Share this fundraiser with friends online using ChipIn!

Support Anarchist Bloggers!

Anarchoblogs depends on contributions from readers like you to stay running. We're doing a fundraising drive for the months of October and November.

Donations provide for the costs of running anarchoblogs.org and provide direct financial support to active Anarchoblogs contributors. See the donation page for more details.


How to create a sick system.

Issendai gives us a list of rules on how to create a sick relationship or social system.

Rule 1: Keep them too busy to think.
Rule 2: Keep them tired
Rule 3: Keep them emotionally involved.
Rule 4: Reward intermittently
Keep the crises rolling.
Things will be better when…
Keep real rewards distant.
Establish one small semi-occasional success.
Chop up their time.
Enmesh your success with theirs.
Keep everything on the edge.


Filed under: Left Libertarian.org feed, Links

More statistics: Red States…36.3% of population would get 48 out of 100 Senate seats

Because there were 24 of them which went for Romney, with a total of 112,106 million people. So in other words there's a 12% difference between the percentage of the population they make up and the amount of Senate seats they have. Translating that out, the way the Senate is divided up makes them have the representative power of 36,689,000 more people than they should have. Which, for comparison's sake, is within a million of the population of California, which has roughly 37,254,00 people, meaning that our Senate rules give the red states additional power close to that of the state of California, above and beyond their actual population.


*on edit: this is if all the Red States had two Senators in Congress. The actual makeup of the Senate is a little bit different, with some red states having one democrat and one republican and some blue states having the same. Yet, the stats are similar in that you have 55-45 on the side of the Democrats, either with the party itself or with people who vote with it the majority of the time.

How Democracy Works: 2012 election

According to "The Guardian", Wyoming, Idaho, Oklahoma, Kansas,Utah, Kentucky,West Virginia, Nebraska, Arkansas,  and Alabama all had support for Romney at 60% or higher....making up a total of 59 Electoral Votes out of 538, or roughly 11%. For comparison's sake, New York State has 29 Electoral Votes, and both Michigan and Ohio have 18, with California (who has the most electoral votes of them all) having 55. In other words, go on and vote your heart out, red states---your population is so fucking small it makes no difference. Have a nice day.

*on edit: in other words, the electoral votes of California and Oregon, 55 and 7, respectively, totally negated all of the 60% and over support for Romney.

*on edit part 2: this is borne out by the population of these states. The voters of these states are representing the whole population, and if you add up the populations of the 10 states with 60% up and higher support for Romney, you find that the total (by 2010 Census numbers) is 27,213,918--out of a total population of 308,745,538 for the U.S. as a whole plus DC for 2010...which comes out to about 8.8% of the U.S. population--actually lower than the percentage of electoral votes they got. 

“Property rights” as pseudo-rights.


Above: a fence in the middle of a field that separates part of a field from another part of a field. They are obviously completely different.

I’ve discussed in the past how property is a nonsense concept. In this entry, I want to concentrate on the notion of “property rights” as the economic foundation of capitalist theory. Property rights are taken as a given, but they really are not. The fact is that property rights as we understand them are designed to further the interests of the rich minority (especially business owners), and there’s no particular reason why they should. Many different ownership systems have existed throughout history, and new ones have been conceived and tried out with success.

[D]efinitions of ownership and theft tend to be thought of as straightforward, even natural. But they are not. They are, rather, the product of human decision. That decision operates to give special protection to just those types of ownership (or putative ownership) that are crucial to economic stratification… Indeed, this was the more or less explicit intent of the framers of the U.S. Constitution. As Noam Chomsky and others have discussed, James Madison viewed the property rights of the “opulent minority” as threatened by the masses, and thus as requiring particularly stringent protection.
The Culture of Conformism, p15

Now, what is the foundation of “property rights”? Where do they come from? Capitalists will give various answers to this question.

The most popular foundation is self-ownership (the bizarre circular belief that the body is a property of itself). I’ve already extensively debunked the concept of self-ownership. I’ve also pointed out that proving “property rights” with self-ownership is a circular argument, since the concept of self-ownership itself is based on the concept of property.

But even if we ignore these fatal problems, how do we pass from self-ownership to property rights? It is argued that if we own our body, then we also own what that body produces. But surely this is grossly inadequate as a justification of “property rights” as they exist today; for one thing, “property rights” are routinely applied and enforced on natural resources, which are not the product of any body. But also, this does not address all “property rights.”

“Property rights” are divided in three category: usus, fructus and abusus. Usus contains the rights regarding usage, such as inhabiting a house or an apartment. Fructus contains the right regarding the products of that property, such as the fruits of a tree or the crops gathered from a piece of land. Abusus contains the right to dispose of a property, such as selling, modifying, destroying, etc.

If we accept the reasoning from self-ownership, then we can make sense of usus and fructus, but not of abusus. After all, most capitalists do not believe that we have a right to sell our own body into slavery, for example. Many also do not recognize a right to suicide, especially conservatives. But if self-ownership excludes abusus rights, then how can abusus rights be derived from self-ownership? There is a logical problem here.

One may sidestep the issue by stating that the kind of ownership in self-ownership differs from the kind of ownership we establish with “property rights.” That’s fine, but then in what meaningful way are “property rights” derived from self-ownership? Logically, the fact that one owns one thing does not imply that one owns, or even can own, anything else. So self-ownership in itself doesn’t logically imply the concept of property.

One may then reply that self-ownership does imply property because we need property in order to survive. We need food, lodging, cleaning, and so on. We must, or so goes the argument, hold things as our property in order to use them in these ways. We have a right to life and, in order to maintain that life, we need “property rights.”

But again, this does not prove all “property rights.” You can hold and use an apple without selling it or destroying it (that is to say, making it unusable). You can live in a house without selling it, modifying it significantly, or destroying it. So again, abusus is not proven here, and it is a necessary part of “property rights.”

Not only are “property rights” not needed to affirm any right to life, but “property rights” are at tension with the right to life. Nowhere is this shown more clearly than in the contradiction between the “property rights” of Big Pharma and the “right to life” of people in the Second and Third World. Let’s look at the root cause of this tension.

Consider that “property rights,” by their very definition, are an absolute limit over the implementation of all other, real rights. I’ve made the point before that the right to life is meaningless without the right to health care and other life necessities, that the right to assemble is meaningless without a place to assemble in, that the right to free expression is meaningless without the tools of that expression, that the right to justice is meaningless without the means to be treated as an equal, and so on. All “negative rights” necessitate “positive rights” to be meaningful at all, including material ownership. And “property rights” make it so that this material ownership is contingent, contingent upon a multitude of factors: who you were raised by, the kind of education and work you were able to get, and so on.

Not only that, but “property rights” also dictate how this material ownership becomes concentrated into a small number of hands. The two biggest influence on this are the lack of limits on the amount of land or property one can acquire (so that one person can buy more than his equal share) and, most importantly, the private ownership of the means of production, by which the owner can extract surplus value from his workers with the help of the extensive structural crippling executed by the State. But this is not new; for centuries, “property rights” have explicitly been used to protect the moneyed minority against the anger of the destitute majority (when they talked about the “rights of minorities,” they were talking about the rich, not black people or natives, who were considered subhuman).

If a small percentage of people have most of the wealth (in the US, the top 1% controls 35% of the wealth and receive 20% of the income, while the bottom 80% controls 15% of the wealth and receives less than 40% of the income; the picture is less dramatic but similar in other Western countries), and we live in a society where wealth determines material ownership, and by extension rights expression, then we should expect such a society to be stratified, and for some to have more rights than others. Furthermore, we should expect many in the bottom strata to have very little to no rights at all.

Note that it does not matter what the power elite claims is the case. We are told that all citizens have equal rights (never mind so-called “immigrants” and children, because they still aren’t considered fully human). Yet in practice we know this is false, to a large extent because of material inequality within countries and around the world. Many people don’t have access to adequate food (six million children die annually of starvation), housing (homeless persons die 22 years younger), or health care (ten million children die annually of treatable diseases), or are forced into substandard food (junk food), substandard housing (“ghettos”) or substandard health care (so-called “alternative” medicine). All children are deprived of education, but some have access to better schooling than others, pushing them towards success or failure. The judiciary system in most Western countries, unlike other judiciaries, is explicitly set up so that rich people and majorities have a clear advantage, both in the structure of the police and courts, as well as in the laws themselves (looking at the kind of crimes that are punished, as well as the kind of crimes that are given much lower punishments or no punishments at all). Workers who have to sign work contracts in order to make a living must agree to have some of their most basic rights violated, in some cases to a point where they are made basically slaves (people from Second and Third World countries are “imported,” then their means of leaving are taken away from them). Religious fanaticism, bigotry, homophobia, racism and sexism can make many people’s lives a living Hell and deprive them of their right to liberty, freedom of thought, and the pursuit of happiness, partially through refusing them access to good-paying jobs, inheritances, the ownership of property, and other ways to access wealth. This is just a very short list, obviously, as the number of ways in which people are deprived of rights or given inferior status are pretty much limitless.

Since people must fight against “property rights” to maintain their livelihood and their dignity (as the Zapatista and other indigenous people have clearly demonstated), there cannot be such a thing as “property rights.” A “right” which supports aggression against other people’s rights is not a right at all.

The legitimacy of “property rights” is only maintained by the pretense that because anyone can, in theory, own property, therefore “property rights” are egalitarian. But this is incredibly flimsy grounds on which to exploit and oppress people. Anyone can, in theory, become a CEO- does that mean corporations are egalitarian? Anyone can, in theory, win a fistfight or a duel- does that mean “punching rights” and “shooting rights” are egalitarian? Anyone can, in theory, write a novel or produce a song- does that mean “IP rights” are egalitarian? Anyone can, in theory, follow “the right god”- does that make religion egalitarian? Anyone can, in theory, be a perfect parent- does that make the child-parent relation egalitarian?

“Property rights” are not only not egalitarian, but they are the primary source of inequality, and therefore of unfreedom. As I’ve argued before, all hierarchies are property.


Filed under: Anti-capitalism/usury/STV, Pseudo-rights

Hollywood movies: the extent of the remake takeover.

Short of the Week gives us the lowdown on how extensive the reign of the remake has become in recent years.

And if that isn’t frightening enough, the success of The Lion King 3D is already kicking off what may become a new creative low—re-releases. The Lion King 3D, at a cost to Disney of less than $10M, took in nearly $100M—not a bad ROI for a struggling industry. Titanic, Beauty and the Beast, and Star Wars, all planned for 2012 releases, may mark the dawn of an era of blockbuster re-releases as Hollywood longs for its glory days.


Filed under: Links
Tagged with:

Well, we found out how numerically strong the Tea Party was, didn’t we?

Because the Tea Party, at least the people still involved with it, were promoting it as a sleeping giant that was going to be revived, and Fox News and allied media organizations did their best to portray what was actually believed in by a marginal group of people in the United States as being a popular movement. The truth came out in the election. Nearly every swing state, except North Carolina, went to Obama, even Florida, which even they couldn't rig effectively in Romney's favor. Not only that, but Tea Party candidates who were elected to Congress two years ago were summarily thrown out. Allen West is no more a Representative, neither is Joe Walsh. And, not surprisingly, the implicit endorsement of sexual violence, or at least saying that, hey pregnancy from rape is gift from god, one of the most insane and macabre statements possible, lead not only to the candidates who said these things being defeated but women in general mobilizing to vote for their interests on a large scale.

The Tea Party style Fox News politics proved to be a Tempest in a Tea Pot, the speech of an Idiot with Sound and Fury, signifying nothing. Money can only buy so much.

Grover Norquist, whose daddy told him about the evils of taxation by stealing parts of his ice cream cone when he was kid, got a petition to have him publicly punched in the groin....and, beyond that, it looks like his policies are being rejected by Republican politicians, finally.

Free market politics linked to ignorant Christian theocrats have to be one of the least appealing parts of the American political landscape, a place where the Constitution is looked at as an inspired, unchangeable, document, by people who have never thought of trying to read some of the legal commentary talking about how the Constitution is actually understood in practice. Debate about the Constitution? For shame! It happens every time precedent is re-evaluated.

I don't know quite what to call the Tea Party folks, possibly the last stand of folks in rural America who are woefully outnumbered in our country, and have been for quite some time, but who because of the way our political system is structured, and because of what the media favors, have assumed an importance way outside of their actual numbers. The folks who believe that the earth was created in literally seven days, that the Constitution is unalterable, that the free market in its most obnoxious form is sacred, and who, beyond a few points, really don't care about the Freedom that they so loudly trumpet, are a rind of scum that I'm glad has now been put in their place, hopefully.

The folks running Fox News, running the multi-national corporations, will have to find some other proxy movement to advance their own interests now.

Me, I would gladly welcome some sanity in terms of what the Republican party could potentially offer.

As this blog has lately pointed out, there are quite a few advantages to a moderate social conservatism, good points to be made, that are not being made whatsoever in the current environment. All political philosophies have something to offer, and I think a great balance would be to incorporate some of each of the main three together into a new combination, however, one which stands at its bottom as truly socially radical, in the Marxist sense of workers' power and socialism. 

Introduction to Marxian Economics – Part 1 – Commodities

By my friend Edward Greve.


Filed under: Videos
Tagged with:

Levels of Discipline

Check out this item from Regretsy. Just the thing for your kitchen isn’t it? Also love the comments from people saying they were beaten violently on a regular basis and they still turned out okay. Wonderful!


Filed under: Links
Tagged with:

As Occupy Moves into its Second Year

Rolling Jubilee,  an OWS project is eliminating debt using the system against itself - http://rollingjubilee.org/

Occupy Sandy is engaging in massive mutual aid in the area stricken by hurricane Sandy
http://interoccupy.net/occupysandy/

Romney and the "Gifts" statement

That statement, being that Obama won because he promised "gifts" to minorities, women, and young people, demonstrates how out of touch he is with the current state of the Democratic Party. What many conservatives don't realize is that the Democratic Party that used to be more comfortable with entitlement programs without critically evaluating them is no more. Instead, progressive democrats still support entitlement programs, but in my experience the vast majority of them do so in ways where the reasoning has been shifted to counter conservative critiques of the same.

In a way, the conservatives, while not winning, at least made their point, in that progressive thought, as it exists now, started out fighting from a position that was kind of on the ropes. The progressive writing and thought that's prevalent now started out not from the position of dominance that liberal thought in the early '80s inherited from the '70s and '60s, but from being completely and totally criticized throughout the Reagan-Bush era and abandoned to centrism by the Democratic party in the Clinton era. What's called Progressive thought now had to justify itself both against conservatives who were against any sort of programs whatsoever and against people from the liberal party in power itself who believed that "the era of big government is over". Because of this, progressive thought is much stronger and more consistent than liberal thought at the end of the '70s was.

You can see it as the thesis, '70s thought, being opposed by the anti-thesis, Reaganism, and the latter being opposed by another anti-thesis, leading to a return to the original position altered and wisened by the encounter.

Which is why so much of the rhetoric of the Rush Limbaugh's of the world is regarded as just absurd by many progressives. Limbaugh and company, and Romney with his "gifts" statement, are feeding on stereotypes that haven't been true about progressive democrats for twelve years, with the 2000 election being the watershed year where many folks abandoned the mainstream democratic party in order to pursue a more progressive agenda. It's not like there aren't folks out there who still expect the government to compensate them for everything without demanding any sort of change on their own part, but I would doubt that many progressives would take the demand at face value these days.

Obama, for his part, seems to completely understand this new position, and his actual statements during the debates had no trace of the "entitlement mentality" that folks are now accusing him of using to get votes. In fact, probably because of being Africa-American, I think he avoided anything that could possibly look like that in a way that went a little bit too far. But in any case, what you have with Obama's ideological positions and with those of many, probably most, progressive democrats is a far cry away from the late '70s, where when folks wanted more welfare and more entitlement programs democrats would kind of just give in without really considering the overall rightness, justice, or social impact of those programs on the country as a whole.