day,” O’Reilly proclaimed.</p>
<p>In August 2009, a middle-aged professional named George Sodini walked into a health club in suburban Pittsburgh and gunned down three women. The mainstream press explained Sodini’s motives away by homing in on passages in his online diaries describing his loneliness, inability to convince women to have sex with him, and descent into chronic masturbation. Nearly every major media outlet omitted or ignored a long deranged entry in which Sodini projected his sexual frustration onto Obama, whom he seemed to view as a symbol of black male virility and predation.</p>
<p>The day after Obama’s election victory, Sodini wrote: “Good luck to Obama! He will be successful. The liberal media LOVES him. Amerika has chosen The Black Man. Good! In light of this I got ideas outside of Obama’s plans for the economy and such. Here it is: Every black man should get a young white girl … Kinda a reverse indentured servitude thing. Every daddy know when he sends his little girl to college, she be … real good. I saw it. ‘Not my little girl’, daddy says! (Yeah right!!) Black dudes have thier [sic] choice of best white?? [ellipses in original].”</p>
<p>In another posting to an anti-Clinton forum in 1994, during the height of the Republicans’ Whitewater investigation, Sodini revealed that he had purchased a bumper sticker reading, “Stop Socialism, Impeach Clinton,” from a National Review ad. A year later, Sodini ranted on an anti-government militia site, “I am convinced that more drastic action is required to bring the country back to the Constitutional order that it was 200 years ago. I don’t think any group of political leaders will achieve this for us.” Whether or not Sodini’s murder spree was motivated by his political passions, he was pathologically death-driven and fixated on the phantasmagoria of right-wing imagery. In his final diary entry, Sodini proclaimed, “Death lives!”</p>
<p>More than any other media figure of the Obama era, Glenn Beck encouraged the campaign of racial demonization and conspiracy that consumed the Tea Party “Patriots.” During a broadcast of “Fox and Friends,” Beck opined that Obama “has exposed himself over and over and over again as a guy who has a deep-seated hatred for white people, or the white culture.” As evidence, Beck pointed to White House green-jobs czar Van Jones, an African American former community organizer who was eventually forced to resign as a direct result of Beck’s crusade. From there, Beck targeted another black Obama adviser, Valerie Jarrett, highlighting her ties to ACORN while upholding her and Jones as evidence of Obama’s “socialist” agenda. In another broadcast, Beck played an audio clip of unidentified African Americans referring to “Obama money” as they collected welfare checks in Detroit. Then he showed footage of members of a Kansas City-based youth group practicing a step show, a traditional African-American group dance apparently unfamiliar enough to Beck and his transfixed audience that he felt at liberty to claim the footage as evidence that “Obama’s SS” was being trained across inner-city America.</p>
<p>In September 2009, Beck relentlessly targeted ACORN, the Right’s new favorite hobgoblin, admitting that he intended to use the poor people’s advocacy group to distract his viewers from the health care debate. “Trust me,” Beck said, “Everybody now says they’re going to be talking about health care. I don’t think so.” (His statement was reminiscent of Rush Limbaugh’s scandal-mongering remark during the early Clinton administration: “Whitewater is about health care.”) Beck promptly cued up a series of hidden camera videos shot by conservative youth activists James O’Keefe and Hannah Giles inside ACORN field offices. In the videos, O’Keefe baited African-American staffers into making statements explaining that Giles, who claimed she was a prostitute, could obtain low-income housing.</p>
<p>O’Keefe edited in images of himself clad in an outlandish pimp costume to create the impression that he was dressed that way during the meetings with ACORN; however, Giles later admitted her partner had lied about wearing his costume to further incriminate ACORN. In the end, ACORN was exonerated of all criminal wrongdoing while in a separate incident O’Keefe was arrested and charged with a federal crime after he and several conservative pals disguised themselves as telephone repairmen and attempted to wiretap phone lines in the office of Senator Mary Landrieu of Louisiana. Like Ryan Sorba, O’Keefe and his posse were movement cadres paid and directed by well-funded conservative outfits; O’Keefe had been trained by the Leadership Institute, the right-wing youth group that nurtured leading lights like Jack Abramoff, Karl Rove, Ralph Reed, and Jeff Gannon.</p>
<p>While O’Keefe and his buddies plea-bargained with prosecutors, Beck basked in his formula for success. His show earned the highest ratings at Fox News, topping network franchises like O’Reilly and Sean Hannity. In the process, Beck’s opinions became firmly implanted in the nervous systems of Tea Party activists. “Glenn Beck has taught us everything we know,” a demonstrator at the 9-12 rally told me. “He’s opened our eyes to so much.”</p>
<p>But unlike the right-wing radio warhorses who helped usher in Newt Gingrich’s Republican counter-revolution of 1994, Beck was not an authentic product of the movement. When Rush Limbaugh first began dominating the AM airwaves, Beck was mired in the world of mid-level commercial radio, delivering corny yarns about lesbians and celebrity trash in hopes of becoming the next Howard Stern. By night, as he has tirelessly recounted, he medicated his anxiety with cocaine and alcohol, destroying his first marriage in the process. “We remember Glenn from the womanizing, the drinking, the drugs. Everybody who knew him at the time saw what a complete mess he was,” a shock jock from Tampa, Florida, who called himself Bubba the Love Sponge remarked to me during a broadcast of his nationally syndicated show.</p>
<p>Like Dusty Rhodes, the pseudo-populist demagogue of Elia Kazan’s 1957 film, A Face in the Crowd, Beck was a self-destructive drifter who might have been crumpled up with a bottle of Mad Dog 20/20 in an alleyway or been locked away in a prison cell had fame not found him first. Beck was only able to stabilize his life when he made his escape from freedom, marrying a conservative Mormon, converting to her religion, and transmuting his urge to abuse drugs into conservative radio diatribes. When Beck first broke into television on CNN’s Headline News Channel, he struggled to articulate a coherent political worldview.</p>
<p>If he distinguished himself from other big-time conservative hosts in any way, he did so through strained and often snide attempts at humor, remnants of his failed radio career. Nevertheless, with help from his liberal agent, Matthew Hiltzik, Beck snagged a primetime slot at Fox News in early 2009. Around this same time, Beck began promoting the work of an arcane Mormon conspiracy-peddler named W. Cleon Skousen, whom he described as his political lodestar. Suddenly, Beck had something more to offer than irritable mental gestures.</p>
<p>Thanks to Beck’s designation of Skousen’s pseudohistorical tract The 5000 Year Leap as “required reading” on the Web site of his 9-12 Project, and his promotion of the book on his show, the previously obscure Skousen became the Hidden Imam of the Tea Party movement. By the summer of 2009, Skousen’s Leap was among the top 10 books on Amazon.com and a fixture on literature tables at Tea Party gatherings. It went from selling a puny couple of thousand copies in 2007 to selling over 200,000 copies in 2009.</p>
<p>Just why the book generated such an instant appeal is difficult to understand. It is little more than a slapdash of quotes from the Founding Fathers, often taken out of context and deliberately oversimplified, to explain why America is the greatest nation in history. In the process, Skousen claims that church and state separation is un-American, that “coercive taxation” is communist, and that marriage is the underpinning of a free society. Benjamin Franklin, who wrote at length on the merits of “amours” with “old women,” and who famously solicited prostitutes and fathered a son of out of wedlock, was the ultimate authority Skousen quoted on the importance of marriage.</p>
<p>Though Skousen claims the Founders as the world’s foremost source of eternal wisdom, he buttressed his points with fringe sources like the conspiracist Norman Dodd’s screeds about the Illuminati. According to Skousen, Dodd claimed that “powerful influences congregating in the United States” like the Rockefellers and the Rothschilds had forced the United States into World War I. Skousen published Dodd’s manifestoes in his obscure journal Freemen’s Digest, which he founded for the express purpose of propagating conspiracies.</p>
<p>Skousen’s paranoid politics were an outgrowth of his participation in extreme anti-communist groups during the 1950s. He boasted of a close friendship with then-FBI director J. Edgar Hoover and said he provided him with research on communist plots, claims disputed by FBI historians. (During a recent interview, Skousen’s son, Paul, told me that contrary to rumors of Hoover’s cross-dressing and homosexual dalliances, he would set the top cop up on blind dates with live women.)</p>
<p>Skousen was fired from his job as Salt Lake City’s police chief for, in the words of the city’s conservative Mormon mayor, “conduct[ing] his office as chief of police in exactly the same manner in which the communists operate their government.” From there, Skousen sailed off to the far shores of the Right-peddling conspiracy tracts like The Naked Communist, and earning condemnation from his beloved FBI, which accused him in an internal memo of “promoting [his] own anti-communism for obvious financial purposes.”</p>
<p>Skousen’s vocal support for the far-right John Birch Society’s claim that communists controlled President Dwight Eisenhower cost him the support of the corporate backers who had paid for his Red-bashing lecture tours. He went off the radar for several years, returning during the late 1960s to accuse the Jewish Rothschild family of secretly bankrolling everyone from Ho Chi Minh to the civil rights movement. By the late 1970s, even the Church of Latter Day Saints distanced itself from Skousen and his conspiracy theories.</p>
<p>His work fell through the margins and might have disappeared entirely had Beck not revived it, turning The 5000 Year Leap into the bible of the Tea Party movement. Journalist Andrew Zaitchik observed in his authoritative profile of Skousen on Salon.com that Skousen’s renewed influence through Beck and the Tea Party “suggests that the modern base of the Republican Party is headed to a very strange place.”</p>
<p>Besides influencing Beck, Skousen’s teachings inspired one of the Tea Party movement’s most visible grassroots celebrities, retired Sheriff Richard Mack. I met Mack in February at a far-right rally just outside of Montgomery, Alabama. On a makeshift stage towed into the middle of a rodeo arena by a pickup truck, Mack recalled with reverence his mentorship by Skousen, who he said taught him everything he needed to know about the Constitution. Mack urged his spellbound audience to stockpile ammo and store food. “If you control the food supply,” Mack warned, “you control the people. And that’s the first step to slavery.”</p>
<p>Already a hero to conservatives for successfully suing the Clinton administration over the provision in the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act requiring law enforcement to conduct criminal background checks of gun purchasers, Mack reemerged in the Obama era as the archetypal local lawman who vowed to resist the tyrannical federal government. Along with a few dozen former and active military and law enforcement personnel, Mack helped form a self-styled Tea Party militia called the Oathkeepers.</p>
<p>Galvanized by their fear of creeping socialism, the Oathkeepers solemnly swore to refuse tyrannical federal orders such as cooperating with foreign troops and forcing Americans into concentration camps. Because the group’s members trained for combat, the vow came with suggestion of armed resistance.</p>
<p>Besides Mack, the Oathkeepers attracted a coterie of militia movement retreads into its ranks. The most well-established figure was Mike Vanderboegh, a longtime militia fanatic who published a booklet in the mid-1990s entitled Strategy and Tactics for a Militia Civil War, calling for sniper attacks on “war criminals, secret policemen, rats.” With Obama in office, Vandeboegh churned out anti-government screeds on right-wing blogs with renewed passion and supported his efforts by cashing in the $1,300 in federal disability compensation he received each month.</p>
<p>For all the energy the far right exerted in its campaign to strangle Obama’s agenda, it was a Democrat who posed the greatest threat to the passage of health care reform. Representative Bart Stupak of Michigan had been in office since 1993, placing him among the senior leadership of the so-called centrist Blue Dog Democrats. When health care reform was introduced in Congress, Stupak became the leader of an informal caucus of anti-abortion Democrats, making him the de facto swing vote on the House version of the bill. By extension, Stupak was the point man in the campaign to ensure that the bill would not allow federal funding for abortion for low-income women.</p>
<p>But after close consultation with leaders of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, Stupak went a step further. He introduced a draconian amendment to block women from paying for abortions from even their own private insurance plans. The amendment, which passed the House but was shut down in the Senate, became a key sticking point in health care negotiations. “He’s a big hero now in the pro-life community,” former Bush Catholic issues adviser Deal Hudson told me in November 2009. “Thanks to him, this is the first time I can remember the pro-life Democrats having any power.”</p>
<p>To the chagrin of the Republicans, Stupak entertained offers of compromise from the Democratic leadership. According to Hudson, the Catholic Bishops were keen to see health care reform pass, but only if the bill contained a clear provision forbidding patients from spending federal money on abortion. Finally, in March, after pressure from House Majority Leader Nancy Pelosi, Obama agreed to sign an executive order forbidding the federal funding of abortion. Stupak had been mollified.</p>
<p>Now he and his anti-abortion caucus pledged to deliver the swing votes the Democrats needed to pass the bill. As soon as reports seeped out declaring the imminent passage of health care reform, major right-wing blogs like RedState.org churned out virulent denunciations of Stupak, calling him a traitor and sellout. The blog comment sections filled up with dozens of diatribes referring to Stupak in language previously reserved for Dr. George Tiller: “Bart the Baby-Killer.”</p>
<p>On March 20, thousands of Tea Party activists surrounded the Capitol’s Longworth Building in expectation of Obama’s pep talk to the House Democrats and the health care vote. Democratic Representative John Lewis, a hero of the civil rights movement, and Representative Barney Frank, the first openly gay member of Congress, passed through the crowd on their way inside the Capitol. “Nigger!” a demonstrator barked at Lewis. Another called Frank a “faggot,” eliciting laughter and cheers from nearby protesters. Meanwhile, as another African-American Democrat, Representative Emanuel Cleaver, ascended the Capitol steps, a protester who had been screaming at Lewis and Frank spat on his face.</p>
<p>With the demonstration carried on into the night, cries of “Kill the bill!” drifted into calls for violence. “I would gladly stand with any of you men here and take these fascists down,” a man in camouflage battle dress uniform proclaimed in front of an amateur videographer, pointing toward the Capitol. “You haven’t heard the last of me!”</p>
<p>The next day, Republican members of Congress emerged from the Longworth Building to salute the Tea Partiers. The demonstrators cheered wildly for their proxies on the inside. Finally, after hours of impassioned speeches on the House floor, the bill passed. But the drama was hardly over.</p>
<p>Republican Representative Joe Pitts, an anti-abortion Catholic who co-authored Stupak’s original amendment, demanded a motion to bring it back to the floor for a vote, a transparent exercise in grandstanding that was certain to fail. In response, Stupak rushed to the podium with a stinging rebuke to Pitts and the Republicans. “The motion to commit does not support life,” Stupak declared. “It is the Democrats who have stood up….” Heckling from the Republican side interrupted his statement.</p>
<p>As Stupak looked around the House chamber, Rep. Randy Neugebauer, a right-wing Republican from Texas who openly supported the Birther movement, began shouting at him from the backbench, “Baby killer!” Other Republicans joined in, parroting base insults.</p>
<p>While the Republicans sank their heads in defeat, some more militant devotees of the Tea Party movement called for a right-wing Kristallnacht. “If you wish to send a message that Pelosi and her party cannot fail to hear, break their windows,” Vanderboegh of the Oathkeepers wrote on a far-right blog hours after the bill passed. “Break them NOW. Break them and run to break again.” Within three days, windows and doors at Democratic Party headquarters in New York, Kansas and Arizona had been shattered.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, at least 10 Democratic members of Congress reported receiving death threats. Images of nooses were faxed to the offices of Stupak and James Clyburn, an African-American congressman from South Carolina. Representative Anthony Weiner, an especially vocal proponent of health care reform, received a menacing letter filled with white powder.</p>
<p>The brother of Representative Tom Perriello, another health care supporter, had his home gas line deliberately sabotaged after a local Tea Party organizer posted his address online (he had meant to post the congressman’s) and encouraged activists to “drop by” to express their anger about Perriello’s recent vote. In Tucson, Arizona, the windows of Democratic Representative Gabrielle Giffords’ office were shattered by shots from a pellet gun. And a brick was thrown through the window of Representative Louise Slaughter’s office in New York as her voicemail filled with threats of impending sniper attacks.</p>
<p>After the passage of the health care bill, the Tea Party floated into a gray zone between authoritarianism and anarchy. Crusading to restore a holy social order, they promoted disorder. Claiming to protect democracy, they smashed windows of elected representatives. Warning of death panels, they called in death threats. With the atmosphere of violence thickening, Palin took to her Twitter account to issue a battle cry: “Don’t Retreat, Instead–RELOAD!” Thus concluded the first phase of the Obama era that was to usher in a peaceable kingdom of bipartisanship.</p>
<p><!-- author bio --></p>
<div>Max Blumenthal is the author of <a href="http://republicangomorrah.com/">Republican Gomorrah </a>(Basic/Nation Books, 2009).</div>
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		<title>Alex Knight &#8211; Audio Podcast!</title>
		<link>http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/08/15/podcast/</link>
		<comments>http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/08/15/podcast/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 15 Aug 2010 05:00:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>alex</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[hey all, check out this podcast of me being interviewed by Todd Curl.  I&#8217;m excited to have my views recorded on audio for the first time.  in this extensive 2-hour interview, I discuss: my hometown of Ambler, PA and its history with asbestos my life story of becoming politically aware and active peak oil and [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=endofcapitalism.com&amp;blog=1762754&amp;post=1668&amp;subd=endofcapitalism&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>hey all,</p>
<p>check out this podcast of me being interviewed by Todd Curl.  I&#8217;m excited to have my views recorded on audio for the first time.  in this extensive 2-hour interview, I discuss:</p>
<ul>
<li>my hometown of Ambler, PA and its history with asbestos</li>
<li>my life story of becoming politically aware and active</li>
<li>peak oil and its interpretations</li>
<li>the end of capitalism theory</li>
<li>the nature of capitalism and enclosure</li>
<li>resistance in China, Arizona, and around the world</li>
<li>how radicals can use language to speak to everyday people</li>
<li>healing from abuse and empowering ourselves to live better lives</li>
</ul>
<p>here it is (click to play audio): <a href="http://thepigeonpost.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/A.-Knight-07.30.2010-complete.mp3">Alex Knight Podcast</a></p>
<p>[alex]</p>
<h4><a title="Permanent link to Is Capitalism Approaching the Darkness of Knight?" rel="bookmark" href="http://thepigeonpost.org/2010/08/02/is-capitalism-approaching-the-darkness-of-knight/">Is Capitalism Approaching the Darkness of Knight?</a></h4>
<p>Todd Curl</p>
<p><a href="http://thepigeonpost.org/2010/08/02/is-capitalism-approaching-the-darkness-of-knight/" target="_blank">The Pigeon Post</a>, August 2, 2010</p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><a href="http://thepigeonpost.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/100_0328.jpg"><img class="aligncenter" title="alexpigeon" src="http://thepigeonpost.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/100_0328.jpg" alt="" width="468" height="356" /></a></p>
<p>Here is the interview I did with Alex Knight on Friday, July 30, 2010 at Alex’s home in Philadelphia:</p>
<p><a href="http://thepigeonpost.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/A.-Knight-07.30.2010-complete.mp3">Alex Knight Podcast</a></p>
<p>At just 27 years old, Alex is already an accomplished writer and a full time activist for social justice. His site, <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/" target="_blank">The End of Capitalism</a>, explores the theory of the unsustainable nature of a profit-driven global system that continues to exploit all of the earth’s resources for the sake of greed and power.</p>
<p>Having grown up in Ambler, Pennsylvania — the ‘Asbestos Capital of the World’ — Alex saw first hand the devastation of his home town through the greed of Keasbey and Mattison Corporation who continued to manufacture Asbestos through the 1970s despite the evidence that had existed for years that Asbestos causes Mesothelioma, a serious form of Lung Cancer.</p>
<p>Seeing the sickness of his community first hand eventually built the foundation for Alex’s future environmental and social activism. While at Lehigh University studying Electrical Engineering, Alex became more intellectually aware of the systemic patterns of exploitation and human/environmental devastation brought on by a long history of a Capitalist system concerned only with profit. Alex went on to get his Master’s in Political Science from Lehigh and now is a full-time activist in the Philadelphia area fighting for real and meaningful progressive change.</p>
<p>As Alex will tell you, there is nothing extraordinary about him. Being the quintessential “All American Boy” — he was born on the 4th of July — Alex discovered that real social change is ameliorated when we decide to join forces and fight the powers that are determined to keep us placated and in a constant state of fear so we will not question our own imprisonment of thought and continue to consume without thought or premeditation. For Alex, grassroots organizing and activism is the key to a sustainable future and when we define ourselves as left, right, Marxist, Anarchist, etc.. we just perpetuate petty semantic divides. Alex is proud to call himself “Progressive” as he is a tireless fighter for justice.</p>
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		<title>The End of Capitalism?: Interview of Alex Knight – Part 3. Life After Capitalism</title>
		<link>http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/31/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-3/</link>
		<comments>http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/31/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-3/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 31 Jul 2010 19:30:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>alex</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Republished by Energy Bulletin, Countercurrents and OpEdNews. The following exchange between Michael Carriere and Alex Knight occurred via email, July 2010. Alex Knight was questioned about the End of Capitalism Theory, which states that the global capitalist system is breaking down due to ecological and social limits to growth and that a paradigm shift toward [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=endofcapitalism.com&amp;blog=1762754&amp;post=1646&amp;subd=endofcapitalism&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h6>Republished by <a href="http://energybulletin.net/node/53705" target="_blank">Energy Bulletin</a>, <a href="http://countercurrents.org/knight050810.htm" target="_blank">Countercurrents</a> and <a href="http://www.opednews.com/articles/The-End-of-Capitalism-Par-by-Alex-Knight-100805-84.html" target="_blank">OpEdNews</a>.</h6>
<p>The following exchange between Michael Carriere and Alex Knight occurred via email, July 2010. Alex Knight was questioned about the End of Capitalism Theory, which states that the global capitalist system is breaking down due to ecological and social limits to growth and that a paradigm shift toward a non-capitalist future is underway.</p>
<p>This is the final part of a four-part interview. Scroll to the bottom for links to the other sections.</p>
<h4>Part 3. Life After Capitalism</h4>
<p><em><strong>MC:</strong> Moving forward, how would you ideally envision a post-capitalist world? And if capitalism manages to survive (as it has in the past), is there still room for real change?</em></p>
<p><strong>AK:</strong> First let me repeat that even if my theory is right that capitalism is breaking down, it doesn&#8217;t suggest that we’ll automatically find ourselves living in a utopia soon. This crisis is an opportunity for us progressives but it is also an opportunity for right-wing forces. If the right seizes the initiative, I fear they could give rise to neo-fascism – a system in which freedoms are enclosed and violated for the purpose of restoring a mythical idea of national glory.</p>
<p>I think this threat is especially credible here in the United States, where in recent years we’ve seen the USA PATRIOT Act, the Supreme Court’s <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/01/23/corporate-personhood-and-battle-for-soul-democracy/" target="_blank">decision</a> that corporations are “persons,” and the stripping of constitutional rights from those labeled “terrorists,” “enemy combatants”, as well as “illegals.” <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/05/25/reading-the-grapes-of-wrath-in-2010-immigration-capitalism-and-the-historic-moment-in-arizona/" target="_blank">Arizona’s</a> attempt to institute a racial profiling law and turn every police officer into an immigration official may be the face of fascism in America today. Angry whites joining together with the repressive forces of the state to terrorize a marginalized community, Latino immigrants. While we have a black president now, white supremacist sentiment remains widespread in this country, and doesn’t appear to be going away anytime soon. So as we struggle for a better world we may also have to contend with increasing authoritarianism.</p>
<p>I should also state up front that I have no interest in “writing recipes for the cooks of the future.” I can’t prescribe the ideal post-capitalist world and I wouldn’t try. People will create solutions to the crises they face according to what makes most sense in their circumstances. In fact they’re already doing this. Yet, I would like to see your question addressed towards the public at large, and discussed in schools, workplaces, and communities. If we have an open conversation about what a better world would look like, this is where the best solutions will come from. Plus, the practice of imagination will give people a stronger investment in wanting the future to turn out better. So I’ll put forward some of my ideas for life beyond capitalism, in the hope that it spurs others to articulate their visions and initiate conversation on the world we want.</p>
<p>My personal vision has been shaped by my outrage over the two fundamental crises that capitalism has perpetrated: the ecological crisis and the social crisis. I see capitalism as a system of abuse. The system grows by exploiting people and the planet as means to extract profit, and by refusing to be responsible for the ecological and social trauma caused by its abuse. Therefore I believe any real solutions to our problems must be aligned to both ecological justice <em>and</em> social justice. If we privilege one over the other, we will only cause more harm. The planet must be healed, and our communities must be healed as well. I would propose these two goals as a starting point to the discussion.</p>
<p>How do we heal? What does healing look like? Let me expand from there.</p>
<h4>Five Guideposts to a New World</h4>
<p>I mentioned in <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/20/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-1/" target="_blank">response to the first question</a> that I view freedom, democracy, justice, sustainability and love as guideposts that point towards a new world. This follows from what I call a <em>common sense radical</em> approach, because it is not about pulling vision for the future from some ideological playbook or dogma, but from lived experience. Rather than taking pre-formed ideas and trying to make reality fit that conceptual blueprint, ideas should spring from what makes sense on the ground. The five guideposts come from our common values. It doesn’t take an expert to understand them or put them into practice.</p>
<p>In the first section I described how <em>freedom</em> at its core is about self-determination. I said that defined this way it presents a radical challenge to capitalist society because it highlights the lack of power we have under capitalism. We do not have self-determination, and we cannot as long as huge corporations and corrupt politicians control our destinies.</p>
<p>I’ll add that access to land is fundamental to a meaningful definition of freedom. The group <a href="http://takebacktheland.org/" target="_blank">Take Back the Land</a> has highlighted this through their work to move homeless and foreclosed families directly into vacant homes in Miami. Everyone needs access to land for the basic security of housing, but also for the ability to feed themselves. Without “<a href="http://www.seattleglobaljustice.org/2010/07/us-social-forum-food-sovereignty-declaration/" target="_blank">food sovereignty</a>,” or the power to provide for one’s own family, community or nation with healthy, culturally and ecologically appropriate food, freedom cannot exist. The best way to ensure that communities have food sovereignty is to ensure they have access to land.</p>
<div id="attachment_1647" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 260px"><a href="http://www.anarkismo.net/article/7645"><img class="size-full wp-image-1647" title="ellabaker" src="http://endofcapitalism.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/ellabaker.jpg?w=490" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Ella Baker championed the idea of participatory democracy</p></div>
<p>Similarly, a deeper interpretation of <em>democracy</em> would emphasize participation by an individual or community in the decisions that affect them. For this definition I follow in the footsteps of Ella Baker, the mighty civil rights organizer who championed the idea of <a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=-ExMrqXWr0sC&amp;pg=PA51&amp;lpg=PA51&amp;dq=ella+baker+participatory+democracy+carol+mueller&amp;source=bl&amp;ots=oy5Wps8TbG&amp;sig=o0VEujhD5ZNsZnzLysTReXaRg1I&amp;hl=en&amp;ei=25I7TImyFsG88gack82TBQ&amp;sa=X&amp;oi=book_result&amp;ct=result&amp;resnum=1&amp;ved=0CB8Q6AEwAA#v=onepage&amp;q=ella%20baker%20participatory%20democracy%20carol%20mueller&amp;f=false" target="_blank">participatory democracy</a>. With a lifelong focus on empowering ordinary people to solve their own problems, Ella Baker is known for saying “Strong people don’t need strong leaders.” This was the philosophy of the black students who sat-in at lunch counters in the South to win their right to public accommodations. They didn’t wait for the law to change, or for adults to tell them to do it. The students recognized that society was wrong, and practiced <a href="http://uk.video.yahoo.com/watch/3354268/9405180" target="_blank">non-violent civil disobedience</a> [video], becoming empowered by their actions. Then with Ms. Baker’s support they formed the Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and organized poor blacks in Mississippi to demand their right to vote, passing on the torch of empowerment.</p>
<p>We need to be empowered to manage our own affairs on a large scale. In a participatory democracy, “we, the people” would run the show, not representatives who depend on corporate funding to get elected. “By the people, for the people, of the people” are great words. What if we actually put those words into action in the government, the economy, the media, and all the institutions that affect our lives? Institutions should obey the will of the people, rather than the people obeying the will of institutions. It can happen, but only through organization and active participation of the people as a whole. We must empower ourselves, not wait for someone else to do it.<span id="more-1646"></span></p>
<p><em>Justice </em>is supposed to protect the weak and oppressed from the strong and powerful, but in capitalist society it too often plays out as the reverse. As I write this, the Oakland police officer who shot <a href="http://www.democracynow.org/2010/7/9/outrage_in_oakland_transit_officer_convicted" target="_blank">Oscar Grant</a> in the back and killed him was just handed a verdict of “not guilty” for murder, and found “guilty” of the lesser charge of “involuntary manslaughter.” How can it be “involuntary” if he was caught on video putting a gun in Oscar’s back and pulling the trigger? Is it because the police officer is white and Oscar Grant was black? What would the verdict have been if the roles were reversed and the police officer had been shot in the back? This isn’t justice, it’s injustice.</p>
<p>So to reach an ideal future, we would need to eliminate systems of oppression that benefit one group, like whites, at the expense of another group, like people of color. Racial justice aims to overturn this disparity. Of course we also have to put an end to patriarchy, the domination of society by men. Women have been organizing for centuries to gain equal rights, and to live without fear of violence or silencing. Theirs is a struggle for justice, too. Queer and trans justice mean that everyone should have the basic right to express their sexual preferences or gender identity however they so choose. Finally, I don’t think we can speak of justice as long as society is divided into rich and poor. A just society would ensure that everyone has access to resources to meet their basic needs, like food, housing, education, health care, transportation, clean water and air, and everything necessary for a decent livelihood.</p>
<p>The concept of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intersectionality" target="_blank">intersectionality</a> is also crucial. It means we must appreciate the complex ways that different forms of oppression intersect with one another. A simple example is that the injustice experienced by a black woman is different than for a white woman or a black man. These are not new concepts of justice, but I advocate them proudly.</p>
<p><em>Sustainability</em> is such a buzzword these days, with corporations adopting sustainability statements and selling us “green” products, that it’s close to becoming meaningless propaganda. In a deeper sense, sustainability means human economy existing in harmony with the rest of the planet’s ecology, rather than as an alien force outside it and exploiting it. I draw inspiration for this definition from the work of the late, great social ecologist Murray Bookchin.</p>
<p>Bookchin also theorized that “the domination of nature by man stems from the domination of human by human.” In his book <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2009/08/08/review-of-the-ecology-of-freedom-the-emergence-and-dissolution-of-hierarchy/" target="_blank"><em>The Ecology of Freedom</em></a> he points out that humans lived for 95% of our history as interconnected members of the web of life, and that it was the rise of class society about 10,000 years ago that first divided humans into rich and poor, and alienated us from the Earth’s natural balance. Class societies are committed to exploiting the land, air and sea for all they can provide. The ruling class sees their human subjects and the environment as things to use for enriching themselves and gaining power over other class societies. If they fail to do this, they themselves risk being conquered by more powerful neighbors. Class hierarchy therefore can never be sustainable.</p>
<p>Jared Diamond and others have written in detail how the Babylonian, Mayan, Roman and many other empires have collapsed because they abused their ecosystems faster than those ecosystems could restore themselves. This is why the “<a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=kLKTa_OeoNIC&amp;pg=PA410&amp;lpg=PA410&amp;dq=fertile+crescent+desert+class+empire&amp;source=bl&amp;ots=oYUoKtLjmt&amp;sig=4DJY53nXh64ENj4X62xFTNHgnH0&amp;hl=en&amp;ei=TmJSTPzcOIOB8gb-uJCpAw&amp;sa=X&amp;oi=book_result&amp;ct=result&amp;resnum=7&amp;ved=0CDkQ6AEwBg#v=onepage&amp;q&amp;f=false" target="_blank">Fertile Crescent</a>” of the Middle East, where class society originated, is now largely desert. In a sense, capitalism learned from these prior empires to spread its damage over the entire planet. But what it couldn’t learn was that exploiting the Earth and humanity to enrich the powerful few is always unsustainable in the long run.</p>
<p>Now that this global class society appears headed towards its own collapse, I would expect continents, nations, and regions to go their own directions. This makes it hard to envision exactly how sustainability will develop in the future. What works in the cities might not work in the country, and the same could be said about drylands and wetlands, North and South, etc. One point that seems clear is that technology must be appropriate to its surroundings, because you can’t use wind turbines where there’s no wind, or solar panels where there’s not enough sun. <em>Appropriate technology</em> means that it must serve human need, while also respecting the needs of the ecosystem on which it depends. <a href="http://www.permaculture.org/nm/index.php/site/classroom/" target="_blank">Permaculture</a> is an example of an appropriate technology for growing food – the idea is that gardening should actually restore the soil and nourish the ecology. I’ll add that the movement towards a sustainable future must be global, pursuing all of humanity’s shared long-term benefit. Instead of competing, we must work together, learning from each other’s successes and failures.</p>
<p>One sustainability success story is the <a href="http://www.energybulletin.net/node/13171" target="_blank">organic revolution in Cuba</a>. Around 1990, the collapse of the Soviet Union led to the loss of cheap oil for the island nation of Cuba. Cuba had entirely depended on that oil for their food production, as they maintained an industrialized agriculture system heavy on machinery and petrochemicals. I should add that this industrial food model is the same model the IMF and World Bank have pushed on most of the world. In neoliberal language, this was called the “Green Revolution.” But without oil, this industrial model cannot produce food.</p>
<p>The Cubans recognized this in the most visceral sense &#8211; facing an economic collapse that literally threatened starvation. They had no choice but to rapidly transition all food production over to an organic model. Petrochemical fertilizers and pesticides were abandoned, in favor of “biofertilizers” and “biopesticides,” natural solutions that mimicked the work of ecology. At the same time, tractors were replaced with human and animal effort, and the entire population had to relearn the farming skills of their ancestors. Gardens suddenly appeared on rooftops, in backyards and vacant lots, and the government raised farmers’ pay above that of engineers.</p>
<p style="text-align:center;">
<div id="attachment_1648" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 451px"><a href="http://www.energybulletin.net/13171.html"><img class="size-full wp-image-1648" title="Cuba_2415" src="http://endofcapitalism.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/cuba_2415.jpg?w=490" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Farmers at the Organiponico de Alamar, a neighborhood agriculture project in downtown Havana (Photo by John Morgan)</p></div>
<p>Amazingly, despite being enclosed within a persistent US embargo, this genuine Green Revolution succeeded. No Cuban starved, though everyone lost 20 pounds. Today about half of Havana’s produce is grown within the city limits. As the global oil and energy shortage deepen, the entire world will need examples like that of Cuba. It is not just that the economy must use less resources than it does now. We have to face the equally important question of how to distribute the resources that exist. Transitioning to a sustainable path means prioritizing necessary economic functions like food production over wasteful and irresponsible expenditures on things like weapons or luxury items. For this reason, the transition away from a highly industrialized, capitalist model need not bring poverty and stress. If we use this opportunity to re-prioritize our economy towards meeting human and ecological needs, downscaling can actually improve quality of life and community self-reliance.</p>
<p>Last on the list of guideposts, but certainly not least, <em>love</em> is the force that ties everything together. I don’t speak of the sappy, saccharine love that comes in the form of millions of throwaway Valentine’s cards and gifts every year. What we need is a guide towards respect for life and all creatures, and a spirit of support and cooperation with our fellow human beings. This force, I believe is deep, genuine love. The kind of transformative love that writer <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2009/01/20/review-of-the-will-to-change-men-masculinity-and-love/" target="_blank">bell hooks</a> talks about when she writes, “Love will always move us away from domination in all its forms. Love will always challenge and change us.”</p>
<p>If capitalism is a system of abuse, the task ahead of us is fundamentally one of <em>healing</em>. In any abusive relationship, where one asserts control over another through physical, emotional, psychological, or sexual violence, the only path to healing is to end the abuse. For this reason, we must continue to speak up and challenge the violence capitalism perpetrates daily against the planet and all of humanity. However, we must also understand that the survivor, or the recipient of the abuse, may not recognize their partner’s behavior as abusive, and will typically internalize some amount of shame and guilt, feeling that they brought the treatment on themselves. They may justify the abuse by believing that they deserve it as punishment for real or imagined wrongs.</p>
<p>Even if the survivor names the abuse, they may stick with the relationship and futilely try to “change” or “reform” their abuser. Perhaps they will lower their expectations by reasoning that they cannot “do any better” than this relationship, and so will resign themselves to the abuse. Meanwhile the abuser is likely to attempt to isolate the survivor from friends, family, or other potential sources of support. As time goes on, the survivor is likely to feel increasingly trapped and powerless. The situation is not going to get any better until they end the relationship and rediscover their independence as a self-reliant entity.</p>
<p>I believe this analogy helps clarify why the population living under capitalism often does not appear eager to rebel against the injustices of the system. We have come to internalize our abuse, feeling powerless to escape it, and not recognizing that there are other ways to live. Every one of us has experienced abuse in this system. It comes in many forms, including (but not limited to): poverty, racism, repression of sexuality, pollution and environmental injustice, violence in our communities and schools, police brutality, sexism, ableism, neglect from parents or loved ones, isolation, sexual violence, imprisonment/punishment, and the private hell of domestic abuse. Without the support to be able to name this abuse, and go through the process of healing our wounds, too often we hide our scars and hope the pain will go away. When it doesn’t, we are left with anxiety, depression, addiction and mental illness.</p>
<p>Love can set us free. We must commit to <em>loving ourselves</em> in a deeper sense than many of us ever have. Capitalism uses propaganda, distractions, and boredom to numb us to the violence and enclosures it perpetrates, and often it is easier to remain numb than to deal with our emotional trauma. We have tuned out. We ignore the pain and anguish our bodies are communicating to us, and remain silent. Loving ourselves is really about committing to a process of healing: healing our bodies, healing our minds and our spirits, healing our communities, and healing the planet. I believe in our capacity to heal.</p>
<p>First we must name the abuse – the social and ecological crises we are experiencing, and move past the shame of victimhood. We may have participated in capitalist society and truly believed it was right, but we did not deserve to be treated this way. Next, we must end the relationship with capitalism that is responsible for the harm. When we take this step, the future will open up and we will see immense opportunity in every direction. We will experience a sense of liberation, finally grasping the independence and self-empowerment that we have always been capable of.</p>
<h4>A Society That Values Life</h4>
<p>If we follow the five guideposts of freedom, democracy, justice, sustainability and love, I believe the path will lead towards <em>a society that values life</em>. Capitalism is clear that it values money – profit – and not much else. With this single-minded focus, it leaves the well-being of humanity and the well-being of the planet too far down on the list of priorities. Those should be the <em>top</em> priorities. What is more important than life? This imbalance is the root of our troubles. It’s the reason our era is an era of war, poverty and unemployment, consumerism, drug addiction, corrupt politicians, and ecological catastrophe. We live in a society that straight-up doesn’t care about us. Capitalism cares about an individual if they can make a profit, but if not, it doesn’t care if they’re lying facedown in the gutter. Perhaps we’ve come to accept it, but this is totally backwards logic. It flies in the face of every system of morality, every major religion, and simple common sense.</p>
<p>What if we reversed the priorities and created a society that valued life more than it valued numbers on a spreadsheet? What would that look like? Conflicts resolved through dialogue and reconciliation rather than violence? Sharing when we’ve got enough and our neighbors don’t? Asking for help when we need it, and actually receiving it? Listening to our elders and our youth, and I mean <em>really listening</em>? Working meaningful jobs that make a difference in the world? Spending more time in our gardens, volunteering in the community, or playing with our children? Overcoming addiction and mental illness? Doing what’s in our hearts, and not just what will make the most money?</p>
<p>Does this sound unrealistic? Then remember the figure I quoted in response to the second question: <a href="//www.sitemason.com/files/eowqtO/bailouttallymay2010.pdf" target="_blank">$17 Trillion</a> [PDF]. That’s how much money the US government has given to the banks since this crisis began, according to Nomi Prins. It’s such a huge number that it’s hard to fathom what that means. Let’s put it in perspective. On May 30, the cost of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan hit a total of $1 trillion. So the bailouts have cost about 17 “wars on terror,” in just a year and a half.</p>
<p>The group Rethink Afghanistan made a <a href="http://apps.facebook.com/onetrillion/" target="_blank">Facebook application</a> that suggests alternative ways we could have spent that 1 trillion dollars wasted on war. On the list: $12 billion to “hire every worker in Afghanistan for a year,” $930 million to clean up the BP oil spill, $23 billion for “health care for 1 million children for one year,” and the list goes on. The website <a href="http://www.globalissues.org/article/26/poverty-facts-and-stats" target="_blank">Global Issues</a> also estimates the following costs for universal access in all the world’s poor countries: $9 billion to provide clean drinking water and sanitation, $12 billion for reproductive health for all women, and $13 billion for basic health and nutrition. Even if these figures are underestimated, it seems clear that we could eradicate global poverty and eliminate the conditions that breed terrorists for just a fraction of the cost of occupying the Middle East with US soldiers and keeping capitalism on life support.</p>
<p>What would you do with $18 trillion? I trust the reader could come up with all kinds of good ideas! For myself I want to see every community self-sufficient with electricity and heat, coming from clean and renewable energy sources. Let’s make solar panels, wind turbines, geothermal, passive solar, and most importantly, energy efficiency, available to everyone regardless of income.</p>
<p>We have the resources. We have the technology. All we need is the <em>power</em> to change these priorities. Every day, people all over the world work towards gaining this power.  Impoverished communities, youth and students, people of color, disabled folks, women and trans folks, workers, lesbian, gay and queer folks, religious and ethnic minorities, indigenous communities, and allies are organizing daily to end the trauma of capitalism and move towards a society that values life. This struggle is as old as time. As long as oppression has existed in the world, people have been organizing to undo it.</p>
<p>If the <em>End of Capitalism Theory</em> is correct, then right now we find ourselves at a historic crossroads, where the old order of oppression is breaking down under the strain of ecological and social limits. Will it be replaced by a new form of oppression, perhaps even more violent and authoritarian, or will we begin to heal and put an end to oppression once and for all? It’s a question that only <em>we</em> can answer through our actions.</p>
<p>Many people across the US and the world are trying to answer this question. We are getting smarter at creating approaches that integrate both ecological justice and social justice. More and more people are beginning to see that economic growth is not the goal. The capitalist economy is large but poor &#8211; it does not meet the needs of the majority of humanity or the needs of the planet. We can create an economy that is smaller but richer. Some examples of people who developing and spreading this knowledge are the <a href="http://degrowthpedia.org/index.php?title=Main_Page" target="_blank">de-growth movement</a> which is getting stronger in Europe, and the <a href="http://www.postcarbon.org/" target="_blank">Post-Carbon Institute</a> in the United States. <a href="http://yesmagazine.org/" target="_blank">Yes! Magazine</a> and <a href="http://www.democracynow.org/" target="_blank">Democracy Now! </a>are two media outlets that regularly highlight the solutions we need.</p>
<p>Detroit, more than any other city, displays the hope springing from the cracks in capitalist crisis. Detroit was once the home of the automobile industry, the example of technologic progress in America. That industry has fled and left tremendous disinvestment and poverty in its wake. But solutions are coming from the community. Poor black people are turning vacant lots into urban gardens and organic farms, so that now Detroit has more urban agriculture than any city in the US. <a href="http://www.dcoh.org/" target="_blank">Detroit City of Hope</a>, an effort connected with 95-year-old long-time activist Grace Lee Boggs, is helping to coordinate efforts between community organizations re-imagining sustainable development in what used to be the “motor city.” Like a phoenix rising from the ashes, Detroit shows us that by joining together in a spirit of mutual aid and healing from trauma, regular people can begin to create a new world, now.</p>
<h4>What If Capitalism Survives</h4>
<p>As you point out, the <em>End of Capitalism Theory</em> could be wrong. So what if capitalism survives this crisis as it did the others? In that case, I see two possible outcomes.</p>
<p><strong>Option 1</strong> is that the world literally comes to an end, either because of catastrophic climate change or nuclear warfare. The planet fries, the seas boil, and all life ceases, including humanity. This possibility is too horrific for me to imagine. I also happen to think it’s less likely than the second.</p>
<p><strong>Option 2</strong> is that either through renewed enclosures on the planet and the poor, pure dumb luck, or some combination of the two, President Obama and the world leaders manage to get the global economy back on a trajectory of growth, for another few decades. Perhaps they push through “<a href="http://storyofstuff.com/capandtrade/" target="_blank">cap and trade</a>” and sell the atmosphere to polluters, opening up a new market for speculation. Or similarly they could force into existence a climate deal that includes <a href="http://climatevoices.wordpress.com/2010/05/07/indigenous-peoples-support-the-bolivia-cochabamba-peoples%E2%80%99-agreement-of-the-recent-people%E2%80%99s-global-summit-on-climate-change-and-the-rights-of-mother-earth-demand-a-study-on-violations/" target="_blank">REDD agreements</a> that privatize pristine forests and displace the indigenous communities that have lived in them for thousands of years. Maybe they pump enough oil out of the tar sands, known as “<a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/14/tar-sands-worlds-biggest-climate-crime/" target="_blank">the most destructive project on Earth</a>,” and waste a lot of money on more nuclear reactors and ethanol plants in desperate attempts to mitigate some of the effects of peak oil. Slavery could be reinstated, perhaps along with debtors’ prisons to house the millions of Americans unable to pay back their student loans, credit cards, and mortgages. Or the ruling class could fall back on the tried-and-true strategy of escaping economic crisis by launching another war. They might enlist non-profits, academics, and even some “leftists” to promote the project by calling it neo-Keynesianism, or a Green New Deal, or some other snazzy title.</p>
<p>It sounds plausible. The problem with this option is that these are all, at best, temporary fixes. The fundamental contradiction of a system that requires endless growth on a finite planet would remain in place like the force of gravity on an airborne vehicle. It’s not the kind of thing that can be delayed forever. Once the fuel runs out, that sucker’s going down. Capitalism has stayed in the air through a lot of crises in the past, but it has only managed to buy more time until the next storm hits and throws the system into jeopardy even more starkly.</p>
<p>Sooner or later, capitalism will lose its forward momentum and there will be no technological fix, no new miracle energy source, no new round of enclosures that can pull it from its nosedive. The <em>End of Capitalism Theory</em> says this day will probably come sooner rather than later, and in that sense it’s a hopeful theory. But I think if we study the evidence of the ecological limits, like how soon peak oil is hitting, and the social limits, like the turmoil in China, we’ll see the system is either sputtering and about to go down, or has already entered freefall. If capitalism is already hurtling towards the rocks, then I believe the severity of the current crisis &#8211; which everyone agrees is rivaled only by the Great Depression, and this time is a much more global crash &#8211; begins to make sense. That’s what theories are good for, after all, helping us make sense of our experiences.</p>
<p>Thanks for the wonderful questions!<br />
Alex Knight<br />
July 2010</p>
<p style="text-align:center;">&#8212;&#8211;</p>
<p><em>Alex Knight is a proponent of the End of Capitalism Theory, which states that the global capitalist system is breaking down due to ecological and social limits to growth and that a paradigm shift toward a non-capitalist future is underway. He is working on a book titled “The End of Capitalism” and seeks a publisher. Since 2007 he has edited the website <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com">endofcapitalism.com</a>. He has a degree in electrical engineering and a Master&#8217;s in political science, both from Lehigh University. He lives in Philadelphia, where he is a teacher and organizer. He can be reached at alex@endofcapitalism.com</em></p>
<p><em>Michael Carriere is an assistant professor at the Milwaukee School of Engineering, where he teaches courses on American history, public policy, political science, and urban design. He is currently working on a book, with David Schalliol, titled “The Death and (After) Life of Great American Cities: Twenty-First Century Urbanism and the Culture of Crisis.&#8221; He holds a Ph.D. in American history from the University of Chicago.</em></p>
<p style="text-align:center;">&#8212;&#8211;</p>
<p><strong>Click the links below for more of the interview:</strong></p>
<p>1. The current financial crisis is clearly a moment of peril for both individuals and the broader system of capitalism. But would it also make sense to see it as a moment of opportunity?<br />
<a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/20/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-1/">Part 1. Crisis and Opportunity</a></p>
<p>2. Capitalism has faced many moments of crisis over time. Is there something different about the present crisis? What makes the end of capitalism a possibility now?<br />
<a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/23/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-2a/">Part 2A. Capitalism and Ecological Limits</a><br />
<a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/26/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-2b/">Part 2B. Social Limits and the Crisis</a></p>
<p>3. Moving forward, how would you ideally envision a post-capitalist world? And if capitalism manages to survive (as it has in the past), is there still room for real change?<br />
<a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/31/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-3">Part 3. Life After Capitalism</a></p>
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		<title>The End of Capitalism?: Interview of Alex Knight – Part 2B. Social Limits and the Crisis</title>
		<link>http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/26/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-2b/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Jul 2010 22:43:44 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Organizing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Patriarchy]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Republished by Energy Bulletin, OpEdNews, and Countercurrents, and translated into Turkish for Hafif.org. The following exchange between Michael Carriere and Alex Knight occurred via email, July 2010. Alex Knight was questioned about the End of Capitalism Theory, which states that the global capitalist system is breaking down due to ecological and social limits to growth [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=endofcapitalism.com&amp;blog=1762754&amp;post=1621&amp;subd=endofcapitalism&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h6>Republished by <a href="http://energybulletin.net/node/53601" target="_blank">Energy Bulletin</a>, <a href="http://www.opednews.com/articles/The-End-of-Capitalism-Par-by-Alex-Knight-100727-879.html" target="_blank">OpEdNews</a>, and <a href="http://countercurrents.org/knight290710.htm" target="_blank">Countercurrents, </a>and translated into Turkish for <a href="http://www.hafif.org/yazi/kapitalizmin-sonu-sosyal-sinirlar" target="_blank">Hafif.org</a>.</h6>
<p style="text-align:left;">The following exchange between Michael Carriere and Alex Knight occurred via email, July 2010. Alex Knight was questioned about the End of Capitalism Theory, which states that the global capitalist system is breaking down due to ecological and social limits to growth and that a paradigm shift toward a non-capitalist future is underway.</p>
<p>This is the third part of a four-part interview. This part is a continuation of Alex’s response to the second question. <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/23/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-2a/" target="_blank">Click here for Part 2A</a>. Scroll to the bottom for links to the other sections.</p>
<h4>Part 2B. Social Limits and the Crisis</h4>
<p style="text-align:left;"><em><strong>MC:</strong> Capitalism has faced many moments of crisis over time. Is there something different about the present crisis? What makes the end of capitalism a possibility now?</em></p>
<p><strong>AK:</strong> As I described in the <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/23/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-2a/" target="_blank">last section</a>, the current crisis can be understood as resulting from a massive collision between capitalism’s relentless need for growth and the world’s limits in capacity to sustain that growth. These limits to growth are both ecological and social. In this section I’ll discuss the concept of social limits to growth.</p>
<h4>The Extraordinary Power of Social Movements</h4>
<p style="text-align:left;"><em>Social limits to growth</em> function alongside the ecological limits but are drawn from a different source. By social limits we mean the inability, or unwillingness, of human communities, and humankind as a whole, to support the expansion of capitalism. This broadly includes all forms of resistance to capitalism, a resistance that has arguably been increasing around the world through innumerable forms of alternative lifestyles, refusal to cooperate, protest, and outright rebellion.</p>
<p>As a disclaimer it&#8217;s important to recognize that not all resistance is progressive. There are right-wing, fundamentalist, and undemocratic forces that also resist capitalism, for example the Taliban, or North Korea. These are not our allies. They do not share progressive values, we cannot condone their attacks on women, or on freedom more generally, and I don&#8217;t see anything to be gained by working with them. However it is important to recognize how these forces are aligned against capitalism and U.S. imperialism, in addition to being aware of the danger they present to our own hopes and dreams.</p>
<p>Progressive resistance, on the other hand, has always taken its strength from grassroots social movements. Silvia Federici writes about the immense and varied <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/23/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-2a/" target="_blank">peasant movements</a> in medieval Europe that fought for religious and sexual freedom, challenging both feudal lords and emerging capitalist elites. I like to think of these rebels as my European ancestors &#8211; they were just commoners but they rose up to fight for a better world. This is the nature of social movements. Ordinary folks, daring to pursue their deepest aspirations, interests and dreams, join together with others who share those desires, and thereby create something extraordinary. The magic exists in the joining-together. Isolated individuals lack the power to accomplish what a group can achieve.</p>
<p>We can appreciate this extraordinary power if we look at how social movements have transformed our lives. A century ago, millions of American workers joined the labor movement and won the 8-hour day, Social Security, and workplace safety. Regular folks carried forward the Civil Rights Movement and broke Southern segregation. The feminist and LGBT movements have transformed the way gender and sexuality are viewed all over the world. It’s hard to overstate how dramatically these and other social movements have improved society. While capitalism has invented ways to co-opt social movements and redirect them into outlets that do not challenge the system on a deep level (like the “<a href="http://www.leftturn.org/?q=node/799" target="_blank">non-profit industrial complex</a>”), movements have remained alive and vibrant by empowering people to reach towards a different world.</p>
<p>Have social movements limited capitalist oppression recently? To answer this we need to learn the story of the Global Justice Movement.</p>
<div id="attachment_1623" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 451px"><a href="http://www.globaljusticeecology.org/photo_gallery.php?catID=27&amp;ID=278"><img class="size-full wp-image-1623" title="cancun_fence" src="http://endofcapitalism.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/cancun_fence.jpg?w=490" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Demonstrators tear down a section of security fence in the Mexican resort city of Cancun to confront the World Trade Organization’s Fifth Ministerial summit on Sept. 10, 2003.</p></div>
<h4>The Global Justice Movement</h4>
<p>David Graeber, anarchist anthropologist, wrote a remarkable essay called “<a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2008/01/31/the-shock-of-victory/" target="_blank">The Shock of Victory</a>” in which he looks at this movement that suddenly flared up at the turn of the millennium and seemed to disappear just as quickly. Although most Americans may not remember the Global Justice Movement, and those who participated in it may feel demoralized by the fact that capitalism still exists, Graeber points out that many of the movement’s ambitious goals were accomplished.<span id="more-1621"></span></p>
<p>A decade ago, capitalism was pursuing a strategy to transform the entire world into a single marketplace. It claimed this “globalization” would benefit everyone because everyone would get to share in the spoils of growth. What it really wanted was to extract maximum profit from the cheap labor of the “Global South,” by moving industry and jobs out of high-wage areas like the US, while imposing privatization and debt on the poor countries of the world. This strategy was called “neoliberalism,” because it aimed to eliminate all barriers to trade, such as worker protections or environmental regulations. Multinational corporations would have a bonanza. Like previous rounds of enclosure, the damage these policies would have on poor communities and on the planet was disregarded.</p>
<p>Starting from directly affected communities in places like Mexico, Brazil, India, South Korea and Africa, an enormous network of farmers, workers and educators connected with progressives and anti-capitalists in North America and Europe. They didn’t have a single leader or organization, but they came together as a Global Justice Movement to coordinate efforts and stop the spread of neoliberalism. The movement became visible to the world when it manifested at the 1999 World Trade Organization (WTO) protests in Seattle, where steelworkers, indigenous people, environmentalists, and students literally shut down the trade negotiations with creative civil disobedience.</p>
<p>Along with the WTO, the other main institutions responsible for pushing global neoliberalism were the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. The GJM moved to confront all three. “Free trade” agreements such as the hemisphere-wide Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) were also challenged. Through creative protest and non-violent direct action, the movement called into question the dominant story around “free trade” and pointed towards a new world of global cooperation. And to their own surprise, they were incredibly successful.</p>
<p>According to David Graeber, Global South governments (like India and Brazil) were emboldened by the worldwide protest and refused to compromise on the North’s (European and American) unfair agricultural subsidies. As a result the WTO’s negotiations have <a href="http://focusweb.org/will-doha-like-dracula-come-back-from-the-dead.html?Itemid=132" target="_blank">totally broken down</a>. The FTAA never came into existence at all. It was stopped in its tracks. The IMF and World Bank saw their reputations tarnished after their policies led to the meltdown of the Argentinean economy in 2002, and they are no longer welcome in some parts of the world. This is especially true in <a href="http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22171566/" target="_blank">Latin America</a>, where the political landscape has completely turned around in the last 10-15 years.</p>
<p>In the 1990s, most of the continent was still under the heel of military dictatorships and authoritarian states, but since then a wave of leftist governments has been swept into power by unprecedented social movements opposed to neoliberalism and U.S. imperialism. For example, in 2005 Bolivia elected their first-ever indigenous president, Evo Morales, who came directly out of the social movement that successfully <a href="http://www.democracynow.org/blog/2010/4/21/cochabamba_the_water_wars_and_climate_change" target="_blank">stopped water privatization in Bolivia</a>. Morales has become a <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2008/11/08/bolivian-president-evo-morales-on-capitalism-and-saving-the-planet/" target="_blank">spokesperson</a> for many:</p>
<blockquote><p>“If you want to save planet Earth, to save life and humanity, we have a duty to put an end to the capitalist system. If we do not put an end to the capitalist system, it’s impossible to imagine that there will be equality and justice on this planet Earth. This is why I believe that it is important to put an end to the exploitation of human beings, and to put an end to the pillage of natural resources; to put an end to destructive wars for raw materials and the market; to the plundering of energy, especially fossil fuels; excessive consumption of goods and the accumulation of waste.”</p></blockquote>
<p>We can’t ignore the many difficulties facing Latin America or the Global South as a whole. The situation is still extremely dire, with over a billion people living on the brink of starvation and without access to clean water, and with the U.S. expanding military bases in places like Colombia. And of course leftist governments have their own problems and need to be held accountable just as rightist ones. Regardless, the Global Justice Movement demonstrated that by joining together across borders, opposing injustice and working towards a new world, victories can be achieved. Even victories as dramatic as discrediting the major institutions promoting neoliberal capitalism and the political transformation of an entire continent.</p>
<p>The GJM vanished almost as quickly as it appeared, but as David Graeber points out, this was partially because it <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2008/01/31/the-shock-of-victory/" target="_blank">met many of its goals so rapidly</a>. With the widespread repudiation of the neoliberal doctrine, the Global Justice Movement provides an inspiring lesson that social movements can and do place limits on capitalism.</p>
<h4>Social Limits and the Crisis</h4>
<p>Social movements in many countries have been amplified by the economic crisis. <a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/hedgeye-austerity-equals-unrest-and-greece-has-plenty-of-both-2010-6" target="_blank">Greece</a> has seen massive rebellions in the past 2 years to stop the government from imposing austerity measures like cutting social services. In <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2009/01/24/riots-in-iceland-latvia-and-bulgaria-are-a-sign-of-things-to-come/" target="_blank">Iceland</a>, a country not known for its political radicalism, huge protests in response to the country’s bankruptcy brought the government down and led to the election of the world’s first openly lesbian prime minister. In <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2008/09/16/nigerian-rebels-declare-oil-war-attack-shellchevron/" target="_blank">Nigeria</a> there is an armed rebellion aimed at stopping oil companies from destroying the ecosystem and exporting their profits from the region. Off the coast of <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2009/11/30/pirates-hijack-oil-tanker/" target="_blank">Somalia</a>, pirates have plagued international shipping, and grabbed headlines last November when they hijacked an oil tanker headed for the US.</p>
<p>It’s clear that anger is building towards a capitalist system that is failing to meet people’s needs. But let’s dig deeper and ask: What role did social limits play in causing the economic crisis?</p>
<p>Perhaps the most instructive case is that of <a href="http://worldlabour.org/eng/" target="_blank">China</a> and its rising labor movement. Supposedly a “communist” country, China has become a capitalist haven producing an absurd quantity of goods for the global market due to its very low (sweatshop) wages. The profit extracted from Chinese workers has done wonders to sustain capitalism over the last two decades. For this reason, the organization and rebellion of Chinese workers threatens not just the Chinese government, but the global capitalist system as a whole.</p>
<p>This explanation may require a bit of historical context. During the 1960s-early ‘70s, the capitalist order was challenged by a high tide of protest and rebellion &#8211; from Africa shaking off its colonial masters, to the end of Southern segregation in the US, to the struggle against the US genocide in Vietnam, to the new upsurges of the feminist, queer and ecology movements. This movement activity was pronounced a problem of an “<a href="http://www.chomsky.info/books/priorities01.htm" target="_blank">excess of democracy</a>” by the Trilateral Commission, a ruling class institution composed of bankers and corporate elites from the US, Europe and Japan. One of the strategies used to escape this &#8220;excess of democracy&#8221; (along with increased repression and co-optation of social movements), was to relocate industrial production out of places like the US, where wages were seen as too high, to places like China, where wages were minimal.</p>
<p>Obviously this cheap labor generated more profit in production. But it also created a problem in terms of consumption, because US wages began to decline as all those unionized industrial jobs left the country. As explained by Professor Richard Wolff in his video “<a href="http://www.mediaed.org/cgi-bin/commerce.cgi?preadd=action&amp;key=139&amp;template=PDGCommTemplates/HTN/Item_Preview.html" target="_blank">Capitalism Hits the Fan</a>,” in order to make up for this income difference and keep consumption growing, starting in the 1970s US workers were given access to an immense pool of credit, in the form of credit cards, home mortgages and financial schemes like 401(k)s. Cheap available credit allowed the US to consume more and more junk, even as wages declined. It kept its position as the world’s strip mall.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, China became the world’s factory, pumping out cheap products for the global market, especially for the United States. As Americans flocked to Wal-Marts for their low prices, the Chinese government was flooded with trillions of US dollars. So far, they have dutifully <a href="http://www.henryckliu.com/page215.html" target="_blank">recycled those dollars back into US Treasury bonds</a>, thus keeping the American economy afloat. If they didn’t invest in the US, their main trading partner would be crippled by its trade debt, which grows daily.</p>
<p>The US-China relationship became core to the global economy. Each behemoth kept the other afloat – one producing like crazy by exploiting its workers near exhaustion, the other consuming like crazy by sailing on a sea of cheap credit. The damage to the planet’s ecosystem was atrocious, but immense profits were made and by the 1990s the market was soaring and “<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_End_of_History_and_the_Last_Man" target="_blank">the end of history</a>” was proclaimed. It seemed all opposition to capitalism had been vanquished.</p>
<p>There are numerous weak points in this international division of labor. One that has not been fully appreciated is the severe turmoil in China due to the growing strength of a <a href="http://www.labornotes.org/2010/06/do-spreading-auto-strikes-mean-hope-workers-movement-china" target="_blank">new militant labor movement</a>. This movement aims to put an end to sweatshop conditions where many toil for 12+ hours a day in dangerous, polluted factories. Organizing outside the Communist Party’s official unions, Chinese workers have initiated a <a href="http://chinaworker.info/en/content/news/1134/" target="_blank">series of crippling strikes</a> that repeatedly shut down factories, among other forms of rebellion. The government has been forced to accept workers’ demands for wage increases, so the Chinese average <a href="http://www.midnightnotes.org/Promissory%20Notes.pdf" target="_blank">real wage has risen by 300% between 1990 and 2005</a> [PDF], with half of that increase between 2000 and 2005.</p>
<div id="attachment_1624" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 451px"><a href="http://www.worldlabour.org/eng/node/378"><img class="size-full wp-image-1624" title="electronicstrike2" src="http://endofcapitalism.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/electronicstrike2.jpg?w=490" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Workers in green uniforms stage a sit-in protest at the main entrance of the Mitsumi Electric Co factory in Tianjin on Thursday, July 1, 2010. China Daily</p></div>
<p>Although the Chinese economy continues to grow, increased wages mean a falling rate of profit for companies operating in China, whether American, Japanese, European or otherwise. Wage increases also mean increased consumption within China, and therefore less cheap exports. When Chinese workers can afford the cars and electronics they’re producing, Americans can’t demand the same low prices.</p>
<p>Can we draw a direct connection between Chinese wage gains and the drying up of cheap credit in the US market of 2007-8? I humbly submit this question to the reader, as I haven’t done enough research on the relationship between the two trends. But I’ll say this about the big picture: If Chinese workers continue to break free from totalitarian control and win dignity in their jobs, the loss of China as the sweatshop of the world imperils trade arrangements that have carried global capitalist growth for decades.</p>
<p>If we study any country in the world, we’ll find people resisting capitalism any way they can. In the fields &amp; factories, slums &amp; schools, homes and prisons, the desire to be free cannot be extinguished, only held back and diverted. As humanity gains awareness of its own power and begins to act for its own interest rather than the interest of profit, the system’s tenuous grip on the world can easily falter, and a new world appears just over the horizon.</p>
<p>With the ecological limits encroaching on one side, and the social limits looming on the other, economic growth is under increasing strain in between. It’s as if the system cannot breathe. Like the sorcerer’s apprentice, it’s too busy putting out the fires of multiplying crises, which continue to spawn and grow. The policy makers, market gurus and technocratic apologists scramble to regain control, but they are disoriented in a new arena. Circumstances have changed. They cannot come to agreement on what to do, and instead quarrel amongst themselves over diverging interests. As social and ecological forces combine and put new stresses on the system, capitalism is smothered and chokes.</p>
<p>Considering the ecological limits and social limits to growth side-by-side, the only conclusion I can make is that the end of capitalism is not only a <em>possibility</em>, but an inevitability. Neither the planet nor the world’s population appear able to support this system much longer, and something’s got to give. It may be years or even a couple decades before we can look back and say for sure that a paradigm shift has occurred and that we are living in a different, non-capitalist era. But the <em>End of Capitalism Theory</em> dares us to question how long a system that lives on economic growth can continue to function in a world of such profound and permanent limits.</p>
<p style="text-align:center;">&#8212;&#8211;</p>
<p><em>Alex Knight is a proponent of the End of Capitalism Theory, which states that the global capitalist system is breaking down due to ecological and social limits to growth and that a paradigm shift toward a non-capitalist future is underway. He is working on a book titled “The End of Capitalism” and seeks a publisher. Since 2007 he has edited the website <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com">endofcapitalism.com</a>. He has a degree in electrical engineering and a Master&#8217;s in political science, both from Lehigh University. He lives in Philadelphia, where he is a teacher and organizer. He can be reached at alex@endofcapitalism.com</em></p>
<p><em>Michael Carriere is an assistant professor at the Milwaukee School of Engineering, where he teaches courses on American history, public policy, political science, and urban design. He is currently working on a book, with David Schalliol, titled “The Death and (After) Life of Great American Cities: Twenty-First Century Urbanism and the Culture of Crisis.&#8221; He holds a Ph.D. in American history from the University of Chicago.</em></p>
<p style="text-align:center;">&#8212;&#8211;</p>
<p style="text-align:left;"><strong>Click the links below for more of the interview:</strong></p>
<p>1. The current financial crisis is clearly a moment of peril for both individuals and the broader system of capitalism. But would it also make sense to see it as a moment of opportunity?<br />
<a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/20/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-1/">Part 1. Crisis and Opportunity</a></p>
<p>2. Capitalism has faced many moments of crisis over time. Is there something different about the present crisis? What makes the end of capitalism a possibility now?<br />
<a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/23/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-2a/">Part 2A. Capitalism and Ecological Limits</a><br />
<a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/26/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-2b/">Part 2B. Social Limits and the Crisis</a></p>
<p>3. Moving forward, how would you ideally envision a post-capitalist world? And if capitalism manages to survive (as it has in the past), is there still room for real change?<br />
<a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/31/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-3">Part 3. Life After Capitalism</a></p>
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		<title>The End of Capitalism?: Interview of Alex Knight &#8211; Part 2A. Capitalism and Ecological Limits</title>
		<link>http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/23/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-2a/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 23 Jul 2010 21:24:17 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Republished by Energy Bulletin, The Todd Blog, OpEdNews, Countercurrents, and translated into Turkish for Hafif.org. The following exchange between Michael Carriere and Alex Knight occurred via email, July 2010. Alex Knight was questioned about the End of Capitalism Theory, which states that the global capitalist system is breaking down due to ecological and social limits [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=endofcapitalism.com&amp;blog=1762754&amp;post=1609&amp;subd=endofcapitalism&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h6>Republished by <a href="http://energybulletin.net/53563" target="_blank">Energy Bulletin</a>, <a href="http://thetoddblog.com/2010/07/alex-knight-the-end-of-capitalism-part-2-a/" target="_blank">The Todd Blog</a>, <a href="http://www.opednews.com/articles/The-End-of-Capitalism--Pa-by-Alex-Knight-100725-543.html" target="_blank">OpEdNews</a>, <a href="http://countercurrents.org/knight270710.htm" target="_blank">Countercurrents</a>, and translated into Turkish for <a href="http://www.hafif.org/yazi/kapitalizmin-sonu-jeolojik-sinirlar" target="_blank">Hafif.org</a>.</h6>
<p>The following exchange between Michael Carriere and Alex Knight occurred via email, July 2010. Alex Knight was questioned about the End of Capitalism Theory, which states that the global capitalist system is breaking down due to ecological and social limits to growth and that a paradigm shift toward a non-capitalist future is underway.</p>
<p>This is the second part of a four-part interview. Scroll to the bottom for links to the other sections.</p>
<h4>Part 2A. Capitalism and Ecological Limits</h4>
<p><em><strong>MC:</strong> Capitalism has faced many moments of crisis over time. Is there something different about the present crisis? What makes the end of capitalism a possibility now?</em></p>
<p><strong>AK:</strong> This is such an important question, and it&#8217;s vital to think and talk about the crisis in this way, with a view toward history. It’s not immediately obvious why this crisis began and why, two years later, it’s not getting better. Making sense of this is challenging. Especially since knowledge of economics has become so enclosed within academic and professional channels where it’s off-limits to the majority of the population. Even progressive intellectuals, who aim to translate and explain the crisis to regular folks, too often fall into the trap of accepting elite explanations as the starting point and then injecting their politics around the edges. This is why there is such an abundance of essays and videos analyzing &#8220;credit default swaps&#8221;, &#8220;collateralized debt obligations,&#8221; etc., as if this crisis is about nothing more than greedy speculators overstepping their bounds.</p>
<p>On the contrary, the <em>End of Capitalism Theory</em> insists there are deeper explanations for why this crisis is so severe, widespread, and long-lasting. Here’s one explanation: The devastating quaking of the financial markets, and the lingering aftershocks we’re experiencing in layoffs and cut-backs, are manifestations of much larger tectonic shifts under the surface of the economy. This turmoil originates from deep instabilities within capitalism, the global economic system that dominates our planet. The dramatic crisis we are experiencing now is resulting from a massive underground collision between capitalism’s relentless need for growth on one side, and the world’s limited capacity to sustain that growth on the other.</p>
<p>These <em>limits to growth</em>, like the continental plates, are enormous, permanent qualities of the Earth – they cannot be ignored or simply moved out of the way. The limits to growth are both ecological, such as shortages of resources, and social, such as growing movements for change around the globe. As capitalism rams into these limiting forces, numerous crises (economic, energy, climate, food, water, political, etc.) erupt, and destruction sweeps through society. This collision between capitalism and its limits will continue until capitalism itself collapses and is replaced by other ways of living.</p>
<div id="attachment_1612" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 442px"><a href="http://www.plainedgeschools.org/swells/plate_tectonics.htm"><img class="size-full wp-image-1612" title="tectonicplates2" src="http://endofcapitalism.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/tectonicplates2.jpg?w=490" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Tectonic Plates Colliding - Capitalism is Ramming into the Limits to Growth, Causing Massive Shocks on the Surface of the Economy</p></div>
<p>The <em>End of Capitalism Theory</em> argues that capitalism will not be able to overcome these limits to growth, and therefore it is only a matter of time before we are living in a non-capitalist world. A paradigm shift towards a new society is underway. There’s a chance this new future could be even worse, but I hold tremendous hope in the capacity of human beings to invent a better life for themselves when given the chance. Part of my hope springs from the understanding that capitalism has caused terrible havoc all over the world through the violence it perpetrates against humanity and Mother Earth. The end of capitalism need not be a disaster. It can be a triumph. Or, perhaps, a sigh of relief.</p>
<h4>Defining the Crisis</h4>
<p>Rather than spend our time learning the language of Wall St. and trying to understand the economic crisis from the perspective of the bankers and capitalists, I think we can get much further if we take our own point of reference and then investigate below the surface to try to find the true origins of the crisis. This is what I call a <em>common sense radical</em> approach. Start from where we are, who we are, and what we know, because you don’t need to be an academic to understand the economy &#8211; you just need common sense. Then try to get to the root of the issue (<em>radical</em> coming from the Latin word for “root”). What is really going on under the surface? What is the core of the problem? If we can’t come up with a common sense radical explanation of the crisis, we’ll always be stuck within someone else’s dogma. This could be Wall St. dogma, Marxist dogma, Christian dogma, etc. So what is this crisis really about?<span id="more-1609"></span></p>
<p>I assert that the current crisis is dramatically and profoundly different from any crisis previously faced by the global capitalist system. I see one basic reason for this: the system can no longer grow. Capitalism cannot function without growth. Like a shark that must keep moving in order to breathe, a capitalist economy must keep growing in order to survive. Without the possibility, or probability, that investors will make a profit on their investments, they will not invest. No one invests if they expect to lose money or keep the same amount. If investors cease to invest, businesses cannot expand, jobs are lost, consumer spending declines, and loans stop coming, creating a cycle of bust. Crashing markets will continue to freefall until the government steps in with bailouts to artificially boost investment. But bailouts are only a temporary solution. If the markets cannot be “corrected” and get back on a growth trajectory, game over.</p>
<p>Financial analyst Nomi Prins has tallied the various loans, guarantees and giveaways that make up the Wall St. bailout to a total of <a href="http://www.sitemason.com/files/eowqtO/bailouttallymay2010.pdf" target="_blank">$17 Trillion</a> [PDF], a sum larger than the annual GDP of the United States. This is a staggeringly expensive life support system for the “too big to fail” banks. How much longer can the federal government essentially print dollars to keep the stock market afloat? The <em>End of Capitalism Theory</em> says, “not long.” In the long arch of history, we are at the tail end of the capitalist period. Whatever follows it, for better or worse, will need to be adapted to an economy that grows smaller, not larger.</p>
<h4>Capitalism and Enclosure</h4>
<p>To understand the end of capitalism, we need to know where the system started. For 500 years, capitalism has spread like a cancer across the planet. It first spawned in Western Europe on the backs of the peasants and small farmers who were displaced by the &#8220;enclosures.&#8221; The enclosures were the forced privatization of land, literally the enclosing or fencing off of land that was previously shared or held in common. The state acted as enforcer of this process, violently expelling poor communities from their homes and the “commons,” or traditionally public land. The land was taken away from the small farmers so it could be exploited for large-scale agriculture and animal herding.</p>
<p>These enclosures had the effect (intended or not) of creating two new classes of people: 1. a small opportunist class of private landowners and businessmen who evolved into today’s capitalists, and 2. a large landless class of workers who were forced to toil for a wage in the new urban factories, because they had nowhere else to go.</p>
<p>At the very same moment, the European states carried out the enslavement of millions of Africans and the genocide of the indigenous nations of North and South America. Suddenly two “new” continents could be exploited, with slave labor, bringing tremendous wealth to the rising capitalist elites in Europe. This brutal violence against people of color was instrumental in the spread of capitalism across the planet. It was accompanied by a terrifying assault on women in the form of the witch hunts, which saw hundreds of thousands of women tortured and burned alive, according to Silvia Federici&#8217;s provocative and necessary book <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2009/11/05/who-were-the-witches-patriarchal-terror-and-the-creation-of-capitalism/" target="_blank"><em>Caliban and the Witch: Women, The Body, and Primitive Accumulation</em></a>.</p>
<p>The book documents how the Church and state used the witch hunts to persecute sexually rebellious women, such as those having sex out of wedlock, committing adultery, abortion or infanticide. They also targeted women who held respected professions in peasant communities, such as that of midwife, healer, or fortune teller. Federici sees this as a broad attack on women that created a new kind of patriarchal order. She explains that by the time the witch hunts came to an end in the 17th century, women in capitalist society had largely become enclosed within the prescribed roles of mother pumping out new workers, or unpaid houseworker. These are exactly the female roles that the new system of capitalism required of women, argues Federici, because women’s unpaid reproductive labor boosted capitalist profits just like the unpaid labor of the African slaves. Keeping women confined as housewives and mothers meant their labor was never valued, although this labor is necessary for the entire society to exist.</p>
<p>Women have pushed back against this paradigm and made dramatic gains in the last 50 years, especially in the Global North. But in the Global South the position of women has largely deteriorated as capitalism has penetrated.</p>
<p>A disturbing but necessary example is the <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/26/opinion/26iht-edshannon.html" target="_blank">Congo</a>, where hundreds of thousands of women have been raped and mutilated in the past decade. This mass rape is a weapon in the ongoing war between various guerrilla and state factions over minerals like coltan. Coltan is used in many of our electronic devices such as laptops and cell phones, making it highly valuable. The factions that export these minerals to the global market make a lot of money, which they can use to purchase weapons. Attacking women’s bodies has been one way to assert control over territory, as the shame of rape too often leads to the ostracizing of the women, thus breaking apart peasant communities. Once the village is displaced, their land becomes available for mining.</p>
<div id="attachment_1611" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 260px"><a href="http://www.worldvision.org/news.nsf/news/congo-crisis-200811"><img class="size-full wp-image-1611" title="congo-1" src="http://endofcapitalism.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/congo-1.jpg?w=490" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Mujawimana was raped when she returned to her village to find her children after being forced to flee from fighting there. Photo ©2008 Stephen Matthews/World Vision</p></div>
<p>This appalling violence in the Congo is more than a throwback to the enclosures which first launched capitalism, for as Silvia Federici says, systemic violence “has accompanied every phase of capitalist globalization, including the present one, demonstrating that the continuous expulsion of farmers from the land, war and plunder on a world scale, and the degradation of women are necessary conditions for the existence of capitalism in all times” (pg. 13).</p>
<p>In other words, <em>enclosure has been an ever-present feature of capitalism</em> because the system cannot reproduce itself without constantly putting up walls to control and limit human possibility, as well as controlling the planet itself. To be blunt, people usually only submit to capitalism when they no longer have any option.</p>
<p>Federici&#8217;s work challenges many myths about capitalism, such as the conservative assertion that capitalism works best without state interference, as well as the vulgar Marxist assumption that capitalism was a progressive advance over pre-capitalist forms of life, on some linear march of history. On the contrary, Federici uses the example of the witch hunts to demonstrate that capitalism has always relied on state violence in order to attack not only women’s position in society, but all communal or non-capitalist forms of life. Although she makes it clear that not all pre-capitalist forms of life were idyllic or free of oppression, the ultimate lesson she draws is that capitalism is an enemy of life itself, and that its spread has been a dramatic setback for all of us, including the planet.</p>
<h4>Limits to Growth</h4>
<p>2010 is a very different moment than 1492, or 1929 for that matter. In earlier times, there remained entire continents, entire populations of people, and vast reserves of natural resources remaining to be exploited for the capitalist regime of profit. Now that globalization has worked its wonders and you can order the same McDonald&#8217;s hamburger virtually anywhere in the world, what growth markets remain untapped? The answer is, in my view, remarkably few. The limits to growth are being reached. The system needs growth now. It can’t find it. And the machine is straining to keep running on the promise that profit will come tomorrow. So it turns to speculative bubbles like the dot-coms and the housing market to create artificial growth and keep the party going, even for a little while. But it’s only a temporary strategy. Each time the bubble bursts, the hangover is worse. Reality is beginning to set in. Steady, long-term growth is elusive because capitalism is overstepping its limits. If you want a simple explanation for the collapse of the financial markets, it&#8217;s that.</p>
<p>Let’s explore this concept of the limits to growth. It can be divided into two categories: <em>ecological limits</em> and <em>social limits</em>.</p>
<p><em>Ecological limits</em> are the restrictions placed on economic growth by the planet&#8217;s inability to sustain that growth indefinitely, either because of lack of resources or lack of capacity to withstand ecological damage. The list of ecological limits is long and awareness of them has been growing rapidly. Some big ones include the limits of oil, natural gas, coal, uranium, phosphorus, copper, fresh water, arable soil, fish, and more broadly, climate. Perhaps the most decisive limiting factor is oil, which I’ve called the “lifeblood of industrial capitalism” because it supplies 40% of the energy for the total economy, making it the system’s primary energy source. Oil’s critical contribution includes powering <a href="http://www.postcarbon.org/article/40503-temporary-recession-or-the-end-of" target="_blank">95% of transportation</a>. Oil is the fuel that moves the people and equipment that do virtually all of the work in the capitalist economy. There is no known substance on Earth that can replace it.</p>
<h4>Peak Oil</h4>
<p>Since the oil price shock of 2008, &#8220;peak oil&#8221; has become something of a household word in the United States, but I’ll just give a few facts to back up the validity of the concept. First, <a href="http://www.energybulletin.net/node/48039" target="_blank">US oil production peaked in 1970</a>. Oil was discovered in Pennsylvania in 1859, and the US quickly became the main exporter of petroleum in the world, like Saudi Arabia is today. After its oil supply peaked, the US became a chronic importer of oil and went into severe debt to pay for it. Today, contrary to the cries of &#8220;Drill, Baby Drill!&#8221;, there is no amount of drilling that could bring US oil production back to the level of 40 years ago. In fact, production is about half what it was then, and still declining.</p>
<p>A second essential fact is that <a href="http://www.energybulletin.net/primer.php" target="_blank">global discovery of oil peaked in 1960</a> and for the last 50 years less and less oil has been found across the planet. Demand keeps growing, but supply has not been, despite the efforts of every oil company to discover more “black gold.” With all the cheap, easy oil pretty much gone, they’re left to spend millions to drill in remote locations, like the Gulf of Mexico, which is now a disaster area. So we know peak oil is a real phenomenon because it happened to the US. And we know there’s not enough oil being found anywhere in the world to sustain growing demand. The only question is when the global peak will be reached.</p>
<div id="attachment_1610" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 442px"><a href="http://www.princeton.edu/hubbert/current-events-08-05.html"><img class="size-full wp-image-1610" title="deffeyes peak" src="http://endofcapitalism.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/hubbert-may-2008.gif?w=490" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Global oil production has hit a wall, despite skyrocketing prices. Kenneth Deffeyes</p></div>
<p>There are a whole slew of geologists, ecologists and engineers dedicated to answering that question, and I can&#8217;t add much to their debate. But I do want to highlight <a href="http://www.princeton.edu/hubbert/current-events-08-05.html" target="_blank">this remarkable graph</a> created by Princeton geologist Kenneth Deffeyes, author of the books <em>Hubbert&#8217;s Peak</em> and <em>Beyond Oil</em>. He graphs global production of oil against the price of a barrel (equal to 42 gallons). We can see that as global production hits about 27 billion barrels, the price spikes into the heavens. We would expect, according to Economics 101, that as the price increases, supply would also increase. It’s in the interest of producers to pump more oil from the ground, and develop more expensive oil wells, in order to take advantage of the high prices. Instead, we can see that no matter how expensive oil has gotten, production has hit a wall. What Deffeyes argues, and I agree with his analysis, is that the peak has already been hit. No matter how wildly the price of oil fluctuates, growth in production is no longer possible.</p>
<p>In <em>Beyond Oil,</em> Deffeyes also makes the case that there is nothing that can do for the capitalist economy what cheap and plentiful oil has done. Solar and wind are great technologies, and they certainly have a role to play in transitioning to a democratic and sustainable future, but not being liquid fuels, they’re useless for powering the Army&#8217;s tanks and planes in Afghanistan. Even hydrogen fuel cells or electric engines would solve little, because there would still need to be a massive influx of energy to make up for the 40% provided by petroleum. And that&#8217;s without factoring in necessary growth.</p>
<p>Efficiency is another crucial piece to look at. Efficiency in energy can be measured in <a href="http://www.theoildrum.com/story/2006/8/2/114144/2387" target="_blank">Energy Returned on Energy Invested (ERoEI)</a>. The ERoEI of oil is something like 10-to-1, meaning for every calorie or joule of energy expended in getting oil out of the ground and making it a usable fuel, 10 times that much energy is made available by it. If the ERoEI for a particular fuel was 1-to-1, it would be useless. It would take just as much energy to extract the fuel as they could get out of it. This is the trouble with “non-conventional” fuels such as the tar sands, corn ethanol, or coal liquefaction. All are tremendously destructive to the planet, but none comes anywhere near oil in terms of efficiency, and corn ethanol may actually <a href="http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/July05/ethanol.toocostly.ssl.html" target="_blank">waste more energy than it produces</a>. The bottom line is that no energy source is as abundant, cheap, versatile, easy-to-transport, and efficient as oil.</p>
<p>Oil is also not the only energy source hitting its peak. Natural gas appears to be in the same position, and coal and uranium aren’t far behind. All are being exploited at a rate much higher than can be sustained. This is why Richard Heinberg has written a book called <em>Peak Everything</em>, and argues that from ecological limits alone, <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/04/07/the-end-of-growth/" target="_blank">growth is no longer possible</a>. Capitalism needs abundant and growing sources of energy to move its resources, products and labor around the world, to organize them into the production process, and to power the assembly lines. We are now entering a period in which for the first time in 500 years, less energy will be available, the energy that exists will be more expensive, and therefore profits will be severely constrained. Without energy, the shark stops swimming and dies.</p>
<p>Did peak oil trigger the economic crisis? It’s difficult to know for sure. One thing is certain, in 2007-8 the price of oil skyrocketed to a record high of almost $150/barrel, while production stayed flat. And as former Chairman of the Federal Reserve Alan Greenspan noted in 2002, “<em>All economic downturns in the United States since 1973… have been preceded by sharp increases in the price of oil.</em>”</p>
<p>I will explore social limits, the other piece of the puzzle, when I finish responding to your great question in the <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/26/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-2b/">next part of the interview</a>.</p>
<p style="text-align:center;">&#8212;&#8211;</p>
<p><em>Alex Knight is a proponent of the End of Capitalism Theory, which states that the global capitalist system is breaking down due to ecological and social limits to growth and that a paradigm shift toward a non-capitalist future is underway. He is working on a book titled “The End of Capitalism” and seeks a publisher. Since 2007 he has edited the website <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com" target="_blank">endofcapitalism.com</a>. He has a degree in Electrical Engineering and a Master&#8217;s in Political Science, both from Lehigh University. He lives in Philadelphia, where he is a teacher and organizer. He can be reached at alex@endofcapitalism.com</em></p>
<p><em>Michael Carriere is an assistant professor at the Milwaukee School of Engineering, where he teaches courses on American history, public policy, political science, and urban design. He is currently working on a book, with David Schalliol, titled “The Death and (After) Life of Great American Cities: Twenty-First Century Urbanism and the Culture of Crisis.&#8221; He holds a Ph.D. in American history from the University of Chicago.</em></p>
<p style="text-align:center;">&#8212;&#8211;</p>
<p><strong>Click the links below for more of the interview:</strong></p>
<p>1. The current financial crisis is clearly a moment of peril for both individuals and the broader system of capitalism. But would it also make sense to see it as a moment of opportunity?<br />
<a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/20/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-1/">Part 1. Crisis and Opportunity</a></p>
<p>2. Capitalism has faced many moments of crisis over time. Is there something different about the present crisis? What makes the end of capitalism a possibility now?<br />
<a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/23/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-2a/">Part 2A. Capitalism and Ecological Limits</a><br />
<a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/26/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-2b/">Part 2B. Social Limits and the Crisis</a></p>
<p>3. Moving forward, how would you ideally envision a post-capitalist world? And if capitalism manages to survive (as it has in the past), is there still room for real change?<br />
<a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/31/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-3">Part 3. Life After Capitalism</a></p>
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		<title>The End of Capitalism?: Interview of Alex Knight &#8211; Part 1. Crisis and Opportunity</title>
		<link>http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/20/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-1/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 20 Jul 2010 15:20:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>alex</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Republished by Countercurrents, OpEdNews, Alliance for Sustainable Communities &#8211; Lehigh Valley, The Pigeon Post, Dissident Voice and The (Grace Lee) Boggs Blog! The following exchange between Michael Carriere and Alex Knight occurred via email, July 2010. Alex Knight was questioned about the End of Capitalism Theory, which states that the global capitalist system is breaking [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=endofcapitalism.com&amp;blog=1762754&amp;post=1597&amp;subd=endofcapitalism&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h6>Republished by <a href="http://countercurrents.org/knight200710.htm" target="_blank">Countercurrents</a>, <a href="http://www.opednews.com/articles/The-End-of-Capitalism--Pa-by-Alex-Knight-100723-585.html" target="_blank">OpEdNews</a>, <a href="http://sustainlv.org/index.cfm?section_id=325&amp;page_id=9215&amp;organization_id=11&amp;&amp;ord=323&amp;allowOverwrite=true" target="_blank">Alliance for Sustainable Communities &#8211; Lehigh Valley</a>, <a href="http://thepigeonpost.org/2010/07/24/the-end-of-capitalism-alex-knight-speaks-out-part-1/" target="_blank">The Pigeon Post,</a> <a href="http://dissidentvoice.org/2010/07/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-of-alex-knight/" target="_blank">Dissident Voice</a> and <a href="http://boggsblog.org/2010/09/24/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-with-alex-knight/" target="_blank">The (Grace Lee) Boggs Blog</a>!</h6>
<p>The following exchange between Michael Carriere and Alex Knight occurred via email, July 2010. Alex Knight was questioned about the End of Capitalism Theory, which states that the global capitalist system is breaking down due to ecological and social limits to growth and that a paradigm shift toward a non-capitalist future is underway.</p>
<p>The interview will be available in four parts. Scroll to the bottom to read all of Prof. Carriere’s questions.</p>
<h4>Part 1. Crisis and Opportunity</h4>
<p><em><strong>MC: </strong>The current financial crisis is clearly a moment of peril for both individuals and the broader system of capitalism. But would it also make sense to see it as a moment of opportunity?</em></p>
<p><strong>AK:</strong> Absolutely. I see opportunity springing from every crack in the structure of capitalism. For all those who wish to see a different world, this moment is dripping with opportunity because the old order is crumbling before our eyes.</p>
<div id="attachment_1598" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 410px"><a href="http://brokershandsontheirfacesblog.tumblr.com/"><img class="size-full wp-image-1598" title="sadtrader19" src="http://endofcapitalism.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/sadtrader19.jpg?w=490" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Shock and Awe on the New York Stock Exchange</p></div>
<p>The crisis extends far beyond the broken financial system. Millions of people are losing their jobs, homes, and savings as the burden of the crisis gets shifted onto the poor and working class. Public faith in the system, both the government and the capitalist economy, has been shattered and is at an all-time low. And it’s not just the economic crisis. The bank bailouts, the endless wars in the Mid East, the BP spill and the meltdown of the climate, and about a dozen other crises have shaken us deeply. It’s become common sense that the system is broken and a major change is needed. Barack Obama was elected in the US precisely by promising this change. Now that he is failing to deliver, more and more people are questioning whether the system can provide any solutions, or whether it’s actually the source of the problem.</p>
<p>Shattered faith is the dominant sentiment today. You can see it in people’s faces &#8211; the disappointment, grief, worry, and anger. To me, this loss of faith presents an enormous opening for putting forth a new, non-capitalist way of life. People are ready to hear radical solutions now, like they haven&#8217;t been since the Great Depression.</p>
<h4>Historic Crossroads</h4>
<p>If we go back to 1929, we’ll see some interesting parallels to our current moment. When that depression started, millions lost their livelihoods to pay for the bankers’ crisis. Faith in capitalism sunk to rock bottom. The public flocked to two major ideologies that offered a way out: socialism and fascism.</p>
<p>Socialism presented a solution to the crisis by saying, roughly: &#8220;Capitalism is flawed because it divides us into rich and poor, and the rich always take advantage of the poor. We need to organize the poor and workers into unions and political parties so we can take power for the benefit of all.&#8221;</p>
<p>Socialism attracted millions of followers, even in the United States. The labor movement was enormous and kept gaining ground through sit-down strikes and other forms of direct action. The Communist Party sent thousands of organizers into the new CIO, at the time a more radical union than the AFL. Socialist viewpoints even started getting through to the mass media and government. <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huey_Long" target="_blank">Huey Long</a> was elected Senator from Louisiana by promising to &#8220;Share Our Wealth,&#8221; to radically redistribute the wealth of the country to abolish poverty and unemployment. (He was assassinated.) Socialism challenged President Roosevelt from the left, pushing him to create the social safety net of the New Deal.</p>
<p>On the other side, fascism also emerged as a serious force and attracted a mass following by putting forth something like the following: &#8220;The government has sold us out. We are a great nation, but we have been disgraced by liberal elites who are pillaging our economy for the benefit of foreign enemies, dangerous socialists, and undesirable elements (like Jews). We need to restore our national honor and fulfill our God-given mission.&#8221;</p>
<p>When people hear the word fascism, they usually think of Nazi Germany or Mussolini&#8217;s Italy, where successful fascist movements seized state power and implemented totalitarian control of society. Yet fascism was an international phenomenon during the Depression, and the United States was not immune to its reach. <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smedley_Butler" target="_blank">General Smedley Butler</a>, the most decorated Marine in US history, testified before the Senate that wealthy industrialists had approached him as part of a “Business Plot” and tried to convince him to march an army of 500,000 veterans on Washington, DC to install a fascist dictatorship.</p>
<p>Today we are approaching a similar crossroads. When I hear the story of the Business Plot I think about the Tea Party, which has sprung from a base of white supremacist anger, facilitated by right-wing elements of the corporate structure like Fox News. This is an extremely dangerous phenomenon. The “teabaggers” have moved from questioning Obama&#8217;s citizenship, to now trying to reverse the gains of the Civil Rights Movement, such as the ability of everyone, regardless of color, to <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/05/20/rand-paul-tells-maddow-th_n_582872.html" target="_blank">enjoy public accommodations like restaurants</a>.</p>
<p>I think it’s fair to name the Tea Party, Glenn Beck, Sarah Palin, the Christian Right, etc. parts of a potential neo-fascist movement in the United States. Their words and actions too often encourage attacks on people of color, immigrants, Muslims, LGBT folks, and anyone they don’t see as legitimate members of US society. Ultimately, many in this movement are pushing for a different social system taking power in the United States: one that is more authoritarian, less compassionate, more exploitive of the environment, more militaristic, and based on a mythical return to national glory. This is not a throwback to Nazi Germany. It’s a new kind of fascism, a new American fascism. And it’s a serious threat.</p>
<p style="text-align:center;">
<div id="attachment_1599" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 402px"><a href="http://www.sodahead.com/united-states/tea-partiers-insist-no-racism-here-move-along/blog-300629/?page=21"><img class="size-full wp-image-1599" title="teaparty" src="http://endofcapitalism.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/teaparty.jpg?w=490" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Tea Party racism in Denver, April 15, 2009</p></div>
<p>On the other hand, this crisis is also an opportunity for all of us who see capitalism as a destructive force and believe the message of the recent <a href="http://www.ussf2010.org/" target="_blank">U.S. Social Forum</a> that &#8220;Another World is Possible. Another US is Necessary.&#8221;  &#8220;Socialism&#8221; in the post-McCarthy/Cold War era of the United States is a dead word, because it carries a lot of baggage from the Soviet Union. Rightly so, the USSR was a terrible dictatorship that is hardly an example to follow. The question is, how do those of us who are progressive and anti-capitalist articulate our ideas to resonate with a mass audience in this moment?</p>
<h4>Common Values</h4>
<p>I argue that we need to speak to the population in a language of our common values: <em>democracy</em>, <em>freedom</em>, <em>justice</em>, and <em>sustainability</em>. <span id="more-1597"></span></p>
<p>Adopting this mainstream language is not an attempt to be deceptive. These words have captured people&#8217;s hearts for a real reason: they offer a window to the world we want to see. It is the government, corporations, and media who deceive us by evoking these words to justify their atrocities, as in &#8220;Operation Iraqi Freedom.&#8221; (Over a million dead, and the Iraqi people are no closer to any kind of “freedom” I would want.) Rather than surrendering these noble ideals to the right wing, where they become meaningless dogma, I see immense potential to take language back and use it with honesty, as if words actually mean something.</p>
<p>So what if progressives reclaim these common values and make them guideposts on the way to a better society? For example, how can we talk about freedom if there is no self-determination, either in Iraq or here in the US? Let&#8217;s be honest, what freedom do we really have? The freedom to choose Coke or Pepsi, or similarly, to vote Democrat or Republican?</p>
<p>What about the freedom to determine our own destinies outside the constraints of corporations and government? What freedom is more basic than freedom from poverty and suffering? How can anyone speak of freedom if they have no income and no opportunity to escape unemployment? Or if they have nowhere to live because their home was foreclosed? What if their community is torn apart because so many youth are filling the prisons on nonviolent drug offenses? Is a prisoner free? Is their mother, spouse, or loved ones free? What does freedom mean if you&#8217;re queer or trans, and you face emotional and physical violence every time you express who you are and live your own life? How can we claim to be a free society if immigrants live in fear of being locked up by ICE and deported? <em>What freedom do you have if your neighbor has none?</em></p>
<p>I think real freedom requires self-determination, the ability of an individual or community to choose their own destinies. We can&#8217;t pretend we have freedom in this country until “we, the people” have a say in our neighborhoods, towns and cities, in our workplaces, our schools, and our government. This requires that the public actively participate in managing their own affairs, for example through neighborhood councils to have a say in the neighborhood, through labor unions to have a say at work, student unions to have a say at school, and other democratic organizations that give people the power to defend their rights. There is a dire need to hold our corrupt representatives in Washington accountable to popular will. But to be truly free, might we also need to structure government in a new way, so it can be run by the people themselves? Or even to abolish the government, if it can’t do what the people say?</p>
<p>So I believe when we get to the meaningful core of the word “freedom,” it poses a radical challenge to capitalist society. We can say similar things about &#8220;democracy,&#8221; &#8220;justice,&#8221; and &#8220;sustainability,&#8221; and I would add, &#8220;love.&#8221; I’ll talk more about this in <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/31/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-3/" target="_blank">response to your third question</a>. These values reinforce each other, and if we honor them for their true depth of meaning, they can be effective tools for change.</p>
<h4>The Power of Imagination</h4>
<p>This might sound good, but do progressives have the power to achieve these kinds of changes? It may sound farfetched. The media and government, especially in the U.S., have done an excellent job convincing us that we can never win. People with our views are routinely excluded from official conversation on the news or in elections. When we try to protest and take our voices to the street, they corral us within “free speech zones” so we look crazy and feel powerless. If a progressive voice does get through to the public somehow, it’s dismissed as “unrealistic.” We’re pressured to just vote for the lesser of two evils and be silent. The result of this silencing is that we have no idea how many people share our values and aspirations, because we’re often too intimidated to proclaim our views proudly. Worse, to some degree we’ve internalized this silencing so that we hesitate even to <em>imagine</em> our progressive hopes and dreams, lest they accidentally slip past our lips into polite conversation.</p>
<p>The stifling of progressive views is part of a larger culture of silence that helps the system maintain control. Noam Chomsky and Edward Herman call it <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OJuqoDvyXOk" target="_blank"><em>Manufacturing Consent</em></a>, the use of media and propaganda to create a passive, obedient population. The message we receive constantly from media is that we are spectators, not participants. Rather than take a stand on an issue and risk being wrong or foolish, why not leave it to the experts? Besides, we’re too busy being consumers, workers and students to worry about politics. Better to not make waves. We might as well amuse ourselves with television, celebrity gossip, and Facebook, and try not to get involved. From all the propaganda we consume over the course of our lives, we come to develop the core belief that we are powerless to affect change. This myth of powerlessness is one of the biggest lies in the history of the world, and we need to dismantle it.</p>
<p>What the U.S. Social Forum proves is that there is a large, broad-based movement for change here in the United States, the very core of the global capitalist machine. There are millions of average, everyday people all across the nation who are working and pushing in a progressive direction in large and small ways, whether on immigrants’ rights, women&#8217;s rights, housing, health care, education, prison justice, queer and trans justice, environmental justice, peace in the Middle East, etc. The system doesn’t want you to know about this, which is why they don’t show it on television. Our movements are alive and well. They are strong. They are inspiring. And in many places they are winning.</p>
<p style="text-align:center;">
<div id="attachment_1600" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 402px"><a href="http://picasaweb.google.com/PhillyEssentialServices"><img class="size-full wp-image-1600" title="libraries3" src="http://endofcapitalism.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/libraries3.jpg?w=490" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Coalition to Save the Libraries confronts the Philadelphia City Council and its Budget Cuts, May 21, 2009</p></div>
<p>I’ll just share a local example from here in Philadelphia. In late 2008, Mayor Nutter announced he would close 11 libraries due to budget constraints. Seemingly out of nowhere &#8211; but actually out of strong communities throughout the city &#8211; a movement emerged to oppose and prevent this decision, facilitated by the multiracial, multigenerational Coalition to Save the Libraries. The coalition organized creative actions at library branches slated for closure and at City Hall. People from across the city came together to imagine what kind of library system would best serve the public. Pressure kept mounting until the Mayor had to abandon his closures. All the libraries remain open to this day, despite continuing budget cuts and layoffs.  Kristin Campbell wrote a fuller description of <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/03/26/victory-in-philly-how-grassroots-organizing-saved-the-libraries/" target="_blank">how grassroots organizing saved the libraries</a>.</p>
<p>We can look at this victory and downplay it as limited because it only restored a public service that shouldn&#8217;t have been attacked anyway. But like all grassroots organizing it points towards a better future, for the simple reason that people became empowered by working together. Capitalism is a system of disempowerment. It cannot tolerate our active participation in public affairs. As soon as we begin to break our silence and speak out against the injustices we are being subjected to, the system begins to quake and it searches for ways to pacify and silence us again. If we remain alert, active, and vocal, we can break the culture of complacency and bring more and more people into the awareness of their own power. So I think that&#8217;s the opportunity we have in this crisis.</p>
<p>I want to excite people’s imaginations of what a better world might look like. There is no better time to do it. If my theory is right, then capitalism, the system that has dominated the world for the past 500 years, is coming to an end. Recognizing this opens up a world of possibility for the future. Maybe that’s scary, because who knows what will happen? We might be driven into a neo-fascist nightmare. Things might keep getting worse, in which case maybe we should just find reasons to enjoy our current way of life while it lasts. I can see some of my friends saying that. But that leaves out two crucial truths that I want to highlight.</p>
<p>The first truth is that capitalism is a terribly abusive and destructive system, which we would be better off without. The second truth is that if we organize and push for a better world, we might win. So the time for complacency is over, and the time for taking bolder steps toward our dreams is here.</p>
<p style="text-align:center;">&#8212;&#8211;</p>
<p><em>Alex Knight is a proponent of the End of Capitalism Theory, which states that the global capitalist system is breaking down due to ecological and social limits to growth and that a paradigm shift toward a non-capitalist future is underway. He is working on a book titled “The End of Capitalism” and seeks a publisher. Since 2007 he has edited the website <a href="http://endofcapitalism.com">endofcapitalism.com</a>. He has a degree in electrical engineering and a Master&#8217;s in political science, both from Lehigh University. He lives in Philadelphia, where he is a teacher and organizer. He can be reached at alex@endofcapitalism.com</em><em> </em></p>
<p><em>Michael Carriere is an assistant professor at the Milwaukee School of Engineering, where he teaches courses on American history, public policy, political science, and urban design. He is currently working on a book, with David Schalliol, titled “The Death and (After) Life of Great American Cities: Twenty-First Century Urbanism and the Culture of Crisis.&#8221; He holds a Ph.D. in American history from the University of Chicago.</em></p>
<p style="text-align:center;">&#8212;&#8211;</p>
<p><strong>Click the links below for more of the interview:</strong></p>
<p>1. The current financial crisis is clearly a moment of peril for both individuals and the broader system of capitalism. But would it also make sense to see it as a moment of opportunity?<br />
<a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/20/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-1/">Part 1. Crisis and Opportunity</a></p>
<p>2. Capitalism has faced many moments of crisis over time. Is there something different about the present crisis? What makes the end of capitalism a possibility now?<br />
<a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/23/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-2a/">Part 2A. Capitalism and Ecological Limits</a><br />
<a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/26/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-2b/">Part 2B. Social Limits and the Crisis</a></p>
<p>3. Moving forward, how would you ideally envision a post-capitalist world? And if capitalism manages to survive (as it has in the past), is there still room for real change?<br />
<a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/07/31/the-end-of-capitalism-interview-part-3">Part 3. Life After Capitalism</a></p>
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		<title>Reading “The Grapes of Wrath” in 2010: Immigration, Capitalism and the Historic Moment in Arizona</title>
		<link>http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/05/25/reading-the-grapes-of-wrath-in-2010-immigration-capitalism-and-the-historic-moment-in-arizona/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 26 May 2010 03:45:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>alex</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Book Review]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Capitalism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Class]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Economic Crisis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Enclosures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Immigration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jobs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Latin America]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Racism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Resistance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Video]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://endofcapitalism.com/?p=1540</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck published 1939 during the last Great Depression. Alex Knight, endofcapitalism.com, May 25, 2010 Also posted on The Rag Blog and TowardFreedom. Arizona SB1070, signed into law by Governor Jan Brewer on April 23, requires Arizona&#8217;s local and state law enforcement to demand the immigration status of anyone they [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=endofcapitalism.com&amp;blog=1762754&amp;post=1540&amp;subd=endofcapitalism&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div><img class="alignright" title="grapesofwrath" src="http://routeduvin.typepad.com/photos/bookcovers/img005.jpg" alt="" width="227" height="345" /></div>
<p><strong><em>The Grapes of Wrath</em> </strong><br />
<strong>by John Steinbeck </strong><br />
<strong>published 1939 during the last Great Depression.</strong><br />
<strong>Alex Knight, endofcapitalism.com, May 25, 2010</strong></p>
<p>Also posted on <a href="http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2010/06/steinbeck-comes-to-arizona-rereading.html" target="_blank">The Rag Blog</a> and <a href="http://towardfreedom.com/americas/1981-reading-the-grapes-of-wrath-in-2010-capitalism-and-immigration" target="_blank">TowardFreedom</a>.</p>
<p>Arizona SB1070, signed into law by Governor Jan Brewer on April 23, requires Arizona&#8217;s local and state law enforcement to demand the immigration status of anyone they suspect of being in the country illegally, and arrest them if they lack documents proving citizenship or legal residency. <a id="r9ox" title="Effectively making racial profiling into state policy" href="http://altoarizona.com/">Effectively making racial profiling into state policy</a>, this law is the latest in a series of attacks on Latin American immigrants, as well as the entire Latino community, who must live with the fear of being interrogated by police for their brown skin. Then on May 11, Arizona went one step further, <a id="mwt0" title="outlawing the teaching of ethnic studies classes" href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/04/30/arizona-ethnic-studies-cl_n_558731.html">outlawing the teaching of ethnic studies classes</a>, or any classes that &#8220;are designed primarily for students of a particular ethnic group or advocate ethnic solidarity&#8221;. This same law also states that schools must fire English teachers who speak with a &#8220;heavy accent.&#8221;</p>
<p>Perhaps these new laws make sense if we imagine that undocumented immigrants are merely &#8220;aliens&#8221;, a danger to the good, mostly white citizens of this great country. But suppose we look at the problem of immigration from the perspective of the immigrants? Why are they risking life and limb to come to a foreign land, far from their home and families? Why aren&#8217;t they deterred from making this trip no matter how many walls we put up, no matter how many police collaborate with ICE, no matter how many angry armed &#8220;Minutemen&#8221; vigilantes are conscripted to guard the border?</p>
<p>John Steinbeck&#8217;s classic novel <em>The Grapes of Wrath</em>, following the Joad family as they migrate to California during the &#8220;Dust Bowl&#8221; of the 1930s, sheds light on these questions in a way that perhaps every American can relate to. One of the most popular and well-written American books of all time, <em>The Grapes of Wrath</em> provides a very <em>human</em> perspective on the harsh lives of migrants, personified by the Joads &#8211; a family of poor sharecroppers from Oklahoma. Evicted from their family farm, just as the millions of Mexicans who have suffered enclosure from their land and become homeless and jobless because of NAFTA, the Joads travel to California in a desperate search of work, only to encounter the harassment of authorities and the hatred of the local population.</p>
<p>There are important differences between the &#8220;Okies&#8221; who traveled to the Southwest in the 1930s and Latino <em>migrantes</em> of the 2000s. The Joads, of course, were white, and did not cross a national border when they made their exodus. But at its core the story of the Joads is the story of the migrant workers, their troubles, their fears, but also their humanity, and their hope. It is a story that can inspire us to recognize the historic nature of the moment in which we live, understand why these enormous transformations are occurring, and recognize that justice for the immigrants is justice for everyone, regardless of color or citizenship status.</p>
<h4>Enclosure</h4>
<p>In order to understand the <em>migrantes</em> we first have to understand the story of their displacement, or the <em>enclosure</em> of their land, which has left them homeless and with no other options than to leave their homeland in search of a wage. What can <em>The Grapes of Wrath</em> tell us about this reality?</p>
<p>People usually do not resort to risky and desperate moves unless they have nothing left to lose. Steinbeck begins the Joads&#8217; story with the loss of everything they had: the small farm on which they had sustained their family for generations by growing cotton. Young Tom Joad, fresh out of prison, returns to his home to find it deserted. &#8220;The Reverend Casy and young Tom stood on the hill and looked down on the Joad place&#8230; Where the dooryard had been pounded hard by the bare feet of children and by stamping horses&#8217; hooves and by the broad wagon wheels, it was cultivated now, and the dark green, dusty cotton grew&#8230; &#8216;Jesus!&#8217; he said at last. &#8216;Hell musta popped here. There ain&#8217;t nobody livin&#8217; there.&#8217;&#8221; (51).</p>
<div class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 370px"><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/juan_de/2964543926/"><img title="campesino" src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3165/2964543926_3d810dc73e.jpg" alt="" width="360" height="284" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Mexican farmer with corn / image courtesy of &quot;© Juan_de&quot; on flickr</p></div>
<p>Whether as tenants or small landholders, either for subsistence or for markets, the vast majority of the poor <em>migrantes</em> now coming to this country are fleeing the loss of their farms and their livelihoods, just as the Joads. Perhaps for generations, maybe hundreds or even thousands of years, they had lived in connection with the land and had been able to depend on it for the survival of their families and culture. The loss of this land is devastating to those cultures, but larger forces stand to gain by driving these people into homelessness.<span id="more-1540"></span></p>
<p>The phenomenal book <em><a id="jr8t" title="Caliban and the Witch: Women, the Body, and Primitive Accumulation" href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2009/11/05/who-were-the-witches-patriarchal-terror-and-the-creation-of-capitalism/">Caliban and the Witch: Women, the Body, and Primitive Accumulation</a></em> (Autonomedia 2004) details the violent origins of capitalism in 15th-17th century Europe. In it, author Silvia Federici defines the &#8220;enclosures&#8221; that were necessary for giving birth to capitalism by divorcing the European peasantry from their traditional lands and leaving them with no other choice but to sell their labor for a wage in the emerging industrial economy.</p>
<div>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">&#8220;In the 16th century, &#8216;enclosure&#8217; was a technical term, indicating a set of strategies the English lords and rich farmers used to eliminate communal land property and expand their holdings. [In the footnote she quotes E.D. Fryde:] &#8216;[p]rolonged harassment of tenants combined with threats of evictions at the slightest legal opportunity&#8217; and physical violence were used to bring about mass evictions&#8230;&#8221; (69).</p>
</div>
<p>She goes on, revealing that this enclosure process remains a core element of the capitalist economy we live in:</p>
<div>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">&#8220;In the same way in which multinational corporations take advantage of the peasants expropriated from their lands by the World Bank to construct &#8216;free export zones&#8217; where commodities are produced at the lowest cost, so, in the 16th and 17th centuries, merchant capitalists took advantage of the cheap labor-force that had been made available in the rural areas to break the power of the urban guilds&#8230; As soon as they lost access to land, all workers were plunged into a dependence unknown in medieval times, as their landless condition gave employers the power to cut their pay and lengthen the working-day&#8221; (72).</p>
</div>
<p>Enclosure is precisely the part of the story we never hear about in the mainstream immigration debate in America. It is never questioned why hundreds of thousands of workers are scrambling to come to the U.S., other than for &#8220;our freedom&#8221; or to &#8220;take our jobs.&#8221; But Steinbeck boldly begins <em>The Grapes of Wrath</em> by highlighting the enclosure process as it operated in rural America during the Great Depression.</p>
<div class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 324px"><img title="greatdepression" src="http://www.countrylivingskills.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/great-depression.jpg" alt="" width="314" height="446" /><p class="wp-caption-text">This famous photograph shows a family of homeless migrants fleeing the &quot;Dust Bowl.&quot;</p></div>
<p>In the 1930s, Oklahoma was ground zero for the &#8220;<a id="v_23" title="Dust Bowl" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dust_Bowl">Dust Bowl</a>&#8220;. Unsustainable industrial farming practices such as the monoculture of cotton without crop rotation caused the soil to die, then be picked up by the wind and create enormous dust storms. On page 41, Steinbeck laments, &#8220;You know what cotton does to the land; robs it, sucks all the blood out of it.&#8221; The settling layers of dust killed the crops and made it harder for small farmers to earn a living, and many were driven into debt and became tenants on land that was then technically owned by the bank. At the same time, large, wealthy landowners were able to use tractors and other new farming machinery to replace the many tenants who had previously been needed to work the land. &#8220;Pa borrowed money from the bank, and now the bank wants the land. The land company &#8211; that&#8217;s the bank when it has land &#8211; wants tractors, not families on the land&#8221; (193).</p>
<p>In this passage, Steinbeck brilliantly exposes the evictions as part of the normal functioning of capitalism, as a land owner arrives to evict a tenant family:</p>
<div style="padding-left:30px;">&#8220;Some of the owner men were kind because they hated what they had to do, and some of them were angry because they hated to be cruel, and some of them were cold because they had long ago found that one could not be an owner unless one were cold. And all of them were caught in something larger than themselves&#8230;<br />
If a bank or a finance company owned the land, the owner man said, the Bank &#8211; or the Company &#8211; needs &#8211; wants &#8211; insists &#8211; must have &#8211; as though the Bank or the Company were a monster, with thought and feeling, which had ensnared them&#8230; [T]he owner men explained the workings and the thinkings of the monster that was stronger than they were. A man can hold land if he can just eat and pay taxes; he can do that. But &#8211; you see, a bank or a company can&#8217;t do that, because those creatures don&#8217;t breathe air, don&#8217;t eat side-meat. They breathe profits; they eat the interest on money. If they don&#8217;t get it, they die the way you die without air, without side-meat&#8230; The bank &#8211; the monster has to have profits all the time. It can&#8217;t wait. It&#8217;ll die. When the monster stops growing, it dies. It can&#8217;t stay one size&#8221; (40-42).</div>
<p>As far as capitalism is concerned, whatever will maximize profit is the arrangement that must be pursued, regardless of the human consequences. The situation in Mexico today resembles that of Oklahoma 75 years ago. Small family farms are no longer profitable enough, and people are being thrown off their land every year by the thousands.</p>
<p>The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), signed into law by Bill Clinton on December 8, 1993, created the largest &#8220;free trade&#8221; zone in the world: Canada, the United States, and Mexico. The treaty stipulated that there could be no &#8220;barriers to trade&#8221;, such as a tariff/tax on foreign products. In this video MIT professor Noam Chomsky, interviewed by Rage Against the Machine frontman Zack de la Rocha, explains how the modern enclosures in Mexico are a result of NAFTA, which has not had the effect it was promised to have for the U.S. and Mexican economies.</p>
<span style="text-align:center; display: block;"><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/05/25/reading-the-grapes-of-wrath-in-2010-immigration-capitalism-and-the-historic-moment-in-arizona/"><img src="http://img.youtube.com/vi/eg6Uog_8Lhw/2.jpg" alt="" /></a></span>
<p>As mentioned by Prof. Chomsky, one direct result of NAFTA was the flooding of the Mexican market with artificially cheap agricultural products from the United States, such as corn, which is heavily subsidized by the U.S. government. From 1990-2000, the price of corn in Mexico <a id="aa0s" title="fell by 58 percent" href="http://www.longislandwins.com/index.php/blog/post/oaxaca_trip_nafta_and_mexicos_small_farmers/">fell by 58 percent</a>, and as there is simply no way for the vast majority of Mexican tenant farmers to compete with this artificially low cost of American corn and other products, millions were driven into poverty and debt, and soon faced eviction.</p>
<p><a id="fxjn" title="This excellent article" href="http://www.foodfirst.org/node/45">This excellent article</a> from the Institute for Food &amp; Development Policy states that &#8220;Since NAFTA, 80 percent of rural Mexicans live in poverty, with 60 percent living in extreme poverty.&#8221; It also points out that as of 2004, a total of 1.7 million subsistence farmers had been pushed off their land because of NAFTA. So it should be no surprise that the number of Mexican immigrants entering the U.S. <a id="q:p4" title="increased by 75 percent" href="http://www.yesmagazine.org/issues/a-just-foreign-policy/reclaiming-corn-and-culture">increased by 75 percent</a> in the 5 years after NAFTA became law.</p>
<p>The form of enclosure has changed, but the fact has remained. People driven from their land will search for work in other places.</p>
<h4>Xenophobia</h4>
<p>The second great lesson <em>The Grapes of Wrath</em> reveals about the immigrants is how they are feared and hated, by the local population as well as the authorities, and what it means to endure and overcome this xenophobia.</p>
<div style="padding-left:30px;">&#8220;Once California belonged to Mexico and its land to Mexicans; and a horde of tattered feverish Americans poured in. And such was their hunger for land that they took the land &#8211; stole Sutter&#8217;s land, Guerrero&#8217;s land, took the grants and broke them up and growled and quarrelled over them, those frantic hungry men; and they guarded with guns the land they had stolen&#8230; And as time went on, the business men had the farms, and the farms grew larger, but there were fewer of them.<br />
Now farming became industry, and the owners followed Rome, although they did not know it. They imported slaves, although they did not call them slaves: Chinese, Japanese, Mexicans, Filipinos. They live on rice and beans, the business men said. They don&#8217;t need much. They wouldn&#8217;t know what to do with good wages. Why, look how they live. Why, look what they eat. And if they get funny &#8211; deport them.<br />
&#8230;<br />
And then the dispossessed were drawn west &#8211; from Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico; from Nevada and Arkansas families, tribes, dusted out, tractored out. Caravans, carloads, homeless and hungry; twenty thousand and fifty thousand and a hundred thousand and two hundred thousand. They streamed over the mountains, hungry and restless &#8211; restless as ants, scurrying to find work to do &#8211; to lift, to push, to pull, to pick, to cut &#8211; anything, any burden to bear, for food. The kids are hungry. We got no place to live&#8230;<br />
They had hoped to find a home, and they found only hatred. Okies &#8211; the owners hated them. And in the town, the storekeepers hated them because they had no money to spend&#8230; The town men, little bankers, hated Okies because there was nothing to gain from them. They had nothing. And the laboring people hated Okies because a hungry man must work, and if he must work, if he has to work, the wage payer automatically gives him less for his work; and then no one can get more.&#8221; (297-300)</div>
<p>Throughout the book, as the weary Joads meander west on their old jalopy, their eagerness and optimism about finding decent work and a better life in California are dashed against the rocks of poverty and hatred. Early in the book, Tom&#8217;s pregnant sister Rose-of-Sharon Joad goes on about her expectations for life in California.</p>
<div>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">&#8220;Well, we talked about it, me an&#8217; Connie&#8230; Connie gonna get a job in a store or maybe a fact&#8217;ry. An&#8217; he&#8217;s gonna study at home, maybe radio, so he can git to be an expert an&#8217; maybe later have his own store&#8230; An&#8217; Connie says I&#8217;m gonna have a <em>doctor</em> when the baby&#8217;s born; an&#8217; maybe I&#8217;ll go to a hospiddle. An&#8217; we&#8217;ll have a car, little car&#8230;&#8221; (212).</p>
</div>
<p>But shortly after crossing the border into California, the Joad family encounters the authorities, who are less than pleased by the arrival of more migrants into their state. After setting up camp by a river, Ma settles down for a nap in the tent, only to be disturbed by a law enforcement agent who gives her a threatening welcome.</p>
<div style="padding-left:30px;">&#8220;&#8216;Well, you ain&#8217;t in your country now. You&#8217;re in California, an&#8217; we don&#8217;t want you goddamn Okies settlin&#8217; down.&#8217;<br />
Ma&#8217;s advance stopped. She looked puzzled. &#8216;Okies?&#8217; she said softly. &#8216;Okies.&#8217;<br />
&#8216;Yeah, Okies! An&#8217; if you&#8217;re here when I come tomorra, I&#8217;ll run ya in.&#8217; He turned and walked to the next tent and banged on the canvas with his hand. &#8216;Who&#8217;s in here?&#8217; he said&#8221; (275).</div>
<div class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 368px"><a href="http://boingboing.net/2005/04/15/snapshots-of-volunte.html"><img title="minutemen" src="http://www.boingboing.net/images/minutemen/Minutemen3.jpg" alt="" width="358" height="238" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">&quot;Minutemen&quot; vigilantes patrol the U.S.-Mexico border / picture courtesy of boinboing</p></div>
<p>It becomes clear through the story that the California police and authorities tolerate the presence of the &#8220;Okies&#8221; so they can be exploited for their extremely cheap labor. Sheriffs and rangers even guard the grounds of large private farms where migrants are bussed in. However, the cops maintain a close eye on the Okies, and are not afraid to resort to violence when they step out of line.</p>
<p>The Joads arrive one night in a &#8220;Hooverville,&#8221; the name for the slums on the edges of towns during the Great Depression where unemployed would set up camp. Here a contractor comes to find desperate workers, escorted by a deputy sheriff with whom Tom Joad gets into an altercation.</p>
<div style="padding-left:30px;">&#8220;The contractor turned to the Chevrolet and called, &#8216;Joe!&#8217; His companion looked out and then swung the car door open and stepped out&#8230;<br />
&#8216;Ever see this guy before, Joe? He&#8217;s talkin&#8217; red, agitating trouble&#8230;&#8217;<br />
&#8216;Hmmm, seems like I have. Las&#8217; week when that used-car lot was busted into. Seems like I seen this fella hangin&#8217; aroun&#8217;. Yep! I&#8217;d swear it&#8217;s the same fella.&#8217; Suddenly the smile left his face. &#8216;Get in that car,&#8217; he said, and he unhooked the strap that covered the butt of his automatic.<br />
Tom said, &#8216;You got nothin&#8217; on him.&#8217;<br />
The deputy swung around. &#8221;F you&#8217;d like to go in too, you jus&#8217; open your trap once more. They was two fellas hangin&#8217; around that lot.&#8217;&#8221; (338-9).</div>
<p>The goal of the authorities in the story, as in the country today, is to keep immigrants in a constant state of precariousness, where they cannot make waves for fear of being imprisoned or deported. This climate of fear is the real effect of Arizona SB1070, not to actually deport all the undocumented workers from the state, because that would hurt the economy that depends on their cheap labor. In fact, this CNN video documents that SB1070 has already driven away too many workers from the state and hurting the businesses that had employed them. It seems it has backfired so much that even Russell Pearce, the author of the legislation, has now reversed his stance and is supporting &#8220;guest worker&#8221; legislation to invite undocumented workers back into the state.</p>
<span style="text-align:center; display: block;"><a href="http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/05/25/reading-the-grapes-of-wrath-in-2010-immigration-capitalism-and-the-historic-moment-in-arizona/"><img src="http://img.youtube.com/vi/es3hq0XM-cw/2.jpg" alt="" /></a></span>
<p>What does the climate of fear surrounding immigrants do for the U.S. capitalist economy and its ruling class?</p>
<p>First, it keeps undocumented immigrants in that precarious state where they will not seek help or point out injustices, nor will they try to organize unions and demand higher pay or working conditions. It guarantees they will mostly toil for less-than-minimum wages and suffer in silence. Most Americans are not even aware that since NAFTA was enacted, at least <a id="f4mz" title="3,000 Mexicans" href="http://www.citizenstrade.org/orftc-immigration.php">3,000 Mexicans</a> have died trying to cross the border. Every wall that goes up on the border drives the immigrants into more remote deserts to reach their destination, increasing the likelihood of injury and death, but precious few U.S. citizens are willing to stick their necks out to help prevent such unnecessary deaths.</p>
<p>Second, the xenophobia encouraged by measures like SB1070 is useful for the ruling class because it drives a racial wedge into the American working class. Instead of uniting to fight for better jobs, affordable education, health care, housing, an end to environmental nightmare and endless wars, the anger of the common people is directed at the scapegoat of the immigrant. Steinbeck illustrates this phenomenon when &#8220;a crowd of men&#8230; armed with pick handles and shotguns,&#8221; confront the Joads after they flee the Hooverville. Interrogating and threatening the Joad family, these self-styled vigilantes act just as the &#8220;Minutemen&#8221; who today rove the deserts of Arizona, looking for &#8220;illegals.&#8221;</p>
<p>Though these people&#8217;s anger and fear over the economy and lack of democracy in the U.S. is warranted, they are failing to confront the <em>actual</em> thieves and criminals who have plunged the world into a new Great Depression. Because by identifying &#8220;foreigners&#8221; and people with brown skin and different accents as the reason why wages are low and jobs are lost, corporations and politicians are able to deflect attention away from the real source of economic hardship: themselves.</p>
<h4>Conclusion</h4>
<p>The crisis in the Southwest in the 1930s is unfortunately similar to the situation today. Hundreds of thousands of poor migrants, their land enclosed and with nowhere to go, facing long trips through the heat of the desert and the ice of xenophobia, are nevertheless persisting to do what they need to do to feed their families.</p>
<p>There is a tidal wave coming north now, which resembles one that 3 generations ago came west, but like that one there will be no stopping it by putting up walls and threatening people with violence or deportation. Desperate people will always do what they need to do to survive.</p>
<p>The only way to stem the flow is to repair the dam that has burst, through poverty and enclosure. Latinos need decent livelihoods in Latin America before they will stop coming here, &#8220;scurrying to find work to do.&#8221; Repealing NAFTA and ending the massive corn subsidies for U.S. agribusiness would be two huge steps in the right direction. Rather than making the United States into a nasty place that no one will want to come to, why not focus on helping Mexico, Latin America and the world as a whole, to be suitable places to live, work and raise a family?</p>
<p><em>The Grapes of Wrath</em>, though it details the hardships of the migrant workers at great length, won the Pulitzer prize and captured the hearts of the nation because it is ultimately a hopeful book that inspires us to act for positive change. John Steinbeck, flexing his radical muscles, argues in the book that by targeting the weak and poor with desperate measures such as those currently being enacted in Arizona, capitalism is only putting off its inevitable demise. &#8220;The great owners ignored the cries of history.&#8221; &#8220;[Especially,] the little screaming fact that sounds through all history: repression works only to strengthen and knit the repressed.&#8221;</p>
<p>He explains:</p>
<div style="padding-left:30px;">&#8220;The land fell into fewer hands, the number of dispossessed increased, and every effort of the great owners was directed at repression. The money was spent for arms, for gas to protect the great holdings, and spies were sent to catch the murmuring of revolt so that it might be stamped out. The changing economy was ignored; and only means to destroy revolt were considered, while the causes of revolt went on. The tractors which throw men out of work, the machines which produce, all were increased; and more and more families scampered on the highways, looking for crumbs from the great holdings, lusting after the land beside the roads. The great owners formed associations for protection and they met to discuss ways to intimidate, to kill, to gas. And always they were in fear of a principal &#8211; three hundred thousand &#8211; if they ever move under a leader &#8211; the end. Three hundred thousand, hungry and miserable; if they ever know themselves, the land will be theirs and all the gas, all the rifles in the world won&#8217;t stop them.&#8221;  (306-7)</div>
<p>Many people today have heard the cries of history and are taking a stand. The website <a id="iy_g" title="Alto Arizona" href="http://altoarizona.com/">Alto Arizona</a> is coordinating a national day of action on Saturday, May 29 to repeal SB1070, which they call &#8220;a law that creates 21st century apartheid in the United States.&#8221; They invite us to &#8220;join the right side of history&#8221; by standing up for immigrants&#8217; rights and against racial profiling.</p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><img class="aligncenter" title="altoarizona" src="http://altoarizona.com/images/may-29-english-flyer_medium.gif" alt="" width="491" height="328" /></p>
<p>A wonderful note that&#8217;s currently circulating on Facebook from the <a id="k26l" title="Catalyst Project" href="http://www.collectiveliberation.org/">Catalyst Project</a> shows us ten ways, large and small, to meet this challenge:</p>
<div style="padding-left:30px;"><strong>&#8220;Stepping Up to the Historic Moment in Arizona&#8221;</strong></div>
<div style="padding-left:30px;">
<p>To our friends, families, and allies,</p>
<p>If you were a person of conscious or activist in 1960 when the student sit-in movement swept the country like wildfire, what would you have done? If you were an abolitionist in the 1850s when the Fugitive Slave Law was passed what would you have done? As people who work for justice and equality, we are living in a political moment of profound historic significance, and the question is “what will we do”.</p>
<p>Catalyst Project works in white communities to develop anti-racist leadership as a key component to building powerful, vibrant multiracial movements for justice. We believe that the racist anti-immigrant law SB 1070 passed in Arizona, and the massive wave of opposition throughout the country – from unions, faith communities, sports teams, cities, businesses, professional associations, high school and college students, fraternities, schools, and community groups – represents a historic opportunity for people who want to build a just world to take some major steps forward and for white anti-racists in particular to educate, mobilize and organize tens of thousands of white people to stand against racism and work for justice.</p>
<p>Catalyst believes that Arizona today is similar to what Alabama was for the 1960s. Just as the struggle over racially segregated apartheid in Alabama forced the country to take a stand for or against Civil Rights, the struggle in Arizona is forcing the country to take a stand for or against human rights. This is a movement moment and a time to take risks, bold action, and step up big time. To our white friends, family and allies we must organize visible alternatives to the Minute Men in white communities. We need to give white people opportunities to join the struggle for justice, and help build the national multiracial movement for justice.</p>
<p>WHAT YOU CAN DO</p>
<p>1. JOIN US IN ARIZONA! Join the Puente Movement in Phoenix, Arizona on May 29th for a Mega March and a National Day of Action against SB 1070. For more information on the local events and actions connected to the May 29 march, go to www.altoarizona.com or www.puenteaz.org, and watch this video: <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5gEK4l-GTw0" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5gEK4l-GTw0</a>. Can’t make it to Arizona on the 29th?</p>
<p>2. Join or Organize a Solidarity Action in Your Area for the 29th. If you cannot make it to Arizona go to www.altoarizona.com for toolkits on organizing a local rally or action and for bringing the campaign to you! Actions around the country are coming together.</p>
<p>3. In the San Francisco, Bay Area May 29th? The Arizona baseball team, the Diamondbacks (whose owner helps bankroll the right wing in Arizona) are playing the Giants in San Francisco. Protests against the Diamondbacks around the country help promote the Arizona Boycott, and help nationalize the struggle. In SF on the 29th, Assemble at Embarcadero at 4PM for March. March to and Protest at AT&amp;T Park at 5.15PM. The game starts at 6.05PM.</p>
<p>4. Fundraise. Fundraise. Fundraise. All of the expenses that go along with mounting a local and national campaign for justice are adding up. In addition to getting money to support on the ground organizing, fundraising is a great way to reach out to people in your community, family, and network increasing awareness and presenting opportunities to stand for justice by donating. Write emails and letters to people you care about and ask them to join you in supporting the movement for human rights in Arizona. Hold a dinner or party to raise money and let people know what’s going on. The best way to donate to, because it gets your money into the hands of the movement the fastest is here <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.puenteaz.org/" target="_blank">http://www.puenteaz.org/</a>.</p>
<p>5. Take a 60 Second Action Now! Send an urgent appeal to President Barack Obama, demanding federal intervention to defend civil rights in Arizona and across the country. Go to <a rel="nofollow" href="http://org2.democracyinaction.org/o/6190/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=2796" target="_blank">http://org2.democracyinaction.org/o/6190/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=2796</a>] Please urge your friends, family members and extended networks to join you in taking action for justice!</p>
<p>6. To help build for May 29th, and for future national mobilizations, reach out to people of color-led economic, racial, gender, and social justice groups locally and nationally who you support to see if thy are going to Arizona and if there are ways you can either volunteer to fundraise to help make it happen.</p>
<p>7. Join the U.S. for All of Us: No Room for Racism Network. U.S. for All of Us is a national network of white anti-racists groups and individuals taking action to counter the right wing and work for immigrant rights. Catalyst Project has been working with groups around the country to develop this network and we encourage you to get involved. Check it out here www.usforallofus.org</p>
<p>8. Gear Up For Summer. Organizers all over the country are clearing their schedules and preparing to spend the summer in Arizona. If you can go to AZ for 1-3 months, please contact Leah at US4AllofUsPhoenix@gmail.com and sign up: <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.altoarizona.com/" target="_blank">http://www.altoarizona.com/</a> to get announcements. If you have friends or family in Arizona, reach out to them seeing if they might be able to open their doors to organizers who need shelter while volunteers are there to work.</p>
</div>
<div style="padding-left:30px;">
<p>9. Let people in your life know about the actions you are taking. Let people know what you are standing up for human rights and share ways they can take action too. Use this moment to share your visions and values, step up your leadership as an anti-racist for collective liberation, and help other people join the movement.</p>
<p>10. Use these action steps to develop your leadership, connect to your vision, strengthen your relationships, practice your organizing, and build the movement for the long haul.</p>
</div>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">[Thanks to Beau Bibeau for sharing.]</p>
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		<title>We Can Live Without Capitalism</title>
		<link>http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/05/07/we-can-live-without-capitalism/</link>
		<comments>http://endofcapitalism.com/2010/05/07/we-can-live-without-capitalism/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 07 May 2010 17:51:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>alex</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Capitalism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Economic Crisis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[New World]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Resistance]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://endofcapitalism.com/?p=1530</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Disobeying the Banks: An Interview with Enric Duran by Scott Pierpont Originally published by the Institute for Anarchist Studies On September 17th, 2008, Barcelona-based anticapitalist Enric Duran announced that he had expropriated 492,000 euros. For several years, Duran took out loans that he never intended to pay back and donated all of the money to [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=endofcapitalism.com&amp;blog=1762754&amp;post=1530&amp;subd=endofcapitalism&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h4>Disobeying the Banks: An Interview with Enric Duran</h4>
<p>by Scott Pierpont</p>
<p>Originally published by the <a href="http://anarchist-studies.org/node/429" target="_blank">Institute for Anarchist Studies</a></p>
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<p><strong>On September 17th, 2008, Barcelona-based anticapitalist Enric Duran announced that he had expropriated 492,000 euros.</strong> For several years, Duran took out loans that he never intended to pay back and donated all of the money to social movements constructing alternatives to capitalism. This announcement came with the publication of 200,000 free newspapers called <em><a href="http://www.podem.cat/en/node/50">Crisi</a></em> (Catalan for “Crisis”), with an article explaining Duran’s action, and other pieces offering a systemic critique of the current financial and ecological crises. The action got the attention of tens of thousands of everyday people as well as major media outlets, who soon <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/sep/19/spain">dubbed</a> Duran the “Robin Hood of the Banks.” Duran left the country to avoid prosecution. The group that published the newspapers formed Podem Viure Sense Capitalisme (We Can Live With Out Capitalism) and began region-wide organizing through their website, <a href="http://podem.cat/">http://podem.cat</a>, bringing together debtors, squatters, alternative economy networks, environmentalists, and everyday people to build a large-scale alternative to capitalism.</p>
<p>Duran returned to Spain six months after the announcement to participate in the release of another publication. On March 17th, 300,000 copies of <em>Podem (We Can)</em> were distributed across Spain in Catalan as well as Spanish. Duran announced the publication during a student protest at the University of Barcelona, and was soon after arrested by the <em>Mossos d’Esquadra</em>, the Catalan regional police on charges of &#8220;ongoing fraud” that were brought against Duran by 6 of the 39 financial entities he took money from. He spent two months in jail. He is currently free on bail, having had his passport seized and required to present himself before a judge once a week. None of the charges have been formally brought to trial.</p>
<p>Since then, Duran has been organizing with the We Can campaign. Focused on networking and the distribution of information about alternatives to capitalism, We Can connects with thousands of people participating in alternative economy projects. Many use the group’s website, which includes a <a href="http://www.podem.cat/es/moroses">“Debtors’ Community”</a> where people get practical advice on how to avoid paying their debts. Duran has published a book, <em><a href="http://www.podem.cat/es/node/3207">Insumisión a la banca</a> (Disobeying the Banks)</em>, the proceeds from which go to We Can, and continues to give talks and participate in national networks on degrowth and alternative currencies.</p>
<p>This interview was taped in Barcelona in December 2009.</p>
<p><em>The announcement of your action (September 17th, 2008, two days after Lehman Brothers went down) coincided with a dramatic moment during the financial crisis. Was the date chosen for that reason?</em><br />
That was the goal, to coincide with a moment of ferment in the crises. When the action began at the end of 2005, the crisis hadn’t arrived yet. But the question became when to make it public so it would coincide with an important moment in the crisis. The end of my action was part of the plan, my strategy, by the summer of 2007, when the crisis began in the United States. In the end it was made public in September 2008, coinciding with the breakdown of the international financial order. It was a complete stroke of luck because it wasn’t possible to put an exact date, as we needed a month to prepare the publication and organize people to pass it out. It was really a stroke of luck.</p>
<p><em>And you planned this action for three years?</em><br />
Planning, no&#8230;it was three years of execution. Between 2005 and 2008 I carried out the various parts of this action. There was a period of research at the beginning, of figuring out how to do it, but very quickly I moved on to practice, because practice is the best way of experimenting and learning.</p>
<p><em>In your book you mentioned that this technique of taking out loans was inspired by someone you met who falsified pay stubs. But you also mentioned <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucio_Urtubia">Lucio Urtubia</a> and his <a href="http://towardfreedom.com/home/content/view/1332/1/">action against Citibank.</a> Do you consider your action an expropriation, just as Lucio’s action was?</em><br />
Yes, the principle examples were expropriations carried out in a non-aggressive way, an intellectual way, such as falsification, or taking out loans and not paying them back, as I did. I don’t know of any precedent involving loans in a political way, but I did have the example of that person who had told me about it before. So I guess the example of Lucio inspired my broader conception of expropriation and direct action, as did the examples of civil disobedience like Martin Luther King in the United States, or those in other countries who showed that public, illegal action can have a major impact on social consciousness.<span id="more-1530"></span></p>
<p><em>How did everyday people who received the publications Crisis and later We Can respond to your action?</em><br />
Well, when <em>Crisis</em> came out there was a lot going on and it was widely read&#8230;different types of people had heard on television or radio that a strange publication had appeared, and they wanted to find it. And <em>We Can</em>, well, there weren’t as many people seeking it out, but it enabled the people who were a bit interested to find resources and concrete information to utilize in their daily lives. So it didn’t affect as many people as <em>Crisis</em> although it was distributed across the Iberian peninsula. Its focus was on helping people who wanted to act.</p>
<p><em>Was there a media strategy for this action? Is there a tension between you receiving so much personal attention while We Can promotes collective action?</em><br />
Media pressure was a necessity for two reasons. On the one hand, it was indispensable to have a lot of people know about my case&#8230;it was my protection from police repression. On the other hand, it was to help create a debate, to arouse people’s curiosity, to get people talking. Afterwards&#8230;obviously the media always highlights individual figures more than collective ones, above all in social movements. This is something that always happens, and you have to know how to understand and utilize it. Although it’s lower quality information, people can learn about the social aims behind this person and&#8211;in this case&#8211;behind this type of action. A lot of people became interested in the movement with the publications, which reached a lot of people.</p>
<p><em>And the money itself, which you gave to various projects, do you think it’s been successful in promoting these sort of collective projects as a resource for social movements? </em><br />
Yes; at the moment, mostly on the local level. On the level of groups that get together to form consumer cooperatives, to start exchange networks, to live in a social center, to create an alternative media outlet, to start up a project in the countryside. I believe that I’ve contributed to the proliferation of projects like this and helped them gain more local self-organization. Also, I’ve contributed to the <a href="http://www.decreixement.net/">Catalan Degrowth Network</a> and other groups across Spain that have been forming recently. After all this, we’re still lacking the capacity to manage and coordinate these structures at a systemic level in order to break with capitalism. We won’t be able to do this with only small projects. With more coordination, it’s no longer just a matter of the impact of actions and consciousness, but also of our capacity and skill when it’s time to organize ourselves.</p>
<p><em>In the United States, levels of personal indebtedness are very high&#8211;personal credit, student loans, mortgages. What is the situation like here in Spain? </em><br />
Right now, the banks and savings banks have an average loan delinquency rate between 3 and 5 percent, which is already pretty serious, and it could always go higher. Before the crisis it was around 1 percent, and it always seemed like people were committed to paying their loans back, but now that respect is deteriorating little by little as people consider not paying them back. So I think this current situation could also accentuate the financial crisis.</p>
<p><em>Do you see a weakness in the financial system? Do you think that increasing the number of delinquent debtors is a viable strategy for weakening, or even taking down, capitalism? </em><br />
The weakness of the credit-based financial system is that it depends on people wanting to go into debt and&#8211;more importantly&#8211;being committed to paying those debts back, which is what keeps the system in control. If we’re able to create an alternative that extends beyond capitalism, people will see that they have the option of a life that doesn’t involve paying their debts back. This mechanism, this defect, could amplify our capacity to construct alternatives. A lot of people could use loans to set up alternatives and then quit paying them back, because it would be possible to live in a way that is “insolvent” for the system, but “solvent” for the people in these alternative ways of living.</p>
<p><em>Have people been explicitly inspired by your action, taking out loans without the intention of paying them back in order to promote alternatives?</em><br />
I think so, because people have asked me how, and I’ve told them&#8230;also, people can learn about it through my book without asking me. So, I’m pretty sure it’s being done, but it’s most likely that no one is doing it publicly because that’s safer, with less personal risk. And it’s not only people doing it like that; I think what’s even more common is people who at some point took out loans because they wanted to consume, because they wanted to have a mortgage, whatever&#8211;and now they see the utility in doing this to change their lives.</p>
<p><em>For people from the U.S., can you explain how the financial crisis has affected Spain? Besides We Can, how have social movements responded? </em><br />
There is a long standing, broad-based movement based on communist and Trotskyist ideas centered around making demands, putting pressure on power, and taking power. Facing a crisis, and in other mobilizations, it focuses on organizing what we can call “revolutionary subjects” and getting into the streets, building mass movements&#8230;that’s what they’re always trying to do. I think this is relatively limited and doesn’t have the capacity to extend itself, as more and more people get tired of being pulled along by mass movements as just a number. I think there’s more success in proposals that take the route of personal change, changing values, coherence between ways of thinking and ways of living, constructing alternatives in distinct parts of one’s life, and other ways of living. This was going on earlier as a result of the antiglobalization movement, but now that the crisis has worsened it’s attracting a lot more people and more projects are developing. Another interesting thing to point out is that debtors, especially people with mortgages, are facing a problem without a solution and are organizing to put pressure on the banks. We try to support them, not only to pressure the banks, but to take advantage of this situation to leave capitalism. But for people without a previous commitment to social movements, it’s more attractive to pressure, mobilize, and find a solution that’s not so radical&#8230;your normal life stays how it was.</p>
<p><em>What’s is the current extent of social democracy (health care, welfare) in Spain? How do these state programs interact with the goals of self-management and autonomy?</em><br />
Let’s see, what’s free? Health care is free for citizens, including the unemployed. Education and textbooks are free or inexpensive. Transportation is expensive although it’s public. There is public media, and a few other things. Grants generally have the effect of limiting the freedom of projects attempting to construct alternatives, so groups truly interested in social transformation try to avoid them. In Barcelona or in other large cities there are a lot of groups that function without grants, although perhaps in smaller towns there are more. So you could say that there is a large autonomous movement here, outside of the administration of the state and the market.</p>
<p><em>Moving on to your current efforts, what is the group We Can? </em><br />
We Can Live Without Capitalism is a platform that started as a campaign to help everyone who wants to take their first steps, or next steps, in taking capitalism out of their lives. This is done by distributing information about experiences that can function as examples, and by putting people in contact with projects or people who want to participate in projects. We have to make a path out of capitalism collectively. Basically, we dedicate ourselves to compiling information in publications, distributing them, organizing meetings so people can meet one another, and organizing campaigns such as the bank users’ strike, or others that make people’s local work easier.</p>
<p><em>We Can works in a lot of different areas&#8211;alternative food systems, the bank users’ strike, the neo-rural movement&#8211;what do you consider to be the most important?</em><br />
Let’s see&#8230;numerically, I’d say that it would be the work around banks, since a lot of people can participate on an individual level. Alternative economy projects are clearly important for social transformation, because the alternative economy cuts across all of the other alternatives and is the way to create alternatives in daily life. Lately, work on re-population [moving from cities to live and/or squat in rural areas] has been attracting a lot of people because it’s a way of organizing people to the countryside. It’s also connected to work around the cession of lands [“right to use” agreements recently legalized by the Catalan regional government] for agricultural production.</p>
<p><em>And what’s been the most successful?</em><br />
Well&#8230;.it’s still early to say. As I was saying, what we have success with is the self-organization of people; We Can doesn&#8217;t have a lot of projects of its own, but we’ve helped in creating a lot of projects, in assisting people to start their own&#8230;I think this is an important project. At one time the bank users’ strike was successful, above all in getting money deposited in ethical banks. Like I mentioned, there have been a lot of local projects: alternative economy projects, consumer cooperatives, exchange markets, re-population projects&#8230;.</p>
<p><em>What are the historical and theoretical inspirations for We Can?</em><br />
Historical&#8230;well, a reference that’s very present here is the attempt at an anarchist revolution, and everything that came before the Spanish Civil War, which was a process of challenging the system at that time, producing ever-increasing levels self-management, self-organization, and life outside of capitalism. But later there is a second reference, the squatter movement and the whole movement for the self-management of daily life that came out of the 1980s and 1990s on a small scale. I think that the current decade has seen a boom in these movements in a lot places, but especially here in Barcelona. So sometimes We Can feels like the creation of a new theory, one that has a lot of references in other projects that are going on locally, but less in earlier history, which is unknown to a lot of people.</p>
<p><em>How are decisions made within We Can? </em><br />
Well We Can is, above all, a space for coordination that facilitates work in networks among people and groups, so our tasks are very practical. Then there are responsibilities to carry out for the distinct areas of work, mostly putting people in contact and providing tools. It functions with a lot of autonomy: there are very small work groups that have meetings among themselves, but there are few large meetings except for the occasional autonomous assembly to draw up a plan for what we want to work on and how we want to do it. After that, there’s a lot of trust in people finding one another, day in and day out&#8230;it’s a very decentralized way of doing things.</p>
<p><em>While it’s difficult to avoid speaking in demographic terms, what parts of the population does We Can work with? </em><br />
It’s a diverse group of people; generally people in the large cities tend to be young, and in smaller towns we work with older people, middle-aged people as well. Often it’s neo-rural people, or people who expressly moved to the countryside and stayed in touch with social movements. Also, there’s the specific experience of our work with debtors and people affected by banks, so we interact with people who don’t have any relationship to social movements, people of all ages, which is distinct from the people active in other parts of We Can.</p>
<p><em>How many people are involved in alternative economic networks, if not with We Can specifically?</em><br />
It’s hard to say. Out of 6.5 million inhabitants in Catalonia there are probably 100,000 or 150,000, but that’s just a guess. It’s hard to know because we’re only scratching the surface&#8230;some of the people we’re in touch with have other relationships, but others don’t. We have about 4,000 or 5,000 direct contacts.</p>
<p><em>How has We Can extended outwards? Or, put another way, why is it concentrated in Catalonia?</em><br />
Well, it’s been progressive. Before We Can there was the Degrowth Network that we started in Barcelona and then extended to all of Catalonia. Later, with the <em>We Can Live Without Capitalism</em> publication we started to work pretty much continually with people across the Iberian peninsula as well as with people from across the world. This is “spiral politics,” where there are more ties at the local level, and it extends progressively outwards with less and less ties. So the reason that it’s happened here is perhaps because Catalonia&#8211;within Europe or within the Iberian peninsula&#8211;has a lot of social movements, but we don’t pretend to be connected with all of them.</p>
<p><em>A lot of organizing is done through your participatory website. How many people use it? Is We Can explicitly informed by Web 2.0 or network organizing, in technical terms? </em><br />
Yeah, we use the website as a space for working in networks, a space for debate, for making some decisions among people working together on a project. The online forms especially have made it easier for people to get their information to us, and we’ve been able to put people in contact based on that. We also receive a lot of email: generally 10 to 20 different people write us directly each week with questions, ideas, doubts. Compared with the number of projects we’re organizing directly, that’s a lot.</p>
<p><em>Is We Can criticized by other social movements?</em><br />
There’s a lot of criticism here, but little of it is made public. The concept of degrowth&#8211;and consequentially We Can is criticized by some, such as Marxists and insurrectionists who criticize the theoretical foundation of degrowth in France. But they’re criticizing something distinct from what’s happening in Catalonia. And, in terms of concrete critiques&#8230;well, there are some internal debates, and criticism toward everything, but few are made public.</p>
<p><em>What is degrowth? </em><br />
Degrowth is a current of ideas coming out of France since the beginning of the decade that’s been clearly influenced by the international ecology movement, as well as the critique of developmentalism and the West’s colonization of the world, of <em>pensée unique</em>. It criticizes economic growth for growth’s sake and exponential growth. Taking into account that continued growth is impossible, it proposes a “welcomed degrowth” or a “pleasant degrowth.” That is, a transition to a more locally oriented society, a society with more community, less impact on the environment, less consumption, less work, more free time, and a set of values that encourage social redistribution and balance with the planet.</p>
<p><em>What does the degrowth movement do in Spain?</em><br />
The degrowth movement tries to create practices related to these ideas, and tries to encourage and support the practices that already happen spontaneously and autonomously. A lot of the work is coordination among movements, among political currents, and trying to build a focus on a comprehensive transition so it’s not each issue related to alternatives to capitalism being worked out in isolation. We don’t focus on grand theoretical alternatives, but rather on spaces for coordinating practical alternatives to capitalism that will have to come together day in, day out, so that we can take steps to free ourselves from the current system.</p>
<p><em>Is the degrowth movement concentrated in big cities, or is it a neo-rural, back-to-the-land movement, or both?</em><br />
There’s this interesting coexistence between important activities happening in rural areas, especially among neo-rural people, and activities in urban areas&#8211;mostly encouraging debate, but also promoting alternatives in cities. There’s a rich exchange, a complementary exchange, between what’s happening in rural areas and urban areas.</p>
<p><em>In your opinion, what does the discourse of degrowth contribute to social movements, especially those that have come from the Left tradition that has always demanded more? What does it mean, in a way, to demand less?</em><br />
Looking beyond degrowth, and taking a perspective that’s pragmatic and trusting of the capacity for self-organization, I’d say that in Spain&#8211;and above all in Catalonia with the Degrowth Network and We Can&#8211;we forget to take a pragmatic perspective on autonomy and leaving capitalism. In this sense degrowth contributes a constructive perspective, one of coordinating many alternatives without abandoning demands, above all demands that lead to a transition to another society, such as controlling land and public transportation, and having renewable energy. Any number of demands can be made&#8211;not in a reformist way, but rather so that things can be recovered and collectivized for the people. So up to this point, the construction of alternatives is what’s being advanced. There’s still a long way to go in constructing systematic alternative economies, but when the movement is stronger, it will be able to have an impact on the common resources that will need to be recovered for society.</p>
<p><em>What is a counterhegemonic economy?</em><br />
This is a term we’ve created to describe an economy that’s not only an alternative to capitalism, but rather an economy that starts out coexisting with capitalism, then tries to organize itself to take advantage of capitalism in order to leave it. It’s a transition economy that starts out without hegemony, but has the goal of achieving hegemony&#8211;it’s something very small that’s transformed into a large impact. So it isn’t organized as if capitalism didn’t exist, but rather it takes what it can from capitalism in order to construct something else.</p>
<p><em>Do you think that counterhegemonic economies are the best revolutionary strategy?</em><br />
I don’t know if it’s the best strategy, but I think it’s necessary. Any strategy for transformation has to include the capacity to construct ways of living outside of capitalism before any revolution. That’s to say: We have to live how we think, we have to live how we believe, we have to construct experiences and micro-societies that demonstrate in practice that our ideas are viable. From there we can go on to collectively convince an important part of the population. It’s clear that there might be a conflict at some point&#8211;it’s more than likely that it will be necessary at the end&#8211;but we can only win this conflict if we’ve already constructed wide-reaching ways of living that are different. Because if we haven’t, if we win in a so-called “elite revolution,” then life will still be capitalist and ego-driven because people will not have changed their values. This is the first step we have to take, and it’s a fundamental strategy for social change.</p>
<p><em>How can these spaces of life outside of capitalism, of non-capitalist life, transmit the best of these experiences to people who still have lives dictated by work and rent?</em><br />
By showing that people can live better lives this way, that these projects really solve people’s problems. Showing that it’s easier to find work in the alternative economy than in the official economy, that it’s easier to find housing in the alternative economy than in the official economy. When these are solutions, a lot of people will sign up. One real, practical example is worth more than a thousand words. That’s the idea&#8230;</p>
<p><em>Are there contemporary examples anywhere in the world of an economy that’s not alternative, but counterhegemonic?</em><br />
Well, there are examples that incorporate parts of that, especially in Latin American countries, such as the Zapatistas or the Landless Workers’ Movement in Brazil. They’re mostly in rural areas, with indigenous people and campesinos participating. There are fewer alternatives in urban environments, and I think that it’s fundamental to construct examples of alternatives that function in cities, project that show that this transition can happen in large cities. This is a priority for us now.</p>
<p><em>Finally, any suggestions for social movements in the U.S.?</em><br />
Well, work together in networks and organize yourselves&#8230;and don’t think of only your small group or project, because you can go a lot further if you coordinate and communicate with other groups. If you work in a network, many people can apply what one person or group has learned. And if you have a serious commitment to social change, it’s really important to dedicate part&#8211;or all&#8211;of your time to working in a network with lots of other groups.</p>
<p><em>Scott Pierpont is a translator and alternative-media enthusiast based in Philadelphia, PA. He can be reached at <a href="mailto:scott.pierpont@zoho.com">scott.pierpont@zoho.com</a>. </em></p>
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