Re: Utopia is finally over

2022-03-03 Thread Brian Holmes
On Thu, Mar 3, 2022 Richard Barbrook wrote:

> If you listen to his declaration of war speech, Putin says that he's a
> White not a Red.
>

OMG if you read that book, "Russia's 'Hybrid War'", you find out their
military/propaganda theories are based on a disgustingly conservative White
Russian exiled in Argentina, Evgeny Messner. The counter-revolution is long
and deep.
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Re: Utopia is finally over

2022-03-03 Thread Richard Barbrook

Putin pretty vocally wants to restore
Stalin's USSR.


If you listen to his declaration of war speech, Putin says that he's a 
White not a Red. His stated goal is to return the southern and eastern 
regions foolishly given to Ukraine in 1922 by the wicked Bolsheviks to 
Holy Mother Russia.



No return to 1947!


This should read: No return to 1914!


All hands for the restoration of 1917


But which of the rival faction of the Reds should we support in 2022?

Richard

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Re: Utopia is finally over

2022-02-25 Thread Sean Cubitt
thanks Brian - as ever an astute analysis
It's intriguing how every autocrat this year hankers for the period round 
1945-9: Modi wants to go back to Partition; Xi keeps claiming the revolution; 
Trumpistas want to return to the Eisenhower era (For what it's worth Boris 
seems to want to return to 1943: surviving a ghastly defeat, and before the 
labour Government of 1945 introduced the NHS and welfare state). Putin pretty 
vocally wants to restore Stalin's USSR. (There's more to be said another time 
about the 1947 UN Declaration of Human Rights and the later statement on 
refugees)

but there's another date to bear in mind, 30 years earlier. The history of our 
times can be read as an enormous effort to rescind the gains of the Russian 
revolution. A time when an autocratic leader surrounded by a sycophantic court 
attempted to embroil his people in an unending war.

No return to 1947! All hands for the restoration of 1917

seán


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Today's Topics:

   1. Utopia is finally over (Brian Holmes)


--

Message: 1
Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2022 15:19:46 -0600
From: Brian Holmes 
To: nettime 
Subject:  Utopia is finally over
Message-ID:

Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"

I vividly remember driving past the shuttered customs buildings on the
Franco-Belgian border in the mid-1990s. Paris-Amsterdam had become a
freeway trip. Seven years later, colorful pieces of paper appeared in
everyone's hands: the euro. Almost simultaneously, China entered the World
Trade Organization. Anyone with historical awareness and access to live
information from around the planet could have predicted what would happen
over the middle term: the rise of inequality, the formation of a
transnational oligarchy, extreme environmental degradation, the reemergence
of far-right forces, and ultimately, geopolitical clashes leading to war.
Yet even those who did predict such things experienced a utopian period of
free international cooperation, creativity, travel, the formation of new
kinds of communities and the chance to express a new spirit that had
emerged after the end of the Cold War in 1989-92. In fact the entire
neoliberal period, with market populism at its core, saw incredible
flowerings of culture across the earth, something worth remembering and
trying to interpret.

America's useless wars in Central Asia and the Middle East (supported by
Nato in the former case) cast an excruciating light over this period, as
did the inexorable rise of CO2 in the atmosphere and the corresponding
failure to do anything about it. You'd have thought that the global
financial crisis of 2007-12 would have put an end to all this, but instead
it reinforced the oligarchies. Meanwhile, privileged people all over the
world kept the party going. I was in Mongolia, on an amazing cross-cultural
art junket in 2014, when a Polish artist agitatedly explained to me what I
was not getting: Vladimir Putin's ability to run circles around Western
governments and populations with the destabilizing techniques of what was
then called "non-linear warfare" - while at the same time engaging in the
real thing.

No one knows where the current conflict will end, if war will extend beyond
Ukraine's borders, how the crucial issue of Russian-Chinese cooperation
will play out over the coming months, whether the unified world economy
will split into rival blocs (Nato vs Shanghai Cooperation Organization), or
whether a new, even more corrupt status quo will emerge that allows the EU
to remain Russia's number 1 trading partner.  As I write, the former SPD
chancellor of Germany during the go-go years of globalization, Gerhard
Schroeder, has not yet stepped down from his position as chairman of the
board of Rosneft.

Whatever the outcomes, everyone knows a divide has been crossed, and that
the short and middle-term responses will be crucial. There's half a chance
to purge the global financial / real-estate system of highly corruptive
Russian money, and to quell the voices of those who see Putin's militarist
nationalism as the model for a virile white authoritarian resurgence across
the so-call

Utopia is finally over

2022-02-24 Thread Brian Holmes
I vividly remember driving past the shuttered customs buildings on the
Franco-Belgian border in the mid-1990s. Paris-Amsterdam had become a
freeway trip. Seven years later, colorful pieces of paper appeared in
everyone's hands: the euro. Almost simultaneously, China entered the World
Trade Organization. Anyone with historical awareness and access to live
information from around the planet could have predicted what would happen
over the middle term: the rise of inequality, the formation of a
transnational oligarchy, extreme environmental degradation, the reemergence
of far-right forces, and ultimately, geopolitical clashes leading to war.
Yet even those who did predict such things experienced a utopian period of
free international cooperation, creativity, travel, the formation of new
kinds of communities and the chance to express a new spirit that had
emerged after the end of the Cold War in 1989-92. In fact the entire
neoliberal period, with market populism at its core, saw incredible
flowerings of culture across the earth, something worth remembering and
trying to interpret.

America's useless wars in Central Asia and the Middle East (supported by
Nato in the former case) cast an excruciating light over this period, as
did the inexorable rise of CO2 in the atmosphere and the corresponding
failure to do anything about it. You'd have thought that the global
financial crisis of 2007-12 would have put an end to all this, but instead
it reinforced the oligarchies. Meanwhile, privileged people all over the
world kept the party going. I was in Mongolia, on an amazing cross-cultural
art junket in 2014, when a Polish artist agitatedly explained to me what I
was not getting: Vladimir Putin's ability to run circles around Western
governments and populations with the destabilizing techniques of what was
then called "non-linear warfare" - while at the same time engaging in the
real thing.

No one knows where the current conflict will end, if war will extend beyond
Ukraine's borders, how the crucial issue of Russian-Chinese cooperation
will play out over the coming months, whether the unified world economy
will split into rival blocs (Nato vs Shanghai Cooperation Organization), or
whether a new, even more corrupt status quo will emerge that allows the EU
to remain Russia's number 1 trading partner.  As I write, the former SPD
chancellor of Germany during the go-go years of globalization, Gerhard
Schroeder, has not yet stepped down from his position as chairman of the
board of Rosneft.

Whatever the outcomes, everyone knows a divide has been crossed, and that
the short and middle-term responses will be crucial. There's half a chance
to purge the global financial / real-estate system of highly corruptive
Russian money, and to quell the voices of those who see Putin's militarist
nationalism as the model for a virile white authoritarian resurgence across
the so-called West (I'll leave others to speculate about contrary
possibilities). Maybe a live demonstration of what risk really means will
convince politicians and populations to prepare more deliberately for
obvious and pressing future challenges. Anyway, the giddy period that so
many of us lived through ended long ago. Now, at least a decade too late, I
think that period is both formally and functionally closed for the
international system. It turns out Covid was just a prelude, or maybe an
incubator. How to forge new ideas and pick up new tools in a radically
different world?

My heart goes out to all those hit by this war.

Brian
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