12 Responses

  1. Dan Romesberg
    Dan Romesberg February 29, 2016 at 9:17 am | | Reply

    A reasonable assessment, I believe.

  2. Jason Schulman
    Jason Schulman February 29, 2016 at 1:45 pm | | Reply
  3. Doug1943
    Doug1943 March 1, 2016 at 3:52 am | | Reply

    ‘Worker control of enterprises’ is a meaningless concept. It’s the warm fuzzy magical phrase by which socialists hope to banish the evil genie of the market.

    But you either have a market, or you don’t. If you do, ‘worker control of enterprises’ will operate within very narrow constraints … do we come to work at 8am or 8.30? But the real ‘decisions’ will be made by the market. If you don’t have the market, then you will have Central State Planning.

    In which case, stock up now on soap and toilet paper and everything else.

  4. Jason Schulman
    Jason Schulman March 1, 2016 at 6:07 pm | | Reply

    Doug — I highly recommend reading this, which lays out a credible vision of rather comprehensive democratic planning (with a subordinate market sector):

    http://content.csbs.utah.edu/~mli/Economics%207004/Laibman-Mature%20Socialism.pdf

  5. Danny Mitchell
    Danny Mitchell March 4, 2016 at 12:12 pm | | Reply

    There is a difference between a Democratic Socialist and a Democratic Marxist. A Democratic Socialist still believes in the two party system and continues to beg the liberal wing of the Democrats for more crumbs. While a Democratic Marxist uses the fight within the Democratic Party to begin the discussion of Socialist solutions to the problems with the economy. But knows that the real solution to peoples problems can only be solved by organizing the workers into a legitimate third party, a Labor Party. After the Democrats choose Hilary, lets use the momentum to begin organizing the Labor Party.

  6. Hamid Vakili
    Hamid Vakili March 11, 2016 at 11:05 am | | Reply

    Left is misleading themselves and others if they believe that the long overdue discourse on inequality and social justice has ever been as spread among Americans as Bernie Sander’s campaign has been doing it.
    This might not grow into a social movement, and who says it must. If Sanders can do all the work for Left in America, then why the Left is needed anymore?
    If we are not able to help Sander’s campaign, let’s keep quiet and not hurt his wonderful job. If we claim that we can mobilize the masses better than him, let’s build up on the basis he has been laying.

  7. Jose Ayaia
    Jose Ayaia March 11, 2016 at 7:38 pm | | Reply

    “What we have got to do is wage a political revolution where millions of people who have given up on the political process stand up and fight back, demand that the government represent us and not just a handful of campaign contributors,” he said.

  8. thrownstone
    thrownstone March 18, 2016 at 11:05 am | | Reply

    When have teach-ins ever led to a viable political movement? It’s just a way to mark time with busy-work while waiting for the next election. Revolutions don’t start with teach-ins. They start because the personal experiences of a large number of citizens convinces them individually that the system must be changed. If you have to teach people that they want to be free and that corruption is bad, then they are not ready yet and won’t be until things get worse. If they are not ready, then they won’t get it. How many Democrats does it take to change a light bulb? Only one, but the light bulb has to want to change. You can’t make someone get ready.

  9. phillip sawicki
    phillip sawicki March 23, 2016 at 6:46 am | | Reply

    This article offers the typical and superfluous idea that “education” about the system is what is needed for revolution. You start a campaign, as Sanders has, from where you are, and criticize it for what it is. And the response to Sanders, considering where the U.S. is now, has been staggering. The writer of this article is a typical far leftist who wants to start again from zero.

  10. phillip sawicki
    phillip sawicki March 24, 2016 at 5:45 am | | Reply

    Unable to make an argument. Yates resorts to calling me names. Nor does he know the meaning of the word “epithets.” I “hurled” no “epithets.”

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