Julian Vigo – How Privilege and Woke Politics are Destroying the Left

Link to an article by Julian Vigo:

“How Privilege and Woke Politics are Destroying the Left”

 

Bonus links: Review of Kill All Normies and “Too Much of Not Enough: An Interview with Alenka Zupančič” (“(Moral) outrage is a particularly unproductive affect, yet it is one that offers considerable libidinal satisfaction. By ‘unproductive’ I mean this: it gives us the satisfaction of feeling morally superior, the feeling that we are in the right and others are in the wrong. Now for this to work, things must not really change. We are much less interested in changing things than in proving, again and again, that we are in the right, or on the right side, the side of the good.”) and Beautiful Soul Quote and Review of Domenico Losurdo’s Liberalism: A Counter-History and  “The Politics of Online Friendship” and “Against the Neoliberal Blackmail: Identity Fetishism and the Privatization of Affect” and “What’s Wrong With Identity Politics (and Intersectionality Theory)? A Response to Mark Fisher’s “Exiting the Vampire Castle” (And Its Critics)” (“The upshot in political practice is a static pluralism of reified social categories, each vying for more-subaltern-than-thou status on a field of one-downsmanship.”) and “The Politics of Identity” and “Multiculturalism, or, the Cultural Logic of Multinational Capitalism” and Amuse-Bouches II – Testimony and the Pass” and Review of The Trouble With Diversity and “The Political Economy of Effective Altruism”

Rob Urie Quote About Differences on the Political Left

Quote by Rob Urie:

“Differences on ‘the left’ have been between the chide that we need better management of empire versus the counter-argument that capitalist imperialism is the problem that needs to be solved. The charge, addressed below, that Donald Trump represents a ‘unique threat’ falls out on the ‘better management of empire’ side of this divide. The subtext is a contested analogy regarding the genesis of European fascism in the twentieth century. To state: the base difference between left and right political analysis has historically been a focus on society and institutions (left) versus individuals and ‘character’ (right).

“As a child (and opponent) of the Vietnam war, I’ve argued for most of my now substantial years that assessments of the uniqueness of the Nazi threat depends on which side of American power you exist on. The horror of Nazi atrocities can’t be understated. But neither can the basic outline of American history, from slavery and genocide against the indigenous peoples to the people, friends, families, communities and nations destroyed. From Vietnam to Central America to Iraq to the present, I’ve met more than a few American ‘heroes’ who would be understood to be the moral equivalents of Nazi concentration camp commanders but for which side of power they reside on.

“Following WWII, an argument was developed in support of the ‘uniquely evil’ nature of Nazism whose very purpose was to get past American history up to that point. And it depended on ideological explanations of history, purposely leaving aside the economic circumstances behind the rise of Nazism so as to avoid capitalist culpability for the Great Depression. This theory, tied to right-wing economics, is today known as ‘neoliberalism.’”

“The Open Letter and the DNC”

Bonus link: “The Two Totalitarianisms”

Frank González – Militant Journalism

Link to an article by Frank González:

“Militant Journalism: The Role of Journalism in Class Society and Revolution”

 

Bonus links: “We Need a Media System That Serves People’s Needs, Not Corporations’” and “An Apology & Explanation, Two Years On” and “Making Rebellion Attractive: Why the Establishment Still Hates John Reed”

Robert Parry – An Apology & Explanation, Two Years On

Link to an article by Robert Parry:

“An Apology & Explanation, Two Years On”

 

Bonus links: “America’s Reporter: The Hersh Method” and “Making Rebellion Attractive: Why the Establishment Still Hates John Reed” and “Why ‘Russian Meddling’ is a Trojan Horse” and “The Limits of the Web in an Age of Communicative Capitalism” and “Three Variations on Trump: Chaos, Europe, and Fake News”

Bonus quote from Rex Butler:

“in the analysis of ideology, it is not simply a matter of seeing which account of reality best matches the ‘facts’, with the one that is closest being the least biased and therefore the best. As soon as the facts are determined, we have already — whether we know it or not — made our choice; we are already within one ideological system or another. The real dispute has already taken place over what is to count as the facts, which facts are relevant, and so on.”

Jim Kavanagh – Impeachment: What Lies Beneath

Link to an article by Jim Kavanagh:

“Impeachment: What Lies Beneath?”

 

Bonus links: “Impeachment Hearing Highlights Conflict Over US Policy in Ukraine” and “A Warning: A Manifesto of the Pro-war ‘Resistance’ in the American State” and “America Escalates Its ‘Democratic’ Oil War in the Near East” (and “The Saker Interviews Michael Hudson”) and “Impeachment Without Class Politics: An Autopsy”

Stephen Gowans – Soleimani Assassination Only One of Many (and Not the Most Consequential) US Acts of War Against Iran

Link to an article by Stephen Gowans:

“Soleimani Assassination Only One of Many (and Not the Most Consequential) US Acts of War Against Iran”

 

Bonus links: “America Escalates Its ‘Democratic’ Oil War in the Near East” and “The Saker Interviews Michael Hudson”

Kevin Kumashiro – The People With the Least Resources Are Now Shouldering the Greatest Burden

Link to an interview with Kevin Kumashiro, conducted by Janine Jackson:

“The People With the Least Resources Are Now Shouldering the Greatest Burden”

 

Bonus links: Pedagogy of the OppressedRichard Shaull Quote, Democracy and Education, The Higher Learning in America, “‘They’ve Been Doing This Massive, Anti-Democratic Model of Education Reform’: CounterSpin Interview with Wayne Au on Gates’ Educational Failure,” “Could Student Loans Lead to Debt Prison? The Handwriting on the Wall,” “Student Loans, The Indentured Servitude of the 21st Century,” “A Closer Look at Income and Race Concentration in Public Schools,” “The Left Hand and the Right Hand of the State,” “The Slow Death of the University,” and “Red Diaper Babies”