[Marxism-Thaxis] 30 year papers trailer for Dame Stella

2001-01-01 Thread Chris Burford

In Britain under the 30 year rule, a  bundle of secret government papers of 
1970 have been partially made public.

Some of these show the extent of espionage around the dockers' strike. The 
Guardian report suggests that more information may be published by the 
former head of MI5 when her book comes out later this year.



>Focused mainly on the role of communists and their allies in the strike - 
>which was led by the then TGWU general secretary, Jack Jones - the reports 
>reveal the extent of MI5's undercover penetration and surveillance of the 
>left at the time and contain a relatively sophisticated analysis of the 
>private differences among the dockers' leaders.
>
>Their release comes at a time when Stella Rimington, who headed MI5 in the 
>early 1990s, is about to publish her memoirs in the teeth of fierce 
>resistance in Whitehall.
>
>Dame Stella worked for MI5's political subversion department, F branch, in 
>the early 1970s, when its role was massively expanded in response to 
>increasing industrial militancy on the left. She later headed MI5's 
>"counter-subversion" operations against the 1984-85 miners' strike.
>
>The 1970 docks strike was the first of a series of increasingly effective 
>stoppages during the Heath administration, which culminated in the miners' 
>strike of 1974, the three-day week and the Tories' electoral defeat.
>
>The MI5 briefings on the July docks walkout - passed to the prime minister 
>every couple of days and based on agents' reports, phone tapping and 
>bugging - include accounts of private meetings between Communist party 
>officials and dockers' shop stewards and even internal discussions about 
>the editorial line of the Morning Star, described as "the subject of much 
>anxious consideration".


Perhaps Dame Stella and Melita Norwood could jointly host a Truth and 
Reconciliation Commission.




Chris Burford

London




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[Marxism-Thaxis] Further blow to death penalty

2000-12-28 Thread Chris Burford

re previous exchanges with Charles, I thought it worth reporting how this 
item got selected for British news reports. Perhaps it does not stand out 
in the US press but to British and perhaps European eyes it looks scandalous.

The worst thing is you must be killing innocent people who do not get 
released.


Michael Roy Graham Jr was released after 13 years on death row because of 
what Louisiana prosecutors called a "total lack of credible evidence".

Long term, even the massively culturally self-sufficent and smug USA must 
start becoming aware of the way this sort of behaviour is regarded in other 
parts of the world - as barbarity.

Since Bush is a active practitioner of the death penalty, would not a civil 
rights campaign on this issue, put him on the defensive?

Chris Burford

London



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[Marxism-Thaxis] Oil and theory of capitalist crises

2000-09-23 Thread Chris Burford

Mark made another important point in his post of 14 Sept (S11) which I 
wanted to come back to. (The intensity of Mark's posts and the quality of 
his information makes it difficult to keep up, but the problems of the 
global economy will not go away anyway, so here goes.)

I accept the broad case Mark argues, for example in his persuasive piece "A 
New Energy Crisis" of 13th Sept. Also the Crash List has been pursuing this 
theme, and among other things I have picked up from there, I agree the 
arguments first presented by Hubbert, and now called the Hubbert Curve, 
about the peak of oil production.

www.hubbertpeak.com

However the point I wanted to come back to seems to be not quite right from 
a marxist point of view, or if it is right, it raises some interesting 
questions about how to apply the marxist theory of crises to the present 
phenomena.

Mark wrote:

>to anyone who's done their
>homework this cannot hide the fact that (since 1973 at least)
>energy-shortages have been behind economic cycles, have
>led to the collapse of the Soviet Union and to
>3 mideast wars, and are now resulting in the Fourth and Final Oil Shock

Now the marxist theory of capitalist crises, as I understand it, describes 
the endless tendency for surplus value to accumulate more surplus value, to 
the business cycle accelerating until it reaches its rate- limiting step in 
the

contradiction between capitalist accumulation and the limited purchasing 
power of the masses of working people.

There are sub-phases to this as stocks of overproduced commodities 
accumulate, which usually first trigger a financial crisis, before a 
general economic crisis ensues, with the destruction of a significant 
amount of capital, living and dead.

This theory of crises depends on exploitation of labour power. Marx 
recognises exploitation of resources too, but his theory of capitalist 
crises is not dependent on them.

Mark's point above is compelling enough in that a short supply of a basic 
commodity like oil may imperil the profitability of certain sectors of the 
economy short of a general economic crisis of capitalism. But it would be 
theoretically risky to substitute important ecological arguments for the 
marxian theory of crises.

That theory is independent of what technology is used by capitalism. Indeed 
it presumes constant revolutionising of the means of production under 
capitalism.

  Mark is persuasive about the arguments that the human race is coming up 
against the finite limits of extractable oil.  But that does not 
necessarily unfortunately mean the end of capitalism.

Capitalism wobble as a result. But if you don't push it, it won't fall.


Chris Burford





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Re: M-TH: Fwd: Mongolian CP wins in a Landslide

2000-07-05 Thread Chris Burford

At 10:34 05/07/00 -0400, you wrote:
>Communists reclaim power in Mongolia vote
>Landslide victory could limit freedoms, analysts say
>
>By Jeremy Page, Reuters, 7/4/2000
>
>
>ULAN BATOR, Mongolia - Mongolia's former communist rulers have been swept
>back to power in a landslide election victory, state media said yesterday,
>crushing the forces that helped usher in democracy a decade ago.
>
>
>State radio said the Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party, or MPRP, had
>won 72 of 76 seats up for grabs in Sunday's election to Parliament, or Great
>Hural.


That is a fine victory in a country that will be seen in the west as quite 
peripheral to the global capitalist economy. Presumably the population also 
feel secure that Russia and China, may provide some insulation against its 
worst effects.

The report is written in such a fashion as to imply it may be the end of 
"democracy" once again. But that bias should be questioned. Presumably the 
MPRP should be able to win future elections even in a more diversified 
economy, without having to restrict basic democratic rights. Who owns the 
media, might be a crucial question.

Chris Burford

London





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M-TH: Livingstone claims money for London

2000-07-03 Thread Chris Burford

On the day of his inauguration as Mayor of London, Livingstone played the 
populist card by claiming that every Londoner, man, woman, and child, pays 
£50 a week in subsidy to other parts of the country.

This amounts to over £19 billion per year.

Livingstone is good at popularising statistics and the arithmetic no doubt 
backs him. However the argument is in essence chauvinistic.

It is similar to the argument that the rich developed countries have the 
greatest financial stake in the IMF and in the United Nations and should 
therefore have a disproportionate influence on the world economy.

London and the South East of England is overwhelmingly the richest part of 
England, although there are islands of poverty. It illustrates the economic 
concept of regional city centred economic zones which form the basis of the 
European Union's economic planning.

The volume of commercial traffic may be greatest at the centre, and 
therefore the wealth greatest, but the regional market must be considered 
as a whole. Without the large poorer penumbra there would be a much smaller 
market for the centre to sell to, and exploit. Without a pool of cheaper 
labour moving gradually towards the centre, wage costs would rise more 
rapidly and cut the upturn short each time in the capitalist upturn. The 
law of value must be interpreted dynamically in the economic area as a whole.

Without a concept of the non-equilibrium nature of regional economies, and 
indeed the global economy, the left will be vulnerable to the sort of 
populist interventions of people like Ken Livingstone.

Chris Burford

London



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M-TH: Livingstone backs Euro

2000-07-02 Thread Chris Burford

Ken Livingstone is already supping with capitalism with not too long a spoon.

Due to be formally invested on Monday as London Mayor of London, Ken 
Livingstone  told GMTV's The Sunday Programme that he was in discussion 
with major international firms who have investment programmes planned in 
the UK. "They are all working on one assumption, that is we will be in the 
Euro by 2003," he said. "If we are not...they will be rethinking their 
investment plans, I have no doubt about that. Any sign that we were pulling 
back from that assumption we are on our way in would be devastating for 
jobs in London."

"We have got to play on a world stage. One third of firms in Britain now 
link in to International Corporations. You can't opt out of the world. You 
can't stop the world because we want to get off and go back to the 1950s."

His argument, and that of John Monks, head of the British Trades Union 
Congress, is to support industry, including industrial capitalism, against 
finance capitalism. And not just national industrial capital.

Nissan warned earlier this week that jobs could be under threat unless 
Britain joins the single currency.

Mr Monks said that there were "quite a lot of Nissans. Toyota have been 
saying the same sort of thing and we know it was a factor behind the BMW 
decision in relation to Longbridge.

Is this a compromise too far?

ust because Lenin said it, does not make it right, but he did say "From 
their daily experience the masses know perfectly well the value of 
geographical and economic ties and the advantage of a big market and a big 
state."

That of course does not mean that people with socialist credentials should 
become the cheer leaders of industrial capital. But do not the arguments of 
Livingstone and Monks stand on their own merits?

Chris Burford

London



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M-TH: e-government

2000-06-28 Thread Chris Burford

Power without guns? The withering away of the state?

Extract from article in the Economist below

Chris Burford

London



SURVEY  GOVERNMENT AND THE INTERNET



IN DOWNTOWN Phoenix, Arizona, people are queuing
in a grubby municipal office to renew their car and truck
registrations. They are visibly bored and frustrated, but
what can they do? All over the world, people dealing with
government departments and agencies are having to engage
in dreary and time-consuming activities they would much
rather avoid.

What is unusual about Arizona is that the locals have a
choice. Since 1996, a pioneering project called
ServiceArizona has allowed them to carry out a growing
range of transactions on the web, from ordering
personalised number plates to replacing lost ID cards.
Instead of having to stand in a queue at the motor vehicle
department, they can go online and renew their registrations
24 hours a day, seven days a week, in a transaction that
takes an average of two minutes.

What is more, ServiceArizona has not cost taxpayers a
cent to set up, and is free to users. The website was built
and is maintained and hosted by IBM, which is being paid
2% of the value of each transaction—about $4 for each
vehicle registration. But because processing an online
request costs only $1.60, compared with $6.60 for a
counter transaction, the state also saves money. With 15%
of renewals now being processed by ServiceArizona, the
motor vehicle department saves around $1.7m a year.



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Re: M-TH: Zimbabwe

2000-06-25 Thread Chris Burford

At 10:30 24/06/00 +0100, you wrote:
>It is clear as to how the Zimbabwe economy is in such a shabby condition.
>Despite a mineral rich country it suffers tremendous economic problems. The
>fact that these mineral resources are largely owned by imperialist companies
>helps explain why the country is so relatively backward.
>
>Comradely regards
>George


The high turnout suggests the opposition claims are true that many people 
are disaffected by the economy, and feel intimidated from expressing their 
opposition to Zanu publically.

However from England I think the main thing is to separate ourselves from 
the publicity designed to ridicule or demonise the quite reasonable demand 
of Zanu for a redistribution of the land of the white colonial farmers, who 
are producing a poisonous cash crop for export dollars.

The blame for the state of the Zimbabwean economy should lie on the global 
financial system rather than on Mugabe.

I am doubtful that a win for the MDC will really see progressive change.

Chris Burford

London




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M-TH: Football and finance capitalisml

2000-06-21 Thread Chris Burford

If Rupert Murdoch was watching the England game last night, no doubt on one 
of his Sky TV channels, he must be a confused man.

How come the richest league in football, the English, could perform so 
badly? Especially after he had invested so much money in it?

Just as off piste is more exciting in skying, so off pitch in football was 
the real site of the most dramatic battles. Could national governments spot 
all known criminals and racists from getting to the football venues, what 
strength of beer would be available, should cafe's have tables and chairs 
available facing the main town square, how did the Belgian police team 
compare with the Dutch police team for pace, coordination and results?

Keegan's strategy was to pick the best English players from the league, 
(not that brilliant) and to try to get them to play together. But they 
lacked ability to work as a team. In his post-mortem they lacked ability to 
trust each other to pass the ball. So smaller and poorer countries like 
Portugal and Romania showed much more overall team ability.

These are the fruits of treating individual players as individual atomised 
commodities, bought and sold between companies backed by finance capitalism 
for the highest fee.

Also in broader Gramscian terms it shows the bankruptcy of Little 
Englandism as an ideology, with supporters from nations like England, 
outside European civility, sitting handcuffed in the main town squares 
continent protesting that allowances should be made for their behaviour 
because their grandfathers allegedly won the last world war.

Finance capital will have to think again where it puts its money. In 
particular in British politics it will now be subtly important how strongly 
Murdoch's paper, the Sun, continues to play the card of little England 
jjingoism, in an attempt to prevent the Labour government from joining the 
European currency union.

Chris Burford

London




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Re: M-TH: Communism gains acceptance in Japan

2000-06-19 Thread Chris Burford

At 12:43 18/06/00 -0400, you wrote:
>Communism gains acceptance in Japan
>
>  Economic problems turn voters away from mainstream parties
>
>  By Sharon Moshavi, Globe Correspondent, 6/18/2000


Interesting article and hopeful, if old prejudices are dying out. But the 
developments here must be qualified in many ways.

They sound similar to the gradual relative rise in respect and 
acceptability for the Communist Party of Italy. That went hand in hand with 
developments in Eurocommunism, and also with changes of name. Although the 
official policy is not to change the name of the CPJ, it is not surprising 
the question has come up.

The article is accompanied by many protestations against anything that may 
sound like the dictatorship of the proletariat. Ultimately force lies 
behind much of politics. Tactically and strategically I am sure the CPJ is 
right not to imply it will be the first to use force. But from this 
bourgeois report it could be more explicit about how it is going to 
neutralise the force of the enemy.

It appears to be attracting votes as a sort of protest party concentrating 
on local activism. It sounds the equivalent in English terms of a cross 
between the Liberal Democrats and Ken Livingstone.

Gathering together all the threads of discontent is a strategy which has 
Lenin's stamp of approval, and they appear to be occupying a viable niche 
here, but it is not really communism.

Or is it?

The report is reminiscent of the situation which Marx and Lenin described 
in the early 1840's in Germany when all different strata called themselves 
communists. The CPJ seems to be angling for a return to that sort of 
acceptance.

After all Jesus was a communist, and different sorts of communists have 
surfaced in different social conditions throughout history.

How does the CPJ deal with class contradictions, and finance capital?

Chris Burford

London





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Re: M-TH: Is Chris Buford here?

2000-06-03 Thread Chris Burford

No, Chris Burford is not here.

Or only here long enough to say that I am going away for a week.



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Re: M-TH: SACP statement on general strike

2000-05-27 Thread Chris Burford

At 15:11 25/05/00 -0400, you wrote:
>SACP salutes South African workers
>
>Workers in South Africa staged a general strike May 10 under the 
>leadership of the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU). 
>Following is a statement issued by the South African Communist Party 
>(SACP) on the strike.
>
>* * * *
>
>All reports indicate massive and enthusiastic support for the general 
>strike against job losses and for job creation. The SACP salutes the South 
>African working class, under the revolutionary leadership of COSATU, for 
>today's actions.

I would be surprised if a trade union organisation could give revolutionary 
leadership.  But this does look a very pointed stance by the SACP against 
the ANC government.

They say the strike is in essence against capitalism, but there are no 
points made here about the IMF and the domination of global finance capital.

Mbeki will say very reasonably, that there is no alternative to the 
governments policies, while the South African economy is dependent on the 
credibility of the Rand in the eyes of the handlers of finance capital.

Can the SACP square this circle?

Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: Russian 'intervention' in Afghanistan

2000-05-25 Thread Chris Burford

At 06:44 23/05/00 +1000, Rob wrote:

>I see Moscow is threatening to drop some bombs on Afghanistan because the
>Taliban is allegedly (and unsurprisingly) helping out the Chechen
>separatists.

This is consistent with 100 years of imperial assumptions by Russia towards 
Afghanistan. It is no accident that Putin had himself inaugurated in the 
throne room of the Czars.

(British imperial history makes the contested nature of Afghanistan between 
different empries quite clear. At least Britain got a thrashing early on.)

Policy towards Afghanistan has been one of the big crunches on the left, 
with certain allegedly marxist groups supporting the Russian invasion of 
1970 and the Brezhnev doctrine of limited sovereignty.

Unfortunately a large section of the left in the USA and in Europe will 
once again feel indulgent towards Russia because Afghanistan has 
undemocratic practices towards women.



>  the
>hegemons du jour prefer their foreign radicals to be of the right - as
>Trotsky warned when the boy Hitler first came under notice

Can you explain this reference?


>  - and as Caspian
>oil projections might recommend).


Can you explain again.

Too eliptical.

Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: British intervention in Sierra Leone

2000-05-12 Thread Chris Burford

At 08:43 12/05/00 +0100, you wrote:
>In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Chris
>Burford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes
>
> > What Jim is
> >opposing is any discrimination between the different actions of imperialist
> >powers as to which are progressive and which are not. This is childish
> >leftism, ridiculed by Lenin.
>
>Progressive imperialism? I have often been criticised for insisting on
>the persistence of progressive trends within capitalism, such as the
>(intermittent) development of productivity, but it would not have
>occurred to me to insist on the progressive aspect of imperialism.


On the internetit is possible to  learn something everyday.

Of course it does not mean it is correct just because Lenin had the 
thought, but his argument seems a credible one:-

"Imperialism is as much our 'mortal' enemy as is capitalism. That is so. No 
Marxist will forget, however, that capitalism is progressive compared with 
feudalism and that imperialism is progressive compared with pre-monopoly 
capitalism."

An occurrence has just occurred in Jim H's brain.

Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: British intervention in Sierra Leone

2000-05-10 Thread Chris Burford

At 08:34 10/05/00 +0100, Jim heartfield wrote:

>In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Chris
>Burford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes
> >IMO this particular British involvement is progressive and is part of the
> >developing process of world governance, so long as it assists the UN and
> >the West African peace keeping force to re-organise. I say that, conscious
> >at this moment, that the British government deserves strong criticism for
> >its interference in the developing land redistribution in Zimbabwe.
>
>Well, its hardly surprising. Chris has lined up behind ever imperialist
>venture in the post-cold war world by my recollection.

Cheap shots are part of the internet, but you only have to look at the last 
passage that Jim quoted, to see that this is a cheap shot. What Jim is 
opposing is any discrimination between the different actions of imperialist 
powers as to which are progressive and which are not. This is childish 
leftism, ridiculed by Lenin.

Cannot he see for example a progressive side to the pressure the west 
brought on Croatia, to remove the repressive and racist features of 
Tudjman's regime and accept bourgeois democratic norms?

This refusal to discriminate between positive and negative policies of 
imperialism is consistent with the Trotskyist view that opposed 
participation in the Second World War, something steadfastly propagated by 
the owner of "the" Marxism list.


>It is not the subjective intentions of the imperialists that makes
>imperialism

Of course. That is why even when we see a positive feature in their 
policies, we do not "line up" behind them.

Chris Burford

London



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M-TH: British intervention in Sierra Leone

2000-05-09 Thread Chris Burford

One of the ways the world could make reparations to Africa is by giving 
support to the democratic resolution of its conflicts.

This Time article characteristically pinpoints a dilemma for western 
capitalist governments.

>   May 9, 2000
>
>   By Tony Karon
>
>   In Kosovo, the West went to war to stop ethnic 
> cleansing; in Sierra Leone the
>   international community appears unable to muster the 
> will and resources to stop
>   a ragtag guerrilla band that has already killed and 
> mutilated tens of thousands
>   more people than Slobodan Milosevic's forces ever did.

The British government has sent in 700 troops on the pretext of withdrawing 
European nationals. They have got out 100 so far. This is a typical excuse 
for imperialist intervention. Britain has also claimed it has secured Lungi 
airport for the United Nations.

In Parliament the debate is between the Conservatives who demanded a strict 
assurance that the British involvement was only for the purpose of getting 
British and Euorpean nationals out, and the Labour government which kept 
the door open for a wider involvement.

 From the Guardian webpage today:

>Mr Cook said that the operation is
>proceeding "smoothly", but said that there
>is no timetable for its completion.

In the case of East Timor, progressives in the west, such as Chomsky, 
called for Western intervention.

IMO this particular British involvement is progressive and is part of the 
developing process of world governance, so long as it assists the UN and 
the West African peace keeping force to re-organise. I say that, conscious 
at this moment, that the British government deserves strong criticism for 
its interference in the developing land redistribution in Zimbabwe.

I suggest that only left wingers who are in fact anarchists or pacifists 
would *in this particular context* denounce British intervention in Sierra 
Leone as imperialist in nature.

Chris Burford

London

>






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M-TH: Fwd: "Lessons of the LONDON ELECTIONS" - Next L.S.D.F. Meeting

2000-05-08 Thread Chris Burford

In the interests of pluralism I forward this further discussion statement
from someone in CATP and notice of a discussion meeting in London on
Sunday 14th May.

Chris Burford

London



Campaign Against Tube Privatisation -
http://CATP.listbot.com


Now is a good time to re-assess our positions in this election.

I think many people got over-excited by just listening to the rest of the left and isolated sections of advanced workers - and (including me, who thought one of Tatchell or the LSA might come closest) failed to make a sober assessment of the balance of forces we were faced with. It is now clear that the "Livingstone factor" was mainly only present in the mayoral race, although it probably exaggerated the left vote, bit not to a significant degree.

Nonetheless, Livingstone has won mayor - & he will no doubt claim that his position on voting Labour/Green has been vindicated. As someone who always supported the "labour" part of that, I am not surprised. There was no significant challenge to labour from workers' candidates. The only 2 results at all like that were the 2 people who had the foresight to stand as "pro_livingstone" (one was also "independent labour" and polled strongly), doing very well, up there with the Greens who are an established party. Although it is true that if all the left candidates added up got 5.2% that is hardly earth-shattering on a 34% turnout,and a) it's fantasy politics, in an election this size it is practically impossible to get the left outside labour to unite around one candidate and b) it doesn't necessarily follow that all those that voted CATP or Tatchell would have voted LSA had those 2 options not been standing. A vote for CATP jsut expressed opposition to tube privatisation (progressive and correct but not for the same programme as an LSA vote), whilst many who voted for Tatchell probably did so because of their respect for his work over the years for gay rights and wouldn't necessarily have backed the LSA.

It seems to me that the idea that you can "shortcut" your way to success on the back of the fracture and schisms that occurred in the london labour movement over Ken was wrong. The idea that the LSA was some embryo of a mass workers' party of the future, and not just an alliance of a few individuals along with a no.of small propoganda groups, looks to have been proven wrong by events. To me it is clear that although workers are disillusioned with this government and often stay at home rather than vote Labour, there is no sign that they are going to be won over to an LSA type body in the foreseeable future.

But now we must all unite to fight tube privatisation - Livingstone appears to be making a stand which is good for all who believe in class politics. 

I would be intested in the views of the LSA, CATP etc candidates around us about this and also on the related topics about where to go from here.




The Meeting will be held:

IN: the Calthorpe Arms, Grays Inn Road (corner with Wren Street) 

FROM:   2.00 pm ON: Sunday 14-MAY-2000

TOPIC:  "Lessons of the LONDON ELECTIONS"

London Socialist Discussion Forum is supported by "New Interventions" 
and "What Next?" magazines, and is a forum for non-sectarian discussion 
of issues facing revolutionary socialists today. 

If you want to attend you will be very welcome, and if there is any subject 
that you would like us to discuss, please contact me with the details, 
and I will bring them up at a planning meeting.




M-TH: Re: UK Far Left Blows Its Chance in London

2000-05-07 Thread Chris Burford

At 11:17 06/05/00 -0400, you wrote:

>See attached article
>
>Given the proportional election system of the new London Assembly, this
>should have been a chance for left socialists to elect a few assembly
>members as a beachhead against the centrism of New Labour.  The Greens
>managed to elect three out of the twenty-five assembly members, but vicious
>infighting and sectarian proliferation of candidates assurred that none of
>the far left socialist parties got anywhere.  It looks like Scargill, the
>SWP (IS), Communist Parties and other groups have strongly established their
>absolute electoral irrelevance in Britain.  If they could not win in an
>election where Ken Livingstone was romping to victory with two thumbs firmly
>in the eyes of the Tories and Blair's Labour, is there any reason why anyone
>will take them seriously after this?  Any UK folks with other thoughts?
>
>Nathan Newman
>-
>Factions blow their chance
>By Ben Leapman
>
>Extraordinary infighting among five competing socialist factions looks set
>to ensure that none achieves success in the London elections.
>
>Far Left groups have squandered a unique chance of electoral success on the
>coat-tails of Ken Livingstone. With the rebel MP streets ahead of Frank
>Dobson in the polls, there is a huge appetite among Labour-leaning Londoners
>to cast "safe" anti-Government protest votes.
>
>The 25-member Assembly, to be elected alongside the Mayor on Thursday,
>appears ripe for fringe candidates to shine. It has few real powers for
>extremists to abuse. The list voting system means parties need only five per
>cent support across London to win a seat.
>
>Yet extraordinary infighting among five competing socialist factions looks
>set to ensure that none reaches that threshold. The combined votes of the
>far-Left parties may well reach five per cent, but individually it is almost
>certain that none of them will. The row could come straight from Monty
>Python's Life of Brian, in which the People's Front of Judea accuse the
>Judean People's Front of being "splitters".

Surely.

Greens got three seats in the London Assembly through proportional 
representation, and the Liberal Democrats (who in some respects are left of 
New Labour) got four.

There is no radical left wing representative to back up Livingstone.

Scargill, who actively favoured proportional representation for this 
purpose (unlike Tony Benn), insisted on heading his Socialist Labour Party. 
Their leaflet emphasised "London Underground must be kept in public 
ownership. Both the private finance initiative (PFI, or PPP) *and* 
New-York-City type bonds mean "privatisation" of the Tube by one means or 
another.

Bonds were Livingstone's answer.

Livingstone clearly asked the London Socialist Alliance to keep at arms 
length so he could win as an independent. However it did not pitch itself 
as providing a broader lead, but like most left groups concentrated on 
trying to prove it was purer than the rest.

By contrast Trevor Philips, the black journalist, who has been close to 
Democratic left, has emerged as one of the most influential members of the 
Labour group on the Assembly and likely to become its first chairperson.

Livingstone too has embraced the new pluralist politics. He has gone to 
each of the parties *including the Conservatives* and invited them to have 
a representative in his cabinet. The Conservative asked if that included 
executive office. He replied that that could be negotiated.

London could soon have an assembly, like Northern Ireland, that embraces 
all shades of opinion.

On balance this provides a more transparent arena for the left to argue out 
what really is, and is not, democratic.

Yes quite right to deride the sectarian dogmatic left. They do considerable 
damage in preventing a rational application of a marxist approach.

But it is early years yet in learning how this system works.

I would predict that a radical left candidate capable of crossing the 5% 
hurdle in four years time, will need to combine a radical green as well as 
a socialist stance.

But the theory behind this practice must also be seriously discussed. I 
hope the organisation will be marxist-influenced.

Chris Burford

London




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Re: M-TH: Membership etc

2000-05-07 Thread Chris Burford

At 13:59 07/05/00 +0200, you wrote:

>This possibility was removed after discussions about not making things too 
>easy for cyberspooks.
>
>What replaced it was the occasional moderator's report about the numbers 
>subscribed and a breakdown of their nationalities.
>
>Cheers,
>
>Hugh


This possibility was removed about 3 years ago, just before the list was 
moved from Spoons, because spammers were able to get the list of names 
automatically and bombard subscribers. It may still be necessary. Possibly 
though the moderator could get the list and post it as an ordinary e-mail 
message to the list.

It is a pity because it reduces the collective spirit of a list.

Chris Burford

London





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Re: M-TH: CPGB archives

2000-05-07 Thread Chris Burford


At 07:29 06/05/00 -0700, you wrote:
>- Original Message -
>From: Barry Buitekant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: Michael Pugliese <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Sent: Friday, May 05, 2000 10:43 PM
>Subject: Re: M-TH: CPGB archives
>
>
> > Michael
> >
> > The CPGB archives are held in the National Museum of Labour History.
>Address
> > is 103 Princess Street, Manchester M1 6DD.
> >
> > Two odd things ie I cannot find a website for them.


> > Regards
> >
> > Barry


There is not a CPGB website, because the CPGB legally transformed itself 
into Democratic Left. (Because of the size of the assets this was tested in 
the courts and found to be consitutionally valid.)

A new organisation has taken on the name of CPGB but is criticised by its 
enemies as Trotskyist. Although no doubt it claims it is morally and 
ideologically the descendant of the founding spirit of the CPGB there is no 
organisational continuous line of descent.

Democratic left at a conference at the end of last year committed itself to 
transform into the "New Times Network".

The politics are not explicitly marxist. They are explicitly pluralist.

The organisation has lost core size and very possibly viability, but has 
spread in influence in the 90's. It helped to shape the politics of New 
Labour, as did Marxism Today, the defunct journal of the Eurocommunists. 
The General Secretary of the Trades Union Council, John Monks, has attended 
a number of meetings sponsored by Democratic Left, together with other 
organisations (joint sponsorship was part of DL's style.) The person who is 
the formost Labour spokesperson on the new Greater London Assembly, the 
black journalist Trevor Philips, who is likely to become chair of the 
Assembly, has also attended a number of functions organised by Democratic Left.

DL has no democratic centralist structure. Members are not obliged to 
follow the decisions of the central body. Marxists are not excluded as 
such, but are expected to subscribe to pluralist politics. As I do.

The post of general secretary has been replaced I think by a co-ordinator. 
The new person who is taking over from Nina Temple, starts work this month.

The URL for Democratic Left UK is http://www.democratic-left.org.uk/

This page states that the New Times page was last updated in Febraury 2000.

I hope this information is transparently clear.

I am glad to hear the archives of the CPGB are in Manchester.

Chris Burford

London





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Re: M-TH: London Election - Left in a mess

2000-05-05 Thread Chris Burford

At 13:24 05/05/00 +0100, you wrote:


>On Fri, 5 May 2000, Andy Lehrer wrote:
>
> > The results thus far are disappointing. The LSA's only chance at an 
> outright
> > first-past-the-post seat, Ian Page, has not been elected and as for the 
> "top-up"
> > PR returns the LSA seems to be running between 2-3% with half the votes 
> counted,
> > well below the necessary 5% threshold.
> >
>The LSA got about 1.6% of top-up votes and 2.7% of constituency votes.
>Note exactly brillant. It's worth noting that in total leftwing slates in
>the top-up section got around 4%, all the parties were standing on
>broadly similar platforms so this isn't unreasonable.


Yes, we are going to have to learn how to use this proportional electoral 
system. Hopefully next time round there will be still more serious debates 
about where the left should pitch its stall. Of course some groups would 
rather fight on their own to get 1% of the vote across London, but I 
predict over the next ten years a group will emerge that will put a more 
radical reasonably-coherent reformist position.

This should still not be about tailing behind bourgeois parties or 
bourgeois politics. But without the first past the post system, that is 
less of a danger.

How this can link up with revolution, the question John Walker poses, is 
that this radical party must articulate issues that make sense in terms of 
immediate tactics as well as with long term goals.

At the moment it is the three green councillors who have got the chance.

Meanwhile we will have to see whether the extra-parliamentary anarchist 
anti-capital protestors will find a more effective way of locating their 
direct action within the context of a larger political space which they 
have to open up with the help of serious radical reformers.

The socialising of land in London would be a pretty radical agenda, and 
does indeed touch on the Mayor's few powers - over transport and vetoing 
certain developments.

Don't expect the IMF to schedule its next major international conference 
here in London in the near future!


Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: London Election - Left in a mess

2000-05-05 Thread Chris Burford

At 15:19 04/05/00 +, you wrote:
>Dear comrades,
>
>I have been quietly reading the Left press in relation to the London
>Election and Ken Livingstone London's Mayoral candidate which is
>happening today.
>
>A large section of the Trotskyist Left and the Marxist Leninist CPGB
>are backing Ken Livingstone  and have gathered themselves together
>into the London Socialist Alliance and will stand for the Greater
>London Authority (where if they are lucky they may win just one
>seat!).



>John Walker


Proportional voting and tactical voting are becoming more important here. 
Although there are delays in the London counting, one result tonight shows 
massive tactical voting got the Conservative MP out in a Parliamentary 
by-election, with Labour voters switching to Liberal Democrat.

Ken's vote is partly a protest vote and most votes are votes against someone.

All this talk of entrism is a waste of time. Serious discussion of tactical 
voting is not. There is an advantage in having at least one radical left 
representative in the Greater London Assembly.

Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: www.computeruser.com

2000-04-28 Thread Chris Burford

At 15:32 28/04/00 -0400, you wrote:
>www.computeruser.com


Looks an interesting site, but why did you post it here?

Chris Burford

London





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Re: M-TH: Execution of a deputy mayor

2000-04-27 Thread Chris Burford

One of the least attractive things about China from Britain is its ready 
use of the death penalty. Presumably that is not the main obstacle to 
friendship with China in the USA.

These repeated accounts are sometimes taken as proof that China is just 
going capitalist, or if not, is a most unattractive version of socialism. I 
am sure that is not Charles's purpose in reproducing this item.

These reports are often recycled from Chinese sources but are re-edited in 
the West to pick up only the scandal.

I suggest they are best viewed in perspective as a society in the course of 
major social change dictated by the change in the means of production.

The millenia old culture of China relied on a professional system and a 
culture of what was acceptable and what was not, in order to influence that 
system. Yet that system was able more or less to run half a continent.

In retrospect some of the most radical features of China's socialism had 
elements of the old feudal system in it. The overthrow of rotten imperial 
officials for example. The peasant uprising overthrowing a dynasty before 
the old system re-asserted itself.

The new emphasis in China on a social and a market economy puts tremendous 
pressure on this system which cannot be controlled by more sophisticated 
methods such as accountants. Hence the reversion to public shame and 
exemplary punishment.


Chris Burford

London


At 12:14 26/04/00 -0400, you wrote:
>Monday, April 24, 2000
>
>China executes deputy mayor for graft
>ASSOCIATED PRESS
>
>BEIJING, APRIL 23: Chinese authorities executed a deputy mayor on Sunday for
>massive bribery, the latest official punished in a year-long campaign
>against rampant corruption.
>After a case review by China's Supreme Court, Li Chenglong (48) was put to
>death in the impoverished southern region of Guangxi, where he worked as a
>deputy mayor of Guigang city, the state-run Xinhua News Agency said.
>On Thursday, the head of Guangxi's government from 1990-1998, Cheng Kejie,
>was expelled from the ruling Communist Party ahead of his prosecution for
>alleged bribery.
>Cheng, a deputy chairman of China's national legislature, was one of the
>most senior officials caught in the recently renewed campaign against the
>graft that is undermining public support for Communist rule.
>Li was convicted of bribery and having unexplained sources of income, Xinhua
>said. It said that in exchange for approving promotions, loans, land and
>construction contracts, Li took Dollars 478,500 worth of bribes in Chinese,
>Hong Kong and US currencies between 1991 and 1996, when he was Communist
>Party secretary of Yulin city in Guangxi, Xinhua said.
>Li also couldn't explain where he got currencies worth more than Dollars
>685,000 that were found in his home, along with jewellery, Xinhua said.
>Copyright © 2000 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.
>
>
>
>
>
>
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M-TH: "Reparation for Our Nation! Organize!"

2000-04-19 Thread Chris Burford
he motherland of the entire human race. His demand 
for Reparation for Africa is a movement that will go on, by people with the 
knowledge, skill, expertise and insistence that it must go on. 
Reconciliation can only be based on recognition of what has happened, not 
least in the African holocaust and what is happening now.  In fighting for 
Africa, they are also fighting ultimately against finance capital that has 
impoverished, degraded, and killed the people of the rich motherland of our 
human race. God Save Africa! Our god is, ultimately, the human race.

Bernie fought that fight, and leaves behind him tens of thousands of people 
determined to strengthen that fight. To succeed it will have to overthrow 
the global rule of finance capital. In alliance with other oppressed 
peoples, it will succeed. The African drums beat exuberantly and the 
sisters danced, as Bernie's coffin was placed on the hearse to drive down 
the hill. His message will go on until it is achieved.

  Nkosi Sikelela!


Chris Burford

London












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Re: M-TH: Putative about Putin

2000-04-18 Thread Chris Burford

At 09:04 18/04/00 +, you wrote:
>Chris wrote:
> > I think it is more an attempt to forge a special relationship with 
> Blair in
> > which they are using each other. Putin is a creature created by the
> > oligarch media owners in Russia. He has been well advised by media
> > specialists about how to manage his image. They have clearly liaised
> > closely with Alistair Campbell, Blair's expert spin doctor, in
> > orchestrating the visit by Tony and Cheryl last month to meet the Putin's
> > at a special performance of "War and Peace".
> >
> > Blair has always sought to use personal charm and dynamism to help Britain
> > punch above its weight. He now seeks to present himself as an intermediary
> > between Putin and Clinton, especially on the strategic arms limitation
> > negotiations,
>
>Surely this is to reduce political analysis to clever tricks with
>smoke and mirrors. That it is all a matter of individual
>personalities and internal propaganda advantage. This might be
>interesting comment for the bourgeois press (and their largely
>proletarian and middle class readership) but surely Marxists should
>aim for a little more indepth analysis of the real underlying
>factors for a possible (historic) alliance between Russia and
>Britain, beyond the photo-oportunities with smart suits and
>fashionable wives.
>
>In my view the real important factor appear in your later brief
>paragraph:
> > The press release also refers to financial talks between Britain and
> > Russia, designed of course for Britain to get some tactical advantage
> > relative to German and French capitalism in Russia.
>
>We'll wait and see which is the more important...
>Regards, John


The economic base, yes, is ultimately the determining factor. The economic 
basis of solidarity between Blair and Putin is capitalist profit.

But what I describe is more than smoke and mirrors. It is inherent in the 
contradiction of state power that the executive committee of the 
bourgeoisie has simultaneously both...

1) to appear to stand above classes impartially.

2) to ultimately rule in the interests of the dominant class.

Sophisticated management of modern media is what Blair and Putin have in 
common.

Their economic base is also ultimately the same: not small capital, not 
even middle sized capital, not industrial capital, and not speculative 
capital. It is finance capital at its weightiest and most rational.

They have a natural alliance beyond the closeness of their age.

Note also how Putin is a charmer and a dealer: He has just signed an 
agreement with Kuchma of the Ukraine (shortly after Kuchma makes his bid 
for greatly enhanced powers) to cooperate in arms manufacture and in 
nuclear reactors. Putin has also done a pluralist deal with the Russian 
communists. That party has just had its nominee confirmed as speaker of the 
Duma. Putin appeals to the nostalgia for the strenght of the old regime. He 
is forging alliances that could open the door for the reconstitution of the 
USSR (in the service of finance capital).

More than smoke and mirrors. Damn clever footwork in the service of the 
powers that be, finance capital.

Chris Burford

London




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Re: M-TH: Putative about Putin

2000-04-17 Thread Chris Burford

At 16:54 17/04/00 +0100, you wrote:
>Mr Putin's UK visit  may putatively form part of a strategy to, among 
>other things, drive
>a wedge between Europe and the US in western relationships with the CIS.
>
>Warm regards
>George Pennefather


I think it is more an attempt to forge a special relationship with Blair in 
which they are using each other. Putin is a creature created by the 
oligarch media owners in Russia. He has been well advised by media 
specialists about how to manage his image. They have clearly liaised 
closely with Alistair Campbell, Blair's expert spin doctor, in 
orchestrating the visit by Tony and Cheryl last month to meet the Putin's 
at a special performance of "War and Peace".

Blair has always sought to use personal charm and dynamism to help Britain 
punch above its weight. He now seeks to present himself as an intermediary 
between Putin and Clinton, especially on the strategic arms limitation 
negotiations,

The press release also refers to financial talks between Britain and 
Russia, designed of course for Britain to get some tactical advantage 
relative to German and French capitalism in Russia.

Neither Putin nor Blair are trying to drive a wedge. At best, as 
sophisticated opportunists, they are efficient transducers of the balance 
of forces, internally and externally.

All at the expense of the oppressed people of Chechnya, of course, of whom 
Blair is as much a champion by dialogue, as he was a champion by war of the 
rights of the muslim people of Kosovo.

I see nothing progressive in these exchanges except that global dialogue is 
better than global war.

Progressive and marxist people should note which nations are oppressed and 
which are oppressor, and where the interests of capital lie, and those of 
working people.

Chris Burford

London



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M-TH: Gysi steps down

2000-04-14 Thread Chris Burford

I missed this news. Can anyone tell me why?

I attach the not very idiomatic report of the 3rd Congress of the PDS from 
their web site.

Chris Burford

London
__

PDS International

Information on the results of the 3rd Session of the 6th Congress of the PDS

This session took place on 7-9 April, 2000 in Münster in North-Rhine 
Westphalia - for the first time in a West German federal state. The PDS had 
taken this decision to demonstrate after the successful elections of the 
years 1998/99 the importance of a growing influence and stronger 
organisations in the lander of the old FRG. At the same time this was meant 
as a support of the PDS campaign for the Landtag election in this federal 
state due on 14 May, 2000.

For financial and organisational reasons the PDS had not invited partner 
organisations from abroad to take part in this session. Representatives of 
several foreign embassies attended as observers.

The main points of the agenda were:

Keynote speech of the party chairman General discussion and decision on 
continuing the programmatic debate in the party Discussion and decisions on 
the following problems: - Armed military missions of the UN - Future 
orientated ecological policy - North-South relationship, just world 
economic order - Gender emancipation Amendments to the party constitution

The session attracted considerable media attention. The number of the 
registered correspondents exceeded that of the delegates. The whole session 
of 2,5 days was transmitted live by one public TV program and one radio 
station.

The following are the main results of the session:

1.After the general debate on the keynote speech of party chairman, Lothar 
Bisky, the congress adopted a political resolution which calls for basic 
changes in the development of society to prevent the destruction of the 
welfare state. It must be reconstructed under the new circumstances. The 
party views itself as part of this society and signals from Münster a new 
opening towards it. It seeks closer co-operation with all forces striving 
for a sustainable development. It will put forward its own specific 
propositions and not duplicate erroneous projects of Social democrats and 
Greens.

2.After a thorough debate the congress decided with a big majority against 
the vote of delegates of the Communist Platform, the Marxist Forum and 
others on a revision of the party programme of 1993, thus paving the way 
for a programmatic renovation of the party. No time limit was set for this 
work but the national election of autumn 2002 is exerting a certain 
pressure. The voters of the socialist party in Germany have the right to 
know about the principal political and programmatic positions of the PDS. 
Lothar Bisky demanded in his speech neither to exaggerate nor to deny the 
chances and the potential of reform in this society.

3.The congress stated the necessity to pay more attention to the ecological 
problems in PDS politics. A socialist party can only be an ecological one.

4.In the debate on development issues delegates demanded more active 
solidarity with the developing countries. All the more so as the PDS is 
finding growing acceptance with the NGO's working in this field.

5.The worsening social situation of women in Germany ten years after 
unification was met with harsh criticism. Their real influence on PDS 
policies is also seen as insufficient, the decision on 50 % reserved places 
in all leading bodies of the party notwithstanding.

On the last three issues the National Executive presented position papers 
(see the PDS website on www.pds-online.de).

6.On application of the National Executive the congress adopted several 
amendments to the party constitution. The most important one concerns the 
terms of office for the leading posts of the party. As a lesson from SED 
times a person was allowed to stay maximum eight years on the same post. 
According to the amendment adopted by the congress this now refers only to 
party officials elected individually (chairpersons, vice chairpersons, 
general secretaries, treasurers) on the lander and national levels. After a 
special decision of the competent body adopted by two thirds of the vote a 
prolongation of two years is possible. For the lower levels the limit has 
been lifted altogether.

7.On the position of the party towards armed UN missions according to 
Chapter VII of the Charter the session continued the passionate, emotional 
debate which has been going on for several weeks. It adopted by big 
majority a resolution confirming the anti- militarist consensus of the 
party, its character as a force of peace. Important points of this 
consensus are:

a civil, non-military foreign and security policy peaceful, non-military 
solutions to conflicts, their preventive handling no militarisation of the 
EU general and full disarmament, prohibition of weapons of mass destruction 
and arms exports no Bundeswehr missions in foreign countries.

M-TH: Ken slips below 50%

2000-04-13 Thread Chris Burford

Today's London Evening Standard shows a decline in the opinion polls for 
Ken Livingstone. Nevertheless their right wing editorial line continues to 
support him as a thorn in the flesh of the Labour Government.

Ken is down from a month ago by 12% to 49%. Dobson, the New Labour choice, 
has picked up none of this and has if anything slipped a point to 15%. 
Norris, the conservative candidate, finally married again, has just 
overtaken him at 16% by picking up 3%. The Liberal is up 4% to 12% and the 
Green is on 4%.

Ken has been slightly damaged in the atmosphere of consensus politics 
presumably by conservative voters wondering if they really want to vote for 
him. Just before the poll he had hinted at the legalisation of cannabis. 
However he is likely to get a lot of the second preference votes in a 
tactical switch, and will he get almost all of Dobson's.

But lest non-Brits think that history is made by individual heroes, what 
may really matter is the voting for the assembly.

  Labour's percentage is still apparently strong at 44%, and the 
conservatives still down at 27%. Liberals at 17%.

In his time at the GLC, Ken was surrounded by radical Labour councillors 
who produced many of the ideas he marketed. This time it is possible that 
his standing may increase the vote by cutting abstentions.

There are no signs yet that he will bring a lot of people to vote for the 
London Socialist Alliance list - a coalition of Trotskyist groups. He is 
clearly not backing them publically. The Assembly votes are more likely to 
go to Labour. And the Assembly seats will be distributed by proportional 
representation, requiring consensus politics.

I suppose the key question for a marxist analysis is whether Ken's 
candidacy opens up a space for genuinely radical politics. Not as much, I 
suspect, as the Trotskyist entrist groups assume.

Painful though Dobson's defeat will be for Blair, it looks however as if 
this constitutional experiment will liven up local politics in London.

Perhaps the election of that will be the really interesting one politically.

Chris Burford

London




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Re: M-TH: Red Ken

2000-04-11 Thread Chris Burford

This is a Telegraph piece and therefore tailored to make the readers tut 
self-righteously.

It is also a bit old.

The assumption is still the Ken will win but someone I know who I expected 
to support him did not. This man worked in the GLC during Ken's leadership. 
He pointed out that many of Ken's progressive ideas at the time came from 
the couple of hundred of left wing councillors who made up the Labour 
section of the GLS. Ken is a good left wing publicist but my friend 
criticised him for not having any strategic thinking.

What will happen after the election? Ken will not have much power because 
he will not have these left wing-councillors with him.

The test of his politics currently is his proposals about raising a bond 
issue for the London Underground.

Chris Burford

London




At 13:05 11/04/00 -0400, you wrote:

>Livingstone aims Hitler attack at capitalists
>
>By Robert Shrimsley, Chief Political Correspondent Telegraph
>
>Ken Livingstone's efforts to project a business-friendly image were
>undermined yesterday when he said that international capitalists had killed
>more people than Hitler.
>
>His latest attack on the forces of capitalism follows controversy
>surrounding earlier remarks [see below] where he expressed sympathy with the
>rioters who brought chaos to the World Trade Organisation negotiations in
>Seattle and the simultaneous anti-capitalist protests in the City. The
>front-runner to be mayor of London made his comments in a question and
>answer session with readers of New Musical Express.
>
>Asked whether he still believed the bosses of the International Monetary
>Fund should "die painfully in their beds", Mr Livingstone replied: "The IMF
>and the World Bank are still appalling and now the World Trade Organisation,
>too. All over the world people die unnecessarily because of the
>international financial system."




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M-TH: Merkel's acceptance speech

2000-04-10 Thread Chris Burford

Angela Merkel's acceptance speech as president of Germany's CDU was 
particularly assured for a woman from East Germany, who was born after the 
foundation of the CDU.

Possibly her period thinking about the alternatives to East German state 
socialism has given her a theoretical base which she can combine with 
skilled manoeuvring as the CDU tries to extricate itself from the era of 
illegal funding under Kohl.

Significant were the the tilt away from centralisation of Europe in 
Brussels and the gesture of solidarity with Austria's People's Party, which 
has gone into coalition with Haider's Freedom Party.

It echoes a sharpening of the rhetoric by the British Conservative Party 
against immigrants.


Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: From China

2000-03-30 Thread Chris Burford

I agree this sort of news from China is important.

I also agree that it is silly to take a routinely positive or a routinely 
negative attitude to developments in China.

  But why did you choose this item? What conclusions do you draw from it?

Chris Burford

(absent recently owing to leave and the joys of computer upgrading!)





At 11:58 30/03/00 -0500, you wrote:


>SCMP  Thursday, March 30, 2000
>
>Army pushes Jiang's party unity dictum
>
>WILLY WO-LAP LAM
>
>President Jiang Zemin is pushing ideological
>education in the face of rising
>pro-independence sentiments in Taiwan.




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M-TH: Britain to join NAFTA?

2000-03-18 Thread Chris Burford

There is a  reports that a group of British Conservatives have approached a
US Congress committee to ask assistance with a feasability study on Britain
joining NAFTA.

In the post modernist world of politics this is not a rumour of a possible
conspiracy.

It means 

1) that someone has decided that it is in their interestes to leak the
existence of such a study 

2) plans for such a study do indeed exist

3) the range of possibilities for the British economy has been irrevocably
altered several degrees by the fact that all other political calculators
may feel pressured to consider and at least discount this scenario. The
leakers have already achieved their first objective. 

Any confirmation on the western side of the pond?

Any comments on viability. It is primarily caution about gut little
Englanderism that makes the British government reluctant to spear-head a
campaign to join the Euro, but it is still being said without factual
contradiction that British economic cycles are out of sync with continental
Europe.

And the British government continues to pursue a strong pound, high labour
flexibility, low unemployment policy with falling national debt, as in the
USA.

Chris Burford

London 



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Re: M-TH: Livingstone stands in London

2000-03-07 Thread Chris Burford

At 10:28 07/03/00 -0500, you wrote:
>If this guy passes Hugh's test, he ain't no sellout.
>
>CB


He's not a sell out. He is courageous and shrewd. But that does not stop
him being an opportunist. 

If he wins, and it is more than likely, since he will get the largest first
preference votes, and will get the largest second preference votes from
everyone else, including the Conservative! then he will incorporate protest
votes once again into the New Labour machinery. They will make some
accommodation with him, and when his term expires, the party machinery will
reabsorb him. 

And I should warn Charles that Livingstone supported military intervention
in Kosovo, though he did not support the intervention that occurred.

BTW how would you suggest he raises several billion to renovate the London
underground?

Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: LSA welcomes Livingstone's decision to stand for major

2000-03-07 Thread Chris Burford

At 12:57 07/03/00 +, Dave wrote:
>
>[From http://www.londonsocialistalliance.org.uk/.]
>
>The London Socialist Alliance welcomes Ken Livingstone's decision to stand
>as an independent candidate for mayor of London. By doing so, he has given
>Londoners an alternative at the ballot box. We hope Ken will stand on a
>socialist and trade union platform.

Last night Ken dismissed the Socialist Alliance as a group of old
Trotskyists. He is also believed to have cancelled an appearance at a large
rally to avoid being associated with "the Left". Comments Dave?

Chris Burford

London



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M-TH: Re: [PEN-L:16920] Livingstone stands in London

2000-03-06 Thread Chris Burford

At 00:15 07/03/00 +, I wrote:


>A snap telephone opinion poll for the Guardian tonight reports him to be
over 40 % ahead of his nearest rival, Dobson, who has 13%, with the
Conservative candidate Norris on 11%.
<


Whoops! I have already slandered him. It must be my New Labour proclivities!

He is in fact 55% ahead of his nearest rival. (sic) 

I thought I heard that ,but I could not confirm it in writing before I had
to send my post.

Here is the Guardian article on the poll. Perhaps this is a candidate for
erasure if the listserver is concerned about copyright, but all the
material is so relevant for comment and it is a good advert for the
Guardian, I cannot really imagine them suing.

You might like to bookmark their webpage on the contest, since Livingstone
will have no machine to work for him and the media and the internet may be
decisive.

Chris Burford

London

_



Official candidates eclipsed in survey confirms Ken's cross-party charm

ICM poll: Half of Tories would vote for Livingstone

The London mayor: special report

Alan Travis, Home Affairs Editor Tuesday March 7, 2000

The breathtaking 55% poll lead that Ken Livingstone has built up in the
battle to be the first elected mayor of London is reinforced by nearly
every detail of the findings of the Guardian/ICM opinion poll.

Mr Livingstone's cross-party popularity in London has become so great more
than 70% of Labour and Liberal Democrat voters in the capital say they will
support him against their party candidates - and an extraordinary 48% of
Conservative voters say they will back him.

The poll shows that Livingstone's support is solid at over 60% among both
men and women, across all social classes and all age groups.

Steven Norris, the Tory candidate, is humiliatingly eclipsed by Mr
Livingstone among Conservative voters. Mr Norris, who has 11% support
overall, secures only 40% of the Tory vote, compared with 48% for Mr
Livingstone. The poll indicates that the Tory voters will be engaging in
tactical voting on a scale unseen for more than 20 years.

The detail of the poll spells only despair for Frank Dobson. He might have
hoped that those who were supporting Mr Livingstone - particularly Labour
voters - were doing it only as a mid-term whinge at the performance of the
Labour government.

But when those who said they intended to vote Ken were asked about their
motives it was the personality factor that proved the strongest of all.

Nearly all Livingstone voters think he has been treated unfairly by Labour.
Two thirds think that Frank Dobson is a weak candidate and want to give
Tony Blair a kick by voting for Ken, but when they were asked to specify
the principal reason for voting for him 72% said they believed he was the
best candidate for mayor.

Even among that select group of Conservatives for Livingstone, 68% said
they would back him because he was the best candidate, and only 13% said
they were backing him mainly because they wanted to give Tony Blair a kick.

The only possible saving grace for Mr Dobson lies in the 18% who say they
have not made up their mind. But even if the official Labour candidate were
to sweep the board among these "don't knows", it seems inconceivable that
he will be able to demolish Mr Livingstone's overwhelming lead in the next
two months, given that he starts his campaign at such a low level of
support - 13%.

But there must be disappointment for those who had hoped that a Livingstone
bid for mayor would boost the turnout. Those who say they are certain to
vote account for only 41% - about the same level as a similar ICM poll a
fortnight ago.

As to the immediate future, the poll brings more bad news for Labour. The
next few days will be dominated by the process of expelling Mr Livingstone
from the party for standing against an official candidate.

The poll shows that this may bring even more unpopularity for the party.
Some 59% believe that expelling him would be unfair, as against 27% who do
not. Among Labour voters those who believe it would be unfair reaches 68%.

However much the question of expulsion might be understood and accepted by
party activists, the poll shows that the reasons are not understood by
London voters. They are even more hostile to the idea of other Labour
members being expelled for openly supporting Livingstone. Only 12% of
London voters believe this would be fair, and even 72% of those who say
will vote for Frank Dobson think it would be unfair.

ICM Research interviewed a random sample of 1,003 adults aged over 18 by
telephone on March 6. Interviews were conducted across London, and the data
has been weighted to the profile of all London adults.

Ken Livingstone's biographer, John Carvel, will be live online on the
Guardian network at 2pm today to answer your questions about Livingstone's
mayoral bid.

• Ken Livingstone's biographer John Carvel will be live on the Guardian
network at 2

M-TH: Livingstone stands in London

2000-03-06 Thread Chris Burford

Ken Livingstone has taken the plunge, broken his word, and announced he is
standing for the new post of Mayor of London, against the official Labour
candidate Frank Dobson.

A snap telephone opinion poll for the Guardian tonight reports him to be
over 40 % ahead of his nearest rival, Dobson, who has 13%, with the
Conservative candidate Norris on 11%.

Blair's devolution strategy has already run into difficulties in Scotland
and Wales where people have relished the opportunity to distance themselves
from New Labour central policies. Livingstone's cheeky humour attracts him
to many. 

It is also a symptom of the success of New Labour that the opposition is
coming from within the Labour party. Another opinion poll gives Livingstone
a majority not only of Labour voters but of Liberal voters and of Tory voters!

The issues of substance here are

1) how much party machines can control the bourgeois electoral process
especially if US type direct elections are introduced. How can corrupt
contenders like Archer be excluded unless there are powerful party machines?

2) whether a contest like this will enliven interest in the mechanics of
bourgeois democracy

3) whether the system of people having a second vote will move us further
towards proportional representation. (Livingstone has shrewdly already said
he would like people to cast their second votes for Dobson)

4) In economic terms there is a major issue of how to raise the vast
amounts of capital needed to modernise the London underground system.
Livingstone is arguing for continued state ownership plus an issue of
bonds. Dobson and Norris are arguing for a public private partnership. 

IMO both methods almost certainly leave the dominance of finance capital
unquestioned.

How should surplus be raised for major civil engineering projects like
this? What despotic inroads into the rights of property would subscribers
recommend to Livingstone or Dobson, that will also get the wage slaves to
work on time and reasonably fit?

Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: Fw: [marxist] new communist movement family tree!

2000-03-06 Thread Chris Burford


>Subject: [marxist] new communist movement family tree!


Interesting concept. 

Could also be applied to e-mail lists.

But where is the ruthless battle against revisionism and opportunism in
this frankly pluralistic description of marxist history? 

Is it not an invitation for everyone to join the happy, or not so happy,
families, that inhabit the marsh of opportunism?


Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: Mandatory Sentencing

2000-02-28 Thread Chris Burford

At 11:32 28/02/00 +1100, you wrote:
>Comrades,
>Despite protests around Australia, PM John Howard and Chief Minister of the 
>Northern Territory, Denis Burke and Premier of West Australia, Richard Court 
>are refusing to repeal mandatory sentencing.  In the last 3 weeks, a 15 year 
>old boy hung himself while in jail for stealing texta/pencils worth $50, a
22 
>year old Aboriginal man was jailed for one year for stealing biscuits worth 
>about $10, another young Aboriginal man jailed for 14 days for breaking a 
>window in his own home and a 15 year old boy was held over night in jail in 
>Perth for taking 40c from a public phone booth so he could catch a train
home.


There are times when I think thaxis is a refuge for marxists from countries
other than the USA who, in volume terms, dominate marxism lists. But if we
are to become truly internationalist in "marxism-space" we need to be able
to read and hear what is unique in the struggle in each country, but also
to discuss what is common.

It seems to me that mandatory sentences are a sort of mirror image of
individualist bourgeois rights. The latter treat all human beings as
abstractly equal and ignore the class or other differences between them.
Yet this affects what sort of lawyers they can hire to enforce their equal
rights. So for this and other reasons, equal rights get enforced unequally.

Mandatory sentences are common, if I understand correctly, in the USA too.
People are supposed to be punished equally for the same crime. The fact
that this ends up with a system where black people are greatly
over-represented among those lined up on death row, is dismissed as pure
chance. 

What is a more socialist attitude to rights and punishment?

To see the rights, and the undesirable behaviour within the individual's
social context. 

With crime, that does not mean ignoring the reality of the crime. It means
asking the person to take responsibility for their decisions but the
society also to take responsibility for the conditions in which the person
found themselves. 

Crime is extremely common among young men and is almost normal affiliative
behaviour, part of risk taking and maturation. In London studies have shown
that re-offending has been cut substantially by cautioning first offenders
and introduing them to a youth club. Unfortunately the previous
conservative government cut youth clubs. 

But what is cheaper, a youth club or a punishment youth prison camp? 

What is the cost of - is it really over 2 million prisoners - in the land
of the free??

I am not sure how much this may have parallels to the situation in
Australia, but people need social support and individual and social
challenges. People are basically good. Only those who believe in the
exploitation of the majority by the minority, or who are part of
privileged minority of beneficiaries, believe otherwise. 

Chris Burford

London




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Re: M-TH: Re: Albright Doctrine of Limited Sovereignty

2000-02-27 Thread Chris Burford

At 02:35 27/02/00 +1100, Rob wrote:
>G'day Chris,
>
>>"Sovereignty carries with it many rights, but killing and torturing
>>innocent people are not among them."


> Guess Unca Sam is just that extra bit
>sovereign.

Of course. But he is also vulnerable to the criticisms you make, and that
is the strategic advantage of taking this battle on.




>>I suggest this hegemonism must be fought on the merits of the case and not
>>on any abstract principle that national sovereignty is sacrosanct. There is
>>no materialist basis for such an approach.
>
>Er, yeah ...  Is this Burford of Kosovo speaking?  Christopher nemesis of
>Luxemburgian state theory?  What's happened to ya, mate?  Whatever it is, I
>like it.

Rob, I can't say 'Touché!' because I cannot work out what point you are
making. Haven't a clue about the allusion to Luxemburg on the state. As for
Kosovo my position is consistent. Like Ken Livingstone and quite a section
of left Labour, the Guardian and the Observer, I thought there had to be
intervention of some sort in Kosovo, like I thought there should be in East
Timor and should have been in Chechnya.

I am not a pacifist. 

>From that position it is easier to criticise the imperialist nature of the
intervention that did take place. The war should have been restricted to
Kosovo, the KLA should have been supported on certain conditions, instead
of disarmed as they have now been, and international troops should have
been prepared to get killed. Rather than just bombing infrastructure from
30,000 feet, claiming to avoid deliberate deaths. 


>>Clearly we contest the bourgeois, fragmented and individualist version of
>>human rights that is promoted by US imperialism. 
>
>Demanding that these fragments be afforded material content is an apposite
>start, I reckon.  I still maintain that exposing the formalism of bourgeouis
>rights, and demanding they be given the content their essence requires, is a
>good way to push 'the idea' towards the already pulling material relations
>of our day.

Absolutely. In taking up a democratic demand the difference between the
marxist contribution to a broad movement and that of liberals or
conservatives, would be that the marxists would bring to the fore the
social context. In essence argue for social human rights, and not just
individual human rights.

As the penultimate thesis on Feuerbach puts it:

"The standpoint of the old materialism is 'civil' society; the standpoint
of the new is *human* society, or associated humanity."



> I maintain it's not wise to
>content ourselves with a 'dissolution of the state' descriptor-du-juour. 
>What the state's doing is transforming.  From the proletariat/petit
>bourgeouis/lumpen-point of view, it looks to be dissolving.  To some it
>already looks completely alienated from them.  But, from the point of view
>of the haute-bourgeoisie, it's as crucial as ever, although now an ally who
>asks much less for its services than it used to.
>
>I still think Seattle can best be read as a demand for democratic
>involvement in the polity.  Which means, and must mean already to a lot of
>the protesters, that the contradiction between high capitalism and
>humanly-authored human existence has shown its face.  The broadly-animated
>quest to reassert the enlightenment conception of the state (a la
>Galbraith), or an enlightenment notion of transnational democratic
>accountability and guidance (a la Habermas), should, with a bit of luck, be
>most enlightening for people, as the very idea of 'liberal/democratic
>capitalism' becomes harder and harder to envisage.

Yes again. There are of course anarchist responses to the contradictions of
late capitalism. They added to the movement against finance capital that
came to a head on June 18 in London, and was carried on in Seattle. But
with courage and revolutionary phrases alone they will run out of steam.
They need to be part of a wider movement, some elements of which they would
regard as reformist. And the whole movement needs marxist analysis to see
the objective points of unity and common interests and the areas of
weakness in the defences of global finance capital.

This is one of the best countermoves to the Albright Doctrine of Limited
Sovereignty.

Chris Burford

London



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M-TH: Albright Doctrine of Limited Sovereignty

2000-02-26 Thread Chris Burford



"Sovereignty carries with it many rights, but killing and torturing
innocent people are not among them."



Madeleine Albright presenting the State Department's 1999 world survey on
human rights.




This statement comes nearest to a formula of Limited Sovereignty. It can be
compared to the Brezhnev Doctrine of Limited Sovereignty. Obviously the
stated ideals are different. What they share is a moral justification for
limiting state sovereignty. 

I suggest this is not just an ideological battle. It is a reflection of the
fact that the development of the means of production limits the ultimate
relevance of the nation state.

A hegemonic power therefore has some logic in appealing, if it wishes, to
an overarching ideal with which to justify its interference in the internal
affairs of other countries.

I suggest this hegemonism must be fought on the merits of the case and not
on any abstract principle that national sovereignty is sacrosanct. There is
no materialist basis for such an approach.

Clearly we contest the bourgeois, fragmented and individualist version of
human rights that is promoted by US imperialism. 

Eg we should not claim purely abstractly that the right of a doctor in Cuba
to fly the flag upside down is equivalent to the right of a tens of
thousands of children *NOT* to have to scrape a living out of the municipal
rubbish heaps of third world countries or by running dangerous lawless
errands for drug dealers, who may execute one of them periodically to
impose labour discipline.

But limited national sovereignty is here to stay.

Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: The IRA and Fintan O Toole

2000-02-24 Thread Chris Burford

At 10:56 21/02/00 -, you wrote:
>Below  are some comments to an piece written by the Irish Times
>columnist Fintan O  Toole published in the Irish Times on Friday, 18th
>February  2000: Fintan  O Toole: As the rump of the Second Dáil and the
>remaining leadership of Sinn  Féin after the departure of Eamon de Valera
>to form Fianna Fáil, these people  really did believe that they were the
>legitimate government of Ireland. And  until very recently, Sinn Féin and
>the IRA went on believing in this fantasy.   When,  in 1939, the tiny rump
>of the Second Dáil formally passed its powers to the IRA  army council, the
>line of apostolic succession passed to an ever more secretive  elite. And
>throughout its vicious campaign in Northern Ireland, the IRA, in its  own
>mind, continued to draw its legitimacy from this weird delusion.” 

I agree with George's reasoned criticism of the idealism that is inherent
in one strand of Irish republicanism. Also that Fintan O'Toole appears
merely to criticise it from another idealist point of view, but one without
any radical or revolutionary significance.

I also agree that the idealist strand of republicanism was literally
reactionary - in that it reacted to the oppression of British imperialism
with idealist ideology.

However not all Irish nationalism was reactionary of course. I would extend
George's emphasis on political reality to stress an emphasis also on
economic reality.

The development of capitalism does not stir all potential nations into
separate national life. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the
most rapid means of transport of the growing trade in commodities was by
water, and several cities grew on either side of the Irish Sea: Bristol,
Dublin, Liverpool, Belfast, Glasgow.

It was only in the 19th century when railways and improved roads gave
greater continuity to land communications.

The bulk of the population joined an effective and democratic nationalist
movement against British domination which won consitutional and to a large
extent economic independence for Eire. But it was not strong enough to take
the whole population with it and to prevent various forces external and
internal (obviously including British imperialism) from causing a split.

The development of capitalism has now moved on and the economic
self-sufficency of 
de Valera Eire is antiquated. Ireland is part of the European Union, and so
is Northern Ireland. Irish nationalism is not therefore one single entity
but has a different context at different stages of economic history.

>From a materialist point of view, continuing national and democratic
demands must be pursued starting from this economic context. They can be
pursued in a radical way, in a reformist way, or in a potentially
revolutionary way. But the economic and political reality cannot be
combatted by an ideology of philosophical idealism.

Chris Burford

London

PS could you note that I think your post must have been in html format as
it came out with funny format coding and layout.

  



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M-TH: London and Ulster

2000-02-14 Thread Chris Burford

At 06:36 14/02/00 +0100, you wrote:
>I saw today your defense of the Vietnamese Stalinists Chris and thought
>about recent events in Ireland. Well, what have ya got to say now? About
>Stormont and the fake peace process.
>
>In fact the old term "I told you so" comes to mind. 
>
>Warm Regards
>Bob Malecki


Funny you should say that. I have often thought of saying "I told you so"
to you about Ireland.

I was defending the Vietnamese for a rational revolutionary strategy in
marxist terms and would not want to say I was defending Vietnamese
"Stalinists". The term covers too many things to be sure it is more than a
term of abuse. But if you mean by 'Stalinist' they indulged in dogmatism
and widespread purges against members of the party, I have not heard that
they did this any more than other communist parties at the time.

Ireland:

What is fake about the peace process? Politics is a continuation of war by
other means. 

The Provisionals should be getting gold medals from revolutionaries for not
surrendering their weapons, which many communist parties did after the
anti-fascist struggles in 1945-46. The way they are doing this is by saying
that rust is the best decommissioning agent. They also say that enough
trust has not been built up yet. They could also say, and probably have,
that it is in the interests of the British and Irish governments and the
enlightened unionists to keep the political process going because then that
cuts the arguments away from those wishing to raise funds for more
armaments. They also point out that they are not the only owners of arms,
and that if the nationalist population of the north is to feel they do not
need arms again then they need the assurance that the army of domination,
the Royal Ulster Constabulary has been qualitatively transformed. They also
need assurance that triumphalist paramilitary parades will not march round
their communities during the "Marching Season".

So if political power grows out of the barrel of a gun, they need
assurances that the barrels of the guns are not pointed in one particular
direction.

As for the British and Irish governments they have been following a policy
of conflict management and conflict resolution which is in the interests of
their finance capitalist class, who want a smooth integrated market in the
whole of the British Isles as well as Ireland. Therefore for historical
materialist reasons the significance of home rule for Ulster has changed
from a fundamental nationalist demand to part of the process of assuring
national democratic rights in a pluralist political environment in an
integrated market.

It is quite clear from the present exchanges that Trimble and Adams know
what roles each has to play and are carefully avoiding burning final bridges.


What is fake about that? More it is a fake breakdown.


Your problem Bob, is that whenever I point out a progressive development by
the Blair regime, you imagine I am advocating unqualified praise. Blair has
done this because it is in the interests of British finance capital.
Coincidentally it is also in the interests of the proletariat. 

I told you so!

Chris Burford

London






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M-TH: stop-imf listserve announcement

2000-02-13 Thread Chris Burford


>Dear Friends:
>
>Especially as interest grows in the April 16 actions coming up in
>Washington, D.C., we would like to build the subscription base of
>stop-imf (now around 500). If you value the listserve, please pass the
>announcement below to friends, colleagues and relevant lists, and
>encourage people to join. Thanks.
>
>Robert Weissman
>Essential Information  |   Internet:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
>** LISTSERVE ANNOUNCEMENT **
>  ** [EMAIL PROTECTED] **
>
>Want to learn more about the International Monetary Fund and Third World
>debt issues in the run up to the April 16 actions in Washington, D.C.?
>
>Then subscribe to stop-imf, a listserve run by Essential Action!
>
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] is an open, moderated listserve which posts
>newsclips, reports, news releases, updates, urgent actions and analyses on
>topics relating to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), structural
>adjustment and Third World debt. It is not a discussion list. Traffic
>ranges from zero to five messages a day, averaging approximately two a
>day.
>
>To subscribe to stop-imf, send a message to
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] with "subscribe" in the text of the
>message.
>
>Stop-imf archives can be accessed at
>http://lists.essential.org/pipermail/stop-imf/2000q1/date.html
>
>
>
>
>___
>stop-imf mailing list
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>http://lists.essential.org/mailman/listinfo/stop-imf
>
>



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Re: M-TH: The Vietnam War

2000-02-13 Thread Chris Burford

At 23:18 11/02/00 -, George wrote:


> In 1945 and 1946 the PCF
>hoping to win power through the ballot box was not anxious to avoid
>anything  to do anything that might make them unpopular which is why they
>abandoned their support for national independence movements. 

That sounds possible but I would like to see the context and exactly what
the PCF  did or did not do.

Overall however these comments on the Vietnam War fail to understand the
brave and largely correct strategy of the Communist Party of Vietnam of
leading a war of national liberation. It also fails to understand the need
to make compromises and to take advantage of contradictions among the
enemy, eg at one time using US imperialism against French, and vice versa.

Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: hoaxes and the health of capitalism

2000-02-13 Thread Chris Burford

At 10:31 11/02/00 -0500, 

>
>CB: One of my slogans is " repudiate the U.S. national "debt" ". That
would be a radical reform.  It can be put in popular terms. Why should the
government on behalf of the people owe a bunch of bankers a debt. They
should owe us with all they have been ripping off, and all the money put
into protecting their investments overseas.

Good, stategically that sounds quite right. It is about a society where
living labour has domination over dead labour. 

>So what about restriction of the power of rentier capital and landed
>capital, and increased legislation and monitoring to promote social
>production controlled by social foresight? Not red-blooded enough for Hugh,
>but a step on the way? No?
>
>&&&&&&&&&&
>
>CB: Marxists struggle for reforms and for revolution. How would the above
be struggled for in a revolutionary manner ?
>
>Revolutionaries in the U.S. struggled for many reforms such as
legalization of industrial unions, unemployment insurance, welfare for the
poor, Social Security, anti-racist and anti-lynch laws, etc.


How to struggle for the above in a revolutionary manner?

It needs coming at from both sides: side one, opposition in principle to
the domination of finance capital; side two, study of the details of
financial management in order to maximise the campaign against finance
capital, and minimise the proportion of the population opposed. For example
the measures should not look bureaucratic.

Once step is to study the Financial Services Authority that Gordon Brown
has set up in the UK, and discuss the fine print of its aims, remit, and
"mission statement".

Close attention to the popularity of the Financial Services Authority. A
culture of consumer rights at first sounds very individualistic but can tap
into the sense of outrage and vulnerability that even people with "middle
class" aspirations face from unfair judgements about insurance policies,
health care entitlement etc. 

We have already said about the importance of reducing the national debt. 

Salami tactics against private landownership, with a flexible market in
renting the usage of land in accordance with socially controlled plans.
This will bring a stream of revenue to the state funds that will be higher
in periods of high economic activity and can be used to ease burdens during
the turn down of the business cycle. 

Trade union investment fund managers helping progressive forums with
studying how to reform the financial climate to give greater security to
people. 

Some ideas.

Chris Burford

London




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M-TH: hoaxes and the health of capitalism

2000-02-10 Thread Chris Burford




Thanks to a passing virus hoax for sparking us back to life. 



At 09:25 10/02/00 +0100, Hugh wrote:



>the whole of his bloody book is a chain of empirical claims. Facts,
>facts, facts! Mr Gradgrind would be very proud of him. Trouble is, it
>explains fuck all about capitalism, what it's doing and where it's heading.


The book certainly is full of a lot of empirical data but that does not
mean it is empiricist. Doug is both coy and provocative at times.
Nevertheless there are a score of references to Marx, with theoretical
implications of an imaginative kind which many dedicated marxist
revolutionaries would overlook.

Could Hugh take up one reference to Marx or one quotation from Marx in
"Wall Street" and illustrate how it is inadequate, or erroneous. No doubt
from his point of view it is, so that should be easy but it is not correct
to say that Doug ignores theory. 

I have just looked up the first reference to Marx again that caught my eye:

"The public debt becomes one of the most powerful levers of primitive
accumulation. As with the stroke of an enchanter's wand, it endows
unproductive money with the power of creation and thus turns it into capital."

So reduction of the public debt from this point of view is progressive even
if it is not revolutionary ... or should we think otherwise?


Hugh:
>Except to lull us into thinking that it's never been stronger, of course,
>and that our best political hope is a weaker capitalism with a kinder,
>gentler regime. Maybe Doug should run for president.


Please no, third party attempts within the US two party system are a major
recipe for wasted efforts. But what of a half-way goal of a "weaker
capitalism with a kinder gentler regime"?

Why not? And a weaker capitalism would be less able to resist further
advances... 

So what about restriction of the power of rentier capital and landed
capital, and increased legislation and monitoring to promote social
production controlled by social foresight? Not red-blooded enough for Hugh,
but a step on the way? No?


Chris Burford

London



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M-TH: Declaration of the Austrian antiracist movement

2000-02-06 Thread Chris Burford

This was sent by JS to 


>To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
><[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


but there may still be some people on PEN-L who did not get it.

I am forwarding it to PEN-L and to marxism-thaxis

It is in the name of 

Platform for a world without racism

Vienna, 1.2.2000



***.

WE ARE CONCERNED ABOUT WHAT IS DONE TO HUMAN RIGHTS AND HUMAN DIGNITY IN
OUR COUNTRY.

We do not feel obliged to claim Austria's "innocence". The to-be government
is in support of the majority of Austria's population. We have no reason to
claim Haider is "just another" populist. He is not. He is a populist that
operates with xenophobia, racism and the denial of the Holocaust.

The major threat is not the increase of direct violence against minorities.
The major threat is the signal that far right agitation and action is not
only ok but earns you a place in government. As opportunism is one of the
most prominent features of the "Austrian mentality", this is a severe
political danger.

We have reason to be afraid of * the final end of refugee or integration
policies * increasing xenophobia, racism and even antisemitism, because
Austia has never faced its past and now people have governmental
legitimation for such attitudes * law and order policies instead of
co-operative strategies to deal with crime and conflict * abolition of
progressive women's policies (e.g. the post of the minister for women's
affairs will be cancelled and replaced by an extended family ministery) *
severe restrictions to freedom of art, especially where it puts a finger on
the state of the Austrian society (already, in Carinthia, artists are faced
with political limitations to their work) * restrictions to the freedom of
press, because subsidies for critical media products will most certainly be
cut down

we don't know yet what to do about it. we need both your solidarity and
your ongoing critisism. don't stop looking at our country.


To the international community

Declaration of the Austrian antiracist movement

In this moment of Austrian history we are deeply concerned with the
political developments in our country. For more than 10 years, many NGOs,
initiatives and smaller parties have tried to change the austrian racist
reality without success.

In the new millenium, Austria still is not a democracy but a national
democracy. More than 10 % of our population is systematically denied all
political rights and participation, often even for decades, they are kept
in the status of "foreigners". Even in the trade-unions, there are no equal
voting rights for all workers and employees. This system, guaranteeing
equality not to human beeings but to citizens only, is unique in Europe.
Since a democratic system has been imposed on Austria after World War II,
not only the conservatives and the right wing, but also the governing
social democrats fortified this system of nationalistic and racist
segregation and exclusion. This lack of balance in the political system led
to the uprising of a party that is openly promoting a revision of Nazi
history, using racism as an effective political tool due to the lack of a
counterveilling power.

Even the killing of Marcus Omofuma during his deportation on May 1st 1999
did not lead to any antiracist measures. On the contrary, police action,
especially against people with African background, increased drastically.
Charles O., major activist, writer and poet from Nigeria, was even accused
of being a drug-boss and imprisoned for 3 months, before he had to be
released due to complete lack of evidence and major charges were dropped.
Nevertheless these practices led to significant intimidation of the Black
communities in their political campaigning.

Under such unfair conditions of criminalisation and the lack of democratic
rights, we welcome initiatives from the side of the international community
that put pressure on Austrian representatives. Austria is facing a drastic
swing to the right. With a right-conservative government things will even
get worse for people discriminated on grounds of racism, including the
Jewish minority, as well as for people discriminated on the grounds of
sexual orientation, sexual identity or on the grounds of being physically
handicaped.

For some years now, Austria is known in the European Union for its attempts
to radically alter the politics towards a demontage of the Geneva
Convention and the denial of asylum for refugees. Austria has become the
home-base for right-wing policies, threatening emancipatory movements all
over Europe. Therefore it is in the self-interest of all democratic powers
in Europe to try to reverse the political currents in Austria. We want to
encourage all international steps in this direction, hoping that the
European Union at least has learned from history, while the official
Austria has not.

Under any government to come, Austria should finally change towards a fair
democratic system which includes the right to vote

Re: M-TH: There is no premature anti-fascism

2000-02-06 Thread Chris Burford

I very much support the title of Charles Brown's thread on marxism-thaxis. 

Yes Haider's party is not a fully fascist party, but the direction it is
going is clear. 

Its participation in government legitimates this direction. 

It opens up space for more serious advances by the authoritarian, populist,
and racist right. 


The Austrian Ministry of Internal Affairs has already announced a "more
decided and less wavering reaction by the security forces against illegal
protests"

Police in Vienna have announced an "intransingent stand against
law-breakers" (according to posts forwarded by Louis Proyect to PEN-L).


The danger of fascism exists in all bourgeois democracies. The imperialist
bourgeoisie is not a reliable defender of bourgeois democracy even though
petty bourgeois and bourgeois nationalist elements may be more immediately
behind moves to fascism.

There is no perfect check list of states which are fascist and those which
are (bourgeois) democratic. What we have to watch vigilantly is the process
and the direction things are going in.

George is mistaken in just calling for intensified working class struggle
for socialism. The whole revolutionary movement requires taking up of
general *political* issues relevant to all non-exploiting members of the
society.

Bourgeois democracy can never fully deliver democracy, which takes into
account social context and the inequality of people. But bourgeois
democratic rights are extremely important. In the course of the struggle to
defend and extend them, coalitions can be built which will shape a more
robust essentially revolutionary movement social human rights. That will
involve contest with the liberal bourgeoisie and other elements for
leadership of those coalitions. 

Haider's party may not be fully fascist, but "there is no premature
anti-fascism." He and it must be opposed now.

Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: Fw: "Bukharin's prison manuscripts prove Koestler wrong"

2000-02-01 Thread Chris Burford

At 09:54 01/02/00 -0800, you wrote:
>
>- Original Message -
>From: Louis Proyect <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Sent: Tuesday, February 01, 2000 8:38 AM
>Subject: "Bukharin's prison manuscripts prove Koestler wrong"
>


Presuming these texts are authentic, they certainly sound interesting.
Simplistic propagandist versions of "Stalinism" are breaking down,
(although that should not minimise the tragedy of the purges).

Only one caution about the texts: with the polarisation in which Bukharin
is the victim of a particularly arbitrary version of the dictatorship of
the proletariat, he can write a more idealised humanistic version of
marxism. If he was a marxist leader he would still have had to retain
power, ultimately by force of arms.

Or do people want to see him as cuddly, in the way some Gramscians
undoubtedly wish to prettify Gramsci.

Chris Burford

London




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M-TH: Bhaskar proved? (was Idealist discussion of quantum theory)

2000-01-28 Thread Chris Burford

At 16:40 26/01/00 GMT, you wrote:
>Chris,
>
>What exactly is you concern?
>
>I have only briefly glanced through the article and the review a few 
>pages earlier. Does your possible objection lie in the fact that the 
>experiment would appear to bolster Schrodinger's thought experiment 
>(I am personally rather hostile to thought experiments per se) which 
>as I understand it - from the few, contractory, accounts I have read 
>- is an undialectical 'proof' for idealism (or possibly just 
>Kantianism? Or possibly I'm wrong?)


< >


>John


What struck me was the opening paragraph, and Nature is a very
authoritative journal. 

It rang bells for me with arguments presented by Roy Bhaskar, the
dialectical philosopher whose writing is exceedingly detailed and complex. 

One central idea in his "Realist" theory of science is that every "closed"
experiment is artificial. In the universe there is no such thing as
something without interconnections with the outside. But an "orthodox"
scientific experiment which is closed, ie states there are a limited number
of variables at the beginning and the outcome is the result only of those
variables, is actually idealist. It is idealist because it tries to jump
from empirical data straight to Truth, to reality. It is therefore an
empiric*ist* version of idealism. A correctly "realist" approach to
scientific knowledge accepts that material reality exists, often in ways in
which we do not have full direct experience, and attempts to understand the
pattern behind that Reality. 


It was the opening sentences of the Nature article which I thought were a
strikingly confident assertion in an empirical journal, even though I do
not pretend to understand the details of the subsequent study.

>The theory of quantum mechanics applies to closed systems. In such ideal
>situations, a single atom can, for example, exist simultaneously in a
>superposition of two different spatial locations. In contrast, real systems
>always interact with their environment, with the consequence that
>macroscopic quantum superpositions (as illustrated by the 'Schrödinger's
>cat' thought-experiment) are not observed. 


Chris Burford

London



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M-TH: Idealist discussion of quantum theory

2000-01-24 Thread Chris Burford

This abstract from the 20 Jan 00 edition of Nature suggests there is an
undialectical idealism in the discussion of quantum theory in the form of
stories about "Schrödinger's cat".

I am quoting it for the first three sentences. 

While chaos theory is modelled in closed systems it does not apply only to
them. 

The implications of this argument about quantum theory are IMO not clear:
whether it can still apply to non-closed systems i.e. actual reality,
rather than an experiment with an artificially restriced number of variables. 


Chris Burford

London

_


Decoherence of quantum superpositions through
coupling to engineered reservoirs

C. J. MYATT, B. E. KING, Q. A. TURCHETTE, C. A. SACKETT, D. KIELPINSKI, W.
M. ITANO,
C. MONROE & D. J. WINELAND

The theory of quantum mechanics applies to closed systems. In such ideal
situations, a single atom can, for example, exist simultaneously in a
superposition of two different spatial locations. In contrast, real systems
always interact with their environment, with the consequence that
macroscopic quantum superpositions (as illustrated by the 'Schrödinger's
cat' thought-experiment) are not observed. 

Moreover, macroscopic superpositions decay so quickly that even the
dynamics of decoherence cannot be observed. However, mesoscopic systems
offer the possibility of observing the decoherence of such quantum
superpositions.

Here we present measurements of the decoherence of superposed motional
states of a single trapped atom. Decoherence is induced by coupling the
atom to engineered reservoirs, in which the coupling and state of the
environment are controllable. We perform three experiments, finding that
the decoherence rate scales with the square of a quantity describing the
amplitude of the superposition state.



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Re: M-TH: Re: "Kosova revisionists let NATO off the hook"

2000-01-23 Thread Chris Burford

At 06:22 24/01/00 +0100, Bob Malecki wrote:


>These
>people really are the little drummer boys for imperialism in my opinion.

In Bob's opinion - but that does not address the issues. As usual Bob takes
a very abstract approach to being revolutionary: it is enough to say
revolutionary sounding things, but not to expect that progressive people
can intervene concretely in any situation to take the leadership away from
the ruling class. It is a battle fought entirely on the terrain of
revolutionary rhetoric.

It also reveals a failure to understand the progressive reasons for
upholding the right of nations to self determination. That by no means
necessarily entails supporting the imperialist nature of the war that NATO
waged. If we make distinctions and avoid remaining stuck in one-sidedness,
we can see that it might well have entailed supporting the right of the
Kosovans to armed resistance. However as the Green Left article argues one
of the imperialist objectives in Yugoslavia was to be a condescending
saviour and avoid supporting the responsibility of the Kosovans to claim
the right to self-determination, almost certainly because of racist and
imperialist prejudice against muslims. 

Rob concentrates on the number and causes of the deaths and misses the
point in the article about the meaning of genocide: 


>In the UN Genocide Convention, “genocide” is defined as 
>acts “committed with the intent to destroy, in whole or in 
>part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group”. Such 
>acts, with these aims, are not restricted to killing, but 
>include “deliberately inflicting on the group conditions 
>of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction 
>in whole or in part”, such as uprooting people from their homes.
>
>The Nuremberg Tribunal Charter explicitly lists deportation 
>of the civilian population as one of its “crimes against 
>humanity”. The genocide in Kosova was not a question of 
>numbers of dead, but the fact that half the population of 
>Kosova had been driven across borders, and around 80% of 
>those remaining inside Kosova had also been uprooted from 
>their homes.


Besides, with the evidence of what had happened in Bosnia failure to
intervene in Kosovov would have made the west culpable in genocide. 


No doubt Bob on "revolutionary" grounds opposes intervention in Burundi at
present. However in a spirit of internationalism and human rights, some
intervention in Burundi is now essential, even if it does not involve
imperialist bombing their infrastructure!

I trust Rob will make the distinction, even though Bob, I am sure, will be
incapable of it.



Chris Burford

London




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M-TH: "Kosova revisionists let NATO off the hook"

2000-01-21 Thread Chris Burford

I commend this article as a critique of the leftist line on Kosovo:

Chris Burford

London

___


>From Green Left Weekly (Australia) Jan 19 2000

By Michael Karadjis

“The massacres that never were”, ran the headline in the 
right-wing London Spectator. The article reported claims 
by journalist John Laughland that “only” hundreds of 
Albanians had been killed in Kosova during the NATO-Serbia 
war last year, rather than the figure of 10,000 estimated 
by the United Nations. Laughland told readers, “A whole 
string of sites where atrocities were allegedly committed 
have revealed no bodies at all”.

This is hardly surprising from the Spectator, which 
represents the views of those disgruntled Tories who felt 
the traditional ties between the British and Serbian ruling 
classes were more important than British Labour's ambitions 
to put a “human face” on imperialist slaughter.

Similar stories also turned up in the Sunday Times and the 
New York Times, and it was taken up by the pro-Milosevic 
wing of the left. The view was also peddled by the US 
right-wing think-tank Stratfor, which had long advised 
Washington that its war would be counterproductive 
because it would help, rather than hinder, the struggle 
of the Kosova Liberation Army for an independent Kosova. 
Preventing Kosovan independence and disarming the KLA 
were key reasons NATO wanted its troops in Kosova, to 
do the job Milosevic had failed to do.

According to Stratfor, since “only” a few hundred bodies 
have been found, NATO's use of the term “genocide” to 
justify its war has “serious implications not just for 
NATO integrity, but for the notion of sovereignty”. It 
is certainly true that NATO's brutal war on Serb civilians 
casts much doubt on its “integrity,” but this right-left 
alliance to deny the Kosovan genocide has little integrity 
of its own.

The revisionists' main argument was that a Spanish forensic 
team returned home having discovered “only 187 bodies”. This 
pseudo-journalism left the reader to believe this was the 
only team searching. In fact, there were 20 such teams in 
different parts of the country -- a team in Djakovica 
discovered 200 bodies in five days.

When the UN's International Criminal Tribunal for Former 
Yugoslavia (ICTY) recently released the figure of 2108 bodies 
so far discovered, rather than admit their mistake these 
revisionists continued. Maybe not “hundreds”, but “only 2000”, 
rather than 10,000.

Of course, the forensic teams had to pause their work for the 
winter. The 2108 figure was only from the 195 graves so far 
dug up -- out of the 529 so far identified. If that trend 
continued, there would something like 6000 bodies.

But, according to ICTY, this is just the bare minimum, because 
there was also widespread evidence of tampering with grave sites, 
of digging out bodies, of burning and scattering them. The 2108 
bodies had been discovered in sites where Albanians had given 
accounts of 4256 murders of relatives -- the whereabouts of the 
other 2000 is still unknown.

In fact, the 10,000 figure was not invented by NATO, but based 
on figures produced by ICTY of 11,334 killings actually 
identified by relatives. How accurate this is it is difficult 
to say, but it is rarely mentioned that there are still 17,000 
Kosovar Albanians completely unaccounted for. While up to 5000 
are still rotting in Serbian jails, this leaves a figure for 
the presumed dead which is similar to the usual estimate.

But what has this to do with genocide? Are the revisionists 
saying that “only” 2000 dead is not genocide, but 10,000 dead 
is? In the UN Genocide Convention, “genocide” is defined as 
acts “committed with the intent to destroy, in whole or in 
part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group”. Such 
acts, with these aims, are not restricted to killing, but 
include “deliberately inflicting on the group conditions 
of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction 
in whole or in part”, such as uprooting people from their homes.

The Nuremberg Tribunal Charter explicitly lists deportation 
of the civilian population as one of its “crimes against 
humanity”. The genocide in Kosova was not a question of 
numbers of dead, but the fact that half the population of 
Kosova had been driven across borders, and around 80% of 
those remaining inside Kosova had also been uprooted from 
their homes.

Ironically, by doing a hatchet job on the brutalised 
Albanians in order to criticise NATO, these revisionists 
let NATO off the hook. NATO did not act in response to the 
genocide; the NATO bombing precipitated it. And when 
Milosevic launched his genocide using the NATO pretext, 
NATO did nothing to defend the Albanian victims for fear 
that actions against Serb military forces in Kosova would 
aid the KLA, the main thing NATO wanted to avoid.

Veteran Kosovan human rights campaigner Veton Surroi 
described an average day in the war: “It doesn'

Re: M-TH: Re: Gramsci on the State

2000-01-18 Thread Chris Burford

At 15:45 18/01/00 GMT, you wrote:
>Chris,
>
>You seem to have come to a point of stalemate as to in what way 
>Gramsci is or is not a revisionist, but IMO both side have offered 
>little evidence from which anyone, who is not well versed in 
>Gramsci-ism, could come to a reasoned conclusion either way.


Gramsci is not a revisionist. A revisionist means a marxist pariah, 
with a label hung round his neck.  If it cannot be clearly 
demonstrated why he deserves this honour, he is not a revisionist. 



>On the basis of clarification rather than harsh criticism could you 
>elaborate on a few of the points you raise?
>
>You talk of the:
>> analysis of whether the balance of forces is now suited to a war of
>> position or a war of movement? 
>
>What on earth is 'a war of position' or 'a war of movement'?

"He argues that the nature of political power in advanced capitalist 
countries, where political power includes complex institutions and 
mass organisations, determines the only strategy capable of 
undermining the present order and leading to a definitive victory 
for a socialist transformation: a war of position, or trench warfare; 
while the war of movement, or frontal attack, which was successful 
in the very different circumstances of tsarist Russia, is onbly a 
particular tactic." (from a Dictionary of Marxist Thought) 



>Again these smack, not of theoretical tools related to the class 
>struggle, but broader, bland terms arising more from the general 
>tradition of radical continental European political theory and 
>philosophy.

Are you in favour of frontal revolutionary attack in Western Europe?

If so how will you avoid being isolated and defeated?

Chris Burford

London




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Re: M-TH: Re: Gramsci on the State

2000-01-17 Thread Chris Burford

At 13:49 18/01/00 +1300, Dave wrote:

>I would want to add that Gramsci is held up today as a mainstream 
>marxist precisely because of his espousal of what has become 
>canonised as Western Marxism.  By this I mean Menshevism - the 
>doctrine that revolution is evolution and will only take place when all 
>the objective pre-conditions are present - namely a fully developed 
>working class (and culture) etc - as determined by petty bourgeois 
>intellectuals. 

One thing that appears to be a problem with this argument, on both sides,
is that people are attributing to Gramsci what they want to. 

As for Dave's reformulation of Gramsci's alleged errors as Menshevism and
then as political evolutionism, contrary to this, I explicitly quoted
evidence that Gramsci actively argued that Italy did not have to wait for
the developent of capitalism before having a revolution based on an
alliance of the workers and the peasants!


>The reality of class struggle and the need for a the 
>proletariat and its revolutionary vanguard as the active agent of 
>revolution and of the Dictatorship of the Proletariat, is thus denied 
>and suppressed. 

Maybe some people make rightist deviations in the name of Gramsci but what
is the evidence that Gramsci, his experience concentrated by imprisonment
under state power, had illusions about the fundamental class character of
the state and is a "revisionist"?


>Gramsci is hauled out to explain why October 
>was premature, adventurous etc, 

Gramsci specifically argued that October 1917 was not premature.


>Today, after the so-called fall of 'communism', it fits with the 
>wholesale right shift of the left which now (having judged the 
>socialist revolution premature) 

OK switching to today, how imminent is the revolution? Or is Dave just
using criticism Gramsci as a foil behind which he fails to clarify his own
analysis of whether the balance of forces is now suited to a war of
position or a war of movement? 


> This doesnt 
>mean that Gramsci would have endorsed all this reactionary stuff, 
>but he would have to take responsbility for promoting a fatalist 
>method which contributed to it.

What is fatalist about Gramsci's method? It is a method that says in
effect, never stop struggling; look for every opportunity for advance even
when the balance of forces look unfavourable.

Chris Burford

London

 




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Re: M-TH: Chechnea etc...

2000-01-16 Thread Chris Burford

At 13:47 16/01/00 -, George wrote:

>It is clear that the Chechen war is absorbing substantial military
resources. Yet the
>central government in Russia does not appear to be making the necessary
progress for a
>swift victory. Clearly there are significant potential dangers for the
Russian state under
>this scenario. Should the war continue to soak military resources the
opportunity may open
>up for other regional powers to strike out against the Russian state in a
struggle for
>independence. Should several such nationalist wars break out the Russian
state would be
>sorely tried to vanquish them. Under such circumstances it is quite
conceivable that the
>Russian state and economy could disintegrate.
>
>Given a war on several fronts from nationalist movements the opportunities
for Washington
>and even other large powers to exploit the situation would present itself.
This helps
>explain why the Russian government has been putting greater emphasis on
its nuclear
>arsenal. The weaker the conventional military becomes and the state the
more the nuclear
>blackmail will be used as a defensive threat against potential incursion
by imperialist
>powers.

The US must be even happier that Russia is making the surrounding states so
wary of its intentions. It is in the interests of the US to protest about
the attacks on the Chechens but not as much as in the case of East Timor,
to force the army to withdraw. Instead if Putin cleans up his government so
that the oligarchs are not too corrupt and above all co-operate with the
IMF and western banking, then the US will not pull the rug from under the
chauvinist Russian regime. It does not want a socialistic one in its place.

The Chechens will just have to pay the price.

Meanwhile there is a clipping from another list. I cannot speak for the
status of Peoples Voice of Canada, but the clip is a relatively concise and
apparently relatively accurate summary of the oil issue.

Chris Burford

London



(This article is from the Jan. 1-15/2000 issue of People's Voice, Canada's
leading communist newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the source
is credited. Subscription rates in Canada: $25/year, or $12 low income
rate; for U.S. readers - $25 US per year; other overseas readers - $25 US
or $35 CDN per year. Send to: People's Voice, 706 Clark Drive, Vancouver,
Canada, V5L 3J1.)



AS BORIS YELTSIN'S second war against Chechnya grinds on, world public
opinion is growing increasingly alarmed by the terrible consequences for
Chechen civilians, but also at the rising tensions between Russia and the
USA, fuelled by Yeltsin's latest nuclear threats. Clearly there is far more
at stake in this war than first meets the eye.

As with other conflicts in the region during this century, the key to
understanding this struggle is oil. Chechnya and Dagestan are among the
former Soviet territories near the Caspian Sea, with its vast sources of
oil and natural gas. More than a century ago, the nearby city of Baku,
capital of Azerbaijan, became the centre of a booming oil industry which
was greatly expanded during the Soviet era. This industry was a rich prize
desired by Hitler during the Second World War, but the Red Army blocked the
Nazis before they could occupy the Caucasus in 1942.

Since the capitalist counter-revolution which broke up the USSR in 1991, a
consortium of 11 oil monopolies from the USA and Europe have gained control
of more than 50 percent of the oil reserves in the area, estimated at a
potential worth of $4 trillion. US imperialism has steadily worked to
advance its interests around the Caspian Sea, now bordered by five
countries: the former Soviet republics of Russia, Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan
and Kazakhstan, as well as Iran.

The Russian government fears that the CIA and the Pentagon are engineering
the de facto colonisation of these and other resource-rich former Soviet
territories, such as by encouraging the Islamic separatist movement in
Chechnya.

"The national interests of the U.S. correspond to a scenario in which an
armed conflict is constantly smouldering in the North Caucasus," Russian
Defense Minister Igor Sergeyev said in a recent news conference. Russia's
Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Avdeyev said a few days later that the
country may be heading for a direct conflict with the United States.

"The prospects of potentially enormous hydrocarbon reserves is part of the
allure of the Caspian region... New transportation routes will be necessary
to carry Caspian oil and gas to world markets," according to a December
1998 report from the United States Energy Information Administration.

The USA wants a new Caspian oil pipeline to bypass the existing lines
routed through Russia, which were designed to link the Soviet Union
internally. On Nov. 18, President Clinton and Energy Secretary Bill
Richardson met with the presidents of Azerbaijan, Georgia, T

M-TH: IMF needs broader social support

2000-01-14 Thread Chris Burford

Here below, the IMF is acting as testamentary executor for the financial
crash of 1997-8. Some sort of political adjustment is essential. 

The IMF particularly has to shore up its credibility in Asia.

The implications of this are the increasing importance of the 2 billion
members of the emerging global "middle class", on whom Clinton bases his
strategic hopes.

Chris Burford

London



>>>>>>>>>>.

The IMF will secure broader support for its programs from various sectors
of society to make them more effective and successful, AFP reports an IMF
official said yesterday. "Clearly, we think that programs work better and
quicker if there is this broader sense of ownership," IMF External
Relations Director Thomas Dawson said in Singapore. "When a budget is drawn
up, and targets are agreed to, an assessment has to be made as to its
viability."

This is why "Fund missions do regularly meet with elements in the
opposition, with elements in civil society, labor unions in particular
to...make a judgment of what is doable and achievable," he added, citing
the success of the IMF's program in South Korea, where there was leadership
and willingness to support financial restructuring. Dawson said his trip
through Japan and Singapore were among a series of visits by IMF officials
to gain feedback on the Fund's programs, including from the media,
opposition groups, and labor unions.

<<<<<<<<<<<<<



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Re: M-TH: Re: Gramsci on the State

2000-01-13 Thread Chris Burford

At 13:53 13/01/00 +, David Welch wrote:
>
>Didn't we have this discussion last year? Just because something can't be
>touched doesn't mean it isn't material (in the properly marxist sense).
>That said, it's not difficult to share John's hostility to hegemony as a
>socialist strategy. Look what happened to the British Eurocommunists (or
>perhaps they did a bit too well considered the number of ex-CPGB figures 
>in the Labour party leadership)


Good point. I suspect that if the past subscription list of Marxism Today
were published, it would be very embarrassing for the New Labour government.


But it is a strength as well as a weakness. I never had an appetite myself
to read Marxism Today, which always seemed to me to be defeatist about the
need to accommodate to why Thatcherism was so successful. 

However in a sense, it was a very materialist analysis. It cut free from
the idealism of left Labour, which would have a list of good left causes,
suitable to people permanently in opposition. Instead this approach
calculated ruthlessly how to get re-elected and to stay re-elected. This
meant accommodating to the swing section of the electorate, the skilled
working class or the new intelligentsia who call themselves middle class.

It logically implies careful continuous surveys of public opinion and a
5 strong "Peoples Parliament" of focus groups. It includes very much
taking into account people's psychological reactions in a way not usually
made explicit in marxist theory, but very influential in practical
politics. It implies spin doctors, but more importantly positive
presentations. These are not so much political rhetoric but more the way a
modern large monopoly company would organise its employees and its
publicity department.

In strict marxist terms it analyses the "resultant of forces" continuously,
[see Engels' argument in his famous letter to Bloch of September 1890]. 

It limits the scope of reforms only to what can be achieved within the
resultant of forces.

It is therefore by definition reformist.

The question however is whether a revolutionary approach to reforms should
also use the same method of analysing the resultant of forces. I say yes. 

I know David has a thought-out position on involvement in electoral
politics and it is a very difficult problem for what are often small
organisations of marxists. 

But Gramsci implies an alternative to the bourgeois two party system that
has kept capitalism in power for so long. It entails reformist risks but
Gramsci is not I maintain revisionist as such, and Hugh has interestingly
fallen silent on this point. 

Chris Burford

London



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M-TH: Luxemburg Liebknecht March Ban

2000-01-11 Thread Chris Burford

Allegedly on security grounds, this years Luxemburg Liebknecht march in
Berlin has been banned.

Traditionally held on the second Sunday in January, the PDS has now called
for another attempt to be made this Saturday, which happens to be the exact
anniversay, January 15, of the day in 1919 when Rosa Luxemburg and Karl
Liebknecht were murdered.

It was a traditional march in the GDR, and after the fall of the wall many
other leftists supported it. 

The failure of the authorities to protect it allegedly from someone who had
a grudge against the GDR, is ominous.

Chris Burford

London




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Re: M-TH: Re: Gramsci on the State

2000-01-11 Thread Chris Burford

Does Hugh think Gramsci is a revisionist or not?



Chris Burford

London

_

At 19:09 11/01/00 +0100, you wrote:
>Chris writes:
>
>>Presumably if Hugh always assumed Gramsci was a revisionist he did not know
>>the details I posted which I extracted from the Dictionary of Marxist
Thought.
>
>Gramsci's positive attitude to the theory of Permanent Revolution during
>the first few years of October and the Third International is hardly
>surprising. Not even Stalin dared criticize Lenin or Trotsky for this view
>(completely against the Two-Stage Theory of revolution of course) in those
>years. It's what happens to this attitude after the Stalinist
>counter-revolution and the dogmatization of Socialism in One Country etc
>that counts.

>If he thinks the quote from the Dictionary solves that, he's wrong.



>If he thinks that deliberate vagueness and political code is a necessary
>aspect of writing by a communist leader in prison, he should say so and
>crack the code for us so the real revolutionary message of Gramsci's work
>emerges.



>the real orthodox revolutionary Marxist
>message of Gramsci's writings



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Re: M-TH: Re: Gramsci on the State

2000-01-10 Thread Chris Burford

Have Hugh and I reached stalemate on this subject?

Presumably if Hugh always assumed Gramsci was a revisionist he did not know
the details I posted which I extracted from the Dictionary of Marxist Thought.

The more substantive question is the strategic question about preparing for
revolutionary change in an advanced capitalist society. 

Hugh does not oppose the struggle for reforms of course. However I await
him saying how this is combined with a more revolutionary perspective and
how radicals should prepare for those sudden qualitative changes of tempo
that precede a true revolution.

Could it be that our differences are not as great as we would both like to
believe? 

We can still come down on different sides on certain political questions eg
is it more revolutionary or not for Britain to join the European Monetary
Union to take an example we have not discussed.

Chris Burford

London





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Re: M-TH: Re: Gramsci on the State

2000-01-09 Thread Chris Burford
ted a coup d'etat
although he tended to overestimate the fragility of the new regime.

In Jan 1921 he helped to found the Communist Party of Italy as part of
Lenin's Third International. From 1922 - 4 he worked for the Comintern in
Moscow. Elected to the Italian Parliament in 1924 he returned to Italy
where he took over the party leadership and engaged in a struggle to
transform the PCI from the sectarianism of its early years into a party
rooted in the mass movement. [This could be quite consistent with the
political position Lenin argued in "Left Wing Communism - An Infantile
Disorder"] Gramsci was arrested in 1926 and sentenced to 20 years
imprisonment. After years of ill-health Gramsci died in 1937 from a
cerebral haemorrhage. 

 

Now I cannot see any of that is revisionist by definition. The man has
courage. He bases his work on the working class and the peasantry. He
promotes the self-organisation of the working class. He is an
internationalist. He combines parliamentary campaigning with trying to
promote a mass base. He uses bourgeois legality to try to restrict the
risks of fascism, without any suggestion that he would wish to abandon the
goal of revolution.

Perhaps the lessons of Italy and of Germany was that once established,
fascism was a much more serious menace than the communists at first
realised. But that is nothing to do with any charge of revisionism that
could reasonably be levelled against Gramsci.

In terms of Hugh's rather specialised definition of revisionism above, I do
not see how Gramsci's participation in the Third International from 1922-4
could be said to be against the idea of an international party of the
working class, unless Hugh thinks that Lenin's model of a single communist
party in each country was itself revisionist. In which case he ought to lay
the charge of revisionism more coherently at the door of Lenin, and we can
stop trying to interpret Gramsci's cryptic prison notebooks.

Whatever the merits or demerits of what Hugh calls Stalin's two stage
theory of revolution, I do not see that the account of Gramsci's life above
shows he was in anyway reluctant to have had a revolution in Italy if the
conditions had permitted it.

Hugh refers to Lenin's State and Revolution. He presents no evidence that
what Gramsci said was against the principles there. Indeed Gramsci's
analysis of the rise of fascism shows he was very clear of the danger of
the state being a body by which one class oppresses another. 

Really with the resources Hugh has at his disposal from his Trotskyist
contacts and in view of the widespread interest in Gramsci by
"Eurocommunists" I would have thought Hugh would have some ready made
articles to hand with clear passages which could back up his claim that
Gramsci was a revisionist. 

If Hugh is however essentially criticising what he sees as right
opportunist positions by Eurocommunists who claimed to be inspired by
Gramsci long after Gramsci's death, then the debate can move on to that.

And we are back at how in a developed capitalist society the progressive
forces can accumulate strength against the forces of capitalism by long
painstaking work. PLUS, how they can prepare for the unexpected. IMO both
require a revolutionary attitude to reforms.


Over to you again, Hugh.


Chris Burford

London






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Re: M-TH: Re: Gramsci on the State

2000-01-09 Thread Chris Burford
n one is open to right opportunist
distortions.

>I'm surprised no-one else is joining in 

Yes, I too think it is surprising. Just because we can count on Hugh for a
good argument does not mean that this strategic issue is of relevance just
to him and me. At least we both agree that it is pretty fundamental.

Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: Re: Gramsci on the State

2000-01-07 Thread Chris Burford

> When Chris lauds Blair, he is lauding
>a reformist.

[And when Hugh beats his wife, he is a male chauvinist.]



>Let's call a revisionist someone who thinks that somehow socialism will
>grow automatically out of a non-bourgeois, workers state. Once the
>bourgeoisie has been expropriated, the rest looks after itself (always
>providing you exterminate the saboteurs, fascists, Old Bolsheviks,
>Trotskyists, capitalist roaders, imperialist running dogs and other enemies
>of the state, except when you make deals with fascists and imperialists
>like Hitler, Churchill, the Shah, Mobutu or Nixon, for the good of the
>state). This regardless of the position within the world economy of that
>workers state. It is obvious that this kind of break with Marx's principles
>only became possible on the back of October. What is amazing is the
>consistency with which the same guff repeated itself in all the deformed
>workers states following on October -- the Eastern European satellites as
>more or less carbon copies, and with varying degrees of independence but
>fundamental similarities (Socialism-in-Our-One-Country, the Two-Stage
>Theory of Revolution, Bureaucratic Centralism, the personality cult) in
>Yugoslavia, Vietnam, China and Cuba.
>
>So revision of Marx's principles is common to both reformists and
>revisionists, but the main watershed is the principle of the state, where
>the revisionists accept the  necessity (by their institutional dependence
>on it, as a state or as a dependent party, ie a CP performing the function
>of diplomatic representation for the Stalinist Soviet Union, Maoist China
>etc) of a workers state, a dictatorship of the proletariat, but reject the
>consequences of Marx's and Lenin's analysis of the dialectical relationship
>between form of state and mode of production (best presented in Lenin's The
>State and Revolution and Trotsky's Permanent Revolution).
>
>It is clear that Gramsci, as bound hand and foot, and willingly, to the
>Italian, Stalinist CP, falls into this category of revisionism. The
>elements of reformism in his thought, reminiscent of Kautsky's
>ultraimperialism turned in on the operations of society, express a
>compensatory desire to wish away the political defeats of his period (ie
>Stalinist counter-revolution with all its disasters for the international
>working class) by  means of an essentialist, fatalist, automatic growing
>over of imperialist society into socialist society. In other words a
>deliberate ignoring of the political and social contradictions between the
>bourgeois state (ie the relations of property) and the class struggle (ie
>the development of the forces of production).


This sounds at best just one definiton of revisionism, which conveniently
fits everything Hugh would say about Stalinism anyway. Gramsci is tainted
by association with the Communist Party of Italy. That is not a very
convincing way of arguing that Gramsci is inherently revisionist.

However although I would not use the same terminology I think it there is
room for some common ground when Hugh says:

>What is amazing is the
>consistency with which the same guff repeated itself in all the deformed
>workers states following on October 

Why is this amazing? If we still think it is amazing there must be
something deficient in our analysis. There must be something deeper
happening which cannot be summed up just in a word derived from the name of
one man, Stalin. 

As far as revolutionary change in the west is concerned Hugh seems to make
the mistake of arguing that because Gramsci's approach implies 10,000
changes in the superstructure will be part of the process, it will
nevertheless be a gradual evolution. Turbulence and sudden change could
occur. It might still be right to fight a war of position, until it turns
dialectically into a war of movement. 

Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: Re: Gramsci on the State

2000-01-06 Thread Chris Burford

Hugh, are your really calling Gramsci a revisionist?

And if so what type of revisionist is he, and what is your evidence?

(I will still allow that you might want to call many self-declared
*Gramscians* revisionists, but that is not necessarily the same question.)

Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: From another list on "nation"

2000-01-04 Thread Chris Burford
ndation for
solidarity in the future against the common enemy. So even in the case of
movements that are really movements of national minorities, rather than of
full nations, it is usually positive to oppose all forms of oppression as
part of wining them to the socialist revolution in the widest sense.

Chris Burford

London






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Re: M-TH: Re: Gramsci on the State

2000-01-03 Thread Chris Burford
manifest in a clear
temporal sequence - first A then B then C. 

(He argued for the strengthening of the dictatorship of the proletariat in
a socialist country before the victory of socialism world wide (oddly
reminiscent of Stalin's explicit revision of Engels on the question of the
withering away of the state).

Now I read Gramsci as saying that to the extent that the openly cooercive
functions of the state can be replaced by more consensual ones, so long as
*consciousness* can internalise methods of self-regulation in the minds of
the citizens then the state in that sense can wither away. But that will
not be totally possible while classes exist.

For example there are now over 20,000 CCTV cameras in London. Many of them
reduce petty crime just by being there, by intruding on the consciousness
of people that they *might* be filmed. Often there is no film in the CCTV
cameras used to control speeding. The light flashes, and people slow down. 

Fines on the London underground are only £10 for having no ticket. This is
hardly the iron fist of the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie, although the
service is still a bourgeois service, expensive and inconvenient. 

If the market is not immediately to be abolished but if finance capital is
to be brought under social control with the greater use of computers, it is
possibly to envisage a society that is more consciously self-regulated,
with many feedback systems, with only some aspects of the state designed to
maintain the domination of the private ownership of the means of production
by *force*.

Now clearly Hugh would wish to criticise this as revisionist but I would
appreciate him saying exactly in what way. Because I think Gramsci's
formulas can be defended as not revisionist. I think they reflect the fact
that the marxist method of abstraction is to be understood concretely in
terms of quantitive changes turning into qualitative changes over quite a
long period of time, and not as a linear sequence of punctuated
revolutionary steps.

(Marx held that modes of production were often mixed.)

If correct, this has big implications for our concept of revolution.


Chris Burford

London










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Re: M-TH: Gramsci on the State

2000-01-03 Thread Chris Burford

At 22:10 02/01/00 +0100, Hugh wrote:


>
>This makes things pretty clear, I think.
>
>The first sentence talks about "the general notion of the State", that is
>one valid for any state regardless of the class character of the ruling
>class that organizes it to protect its interests in the mode of production
>involved. The second sentence goes on to refer to "a doctrine of a State
>which conceives the latter as tendentially capable of withering away", as
>if the withering away was part of the earlier "general notion of the
>State". Given Gramsci's reputation as a Marxist, it might be thought that
>he was referring to Marx's notion of the State. But Marx made it very clear
>that in his view the State would only be able to wither away once the
>conflicting interests of the classes in the capitalist mode of production
>(ie the bourgeoisie and the proletariat) had been resolved by a revolution
>in the mode of production so that these classes are removed from the
>battlefield of history and replaced by a society of freely associated
>producers, neither wage-slaves nor capitalists but equal in law and in
>practice in their access to the forces of production and in the sharing of
>the wealth they produce. As long as society is riven by class struggle,
>that is as long as capital and labour-power confront each other as polar
>opposites, ie as long as they exist as capital and
>labour-power/wage-labour, there is no way the State can wither away.
>
>It's obvious from the remark quoted that Gramsci ignores this and is
>completely reformist in his general perspective. Which of course is why
>he's such a favourite with academic liberals who like to coquette with a
>dash of Marxist red in their dinner jacket lapels.




Thanks for dealing with these arguments directly. Which was more than I got
from the Moderator of Marxism (LP) on the PEN-L list, whose reply appeared
to be that self-evidently these ideas could not be taken seriously because
they were written in prison!

There is no doubt that Gramsi's ideas are open to a reformist
interpretation. They also try to tackle the complexity of late bourgeois
state and society in which the state intervenes in all sorts of ways, some
of which are not about the open threat of violence by bodies of armed men,
but which merge with accepted procedures sanctioned by the hegemony of
ideas and the practice of civil society.

I think there is a lot to be said for this but in terms of Hugh's
criticisms, the question is, where does the reformist risk in Gramsci come
from? From himself, from the pressure of writing in prison under the
dictatorship of the bourgeoisie, or from his fashionable academic
interpreters.

Hugh directly criticises the passage in Gramsci. But it is certainly
written in somewhat obscure ways and the following paragraph suggests that
Gramsci was signalling the very reservations that Hugh insists upon. Would
Hugh agree? 

"The expression 'Ethical State' or 'civil society' would thus mean that
this 'image' of a State without a State was present to the greatest
political and legal thinkers, in so far as they placed themselves on the
terrain of pure science, (pure utopia, since based on the premise that all
men are really equal and hence equally rational and moral, i.e. capable of
accepting the law spontaneously, freely, and not through coercion, as
imposed by another class, as something external to consciousness)."

Well. Does the fault, if fault it be, lie in Gramsci or in his
opportunistic interpreters? 

Chris Burford

London





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M-TH: Gramsci on the State

2000-01-02 Thread Chris Burford

Gut revulsion at opportunist political leaders seems to combine with a
reading of Lenin's polemics against opportunism to create a view that the
bourgeois state can never have a progressive aspect, nor can government
policies be a terrain of struggle. 

It is a controversial area, but the following extract from the entry on
Gramsci in A Dictionary of Marxist Thought by Anne Showstack Sassoon,
(volume ed. by Tom Bottomore. Blackwell, Second Edition 1991) - may clarify
the arguments.


"Intellectuals organize the web of beliefs and institutional and social
relations which Gramsci calls hegemony. Thus he redefines the state as
force plus consent, or hegemony armoured by coercion * in which political
society organizes force, and civil society organizes consent.

Gramsci used the word "state" in different ways: in a narrow
legal-constitutional sense, as a balance between political and civil
society; or as encompassing both. Some writers criticize his 'weak' view of
the state which overemphasizes the element of consent (Anderson 1976-7),
while others stress that Gramsci is trying to analyse the modern
interventionist state where the lines dividing civil and political society
are increasingly blurred (Sassoon 1980). 

He argues that the nature of political power in advanced capitalist
countries, where civil society includes complex institutions and mass
organizations, determines the only strategy capable of undermining the
present order and leading to a definitive victory for a socialist
transformation.: a war of position, or trench warfare; while the war of
movement, or frontal attack, which was successful in the very different
circumstances of tsarist Russia, is only a particular tactic. 

Influenced by Macchiavelli, Gramsci argues that the Modern Prince - the
revolutionary party - is the organism which will allow the working class to
create a new society by helping it to develop its organic intellectuals and
an alternative hegemony. 

The political, social and economic crisis of capitalism can, however,
result in a reorganization of hegemony through various kinds of passive
revolution, in order to pre-empt the threat by the working-class movement
to political and economic control by the ruling few, while providing for
the continued development of the forces of production. He includes in this
category fascism, different kinds of reformism, and the introduction in
Europe of scientific management and assembly-line production."


* This is a reference to page 263 of "Selections from the Prison Notebooks"
1971, Lawrence and Wishart:

"the general notion of the State includes elements which need to be
referred back to the notion of civil society (in the sense that one might
say that State = political society + civil society, in other words hegemony
protected with the armour of coercion). In a doctrine of a State which
conceives the latter as tendentially capable of withering away and of being
subsumed into regulated society, the argument is a fundamental one. It is
possible to imagine the coercive element of the State withering away by
degrees, as ever-more conspicuous elements of regulated society (or ethical
State or civil society) make their appearance." 1932



Chris Burford

London






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Re: M-TH: Vote for Karl Marx!

2000-01-02 Thread Chris Burford

At 08:35 19/12/99 -0500, Andy Lehrer wrote:
>
>(please forward)
>
>http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/static/events/millennium/default.stm
>
>The BBC is conducting an internet poll to determine "the man of the
millenium"
>(last month
>Indira Gandhi was chosen woman of the millenium).  Anyone anywhere can
have one
>vote for
>each e-mail address. Karl won the  September "Thinker of the Millennium"
vote, got
>tons of
>publicity, and he
>stands a real chance now - so VOTE NOW! Here are the standings thus far:
>
>1. Mahatma Gandhi
>2. Leonardo da Vinci
>3. Nelson Mandela
>4. Sir Isaac Newton
>5. Albert Einstein
>6. Martin Luther King
>7. Jesus Christ
>8. Sir Winston Churchill
>9. Charles Darwin
>10. Karl Marx
>
>As you can see, our man Karl is trailing in tenth spot. Help boost Karl to
 first
>(we did it
>once before with the Thinker of the Millenium poll in  September) by
voting at
>
>http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/static/events/millennium/default.stm


1. Mahatma Gandhi 
2. Leonardo da Vinci 
3. Jesus Christ 
4. Nelson Mandela 
5. Sir Isaac Newton 
6. Albert Einstein 
7. Martin Luther King 
8. Sir Winston Churchill 
9. Charles Darwin 
10. Karl Marx



I see the only change on the final result above was that Jesus Christ moved
up from 7th to 3rd place demoting Nelson Mandela. 

Well at least our man beat Adam Smith, and Darwin was a materialist and
Mandela and Martin Luther King are democrats, and da Vinci and Einstein
were eccentric scientists.

As for Jesus, he was rather arkward too, but I would have thought he should
have been disqualified as far as human beings of this millenium are
concerned. So perhaps Marx was  ninth.


Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: Re: Nation

2000-01-01 Thread Chris Burford

At 23:30 01/01/00 +1100, Rob wrote:

.


>  Not quite Lenin, I'll admit, but no longer cozy Kautskyism either.

.

>Any of that hold any water, ya reckon?



Surely.

It is necessary to shift the framework of analysis of political economy to
the global level.

 The one place on the industrialised planet that could not publicly
celebrate the millenium was Seattle. Good. Rob is also right that the
*nature* of the war that NATO fought in Kosovo was deeply suspect. Not much
credibility there for the global gendarme.

But I would emphasise two points economically.

1) The accumulation of surplus must also be analysed at a global level. In
terms of exchange value it is a zero sum game, even if improved
productivity increases the volume of use values.

2) As I wrote in my notes on "imperialism", Lenin has been proved more
correct than Kautsky, in emphasising finance capital. 

TNC's are essentially masses of finance capital stabilising themselves
across the globe and over time, despite the fluctuations of the business
cycle and of the exchange rates. 

The concept also has the merit of seeing the phenomena as something more
profound than just a set of policies (although of course they have policies
to maximise their returns). They are the most abstract from of capital that
at present exists. But they are virtually untamed at the global level,
still less trussed up and ready for the oven.

But I agree with Hugh, (even though I suspect he may wish to leave me out
of the greetings to revolutionaries) that sometime in the next millenium,
and probably within the next century, we should be celebrating a socialist
thanksgiving, with turkey the main item on the menu.

Chris Burford

London 




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M-TH: imperialisms

1999-12-31 Thread Chris Burford

At 14:57 30/12/99 -0500, you wrote:
>Our friend Bob is always disparaging Kautsky but couldn't it
>be the case that Lenin was right concerning pre-WW I Europe
>whereas Kautsky's concept of a super-imperialism may well
>have validity for the world we live in now?
>
>Jim F.


Highly likely. I tried checking in "Karl Kautsky and the Socialist
Revolution" by Massimo Salvadori 1976 Verso paperback 1990. 

The picture is mixed. It is common in marxism space for people to write
confidently that there were some deficiciencies in the description of
imperialism given by Lenin as based on Hobson's writings. Kautsky's work
certainly has deficiencies too, and it is complex to disentangle the errors
of political judgement, the explanations, the limitations of analysis, and
the change in the objective conditions.

The issue of voting for the war credits, and trying to resist or modify
them while maintaining unity of the German SDP is one question. Another is
whether he could make a principled distinction between calling for the
defeat of ones own imperialist country, and making one's support
conditional only on it not waging an aggressive war. 

There is the wider question of how much genuine socialists should depend on
progressing purely through bourgeois democracy. 

But in terms of the theory of ultra-imperialism -

Kautsky does, as Lenin charged, appear to see imperialism as the control of
agricultural resources by industrial capital. Finance capital is not
emphasised for him in the way it is by Lenin. For Kautsky imperialism is
about empires of industrial heartlands with agricultural colonies. For him
therefore ulta-imperialism is an alternative policy whereby out of class
interests the industrial capitalists of the world could come to see it is
better to overcome war and promote free trade. 

In one sense this is indeed a policy subject to conscious control rather
than a higher phase of capitalism independent of the will of any
individual. But it does not appear to recognise the chaotic dynamics of the
clashes of blocs of finance capital. 

Kautsky appears to have been complacent about the dominance of liberal
bourgeois democracy.

In his analysis of the effects of the war Kautsky appears to have been more
realistic about the likely shifts in the balance of forces internationally:

1) the decline of Europe
2) the rise of anti-imperialist struggles in the colonies
3) the ascent of the United States destined to assume the leadership of the
capitalist world
4) the end of Tsarist Russia.



This sort of theorizing is an attempt to reflect in thought the
contradictions in the external world and we ought to keep our attention
focussed on the external world.  

What people are trying to get at with concepts like "ultra-imperialism" is
the way finance capital can interpenetrate and may promote free trade and
the reduction of the risk of big wars between large states. 

On the other hand the contradictions do not disappear and the terms of
cooperation can cover up skirmishing for dominance between different
imperialisms. EG the Kosovo war was in part an attempt by the USA supported
by the UK to show Europe it could give leadership and impose a solution.
The concealed recriminations and the rapid decision on forming a 50,000
strong European-only defence force, are a reflection of the contradictions.

There can be both contention and collusion between different imperialisms
(by which I mean blocs of finance capital).

Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: Ali BBC sportsperson of the century

1999-12-28 Thread Chris Burford

On 23rd December John wrote:

>My problem is that part of this enforced celebration means that I no 
>longer have access to a computer over this period, so I will just 
>have to save up all my posts until everything reopens. I look forward 
>to reading everyone else when I return. 
>



On  21/12/99 GMT, John wrote:

>You go on to say that 'images of positive role models are
>important.' This seems to be at the heart of you enthusiasm for this
>poll. This sounds very much like bourgeois race relations speak to me.
>Without raising the whole rather complex and long-winded issue of the
>nature of racism for marxists (unless someone's determined I do),
>surely racism is more than just an ideological issue of white people
>having 'incorrect' views and black people having low self-esteem.

Yes. I think racism is a form of national oppression (but that is indeed a
big question). Yes 'positive role models' is liberal speak but more than
that. It is not restricted to "a racially conceived version of the
individualist idea of the Great Men theory of history".

An awareness of class and national oppression is absorbed in childhood. 
A child notices whether their mother or father is treated with respect 
and by whom; what is talked about where, and what is not talked about.
Much of this is subconscious or only semi-conscious.


>> Like Hugh, (who essentially agrees with me apart from having to take
>> a customary swipe at reformism) I also remember the black power
>> salute at the Olympics. That took courage.
>
>Can you explain in greater detail how this historical event manifests
>itself in a BBC poll which in itself amount to a revolutionary change?
>What is the actual mechanism Where by one can go from what I admit was
>a significant and courageous action to a material effect in present day
>society? What REAL individual, significant (however small) 
>revolutionary change has occurred? What sort of minor individual
>changes does Gramski refer to? Isn't it, at best, all part of the ebb
>and flow of politics (ripple across the ideological superstructural
>pool? Or is it, in fact, politically insignificant or down right
>reactionary?

It is all part of the ripples across the ideological superstructural pool.

But when a gathering of mainly white men stand in respect for a black
sportsman, that is a ripple worth noticing.



>> It is worth a hundred lectures against racism and a thousand
>> lectures in praise of proletarian internationalism. It is itself a
>> concrete act of proletarian internationalism.  
>
>How? Surely the idea of BBC Xmas lectures against racism and a 1000 
>programme series on proletarian internationalism might just have some 
>effect? That I could imagine would have a real effect on one or more 
>people who in turn would contribute significantly to revolutionary 
>change. I know I wouldn't object to it.

.

>Absolutely astonished & bemused,
>John  


Well we are obviously approaching this question from very different
subjective, practical, and theoretical positions. That could be creative
but the gap is wide at the moment and we will not bridge it if we get
irritated with each other, which I suspect we would if we tried to force
each other to agree.

I feel your remarks above assume that the way forward in revolutionary
change is through clear-sighted marxists becoming more clear sighted. I am
in favour of this but I think the process of revolutionary change, spread
out over several decades, involves the subconscious of the masses. They
need to experience in practice the issues that marxists
think they can see clearly in consciousness.


BTW my piece was concerned about the consciousness of the mainly white male
audience that voted Ali BBC sportsperson of the century. 

Since then I have been struck by watching a video of Ali standing up
against the Vietnam war and in favour of black assertiveness. He achieved
what Paul Robeson did not succeed in doing - turning the black population
of the USA against an imperialist war. He was less educated than Robeson,
and rougher in his language. He did not communicate in educated diction.
There will also be political differences that I suspect Charles Brown knows
in much more detail than I do. But his mind was extraordinarily nimble and
intelligent in asserting the justice of his position. He risked prison,
risked never being able to fight again in any country of the world, risked
isolation from his community. 

Not the foremost marxist theoretician of his decade but a brave
internationalist. Because when it came down to it his nationalism was
internationalist. No Vietnamese ever called me a nigger. What is the
abstract concept of proletarian internationalism if it cannot express
itself in concrete deeds like this?

So when he accepted the gift in person of the BBC t

Re: M-TH: Re: Fictitious capital

1999-12-22 Thread Chris Burford

At 00:21 22/12/99 +0100, you wrote:
>>Given the large amounts of fictitious capital in existence in the form of
>>bonds and shares
>>etc and the long run rise in the price of shares it must be that the
>>accumulation of
>>capital in the West has been sufficient to sustain this bull market.
>
>Why?
>
>How?


Broadly, yes. I am not sure that this hangs on the technical Marxian
meaning of fictitious capital. 

The USA escaped the crisis of liquidity just. Critical was the bail our of
LTCM. 

More capital was destroyed in Asia. This balanced the picture in the world
as a whole and the US could become the world's engine of growth, generously
accumulating even more so that people could sell to it on credit.

Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: Marx/Engels Internet Archive

1999-12-20 Thread Chris Burford

Well can you get the quotation on the duopoly with these search methods??

>"We find two great gangs of political speculators, who alternately
>take possession of the state power and exploit it by the most corrupt
>ends -- the nation is powerless against these two great cartels of
>politicians who are ostensibly its servants, but in reality dominate
>and plunder it."



Apart from getting a loop back to the archive button, if you go directly to
the web page quoted, and type in "two great cartels" you get a large number
of Trotskyist references but not the Engels text.

Thank goodness the Exeter mirror site, although very out of date, is still
in existence.

What about the Colorado.EDU site?

I realise that vast amounts of unpaid labour have gone into all this, but
the present situation appears a potentially serious loss of a valuable
resource.

Chris Burford

London



At 10:49 20/12/99 +0100, you wrote:
>Good news!
>
>After Chris B's note about the Marx/Engels Internet Archive not having a
>search engine I checked it out and wrote to the Archive to ask about it.
>This is their reply.
>
>Cheers,
>
>Hugh
>
>___
>
>
>Greetings, and thank you for your inquiry.
>
>We're in the process of moving the marxists.org site to a new server
>that will support a search engine.  We hope to complete this move
>within the week.  In the meanwhile our UK mirror has a search
>capability:
>
>http://www.marxists.org.uk/search.shtml
>
>This mirror is perfectly up-to-date.
>
>>This has no search engine, and lacks much of the other supportive
>>material,
>>and I suspect, texts of the earlier site.
>
>On the contrary, the marxists.org site has vastly more content than
>the original marx.org site, which was pulled by its administrator
>many months ago.  We mirror all of its original content and much more
>besides.  Please clarify this point to your comrades.  It's a painful
>misperception.
>
>If you have further questions please don't hesitate to contact me.
>
>Best,
>
>Tim Delaney
>Director, Marx/Engels Internet Archive
>http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/
>mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> --- from list [EMAIL PROTECTED] ---
>
>



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Re: M-TH: Engels on Two Party Duopoly

1999-12-19 Thread Chris Burford

At 08:27 18/12/99 -0800, you wrote:
> Found this F. Engels quote on a libertarian list. Any ideas on the direct
>source?
> Michael Pugliese
>
>"We find two great gangs of political speculators, who alternately
>take possession of the state power and exploit it by the most corrupt
>ends -- the nation is powerless against these two great cartels of
>politicians who are ostensibly its servants, but in reality dominate
>and plunder it."
>
>-- Friedrich Engels


FREDERICK ENGELS

London, on the 20th anniversary
of the Paris Commune, March 18, 1891.

Introduction to Civil War in France

This should not just be on a libertarian list. It is in praise of the
"dictatorship of the proletariat" as illustrated in the Paris Commune of 1871!



I only got this by going to the Exeter mirror site of the Marx Engels
Archive. This has a warning that it is "fearfully out of date", and advice
to go the the "Marxists" archive. 



What has happened to the Marx Engels Internet Archive at Colorado, which
has a search engine? This is a serious loss.

This used to be at http://csf.COLORADO.EDU/psn/marx/

When I clicked on this recently it took me straight to the "Marxists.org
Internet Archive"

This has a drop down menu with Marx Engels as the first choice. When you
click on "Enter Archive" you at 

www.marxists.org/archive/marx/

This has no search engine, and lacks much of the other supportive material,
and I suspect, texts of the earlier site.

Hopefully there is just a problem of links. Does anyone know?

Chris Burford

London








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Re: M-TH: Ali BBC sportsperson of the century

1999-12-18 Thread Chris Burford

Charles Brown and John Walker made some interesting criticisms of my post a
few days ago about Ali winning the BBC sportsperson of the century award.

I agree there are reservations about boxing. It is dangerous. Fortunately
there has been no suggestion that Ali's Parkinson's disease comes from that. 

It is true it is invariably about working class people fighting. But so are
most mass spectator sports. 

It was not mentioned but I would agree there have to be reservations about
the ideological significance of black islam. That was not mentioned last week.

It is a sign of racism and the marginal position of black people in the
reserve army of labour that Black people have had to win respect through
some specialist contributions in music, including jazz, and in sports such
as athletics and boxing. Samuel Coleridge-Taylor was marginalised as a
serious composer in Britain. Paul Robeson had to fight to win respect as a
footballer and went onto the stage because racism prevented him winning a
respected place in law.  

If the contributions of black people to modern society were restricted to
boxing, the images would be negative - they would be merely the gladiators
of the empire. But it is more than that and images of positive role models
are important. 

Like Hugh, (who essentially agrees with me apart from having to take a
customary swipe at reformism) I also remember the black power salute at the
Olympics. That took courage.

Robeson was marginalised from the black community when he came out against
the Korean War. Ali came out against the Vietnam war and won. Less
politically conscious, less eloquent, but no less brave. 

I am glad to say both were respected by many white people in Britain. 

I really know nothing about boxing but the BBC expert sportsreporter
claimed his skill and ability reached new heights. Certainly he trained
hard enough. And was fighting fit within a short space of coming out of
prison.

Nelson Mandela also used pride about boxing to make links with the black
community in the USA. 

In England there has been a fight over 20 - 30 years against racism in
sport. The fascists particularly tried to recruit at football matches. That
battle has been largely won, although we should not be complacent. The BBC
vote clinched it.

What happened last week at the BBC ceremony is not important as a verdict
on Ali (No doubt Charles Brown has more detailed knowledge of the strengths
and weaknesses of Ali's political position than I do.) What happened last
week at the BBC ceremony was important for the consciousness of white
English people. The votes were over a million (I do not know the total). No
doubt the age profile may have been middle aged on average and
predominantly men.

When you see a hall of mainly white men standing up and applauding three
black men, shall we say it is better that it happens than it does not. It
is a liberation for the white people, quite apart from more obvious benefits.


It is worth a hundred lectures against racism and a thousand lectures in
praise of proletarian internationalism. It is iteself a concrete act of
proletarian internationalism.  

If we abolish boxing, let us do it together, but meanwhile let us respect
skill, courage, and dignity in the face of great difficulty. That is the
real revolutionary significance. 

Chris Burford

London






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Re: M-TH: Historical vs Dialectical materialism.

1999-12-14 Thread Chris Burford

At 09:42 14/12/99 GMT, you wrote:
>Chris,
>
>As I work in the university library I have tried to find some of the 
>papers of Schorlemmer but I have not suceeded in locating anything of 
>interest. I have looked through all his published works in English 
>but do not know enough about chenistry to spot the interesting bits. 
>All the biographies are in German from the commemorations in the GDR, 
>but I do not read German.
>
>As the geatest communist in Germany as Marx and Engels described him 
>it is a pity there is not more on him especially in Britain where he 
>lived all his adult life and who was so significant in Organic 
>Chemistry (in fact the world's first professor of the subject). He 
>really did come to communism because of the its  scientific 
>rationale.
>
>What is the 2000 page document you are referring to? What other 
>information on him do you have? I would greatly appreciate more 
>information on him?
>
>Regards,
>
>John


In July 1998 there was some correspondence about this on
Marxism-and-Sciences, a list which essentially withered after its transfer
to Emory, despite occasional postings from Charles Brown. [My view is it
has to move, or the issues have to be pursued on a list like this - but
that is another question.]

One correspondent responded to an appeal to get further information about
Marx's unpublished manuscripts because he lived in Manchester and there was
reference to 2000 pages of manuscripts by Schorlemmer. Shortly after saying
that he had emailed the man in charge of manuscripts, he announced with an
exclamation mark that he had found the Schorlemmer manuscripts in the rare
books section of the John Rylands Library. We heard no more. Perhaps he is
still there!

Please report back.

Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: Historical vs Dialectical materialism.

1999-12-13 Thread Chris Burford

At 12:07 13/12/99 GMT, John Walker wrote:


>Here are a few more quotes from Marx OWN writings on dialectics
>existing in nature:


Bravo!!


If you are in Manchester have you been able to inspect in the rare books
section of the John Rylands University Library for the 2000 page documents
of the chemist Schorlemmer who was a friend of Marx and Engels. They might
just possibly contain some reference to the two, or show some attempts at
the application of dialectics.

Chris Burford

London





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Re: M-TH: Ali BBC sportsperson of the century

1999-12-13 Thread Chris Burford

At 09:09 13/12/99 GMT, John Walker wrote:
>Chris actually wrote that:
>> One of the problems of a Gramscian concept of revolutionary change in a
>> developed capitalist society it what individual changes are significant,
>> however small. 
> 
>If Mohammad Ali was voted Sports personality of the century is really 
>such a revolutionary change odd that the rest of you report of the 
>event fails to mention he avoidance of fighting in Vietnam. 

I wrote:

>Mohammed Ali won the century and received an introduction that
>specifically noted his political courage in going to prison rather than
>fight in the Vietnam war.


John wrote

> In his acceptance speach he made no mention of 
>the new conflicts the USA is involved in, so it hardly has any 
>contemporary relevance.

What do you expect? He did not speak about islam either. But in a wider
sense the votes he got were symbolic of more than boxing. 

I do not think a Gramsian approach is necessarily desparate at all. Could
you spell out what are your criticisms of it?

Chris Burford

London




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M-TH: Ali BBC sportsperson of the century

1999-12-12 Thread Chris Burford

One of the problems of a Gramscian concept of revolutionary change in a
developed capitalist society it what individual changes are significant,
however small. 

Last night felt like one of them.

The BBC had its votes for outstanding sports people of the year and the
century. Mohammed Ali won the century and received an introduction that
specifically noted his political courage in going to prison rather than
fight in the Vietnam war. He got more votes than the four other nominees
together.

>>>


Ali, the three-times world
heavyweight champion, received
a standing ovation as he
collected the trophy at the
Sports Personality awards. 

  And boxing celebrated a double triumph as current
  world heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis was
  named BBC Sports Personality of the Year. 



  The 57-year-old, who received the award from
  former world boxing champion Evander Holyfield,
  said: "I would like to thank the British people for
  giving me such a big welcome and all the people
  concerned with the award." 

  And he joked: "I had a good time boxing. I enjoyed
  it - and I may come back." 

  Ali, who has Parkinson's Disease, also issued a
  statement which said: "Ever since I first came here in
  1963 to fight Henry Cooper, I have loved the
  people of England. 


  "They have always been
  extremely warm and
  welcoming to me, which
  is why I am especially
  honoured to accept the
  BBC's Sports Personality
  of the Century. 

  "I give thanks to God and
  to all the people in the
  UK who have supported
  me over the years." 

<<


Flanked by Lennox Lewis, with his stylish dreadlocks, current heavy-weight
champion, and a smiling Evander Holyfield, as the audience all stood in
applause,  this was a moment of pride and respect for the contribution that
black people have achieved in English speaking lands.

The openness and good humour with which Ali dealt with his Parkisons
problem was also a model of dignity in copying with disability without
being socially excluded.

A small but real shift of power in took place last night in civil society
in Britain.

Chris Burford

London






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Re: M-TH: Historical vs Dialectical materialism.

1999-12-10 Thread Chris Burford

At 16:04 10/12/99 GMT, Russ wrote:
>
>Lew writes:
>
>>Whether Engels turned this materialist methodology into a metaphysics
>>(as I believe) or not, the issue now is one of political practice. In
>>what way does "dialectical materialism" contribute to the struggle for
>>socialism?
>
>It hinders the struggle by turning Marx into a metaphysician.

Eh?

Let's take an example. This morning "Science" announces that a group of
researchers believe they have found the approximately 300 genes that are
indispensible for life in a bacterium. They now plan to assemble these
genes artificially and see if they have created life.

This is a fine example of dialectical materialism, dialectical because
everything is connected to everything else, and because quantitative
changes lead to qualitative ones at certain times.


The researchers  have proposed a debate because churches are disturbed. 

The bad reason why churches are disturbed is because they have an idealist
view of the sanctity of Life which separates it from the material universe. 

The good reason why the churches are disturbed is that they represent
conservative alarm at the developments of science and technology and a
strong feeling that these must be brought under social control. This
challenges the private ownership of the means of production.

Only a dialectical materialist approach to this latest scientific discovery
can help progressive working people take a relevant political stand.


>Off on my travels and I await the explanations, hope all is resolved on my 
>return.
>(fat chance)
>
>Russ

Damn.

Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: What is value ?

1999-12-08 Thread Chris Burford

I see on his website the author presents this as 

"Facts From The Fringe
An irregular and irreverent serving of economic tidbits"


He is really criticising concepts such as "unlocking shareholder value",
which are of increasing interest to the bourgeoisified working class as
they increasingly invest directly in shares.

But Jim Stanford is of course not using the term in the marxist sense and
does not make a distinction between exchange value (which is a proportion
of  the total capital-producing labour of the society and is far from
infinite) and use value (which is related to the subjective socially
conditioned determination of needs).

We need this distinction to guard against neo-classical subjectivist
theories of value which just have a grain of truth in them because of the
shifting nature of social estimate of what has use value.

"Facts from the Fringe" looks a lively column but a slightly more
propagandist approach might be of interest to those who are concerned about
the value of shares going down, as well as the hoping about some going up.

>>>>
Indeed, what is value if it can disappear so abruptly and violently
thanks to a few mis-spoken words? I am thinking that perhaps the
term "value" should be promptly reclaimed, and used once again to
describe things with rather more lasting, worldly
characteristics-things like labour, beauty, and knowledge.


 

Jim Stanford is an economist with the Canadian Auto Workers,
and author of a book recently published by James Lorimer & Co.
which does not feature his picture.
<<<

Amazon say his books are out print. He is apparently also the Chair of the
Progressive Economics Forum of the CEA.

Chris Burford

London






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Re: M-TH: Historical vs Dialectical materialism.

1999-12-07 Thread Chris Burford

I have been holding back from this debate because it was very thoroughly
thrashed out to the point of exhaustion previously. Lots of examples were
gathered of Marx's dialectical attitude to the natural world.

The biggest example of Marx's dialectics in Capital, particularly volume 1,
itself.  I would suggest that anyone who reads it and does not accept from
page 1 that for Marx iron, paper, diamonds, dozens of watches, yards of
linen and tons of iron, all have a dialectical nature - is doomed
ideologically to corrupt themselves and others. 

I confess I find the anti-dm position as baffling and as incredible as
Andrew Austin (formerly of this list) used to denounce the dm supporters.
That does not help to convince of course, but I simply do not understand
what mixture of prejudice, misunderstanding, or possibly fear of ridicule,
leads to such an entrenched attitude.

It seems to me that in essence those who restrict marxism to historical
materialism are making profound errors about the role of conciousness in
life, and have a sort of vitalist view of human activity, in distinction to
the rest of the animal kingdom and the universe.

It is as if Marx begins and ends with the following proposition from the
Manifesto which the anti-dm group read as purely a conscious political
process:

"Freeman and slave, patrician and plebeian, lord and serf, guild-master and
journeyman, in a word, oppressor and oppressed, stood in constant
opposition to one another, carried on an uninterrupted, now hidden, now
open fight, a fight that each time ended, either in a revolutionary
re-constitution of society at large, or in the common ruin of the
contending classes."

Now this passage is clearly a core example of historical materialism. But
those who are opposed to dm, I suggest are forced to read this to refer
only to conscious political movements. However Marx and Engels are clear
that politics and other features of the superstructure are only partially
independent and coherent. Ultimately they are reflections in consciousness
of the material economic base. 

Marx's marginal notes on Wagner make clear that for Marx, humanity is an
animal species and there is a continuous development from animal to man.
Now the anti-dm group would presumably say there are qualitative changes on
the way. But I would say not in this fundamental respect: that large
aspects of human social life process is non-conscious. Similarly I suggest
that Marx's comments on animals and men, are quote open to the new
understanding that animals too are sentient beings.

Now is this just a diversionary argument about consciousness? I suspect
not. Because if the anti dm group say dialectics are restricted to the
human world, they must be saying that dialectics consist of only
*conscious* oppositions, eg of serf against landowner, proletarian against
capitalist. But just because we consciously use dialectics to analyse the
world does not mean that the contradictory nature of the world is
restricted to human activity which is conscious. 

So I would ask the anti-dm critics to say why dialectics are manifested in
the human world and not in the animal and inanimate world, if they do not
argue it is to do with conscious processes. Yet Marx's political economy
clearly deals repeatedly with processes that are at best often only
semi-conscious. 

What possible motive could Marx have for finding dialectics in human
society but not in the structure of aliphatic carbon molecules?? 

What the dispute is not about is treating Engels' schema as a dogma. Not
even Stalin did that. 

I have to assume that the passion of the anti-dm group is in a belief that
they must save marxism from loony Hegelianism. 

I on the contrary believe that if we are to use marxism in the renewed
fight against capital we must go to the core ideas of marxism, the citadels
of the law of value and dialectical materialism, and then we must apply
them again non-dogmatically to the external world.

Chris Burford

London





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M-TH: Re: [PEN-L:14223] Re: Marx at Seattle

1999-12-07 Thread Chris Burford

At 05/12/99  Doug wrote:
>Chris Burford wrote:
>
>>Despite the openly declared attacks on world capitalism, I have heard no
>>reports yet of pictures of Marx among the demonstrators at Seattle.
>
>Didn't see it, but I heard there was a giant one at a demo on Thursday.



So Marx was there at Seattle. The old mole was there. 

 

Doug will not mind me quoting from his introduction way back on 19th June
on LBO-talk to the Guardian summary of June 18th in London:-


>Date: Sat, 19 Jun 1999 11:37:33 -0400
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>From: Doug Henwood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Subject: London riot
>Sender: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>[We Americans have so much to learn...]
>
>Guardian (London) - June 19, 1999
>
>DAY THE CITY TURNED INTO A BATTLEGROUND


Well, you Americans learn pretty fast!

The day we hear of the resignation of the Seattle police chief is as good a
day as any to applaud the tremendous spirit of tens of thousands of north
Americans, shaking off the corruptions of imperialism, to challenge, as
Doug said, not just globalisation, but capitalism itself.

>From his daily reports:-

"large, varied, imaginative, and spirited movement"

"One of the many amazing things about this week is how things have kept
evolving, growing, surprising."


"The movement itself should be seen as part of a worldwide mobilization
which is increasingly positioning itself as anti-capitalist rather than
merely anti-globalization"

On at least one occasion according to Doug, Marx was named to applause.
Speakers denounced capitalism by name.

This movement is now irreversible.

No matter that the bravest were anarchists. They often are. No matter that
those brave attacks require more detailed reforming campaigns to sustain
their credibility. Others will also carry that forward. No matter that the
actions were not all totally logically coherent and in full logical
consciousness. Revolutions are a process, not a mathematical formula. 

The agencies of world capitalism are in disarray. A new global alignment of
forces has emerged that is specifically anti-capitalist. 

The editorial in this week's sober New Scientist confirms the depth of the
challenge to world capitalism in a way that complements the gut
anti-capitalism of the protestors.  


Capitalism Kills! That appears to be the core agitational position that
will be the slogan for the new socialist world revolution. That phrase, or
phrases around it, are comarable to Land! Peace! Bread! for the Russian
revolution.

Just ten years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, we have a new alignment
in world politics.

Chris Burford

London






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M-TH: Marx at Seattle

1999-12-02 Thread Chris Burford

Despite the openly declared attacks on world capitalism, I have heard no
reports yet of pictures of Marx among the demonstrators at Seattle. 

Perhaps his followers have not done enough to link the law of value with
global economic conditions. 

Marx himself suggested a more insidious and unconscious process of
revolutionary development in the 18th Brumaire of Louis Napoleon. 

Today the mole is digging away vigorously within 10 years of the fall of
the Berlin Wall.


"But the revolution is thoroughgoing. It is still traveling through
purgatory. It does its work methodically. By December 2, 1851, it had
completed half of its preparatory work; now it is completing the other
half. It first completed the parliamentary power in order to be able to
overthrow it. Now that it has achieved this, it completes the executive
power, reduces it to its purest expression, isolates it, sets it up
against itself as the sole target, in order to concentrate all its
forces of destruction against it. And when it has accomplished this
second half of its preliminary work, Europe will leap from its seat and
exult: Well burrowed, old mole!"



Chris Burford

London



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M-TH: Reforming capitalism for Seattle.

1999-11-28 Thread Chris Burford

The FT leader article on Seattle, talks about conceding ground in the
management of the world economy.

Although Seattle is about the WTO, significantly the FT tackles the
question of the IMF, seeing the structures for managing world capitalism as
interdependent. As indeed do the protestors.

 [Any attempt to limit the protests to the WTO alone would be
short-sighted. On this the anarchists may be more correct in their
instincts than conscientious lobbyists for one of the progressive interest
groups. Th whole picture is about the whole working of global capitalism.]

The FT claims that the IMF already accepts that the unfettered rights of
short term fund holders were arbitrary. That of course is a big shift, and
it is still working through. (I note the Hang Seng index is over 15000 BTW)

But the FT expresses concern about the narrow consent base of the west and
signals strongly that for the first time the West should accept a
non-European as the successor to Michel Camdessus as managing director of
the IMF. 

Note it presents this argument in terms of appeasing the third world.
However one of the likely candidates is Sakakibara from Japan who has just
won the sponsorship of the ASEAN countries. This would reinforce the
capitalist world being split into three main power groups, USA, Europe and
Japan, unable to work together efficiently for the greater accumulation of
Capital.

FT:-

>The IMF, though, is
>starting to see the virtues of transparency. In choosing
>the successor to Michel Camdessus, it has a chance to
>prove that it is not in the hands of western Europe.
>
>The WTO, despite the force of the protests against it, is
>probably the most inclusive of the three; its decisions are
>reached by consensus. The Uruguay round was
>weighted towards the west, but this was partly because
>the developing world did not do enough to push its own
>interests. Developing nations now have a much clearer
>agenda of what they want to gain from WTO talks.
>
> < snip >
>
>A perception that these three international institutions
>are properly reflecting the desires of the developing world
>would do much to defuse the critics' arguments.


So that is the FT's reformist solution. Already quite a shift.


Below is a more thoughtful reformatory solution, which would actually
address the formal power structures of the world economy:

It should be supported.

Open and democratic elections of IMF officials!

Note interesting points in this article.

Over 50 countries having their economic policy supervised by IMF.

Although India has only 2% of the IMF votes  
the developing and post-communist economies have about
40 per cent of the IMF votes, enough to force the candidates
to confront issues of interest to the poorer countries.

- if the managing director was not appointed behind closed doors.



Note also the author's interesting sketch of three different perspectives
for the IMF, the USA's, Gordon Brown's and his own.





Financial Times, 15 Nov 99

by Jeffrey Sachs - Time to end backroom poker game
 
 The IMF's new managing director must be chosen by an
 open and democratic process, says Jeffrey Sachs

Michel Camdessus has wisely recognised that the International
Monetary Fund needs a renewal of vision and leadership.

The cognoscenti of the world financial system expect his
successor as managing director to emerge from the backroom poker
game of European politics, as has always happened in the
past. Will it be a German this time instead of Frenchmen,
they wonder breathlessly.

In the meantime, the developing world - 85 per cent of the
world's population and nearly 100 per cent of the receiving
end of IMF policies - is expected to stand by and wait for the
result. This is no way for a global institution that preaches
transparency, good governance and democracy to function.

The position of IMF managing director is one of the most
important in the world. The IMF, wrongly I would assert, now
has programmes in more than 50 countries, and is
negotiating with at least a dozen more. Hundreds of millions
of people depend on the quality of IMF leadership. In truth,
they often depend more on IMF leadership than on their own
political leaders, so intrusive has the IMF become in the
weak and vulnerable nations of the world.

Yet the IMF's legitimacy is dangerously low. It is already the 
object of riots and unrest throughout the developing world,
as well as scorn in the US Congress and even in much of
the financial world. There is little chance of regaining
global legitimacy if the developing countries have no role in the
selection of a new managing director, including the real
possibility of a successful candidate from a developing
country.

At a time when the gulf between the world's richest and
poorest is the widest in history, one might expect some
more serious attention to ways to improve the prospects of
the poorest countries - including the appropriate roles of
international institutions. And yet, with the horse-trading t

M-TH: Crisis *for* capitalism at Seattle

1999-11-28 Thread Chris Burford
increased concern about the social consequences
of economic activities is mirrored in the return to power of
centre-left governments in the leading European nations.
The rhetoric of economic efficiency that dominated the
1980s has given way to Third Way politics, which is an
attempt to combine economic growth with social justice.

The international community has already taken on board
one of the main lessons of the Asian crisis. There is now
a widespread consensus that short-term capital flows
can be excessively destabilising in all but the best-run
countries. Even the International Monetary Fund, a
staunch supporter of capital account liberalisation prior
to the Asian crisis, now accepts this.

But opposition to free capital flows has extended into a
mistrust of all forms of globalisation, including trade.

...



Part of the reason why the NGOs' objections to free
trade have acquired such force is that international
organisations have lost much of their moral authority.
The Cold War had given the US and Europe a natural
leadership role over countries outside the Communist
bloc; when the Berlin Wall came down, this role fell with
it. Yet the IMF, the WTO and the World Bank remain, in
the public eye at least, western institutions.

The IMF and the World Bank lost a great deal of
credibility following the Asian crisis. "


Certain reformist answers by the FT follow, which are the subject of a
separate post as this one is long enough already.


Chris Burford

London












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M-TH: Re: Stephen Jay Gould on Biological & Cultural Determinisms

1999-11-26 Thread Chris Burford

Good quote.

I am copying it to marxism-thaxis.

Chris Burford

London



At 14:10 25/11/99 -0500, you wrote:
>Stephen Jay Gould writes in "Nurturing Nature," _An Urchin in the Storm:
>Essays about Books and Ideas_ (NY: Norton, 1987):
>
>*   ..._Not in Our Genes_ [by R.C. Lewontine, Steven Rose, and Leon J.
>Kamin] is an important and timely book, for it not only exposes the
>fallacies of biological determinism...but also presents a positive view of
>human behavior that could propel us past the stupefying sterility of
>nature-nurture arguments.  A proper understanding of biology and culture
>both affirms the great importance of biology in human behavior and also
>explains why biology makes us free.  The old equation of biology with
>restriction, with the inherent (as opposed to malleable) side of the false
>dichotomy between nature and nurture, rests upon errors of thinking as old
>as Western culture itself.  The critics of biological determinism do not
>uphold the equally fallacious (and equally cruel and restrictive) view that
>human culture cancels biology.  Biological determinism has limited the
>lives of millions by misidentifying their socioeconomic disadvantages as
>inborn deficiencies, but cultural determinism can be just as cruel in
>attributing severe congenital diseases, autism for instance, to
>psychobabble about too much parental love, or too little. (148)   *




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M-TH: Mother

1999-11-25 Thread Chris Burford

>How's this for a great piece of journalism?
>
>Mother Knows Best
>
>Once convinced that they should expend their precious parental
>energy, mothers go to great lengths to rear their young. Most impressive is
>the Australian social spider. As her spiderlings mature, she begins to
>turn to mush. As she liquefies, her children suck her up. Sated from this
>sacrificial meal of mother, they exercise better manners and forgo
>eating one another as well.
>
>
>It's from a review by Helen Fisher of "Mother Nature" by Sarah B. Hrdy
>(Scientific American, Dec 1999, p 98). The review is entitled "Mother
>Nature is an Old Lady with Bad Habits".


Well pretty good actually, as a piece of journalism. There is such a burst
of popular science literature that we can't be intellectually snobby even
if the article does not scan metrically. I prefer New Scientist, but I
think Scientific American is also very good.

True, one model of the ageing female worker under advanced capitalism is
that she should exhaust her own claims within the social life process, to
nurture her adolescents and stop them fighting each other before she
dissolves in a post-menopausal post-modernistic miasma. 

But I am not convinced this Australian "social" spider is entirely
representative of Motherhood as a Platonic ideal. I am not sure what Rob
would say about this is a symbol of Australian nurturance. Over amiable
though he is, I trust he does not feel obliged to follow this example
sacrifice as list moderator, as much the mother as the father of our
labours, not forgetting Bill of course.  

Besides it can happen the other way round - what about all those little
rabbits that get eaten by their frightened mothers?

("Dead! ... and never called me Mother!" - not surprisingly!) 

Just because rabbits are alien mammalian imports to Australasia does not
deny their place in the animal kingdom, even on this list. Evolutionary
psychology is a little more complicated.




So are we to interpret Horace as an evolutionary psychologist?


>> naturam expellas furca, tamen usque recurret.
>>
>> You can drive her away with a pitchfork -- Nature runs right back!
>>
>> Horace, ars poetica, x.


Dazzled though I am buy Hugh's literary range (rather likelatent Stalinists
on the Central Committee being torn between irritation and wonder, as
Trotsky read French novels during the more boring speeches) I have, despite
myself, to agree with the following:

>The polemical thrust of the signature quote is against proclamationist
>and voluntarist politics, and against cultural relativism. We are animals,
>and our being precedes our thought -- it's not the other way around, we're
>not spirits whose thought can determine our being as if our bodies and
>their needs were infinitely malleable. Fairly malleable, yes, completely
>and voluntarily malleable, no. We are subject to biological and ecological
>constraints and these must be scientifically determined and acknowledged
>for us to get anywhere in changing the world and ourselves for the better.


It is quite clear from, among other things Marx's Marginal notes on Wagner,
that he regarded human beings as inseparable from the animal kingdom; as
animals. 

The problem with "evolutionary psychology" is the reductionism of its
presentation, but not if it is interpreted dialectically. Interpreted
dialectically, it is impossible seriously to deny that we evolved in the
course of the struggle to adapt to our environment. We are a
self-perpetuating species in a self-perpetuating biosphere. 

Abstract reified ideals of Motherhood are socially conditioned and shift
with the mode of production. 

Apple pie however, is as materially real as liquified spiders, and
fortunately more appetising. 

Chris Burford

London

 







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M-TH: Imperialist appeasement of Russian sub-imperialism

1999-11-25 Thread Chris Burford

Thursday, 25 November, 1999, BBC:

  No 'Cold War' over Chechnya 

 

  The United States has signalled that it does not want
  to link international aid to Russia with the war in
  Chechnya. 

* That would be embarrassing. For its own imperialist reasons the USA would
rather appease Russian aggression against the right of the Chechens to
self-determination.


US Secretary of State,
Madeleine Albright, said that the
war in Chechnya must not be
allowed to damage relations
between Russia and the West,
  and turn Russia back into a Cold War enemy. 



* Naturally not, it would rather allow Russia to develop as a
sub-imperialism so long as it can be run by Yeltsin and the oligarchs in
alliance with western imperialism. 



  She was speaking after Russian Prime Minister
  Vladimir Putin ordered more than $100m be added
  to the Chechnya war budget. 

  Some US officials have recently suggested
  Washington might block International Monetary
  Fund (IMF) loans if Russian military action in
  Chechnya intensified. 

  Mrs Albright said that the
  two issues, of IMF loans
  and the war, should be
  kept separate. 

  "We believe it is very
  important for there to be
  economic stability in
  Russia. That is in our national interest," she said. 

  "The last thing I think that we should be doing is
  trying to turn Russia back into an enemy. We spent
  50 years in that mode." 

  She added that the recent 10th anniversary of the
  fall of the Berlin Wall "made it apparent to me one
  more time how much time was lost during the Cold
  War." 

  Mrs Albright reiterated that the Chechen conflict
  should be solved through political dialogue. 

  Our correspondent in Washington, Richard Lister,
  says this is a politically awkward situation for
  Washington. 

* Ha!

  The US is facing an uncomfortable choice. Either it
  can give financial support to a government whose
  military tactics it roundly condemns, or withhold
  assistance and jeopardise both relations with Russia
  and the economic stability of the region as a whole. 



  The army was promised the extra funds in October,
  but the IMF warned that it would suspend help if
  military spending ran out of control. 

 
* How embarrassing!


Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: Washington and Moscow

1999-11-22 Thread Chris Burford

I am surprised to read Rob's arguments that Russia is not going to win.
This war is well-supplied logistically and they are already digging in and
are prepared to surround Grozny and shell it throughout a long winter. They
persist in ruling out negotiations. 

The one thing that can be said for them is unlike in Kosovo and East Timor,
the local population has not been terrorised by para-military fascists. 


On the main theoretical difference between Dave and Bob, I am alarmed to
find myself agreeing with both of them. Rather than argue however between
Russia as a developing imperialist state or as a colony, I would like to
suggest a formula I heard at a seminar on the world economy in London 8
days ago. It was from someone from a Trotskyist background. It was that
there are such things as sub-imperialisms. The definition would be where
the entity keeps some share of surplus value for itself.

I think despite our many other differences all of us can see that the West
has been particularly soft on Yeltsin for entirely discreditable reasons.
It is essentially allowing him to play the idea of becoming a
sub-imperialism. They calculate that he will have to compromise and accept
a subordinate position within a global capitalism dominated by the US. 

BTW I note contributors denouncing the possibility of a western
"humanitarian intervention" into Chechnya. What you are not distinguishing
is between a military attack and financial pressure, of the sort that got
the Indonesian troops to withdraw from East Timor. It is quite clear that
the west could have imposed the latter, and for *imperialist* reasons
decided not to. They would rather do business with a corrupt Yeltsin/Putin
regime that oppresses subject nationalities, than a lefter Primakov type
regime.

Perhaps Dave or Bob will not buy it, but what about "sub-imperialism" as a
relevant half-way concept for what Russia under Yeltsin is trying to achieve?




Chris Burford

London






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Re: M-TH: IT stocks?

1999-11-22 Thread Chris Burford

At 18:08 22/11/99 +1100, you wrote:
>G'day Bob,
>
>Doug's probably fast asleep just now, so here's an interesting piece he
>posted on his list the other day.  I'd be interested in Thaxist views on
>this meself.
>
>Cheers,
>Rob.
>
>[From the bear's den at <http://www.LeMetropoleCafe.com>]
>
>Frank Veneroso - Veneroso Associates - November 19, 1999
>
>The US Economy: The Stock Market
>Shades of the Souk al Manakh
>Is This the Moral Hazard Meltup? Probably Not.


I am glad you reposted this. In view of the volume of correspondence on
LBO-talk I think there is often a role for the issues to be discussed on a
specifically marxism list. And unlike Louis Proyect, you and Bill do not
censor the debate.


But at this stage just a question please. What is moral hazard, and is
there a marxist equivalent for it?

Chris Burford

London



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Re: M-TH: Preobrazhensky - the LOV - Primitive Socialist Accumulation

1999-11-22 Thread Chris Burford
 by workers who do not sell their labour power,
is not commodity production.

I think if a socialised cooperative sector had continued longer, and if we
ever get nearer to that again, then the law of value remains. In principle
a cooperative could go bankrupt, or might at least have to trim back its
economic activities while the society allocated more access to credit to
another enterprise. But such a cooperative sector could be under overall
state guidance of a socialist orientated state. 


>With the existence of simple commodity production under the NEP it was
>clear that there was great *dual* pressure on the new system and its
>political protective armour. On the one hand from inside, with the
>capitalist enclave within the socialist enclave within the imperialist
>world-market, and on the other from the outside, with the pressures of the
>world-market screaming to the peasants (and the less-conscious workers)
>that "here you have cheap cheap cheap goods that are better than the
>expensive crap the Bolshies are forcing you to queue for". Preobrazhensky
>calls this the scissors crisis (the curves for supply and demand, for world
>prices and internal prices opening away from each other on the graph just
>like a pair of scissors). This dual pressure was an expression of the Law
>of Value. 

Is this not similar to the situation that exists in the world capitalist
market today, that it is very hard for less developed countries to catch up
in the accumulation of surplus and get relative surplus value on a global
scale from innovations in the means of production?

A socialist state, like some nationalist states, might be able to retain a
portion of the surplus separate from the centralising effects of the world
capitalist market, but it would be vulnerable to the removal of barriers to
a global capitalist market. 

Essentially the issue when discussing the law of value is which society are
we judging is the benchmark for the prevailing methods of production within
which productive labour power is distributed.


>The proto-socialist economy of the new system was an expression
>of what will replace the law of value worldwide if capitalism does not just
>collapse into barbarism -- ie conscious, rational cooperative planning for
>production and distribution by freely associated social producers. The
>history of the past few decades shows very clearly that the political
>aspects of it all are paramount. The political treachery of the Stalinist
>bureaucrats worked initially to weaken the protective armour of the new
>system and then eventually at a certain point to ditch it altogether and
>hand over the whole thing to the imperialists by opening up to capitalist
>restoration.

I do not want to disguise the crimes against socialist legality, but this
sounds like demonology: the political treachery of the Stalinist
bureaucrats. The premature nationalisation of major areas of the economy
may have been a strategic mistake but bureaucrats may have started off by
trying to work their guts out. Does the term "political treachery" imply
*conscious* "political treachery?

Surely this is a question of non-antagonistic contradradictions becoming
anatagonistic.



> This
>contradiction between the relations of production (hopeless and
>suffocating) and the forces of production (which have the potential to
>create a world of plenty and full individual development for all) is the
>fundamental motive force behind all the conflicts at present tearing the
>world apart, and indicates that until it begins to be solved, consciously
>and internationally and forcibly, by the internationally organized
>revolutionary working class, the whole tragic farce will just repeat itself
>for ever until catastrophe ensues.

I regret Hugh going on to making general manifesto points as if every
theoretical article had to be a propaganda leaflet. I can see the sense of
the need for a conscious political decisions about how to foster the
socialist sector after the revolution in Russia. But the politics of what
we do now is quite a sweep along from the contradictory slave owning Roman
Empire with which Hugh began his article. 

Despite my prejudices against Trotskyism, I have enough respect for Hugh
not to need to be dazzled each time.

But since he poses the need for the revolutionary working class to begin
consciously to solve the contradiction between the relations of production
and the forces of production on a world scale...
 
What reforms does he think revolutionary activists should fight for at the
WTO meeting at Seattle?

Chris Burford

London



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M-TH: 'Natural Capitalism' praised by Clinton

1999-11-21 Thread Chris Burford

In Florence at the conference of Centre Left parties today, Clinton has
just plugged this book again.

It is already number 387 in the Amazon book list.

>From the Amazon reviews below it looks as if it shows a number of ways
capitalism can be reformed to reduce the explotation of the environment. 

The reference to neighbourhood land use *might* imply some sort of
socialisation of land short of outright public ownership (as called for in
the Communist Manifesto)

But it will create illusions that there can be a solution short of the
abolition of capitalism to the uneven accumulation of capital on a world
scale, and the law that the large the stock of capital the larger the
global reserve army of labour. 

These technical innovations might even intensify the relative immiseration
of Africa through the workings of the global capitalist system.

Does anyone know this book and can critique it?

Chris Burford

London

__


Natural Capitalism : Creating the Next Industrial Revolution
by Paul Hawken, Amory B. Lovins, L. Hunter Lovins, Paul
Hawkin

 Our Price: $18.87
 You Save: $8.08 (30%)
 Availability: Usually ships within 24 hours.
 Hardcover - (September 1999) 396 pages 

Reviews
 
Amazon.com
In Natural Capitalism, three top strategists show how leading-edge
companies are practicing "a new type of industrialism" that is more
efficient and profitable while saving the environment and creating jobs.

Paul Hawken and Amory and Hunter Lovins write that in the next century,
cars will get 200 miles per gallon without compromising safety and power,
manufacturers will relentlessly recycle their products, and the world's
standard of living will jump without further damaging natural resources.
"Is this the vision of a utopia? In fact, the changes described here could
come about in the decades to come as the result of economic and
technological trends already in place," the authors write.

They call their approach natural capitalism because it's based on the
principle that business can be good for the environment. For instance,
Interface of Atlanta doubled revenues and employment and tripled profits by
creating an environmentally friendly system of recycling floor coverings
for businesses. The authors also describe how the next generation of cars
is closer than we might think.

Manufacturers are already perfecting vehicles that are ultralight,
aerodynamic, and fueled by hybrid gas-electric systems. If natural
capitalism continues to blossom, so much money and resources will be saved
that societies will be able to focus on issues such as housing, contend
Hawken, author of a book and PBS series called Growing a Business, and the
Lovinses, who cofounded and directed the Rocky Mountain Institute, an
environmental think tank. The book is a fascinating and provocative read
for public-policy makers, as well as environmentalists and capitalists
alike. --Dan Ring 

>From Booklist , September 1, 1999
Hawken is the author of The Ecology of Commerce (1993) and is best known
for his PBS series Growing a Business. Amory and Hunter Lovins founded the
Rocky Mountain Institute, which promotes efficient resource use, and Amory
has been called the "godfather" of alternative energy.

The three have joined forces here to set a blueprint for sustainable
development. The authors argue that it is possible for companies to reduce
energy and materials consumption by up to 90 percent but still increase
profits, production, and employment. They outline the four strategies that
underlie "natural capitalism" and, using hypercars and neighborhood land
use and superefficient buildings as examples, show how these strategies are
being applied. They also identify ways resources are being wasted and
explain the principles of "resource productivity." Throughout their book,
the authors indicate new business opportunities that will be created by
practicing "natural capitalism." David Rouse 

>From Kirkus Reviews 
A critique of the present economic system and its destructive effects on
natural assets, coupled with ideas about how to make it work better. The
Lovinses, directors of the Rocky Mountain Institute, a resource policy
center, and business author Hawken (The Ecology of Commerce, 1993, etc.)
merge their talents and experiences here to offer practical guidelines for
reducing the environmental messes made by the industrial world, including
pollution, transportation congestion, erosion, and wasted energy of all
types. While suggesting solutions, however, they use a good deal of space
to attack both contemporary enterprises and those dating to the Industrial
Revolution. Targets include specific technologies, corporations, and
general business practices, as well as wasteful consumer habits. The
aluminum can, for example, is ex

Re: M-TH: Washington and Moscow

1999-11-21 Thread Chris Burford

At 11:55 19/11/99 -, George wrote:

penetratingly about the contradictions.



However I think the following paragraph gets the balance wrong:



>Despite Russia apparent determination to bring Chchnea under its control
Russia has made
>concession to be included in a final document to be signed which involves
ging the OSCE
>both a political and humanitarian role in the Chechnea.The fact that
Russia has made such
>a concession even if it were to turn out to be a merely paper concession
is an indication
>of both Russian internal weakness and growing isolation from the West.


The press releases from the OSCE tried to present it that Moscow had made
concessions on Chechnya, but (unless it is to be more willing to resettle
the civilian population) there are none! The west has decided to go along
with Yeltsin and Putin because it prefers them to a Primakov type more left
wing regime that would accomodate the Communists. They previously  censored
Yeltsin for declaring war on Chechnya.

It is rumoured that Russia insisted on the USA and the rest of OESC
recognising that Chechnya was its territory otherwise it would veto US
action against Iraq. This is an imperialist compromise, not in the
interests of the people of Iraq, of Chechnya, nor of Russia. 

I am not in favour of Nato bombing the Russian army, but when you compare
what the IMF and the west did financially to Indonesia to force it to
disgorge East Timor, you can see its recent stance on Chechnya as not
imperialist aggression but imperialist appeasement of aggression. 

Yeltsin is up to his neck in corruption and they could pull the rug on his
government any time they wanted, if they preferred the alternative. Which
they do not - for imperialist reasons.

Witness this article in the New York Times for evidence that the IMF can
dictate policy from Jakarta to Moscow:

>The New York Times
>November 10, 1999
>Longtime I.M.F. Director Resigns in Midterm
>By DAVID E. SANGER
>WASHINGTON -- Michel Camdessus resigned Tuesday in the middle of his third
>term as chief of the International Monetary Fund, setting off a
>behind-the-scenes struggle involving the Clinton administration and big
>European nations over who will direct the agency that is in effect
>dictating national economic policy from Russia to Indonesia and Africa.
>Camdessus, who has steered the I.M.F. for nearly 13 years through a
>succession of economic crises, said Tuesday that "entirely personal
>reasons" had prompted his resignation two years before the end of his term.
>Colleagues said constant travel and a succession of international crises
had exhausted
>him. But in a half-hour conversation in his office here Tuesday afternoon,
the
>67-year-old former central banker in France appeared vigorous, telling
>tales of political intrigue, responding to attacks from conservatives in
the U.S.
>Congress who had accused him of wasting billions in bailing out Russia, and
>arguing that his much-attacked prescriptions saved Asia from a far worse
>economic fate. And in discussing the fund's growing political impact
throughout the world,
>he acknowledged for the first time that its actions in Indonesia served as
>a catalyst in forcing out the man who led the nation, the world's fourth-most
>populous. "We created the conditions that obliged President Suharto to
leave his
>job," Camdessus said. "That was not our intention," he said, but quickly
added
>that soon after Suharto's resignation he traveled to Moscow to warn Russian
>President Boris Yeltsin that the same forces could end his control of
>Russia unless he acted to contain them.


Chris Burford

London




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M-TH: Further socialisation of health care in UK

1999-11-17 Thread Chris Burford

One of the main ways that the Labour government has not taken the National
Health Service in a socialist direction is the "Private Finance
Initiative", for the funding of premises.

However the following announcement last week marks a significant turn in
the move from General Practioners, the bed-rock of the British NHS,  being
petty bourgeois independent professionals, to being regulated employees in
a social system of production.

Even under the former Conservative government, the policy was to gather
together GP's in better organised collective practices, performing a number
of multi-disciplinary health tasks. The catch was that the Conservatives
were boosting the GP's practices as surrogate customers with their own
fund-holding budget in order to promote an "internal market" within the
gigantic NHS, one of the largest state economic units west of the former
iron curtain.

This NHS worked on the communist principle of to each according to his
need. (It had been modelled on collective health schemes set up in the
colliery towns of South Wales). But the GP base was a petty bourgeois mode
of production. 

Now within two years of the election, the Labour Government has brought
separate fund-holding GP's, with very little strident opposition, into
Primary Care Groups covering populations of 100,000, and has dropped talk
of an internal market.  These PCG's may become Trusts directly managing
much of local health care. 

The formulas on this note that all GP's may remain independent
self-employed agents. The sub-text is that the government is opening the
door to them being directly employed by their local primary care trust. The
material logic of all this is that health care has moved beyond what a
professional can do in his/her front room, with a nurse attached, and needs
skilled managers, and complex information systems. A complex social form of
production.

Now the announcement on Friday sets up, again without effective opposition
from the professional bodies, a mechanism of quality control for the
medical labour force. This brings them an important step closer to being
employed, highly skilled workers. 


This is a prosaic step in realising the dramatic words of the Communist
Manifesto, in one of the increasingly important sectors of the economy,
health provision: 

"The bourgeoisie has stripped of its halo every occupation hitherto
honoured and looked up to with reverent awe. It has converted the
physician, the lawyer, the priest, the poet, the man of science, into its
paid wage-labourers."

Whether this step is one that ultimately favours socialism, as I believe,
or a more rational delivery of an essentially bourgeois state health
system, it is certainly a more socialised form of organisation of the service.

I would have thought that other capitalist countries need something similar
to the British system of general practitioners who can broker access to
specialised health resources,  in order to move towards socialised health
care.

Extract from the somewhat hyped press-release follow. 

Chris Burford

London





Friday 12th November 1999

 
 Health Secretary Alan Milburn today published ground-breaking
 proposals to tackle the problem of poorly performing doctors.

 The tough new proposals, aimed at protecting patients and driving up 
 standards, will ensure that all NHS doctors provide a first class 
 service, using their skill, education, dedication and commitment to 
 give the very best possible care for their patients.

 Current NHS disciplinary procedures are bureaucratic, legalistic and
 ineffective. The new measures would ensure that NHS trusts and
 health authorities must be able to take action quickly to detect
 emerging problems and resolve them quickly and fairly.

 The comprehensive package of measures will:

 - ensure that all NHS doctors' practice is monitored to pick up 
 problems early, ensure that poor performance is tackled swiftly, and 
 ensure tough action is taken in response.

 The proposals, drawn up by Chief Medical Officer Professor Liam
 Donaldson, completely overhaul key aspects of the the NHS, which
 have remained largely unchanged since 1948.

 For hospital doctors the plans would end the protracted delays,
 expensive suspensions on full pay, and legalistic inflexibility of
 the old arrangement through four key reforms:

 - all doctors to participate in external clinical audit and take part
 in an annual appraisal of their performance.

 - they set up new independent and impartial "Assessment and Support 
 Centres" where doctors suspected of poor practice will be referred. 
 They will be looked at to see if they need retraining, or if their 
 poor standards cannot be put right the centres will advise employers 
 accordingly who can the take necessary action as well as notifying 
 the GMC.

 - they make clear that doctors being investigated for personal
 misconduct (for example sexual assault, fraud)

M-TH: Re: [PEN-L:13501] WTO and value

1999-11-17 Thread Chris Burford
 army. 

Although rises in productivity may mask the workings of exchange value, I
suggest therefore that the greater the capital in the metropolitan
countries the greater the reserve army of labour in the countries of the
third world, and the greater the relative difference in exchange value
between them.

These contradictions will not be resolved until we have expropriated and
socialised global capital.

So I would say to George, that the entry of China to the WTO does not
weaken the relevance of the marxian theory of value, but it does suggest we
should apply it in the form of a field theory analogous to a gravitational
field.

I would appreciate comments and criticisms on this contribution.

I am copying it also to marxism-thaxis at Utah.

Chris Burford

London
 




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Re: M-TH: Whither the Family

1999-11-10 Thread Chris Burford

I think I agree with much of the thrust of the posts by John and Simon. If
I understand them correctly they are both criticising the social and
psychological effects of capitalism. I think this is a very important area
of criticism of late capitalist society, and is essential for the battle
for ideological hegemony of socialist ideas.

However I have differences with the precise wording of the distinctions
they make and would like to discuss this more. It is an area that Marx did
not illuminate particularly strongly as his interests lay elsewhere.


>Domestic work is part of private production and falls outside the 
>realm of social production. 

To be consistent with Marx's terminology I would not say "private
production" here. I would say "outside the realm of commodity production". 

This BTW is not completely true. Capitalism has been able to produce
commodities that save on domestic labour, like vacuums and washing
machines. Companies may sell as a commodity the service of visiting your
home and power-cleaning the carpets. Domestic servants may hire themselves
for a few hours a week. 

Human beings meet many needs for each other. This is all part of the
"social life process" of our species. Only a subset of these activities are
organised through commodity exchange, and only a subset of this subset are
organised for the production of surplus value by capital. Nevertheless the
incessant drive for capitalist accumulation means that this compartment
constantly eats into the quality of the other life processes with damaging
effects, even at the same time as it produces an over-abundance of consumer
durables.

Nor do I think the distinction is quite that capitalism deals with material
reality and human intercourse deals with sentiment. The majority of
commodities meet needs of the imagination, especially now as the social
surplus rises. Growth areas are in "quality" products that somehow have
associated with them the smell of social richness that capitalism actually
destroys. Designer labels give a sense of community with those to whom you
wish to belong. Electronic gadgets create groups across the internet.
Massive expansion of air tourism pollutes the atmosphere and carries people
to idyllic settings which they do not enter with any organic relationship,
but merely photograph for their cosy social charm and leave, without any
understanding of the contradictions which their hosts have to work through
to make their own social life process coherent. 

No the distinction is not that capitalism is about the material, and
socialists are about the spiritual. The critique of what capitalism does to
the spiritual/social, needs to grasp the essence of how commodity
production under capitalism eats like a cancer into all other compartments
of an organic "social life process".

Chris Burford

London




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