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Chi Ha Rubato il Domani di Ieri?

Arriva il 2015 e niente auto volanti.

E la tranquillità, la sicurezza economica che, al di là dei balocchi, era la parte più seducente dell’anno 2015 in Ritorno al Futuro – Parte II? Perché mancano, così come mancano i fax e i CD? E perché, nel cinquantesimo anniversario della Fiera Internazionale del 1964-65, il futuro appare decadente come i suoi edifici rimasti (visti per l’ultima volta assieme al suo compagno kitsch degli anni sessanta: i quadri della serie Big Eyes di Margaret Keane)?

Marty McFly non fu il primo a viaggiare nel paradisiaco futuro americano. Un secolo prima, nel suo libro Guardando Indietro 2000-1887, Edward Bellamy mandava il protagonista Julian West nel mondo utopico del 2000, un mondo reso possibile da un’economia statalizzata. West rimane estasiato dall’abbondanza creata dalla pianificazione centrale così come Marty rimane estasiato davanti al volopattino; la notevole assenza di risentimenti anticonsumistici nella retrospettiva post-Trabant è incredibile. Già molto prima dell’anno duemila era chiaro che le imprese private di Ritorno al Futuro, ispirate da Reagan, avevano vinto. Se esiste qualcosa che può spingere la produttività e allo stesso tempo ridurre le ore di lavoro, non è l’efficientismo di Bellamy ma la concorrenza tra aziende, come quella tra Spacely Sprockets e Cogswell Cogs che dava al patriarca de I Pronipoti una settimana lavorativa di due ore.

Forse la Mattel e la Pepsi non sono poi così diverse dall’economia pianificata di Bellamy.

L’osservazione conferma ciò che disse David Graeber, e cioè che Marx ed Engels “avevano ragione a insistere che la meccanizzazione della produzione industriale avrebbe distrutto il capitalismo, ma avevano torto quando prevedevano che la competizione sul mercato avrebbe costretto i proprietari delle fabbriche a meccanizzare comunque. Se ciò non è accaduto è perché la competizione sul mercato non è, nella realtà dei fatti, un fattore essenziale della natura del capitalismo come loro immaginavano.” I mercati hanno una certa affinità con la tecnologia a tutto vantaggio degli operatori del mercato, perché danno a questi ultimi la possibilità di incrementare il valore di ciò che si crea e allo stesso tempo ridurre la quantità di lavoro richiesta per creare quel valore. Perciò il libero mercato rappresenta un pericolo esistenziale per tutte quelle istituzioni di terze parti che si appropriano della ricchezza prodotta dal lavoratore.

A frenare lo sviluppo tecnologico è quell’alleanza tra grandi imprese e stato osservata da Robert Anton Wilson. Ecco quindi che “i grandi sindacati, le aziende e lo stato si mettono tacitamente d’accordo per rallentare l’automazione, puntare i piedi e far andare l’economia con il freno tirato.”

L’attesa perenne di un nuovo viaggio sulla luna o di un altro Progetto Manhattan dà per scontato che progetti centralizzati su larga scala, finanziati dallo stato o da colossi monopolistici alla Ma Bell, siano indispensabili se si vuole fare un salto tecnologico. Come nota Ralph Nader, però, anche nel ventesimo secolo dominato da questi golia “invenzioni come le lame d’acciaio inox (Wilkinson), le radio a transistor (Sony), le fotocopiatrici (Xerox) e la foto istantanea (Polaroid), sono state fatte da piccoli nomi poco noti al momento dell’exploit.”

Il seguace più presciente di Bellamy forse è stato Ernest B. Gaston, che ha fatto una sintesi di Guardando Indietro con l’altro grande testo riformatore americano del tempo, Progresso e Povertà di Henry George. Fairhope, l’esperimento utopico di Gaston, realizzava il futuro armonioso immaginato da Bellamy grazie alla cooperazione volontaria all’interno della competizione sul mercato così come immaginata da George.

Per andare dove stiamo andando non occorre che lo stato, o i colossi industriali, facciano le strade.

Traduzione di Enrico Sanna.

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NYPD Strike Suggests it’s Time for Assassination Markets

It’s likely that at least a small amount of targeted violence will be required to take down governments, so that a more liberty-centric order can supplant them. If we accept that, as distasteful as it is, then assassination marketplaces become attractive. Unlike a traditional war, assassination marketplaces don’t require that you kill tens of thousands of cops, politicians and soldiers. In order for assassination marketplaces to end the age of the state, only a few targeted individuals need be killed. For the rest, active and well-funded threats are sufficient to intimidate aggressors into remaining peaceful.

The post NYPD Strike Suggests it’s Time for Assassination Markets appeared first on More Liberty Now.

Continue reading at More Liberty Now …

Repression,– A sign Of The State’s Power Slipping.


     When it comes to attempting to crush any resistance to the financial Mafia's dictates, Greece leads the way in Europe. It has just started to transfer prisoners to its new super security prison within a prison, Domokos. However that is only because to date, Greece is the European country where the anger and resistance of the people is at boiling point. As the people of other countries strengthen their resistance to this perpetual plundering of the public purse in aid of the financial Mafia, so the state will strengthen its repression. Greece today, tomorrow Spain, Italy Ireland----?
     The conditions in Domokos are intended to isolate those who are most vociferous and active in their resistance, more than anything, the state fears the spread of of freedom of thought and of expression among the people. Such things eroded the power of the state and it will attempt strangle and crush them before they spread to the general public. At this level the state has long since abandoned the illusion that prisons were for reforming, and now openly uses them for their original and real purpose, repression. They are an inhumanity, a scar on the face of any society, a cancer in any community, a symbol of punitive power.

This from Rabble:

     Domokos prison, in central Greece, is the first prison to be revamped and classified as “Type C” under a new law passed in July. Type C prisons are the first Greek prisons that will meet Europe-wide maximum security standards. The regime prohibits day release and rules out parole for those serving life sentences before prisoners have served at least 20 years behind bars. The general operation and supervision of the prison will be tightly controlled and prison access guarded by the police rather than screws. Visits and phone calls will be restricted.
      Type C prisons are specially made for ‘terrorist’ prisoners (urban guerrillas & revolutionaries), and other detainees deemed to pose a serious threat.
The new Domokos wing opens just as more fighters from the Conspiracy of Cells of Fire are handed prison sentences of up to 25 years.
     These are the actions of a state desperate to contain the spread of rebellion in Greece since the explosion of the economic crisis in 2008. One Domokos prisoner, Revolutionary Struggle fighter Nikos Maziotis, has already issued a call for the formation of an assembly in solidarity with political prisoners. Maziotis writes:
“the passing of legislation of the Type C prisons are an expected development in the repressive attack of the State against the armed Revolutionary Organizations and against armed direct action. Subsequently, the legislative changes and reforms that have been under way for about 14 years are directly linked to the political and economic conditions, applicable for years internationally, and none other than the “war on terror” and the neoliberal reforms intended to impose the dictatorship of the markets, and its doctorate of supranational capital.”
Read the full article HERE:
Visit ann arky's home at www.radicalglasgow.me.uk

And just what the fuck is a W-8BEN?

Oh damnitn bureaucracy has found me! It seems my Patreon account is generating such significant amounts of money, that I need to wade through what is called a “W-8BEN” which includes requirements such as a US Tax ID number (but I’m a EU citizen!), my normal Tax ID number (ugh) and the exact treaty with my country that specifies how much to withhold from me.

So OK, I guess  I can provide the last two, but a friggin’ US Tax ID number? Seriously? This guide suggest calling US IRS on the phone and trying to get an employer ID number which should do the job. However I’m not a company! I’m just a bloke getting donations for voluntary making free software on my free time. The fuck do I do now?

And yet, If I don’t do any of this, Patron cannot transfer any donations to me anymore.

Ugh, I hate bureaucratic stuff…

Graeber et al on the ‘Rojava Revolution’

Below I’ve republished David Graeber’s recent interview with Pinar Öğünç about his recent (December) trip to Rojava as part of a small international delegation to the area. I’ve also included links to several articles of relevance. A good collection of … Continue reading

cheese it, the cops! 2015-01-04 18:28:11

speaking of free will, here is the freedom chunk of entanglements, half or so of the ethics chapter of my magnum opusy thing. it does show the range of tones, or good portion of it, in the book, from a phenomenological and first-person account  to riffing about louis armstrong to a fairly precise analytic-style argument that free will is not necessary for moral responsibility (an analogue in ethics to my view, also re-argued in entanglements, that justification is not necessary for knowledge). i wouldn't say i try to squarely solve the problem of whether we have free will; i'm trying to re-enrich it. i think an beautifully replete question has been nibbled away to nothing by analytic philosophers.

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The Weekly Libertarian Leftist And Chess Review 63

Helen Dale discusses stories vs numbers.

Bruce Fein discusses the AWOL status of Congress on drones.

Kathy Deacon discusses a book on the revolutionary war.

Patrick Cockburn discusses the reason for torture.

Joseph Stromberg discusses command posts and the state.

Patrick Cockburn discusses ISIS.

Jacob G. Hornberger discusses the CIA.

Leonard C. Goodman discusses blowback.

Richard M. Ebeling discusses the new year and liberty.

Anthony Gregory discusses mass killings by Stalin and Hitler.

Uri Avnery discusses the connection between archaeology and ideology in the Middle East.

Jacob G. Hornberger discusses voluntary vs mandatory charity.

Ted Galen Carpenter discusses the opening with Cuba.

A. Barton Hinkle discusses new gun control measures in Virginia.

Scott Beauchamp discusses the bipartisan war consensus.

Deepak Tripathi discusses the Afghan war.

Jack A. Smith discusses the New Year and the ongoing wars.

Noah Berlatsky discusses a book on international human rights law.

Timothy P. Carney discusses the ex-im bank and crony capitalism.

Ivan Eland discusses why hysteria over Sony hacking is unwarranted.

Kent Paterson discusses migrant family detentions.

Kevin Carson discusses a critique of his thought.

Kevin Carson discusses whether capitalism could reconstitute itself with private armies.

Gary Chartier discusses the imperial presidency.

Bruce Fein discusses why the U.S. government shouldn’t promote democracy abroad.

Fernando Teson discusses the uneasy marriage of liberty and democracy.

Miroslav Filip defeats Vaclav Brat.

Miroslav Filip defeats Wolfgang Unzicker.

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#writeandrun31 Day 4

俳句

cold weather running

is something i really like

to include daily

A good friend of mine used to ask me to write more often. Usually he would as me to elaborate on something that we were talking about. Neither of us were under any illusion that anything I penned would change the world, but it would help me think through a lot of things. Things from my thoughts on current events to theories on youth development.  Even though we often speak about it, I have never been able to write consistently. The main reason is, I think, because so many other people do it better.

But. . .

So many people do so many things better. I am not the best pickler, fermenter, runner, program coordinator, or anything else. But that doesn’t matter. Perfection should not be the enemy of the good, right? I am daily telling the kids I work with that we learn by failing. We get better when we try to do something even if we aren’t successful.

So. . .

If I don’t let this bother me in other aspects of my life, why let it stop me from writing? I have found out that I learn more about myself and what I like when I try new things. I have also found out that I can be reluctant to try new things when I am pretty certain that I will fail or not be the best. This isn’t really a good way to live and I am going to do my best to kick it.

How?

In addition to participating in #writeandrun31 I plan on writing at least one haiku a week. Each haiku will be inspired by a picture I take or a current event. My plan is to write both traditional and variant forms haikus. This will be a fun way for me to get back into writing and art.


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Who Got Served?

As a veteran of the US Marine Corps (1984-1995, “honorably discharged”), I’ve always found the obligatory “thank you for your service” remarks somewhat grating. It’s difficult to explain why, but a Google News search returning 19.1 million media results in the last 30 days on the dual terms “veterans” and “service” indicates a need for re-examination of the whole concept of “service” as it relates to military affiliations.

What is “service?” When someone signs a contract and joins a state’s uniformed armed force, who is serving whom? The answer isn’t as simple as one might think. “Service” is a layered thing in even its simplest forms.

For example, think of  the “servers” at your favorite restaurant. They serve at least two masters: The restaurant’s owners on one hand, you on the other. The market justification for this is that by serving the customers well (satisfying their desire for food served quickly, efficiently and courteously), the servers also serve the ownership well (satisfying their desire for maximum profits). And there’s no question that service is what they’re engaged in. They really are servants, not masters, at the beck and call of  (and subject to pleasure or displeasure of) customer and restaurateur alike.

Military “service” is different. The soldier, sailor, airman or Marine certainly serves the military force. Likewise, that military force certainly serves the state which created and operates it. But those are both instances of service to ownership. There are no “customers” in any real sense. The alleged “customers” — the tax-paying citizens of the state in question — are themselves servants rather than served.

In the case of the United States, the only war in its 240-year history which even came close to qualifying as an instance of “service” to the taxpayers was the American Revolution. Every subsequent conflict, from the Whiskey Rebellion to the (just now supposedly wrapping up) occupation of Afghanistan, has been fought entirely in the interests of the state and the ruling class. To the extent that I’ve studied history, this appears to be true of all other states and their wars as well.

If anyone should be thanking anyone else for “service,” it should be me thanking all of you who paid my salary, bought my food, provided my medical care, subsidized my travel and covered the costs of numerous other benefits of military “service,” even though nothing I did during that “service” could plausibly be construed as having been done in your defense or for your freedom.

It’s unseemly that the direction of appreciation should be reversed, with you continuing to believe I did something for you. And since you really have little choice in the matter (other state “servants” stand ready punish you if you don’t pay for said “services”), it seems to me that what you’re due from me is not thanks, but sincere apology. I’m sorry I took the money that the state took from you. By way of restitution, I hope to help you abolish the state which took it.

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Categories: Politics
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[改道] Gǎi Dào Nr. 49 – Januar 2015 erschienen

Gaidao #49

Hallo Menschen,

ein Jahr voller Veränderungen und vielfältiger Ausdrucksformen des Widerstands geht zu Ende, das Projekt Gaidao geht nun ins fünfte Jahr. Auch im kommenden Jahr möchten wir euch einen abwechslungsreichen, sowohl lokalen als auch internationalen Blick auf Entwicklungen in der anarchistischen Bewegung nahebringen.

Auch wenn die aktuelle Ausgabe kürzer als normal ausfällt, erhalten wir für gewöhnlich ausreichend viele Einsendungen, dass wir meistens spannende Ausgaben zusammenstellen können. In den letzten Monaten haben uns gar verschiedene Leute angeschrieben, die jetzt hin und wieder Texte aus dem Spanischen oder Englischen für uns übersetzen. Das ist sehr schön und wir möchten uns herzlich dafür bedanken.

Woran es uns allerdings konstant mangelt, ist Mithilfe im Layoutbereich. Die Arbeit konzentriert sich leider allzu sehr auf ganz wenige Personen, so dass wir regelmäßig zittern müssen, ob die Ausgabe nun wirklich am Monatsanfang (oder überhaupt) erscheinen wird. Üblicherweise wird die Gaidao mit InDesign gelayoutet, doch wir arbeiten aktuell an der Möglichkeit, das vorhandene Layout auch mit dem freien Desktop-Publishing-Programm Scribus umzusetzen. Meldet euch gerne bei der Redaktion, wenn ihr uns auf dem Gebiet (oder anderweitig) unterstützen möchtet.

Besonders hinweisen möchten wir euch auf die Tatsache, dass die Nationalismus-Debatte in dieser (und vermutlich auch in der nächsten) Ausgabe fortgesetzt wird. Und natürlich auf die beginnende CrimethInc-Kampagne “Alles verändern” (To Change Everything), die wir hiermit gerne unterstützen und die weltweit Umsetzung erfährt.

In diesem Sinne: Für eine Fortsetzung aller begonnenen libertären Initiativen!

Eure Redaktion der Gaidao

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