All that Melts…, by Alison Caddick
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What does security—the necessity of being able to assume the contours of a relatively stable life-world—mean any more?
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What does security—the necessity of being able to assume the contours of a relatively stable life-world—mean any more?
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What will happen when it is fully revealed in the operation of the corporate state that the needs of the people are not its concern?
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When growth may no longer mean jobs, we might ask: are any of our political parties facing reality?
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If the money relation sits at the heart of capitalism, how does its present, twenty-first-century form, digitised and ultra-globalised, break asunder the assumptions and ethics of a given world?
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Casting a shadow on the received categories of Left and Right
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We can see again an implicit framework that the major parties share, albeit from different sides … for at least many of the younger generations it is surely a danse macabre, of figures of an old world that retain only slight purchase on the key issues and forms of the present.
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It is a classic situation of a war government gathering support on the home front by creating divisions and binding loyalties, and of a shallow media setting up feared figures then knocking them over in preemptive ways in what we are expected to see as civilised media behaviour.
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Entitlement, like normativity, sits upon unspoken cultural commitments, and perhaps even forms of otherness that have been or will be turned into utility