Alexander Bard on Sat, 28 Jan 2017 16:15:09 +0100 (CET) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
Re: <nettime> Digital leftism in a globalised world? |
Dear Carlo My excuses for being rude in my response to you. And please understand moderators took notice too. That behaviour was completely unwarranted of me and I ask you to accept my full apologies. However, my asking all members of this list to not throw around the label "neoliberalism" lightly had nothing to do with you or your posting and neither did I claim that. What I did however respond to from your specific posting was the idea that international trade is some kind of an internal affair in between nation-states and little or nothing else. That might have been seen as a valid arguement 300 years ago, but its is hardly what international trade is today. The world is not a competition between national powers. Inter-state tade is rather less than 1% of overall global trade today. Trade has rather become a multitude of forces and interests of which nation-states play an incredibly small if any part. This is what I meant with opposing you taking a North Korean approach to trade. Or a Trumpist-populist approach to trade if you wish. From a Marxist internationalist perspective this makes little or no sense. Such a radical nationalist isolationist approach should frankly rather be described as the utter reactionism that it is. As for the examples from a British professor in Paris you mention they are all taken from a colonial past where the destructive colonialist effects of the measures involved were not taken into picture. Scottish trade barriers had a target and that target was hardly English or German producers but rather producers in colonised territories whose industralisation was delayed by some 200 years due to racist trade barriers in colonial Europe in the 18th and 19th centuries up to European trade barriers against African cotton and food products to this very day. Which reminds me of rule #1 in discussing international trade: it can not be taken seriously unless full global implications of trade rules are taken into perspective. Believe it or not, the economy has been globalised ever since The Silk Route's golden days. It is just the size of the trade whic has exploded in recen decades. To the benefit of hundreds of millions of Indian, Chinese, Indonesian and other people. So my mistake was to act out frustration in a completely unacceptable manner. But my main argument that we must not fall into Trumpist argumentation on trade without very good reasons is still adamant. Trump lied massively to his voters. The real danger now lies in where and when they will turn the disappointment this populism will create. Whatever happened to Marxism and its conditional internationalism and borderless solidarity here? Because if it can be saved we can discuss taxation rather than trade barriers. Distributed wealth is way way more benefitial for an egalitarian society than trade barriers ever could be. And I insist on that stance until I have seen proper arguments for the opposite. Funnily I have searched for those atguments through the last 300 years of economics literature and never found them. But I'm still all ears. Until then I belong to the vast majority of Socialists who are in principle pro free trade. Leftist Trumpism is just not my thing. Best intentions Alexander Bard 2017-01-27 17:40 GMT+01:00 carlo von lynX <lynX@time.to.get.psyced.org>: On Thu, Jan 26, 2017 at 03:34:05PM +0100, Alexander Bard wrote: > Excuse me, but what kind of world do you live in? > A world where all property is owned by nation-state governments as if > they were all North Korean dictatorships? And the globe is a > competetion for most evil between these states and nothing else? Have > you even heard of transnational movement? This has not been the topic of conversation in this thread, but you are free to start it. <...> # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: