Message -
From: Ken Hanly [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, July 13, 2001 11:07 PM
Subject: [PEN-L:15132] Re: Re: Speaking of volatility
Do you have the figures? Why is this the case do u think? I guess my
remark
about the new Russian labor law is true though.
Cheers, Ken
, July 14, 2001 2:26 AM
Subject: [PEN-L:15145] Re: Re: Re: Speaking of volatility
http://members.aol.com/ISWoR/english/
International Solidarity with Workers in Russia, neo-Trot.
www.left.ru
(I think, that is the URL, neo-Stalinist.)
There used to be a great publication, Labour Focus
G'day Doug,
Once again, I have to remark on how weird it is that a bunch of
friends of the working class are getting all excited about the
prospects for recession, which means the disemployment of millions
and lower wages for everyone else. Does the ghost of Andrew Mellon
lurk over PEN-L?
Mark Jones wrote:
Doug Henwood:
Once again, I have to remark on how weird it is that a bunch of
friends of the working class are getting all excited about the
prospects for recession, which means the disemployment of millions
and lower wages for everyone else. Does the ghost of Andrew
Nobody is salivating over the prospect of the working class suffer, but it
did not do that well during the Clinton boom. But I do relish the
downfall of many highly leveraged businesses.
I recall your glee at the demise of some of the dot.coms -- a
pleasure,which I shared with you.
Although
Hi again Doug,
Actually I think it's quite relevant to the intellectual and
political marginalization of left political economy - it has no
analytical vocabulary for talking about good times,
If the times are usually good for most people, and sustainably so, well, I
wouldn't be a lefty.
, July 13, 2001 5:12 PM
Subject: [PEN-L:15090] Re: Re: Re: Speaking of volatility
G'day Doug,
Once again, I have to remark on how weird it is that a bunch of
friends of the working class are getting all excited about the
prospects for recession, which means the disemployment of millions
and lower
Michael Perelman wrote:
Nobody is salivating over the prospect of the working class suffer, but it
did not do that well during the Clinton boom. But I do relish the
downfall of many highly leveraged businesses.
I recall your glee at the demise of some of the dot.coms -- a
pleasure,which I
Doug, I don't entirely disagree with you, but part of the problem w/ the
Asian crisis was that it was localized -- leaving the neoliberal
juggernaut relatively unaffected. It was the worst of both worlds -- a
crisis with a neoliberal solution.
On Fri, Jul 13, 2001 at 12:34:44PM -0400, Doug
Mark Jones wrote:
Tom Walker wrote:
There IS a cure for blasé indignation. It is called
beginner's mind. In the beginner's mind there are many possibilities, but
in the expert's there are few.
Good stuff, however I fear a return right back to the womb may be necessary
in the case of some
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