There is another professor from Wellesley, I believe, named Mary Lefkowitz,
author of "Not Out of Africa" who has a whole little business of "refuting"
Bernal and anyone who wants to study any contribution by African peoples.
She's got a bunch of books all on this, she is funded by real right wing
groups, and it's a whole industry she has going, with a following and I am
sure there are a whole group of ph.d's coming up who all go to her panels
and publish in her journals, etc, and so every time a Black Studies Dept.
wanmmts to do anything, they have to spend all of their time answering to
her and her kind, instead of doing productive stuff.  This is how whole
groups and dept.s and individuals get drained if they don't have the energy
to spend all of their time demonstrating that these attacks are wrong,
becvause you have to do it, otherwise it is assumed that if you don't answer
that they must be right!  AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAGGGGGHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!


-----Original Message-----
From: Louis Proyect <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
'[EMAIL PROTECTED]' <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: Henry C.K. Liu ¹ù¤l¥ú <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Tuesday, September 14, 1999 8:28 PM
Subject: [PEN-L:10986] Why China Failed to Become Capitalist


>At 05:12 PM 9/14/99 -0700, Craven, Jim wrote:
>>Add to all of that and more that fully 50% of all children born in Africa
>>today are born HIV positive. I like to use the metaphor of imperialism as
a
>>gigantic "reverse Hoover" vacuum "cleaner".( actually a vacuum plunderer
and
>>dirtier) Whereas a normal vacuum cleaner takes out the dirt and leaves the
>>furniture and rooms in tact and in fact cleaner than before, imperialism
>>takes out the furniture (critical resources, talents, local capital, whole
>>populations, savings, etc) and leaves even more dirt (strip bars, whore
>>houses, tatoo parlors, orphanages full of unwanted mixed-race children,
>>Coca-Colanization, ultra-selfish/rat-race individualism, military bases,
>
>Funny you mention this. These were my exact thoughts a half-hour ago when I
>was viewing the opening-night reception for a show at the Metropolitan
>titled "Egyptian Art in the Age of the Pyramids", courtesy of a ticket that
>my friend, the estimable Henry Liu, laid on me. Most of this art was not
>seen by their makers as art, but permanent icons that belonged in tombs in
>order to establish the immortality of the inhabitants. Created in the 3rd
>century BC, it has an incredible freshness and vitality. One in particular
>stands out. It is a sculpture of a male and female member of the royal
>family who stand as if posing for a Polaroid, with their arms wrapped
>around each other's shoulders.. You can almost imagine them saying
>"Cheese".  It is truly astonishing art.
>
>But the museum in which it is displayed is a monument to inhumanity. It is
>funded by the imperialist bourgeoisie who are largely responsible for
>turning Egypt into what is today: a miserably poor third world country
>which requires US aid in order to survive. Instead of graceful sculptures,
>you have monuments to the quarter-pounder instead.
>
>Charts depicting the building of the pyramids leave no doubt that this was
>a very despotic society. If Egypt had been left to its own devices, perhaps
>there would have been the development of a strong, peasant class that could
>have asserted its own rights and challenged the various feudal monarchies.
>We'll never know. Egypt, like China and the Incan empire, got swallowed
>whole by the Hoover vacuum of imperialism.
>
>There is a very deep ambivalence and anxiety about these kinds of
>precapitalist social formations in  European and American bourgeois
>society. While we organize exhibits of the loot we stole from them, in
>clear deference to the transcendent spirit which animated these societies,
>we still consider them savages. Martin Bernal, the author of "Black
>Athena", is under constant attack for alleging that Egyptian culture shaped
>Greek thought. In the latest New Yorker, there's an review of a new book by
>a Brown professor named Shepard Krech III. Titled "The Ecological Indian:
>Myth and History," it is a compendium of all the bullshit that we hear over
>and over. Krech has assembled all of the arguments about Indians driving
>bison over the cliffs, dying by "accident" because the Europeans didn't
>intend to infect them with smallpox, etc. and packaged them into a $27.95
>book sold by Norton Press. It is a companion volume, obviously, to David
>Stoll's ignorant attack on Rigobertu Menchu.
>
>These precapitalist societies are a constant reminder of what Matt
>Forstater (after Marx) refers to as "horrors, theft, rape, plunder,
>slavery, murder". I am always reminded of that wonderful scene in the movie
>Poltergeist when the land underneath the modern housing development comes
>churning up, vomiting the graves of the violated bodies whose sacred ground
>has been violated. These ideologists like Krech and Stoll just want to keep
>them buried.
>
>
>
>Louis Proyect
>(http://www.panix.com/~lnp3/marxism.html)
>


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