Kasama

Those not busy being born are busy dying.

Archive for January, 2010

Russia Today Interviews Raymond Lotta

Posted by Mike E on January 6, 2010

Raymond Lotta is on a national speaking tour promoting the RCP’s view of revolution and communism. The online newspaper Russia Today conducted the following interview. (Thanks to Richard Stark for pointing this out.)

Posted in >> analysis of news, >> communist politics, Raymond Lotta, Socialism, communism, interviews, revolution, video | 9 Comments »

Who Inherits the Rage: About Those Tea-Baggers

Posted by Mike E on January 5, 2010

Dallas

The following sobering essay, by conservative New York Times columnist David Brooks, is worth a close read (Jan. 5, 2010). Crisis and disillusionment feed radicalism — but there is no guarantee that it is progressive or liberating. Millions of people are being wrenched from their economic, and then political moorings — but even a rapidly deepening distrust of “elites” doesn’t itself unravel the problems of building a movement against capitalism. Who inherits the rage? It is up for grabs. Mao wrote, “Many deeds cry out to be done, and always urgently. Seize the day, seize the hour.”

The Tea Party Teens

The United States opens this decade in a sour mood. First, Americans are anxious about the future. Sixty-one percent of Americans believe the country is in decline, according to the latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal survey. Only 27 percent feel confident that their children’s generation will be better off than they are.

Second, Americans have lost faith in their institutions. During the great moments of social reform, at least 60 percent of Americans trusted government to do the right thing most of the time. Now, only a quarter have that kind of trust.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> analysis of news, Barack Obama, Republican Party, economics, empire and imperialism, fascism, organizing, politics | 25 Comments »

Burj Khalifa: Hidden Stories of Capitalism’s Tower

Posted by Mike E on January 5, 2010

This week the most recently proclaimed ‘world’s tallest building’ officially opened with some fanfare in Dubai. This symbol of hubris stands in the center of the financial city-state that was officially bankrupted by the most recent economic crisis. But that is only an ironic aside compared to much less known story of how this monument to capital was built. (props to Eddie Laing who gathered this post:first dealing with economics, then with raw human misery.)

Dubai Opens a Tower to Beat All

By LANDON THOMAS Jr.
January 5, 2010, New York Times

…The glittering celebration may have been an attempt by Dubai’s ruler, Sheik Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, to shift the focus from Dubai’s current economic troubles to a future filled with more promise.

All the same, the tower’s success by no means signals a recovery in Dubai’s beaten-down real estate market, where prices have collapsed by as much as 50 percent and many developers are having trouble finding occupants for their buildings.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> analysis of news | 1 Comment »

Enforcing a Bandh (Strike) in Nepal

Posted by Mike E on January 5, 2010

It is often reported (in this site and elsewhere) that the revolutioanry forces have called for a bandh. This word is often translated as “general strike” — meaning that there is a workstoppage of business as usual, and that it is essentially political, and not confined to one workplace or industry.

Here is a video of groups of young revolutionaries enforcing a bandh — going to various shopkeepers and calling on them to shut down for the day (i.e. honor the strike and not scab).

There has been a lengthy and interesting discussion of strikes, the right to strike and revolution on Revleft.com

Defining the word Bandh: Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> analysis of news | Leave a Comment »

Uh no, Nepal’s Maobadi Didn’t Ban Strikes

Posted by Mike E on January 5, 2010

Photo: Workers affiliated to Maoist unions rally for May Day 2009

In various corners, a lie has passed around: That Maoist revolutionaries (supposedly) moved to ban strikes when they headed an elected government in Nepal.

The (often interesting) Libcom site ran an article entitled, “Nepalese Maoists restate intention to ban strikes and other news.”

In some other corners the soundbite was even more crude. One report simply \claimed “Maoist Leadership in Nepal Bans Strikes.”

Alastair Reith has decided to deliver these rumors a kill shot. He wrote the following piece on his blog under the title: “Did the Maobadi Ban Strikes?”

* * * * * *

By Alastair Reith

Nepal’s Maoists are often accused of being anti-worker, Stalinist, bourgeois nationalist and so on by many on the Western ‘left’, particularly anarchists and Trotskyists. As ‘evidence’ towards this, it is often claimed that while in government earlier this year, they ‘banned strikes’.

Let’s set the record straight. The Maoists never banned strikes.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> communist politics, Alastair Reith, CP of Nepal (Maoist), CPN(M), Maoism, Nepal, communism, peoples war, revolution | 8 Comments »

Slavoj Zizek in Examined Life

Posted by Mike E on January 4, 2010

(Thanks to Danke2000 in the Spark Discussion)

Posted in >> analysis of news | 13 Comments »

Arizona Bay’s Favorite Kasama Posts

Posted by Mike E on January 4, 2010

more to come....

[Moderator note to readers: If you want to contribute your own list of favorite Kasama posts, add them  here in kasama threads.]

Arizona Bay writes on favorites:

TOO MANY. I’ve read a shitload of Kasama so it’s hard to remember… However I’ll try and remember some of my faves:

I liked that one on “Blacks and Jews: A Revolutionary View” by Mike Ely

Needed Fusion: Profoundly Non-Dogmatic & Starkly Revolutionary” by Mike Ely

Heresy: On New Demarcations & Coherent Theory” by Mike Ely

Bottoms Up: A Pub Crawl with Karl Marx by Wilhelm Liebknecht

Memories of Beer Lovers, Hemp Farmers & Bloody Revolution by Mike Ely.

Also the post “A Question Over Iran: Can the People Make History or Not?” was one of the best pro-Iranian uprising polemics from a leftist perspective available on the internet, I regularly sent it to all the vulgar anti-imperialists I came across.

But that is not all of them, just the ones I can remember that I liked. Kasama has contributed greatly to my current political understandings (and one of the biggest things that got me off the Soviet fetishist quasi-liberal phase I was in for a while)

Posted in >> Kasama Project, Mike Ely | 1 Comment »

MySpace vs. Facebook: White Flight in Cyberspace?

Posted by Mike E on January 4, 2010

This is a draft version of an academic piece, scheduled to appear in the Digital Race Anthology (edited by Lisa Nakamura and Peter Chow­‐White, Routledge Press).

Questions are posed: What does that reveal about continuing racism in U.S. society — and what might that mean for social connections, anti-racism and more?

White Flight in Networked Publics?

How Race & Class Shaped American Teen Engagement with MySpace & Facebook

by danah boyd

(Microsoft Research and Harvard Berkman Center for Internet and Society zephoria@zephoria.org. Originally published in pdf version on www.danah.org)

In a historic small town outside Boston, I interviewed a group of teens at a small charter school that included middle-­‐class students seeking an alternative to the public school and poorer students who were struggling in traditional schools.

There, I met Kat, a white 14-­‐year-­‐old from a comfortable background.

We were talking about the social media practices of her classmates when I asked her why most of her friends were moving from MySpace to Facebook. Kat grew noticeably uncomfortable.

She began simply, noting that “MySpace is just old now and it’s boring.”

But then she paused, looked down at the table, and continued.

“It’s not really racist, but I guess you could say that. I’m not really into racism, but I think that MySpace now is more like ghetto or whatever.” – Kat

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> technology, Blogging, network, security, social networking, surveillance | 25 Comments »

Land’s Favorite Kasama Posts of 2009

Posted by Mike E on January 3, 2010

wolf-howlHere is Land’s list of favorite posts from this last year (not in any particular order):

The Avator debate is amazing. Dec. 2009 (also)

On Economic Struggle and Economism Among Revolutionaries by Mike Ely, May 2009

Needed Fusion: Profoundly Non-Dogmatic & Starkly Revolutionary by Mike Ely, Oct. 2009

Confronting Reality: Change is Inevitable, Liberation is Not. by Mike Ely, Feb. 2009

Where’s Our Mississippi? by John Steele – Feb. 2009 (pamphlet)

Discovery in East Africa: Footprints of Our Ancestors. March 2009

J. Ramsey: Thoughts on Badiou’s Hard Talk Interview - This was published during the time of the London Conference on Communism . Video and remarks. April 2009

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> Kasama Project, Kasama pamphlets, Kasama posters, Kasama translations | 2 Comments »

Michael Kazin: A Critique of Howard Zinn’s History

Posted by Mike E on January 3, 2010

Zinn’s big book is quite unworthy of… fame and influence. A People’s History is bad history, albeit gilded with virtuous intentions. Zinn reduces the past to a Manichean fable and makes no serious attempt to address the biggest question a leftist can ask about U.S. history: why have most Americans accepted the legitimacy of the capitalist republic in which they live?”

A discussion has emerged here on Kasama over Howard Zinn’s book A Peoples History of the United States– a very popular, even beloved debunking of standard myths about the U.S.(first published in 1980).

No one questions Zinn’s lifetime of commitment and courage — from his early days in SNCC to his tireless opposition to U.S. wars. But there is a separate question of summing up his history-as-history (and his politics-as-politics) — as part of deepening our own theoretical understanding of how to understand the world.

Sometimes the criticisms focus on the radicalism of the work. Left historian Eric Foner wrote in an early review “A People’s History reflects a deeply pessimistic vision of the American experience,” in a way that Foner found fragmented and tendentious.

The following is one of the critiques made of Zinn’s methodology. Georgetown University historian Michael Kazin, himself a veteran of SDS and 60s activism, characterizes A Peoples History as simplistic — populated by elite villains and oppressed people, without understanding the more complex motives of the times.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> analysis of news | 14 Comments »

Sue Thompson’s Paper Tiger

Posted by Mike E on January 3, 2010

The Nevada girls’ big stomper from ‘64 (suggested by Ian Anderson. Thanks)

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Historical Materialism, Mao Zedong, Maoism, empire and imperialism, music, video | Leave a Comment »

Howard Zinn’s Approach to American Themes

Posted by Mike E on January 2, 2010

There has been some discussion about how to interpret Howard Zinn’s take on American history and politics — and the work of the recent “People Speak” documentary. Radical Eyes noted that, because this was cropping up in the Avatar threads, perhaps it deserved its own space for discussion. Here is that space.

* * * * * * * *

Radical Eyes kicked this off:

To follow-up on Mike’s recent note about the actuality of and potential for ideological cracks and fissures to emerge within the Hollywood creative community: see the recent History Channel documentary THE PEOPLE SPEAK, based on excerpts from Howard Zinn’s People’s History of the United States. Here we see a whole bunch of Hollywood “liberals” (or are they… radicals?) speaking up, literally…and on the History Channel of all places! Matt Damon, Morgan Freeman, David Straitharn (sp?), Bruce Springsteen, Eddie Vedder, Bob Dylan, and many others were involved in this one…This new documentary no doubt deserves a discussion thread of its own.

Boris wrote:

“Just wanted to second Radical-Eyes’s point on discussing the recent documentary on the History channel by Zinn and Arnove.

But, I’m not so sure it was an ideological crack.

From the inclusion of the Declaration of Independence to the absence of red politics (whether of the 20s-30s or the long 60s) to the particular voices included (and those not included), I think this documentary showed that the dominant ideologies are actually very much in place.”

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> analysis of news | 21 Comments »

Last Poets “When the Revolution Comes”

Posted by Mike E on January 2, 2010

Raw.

Posted in Gil Scott Heron, music, video | Leave a Comment »

Video: An Anthropological Introduction to Youtube

Posted by n3wday on January 2, 2010

This video explores what modern computer technology means for the development and expression of human behavior, positing an increased expression of individuality while at the same time a strengthening of community values and democracy. There’s a great deal more and it’s hard to encapsulate, so I’ll let the video speak for itself.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> analysis of news | 1 Comment »

Stiofan’s Favorite Kasama Posts of 2009

Posted by Mike E on January 1, 2010

[Moderator note to readers: If you want to contribute your own list of favorite Kasama posts, add them  here in kasama threads.]

* * * * * * *

Stiofan writes:

There are so many good ones, how do I begin?

The Nine Letters started it all and “A Gaping Hole Instead of Partisan Bases” (Letter #2)
is that one that really got my attention and made me stick around. Since the announcement that the 9 Letters are out in book form came out this year I am going to consider it fair game.

Before there were web pages there were pamphlets and there is already a good selection here.

“Eyes on the Maobadi: 4 Reasons Nepal’s Revolution Matters” is now getting some traction on
other discussion sites as a basic introduction about why the ongoing struggle is important and should be engaged.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> Kasama Project, 9 Letters, Kasama pamphlets | Leave a Comment »

New Year Announcement: The Khukuri Theoretical Workroom

Posted by Mike E on January 1, 2010

Kasama invites you to participate in a new discussion dedicated to a radical reconception of revolutionary theory.

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Posted in >> Kasama Project | Leave a Comment »