Richard Barbrook on Sun, 24 Jun 2018 22:10:50 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Paul Mason: Trump is a symptom of the new globaldisorder, not the cause |
Hiya, > It would be really great to hear more detail about the Corbynites' analysis of the > international situation and how they translate that into a domestic policy program > (Barbrook, where are you?). We were visiting Berlin to tell the SPD about Labour's digital campaigning during the 2017 election campaign. I emphasised that our success was due to politics not technology. If the SPD also wants to win 40% of the vote, it should move left and become a class party! https://www.marxists.org/history/international/social-democracy/1891/erfurt-program.htm Richard p.s. John McDonnell - Labour's finance spokesperson and Jeremy's Number 2 - is on the executive of DiEM25. ======================= Dr. Richard Barbrook Dept of Politics and IR, University of Westminster 32-38 Wells Street LONDON W1T 3UW England +44 (0)7879 441873 Skype: richard.barbrook Facebook: Richard Barbrook Twitter: @richardbarbrook https://www.digital-liberties.coop http://www.cybersalon.org http://www.classwargames.net http://www.politicsandmediafreedom.net http://www.imaginaryfutures.net http://www.imaginaryfutures.net/other-works 'Clause 5: That as the laws ought to be equal, so they must be good, and not evidently destructive to the safety and well-being of the people.' The Levellers, The 1647 Agreement of the People for a Firm and Present Peace Upon Grounds of Common Right. On Thu 14/06/18 11:16 PM , "Frederic Neyrat" fneyrat@gmail.com sent: > Dear Brian, > As always your emails are illuminating. > I've one question: to you, what are the parties, social > formations, social forces that could enable " dispersed transformation > of the energy and agricultural systems accompanied but pervasive > reworking of the patterns of inhabitation and entirely new forms of > ecological stewardship, based on the logic of ecosystem services > (which needs to be amplified by a new concept of human services to > ecosystems)"? > And maybe a secondary concern about the term "service" that you use: > with a configuration of other managerial terms, it has replaced > -erased - first "source," then "ressource," I mean it's a term > completely integrated in the system that produced the environmental > disasters - I know I go quickly from service to disaster, but, to make > a long story short, it seems to me that the word service is a denial > of any eco-systemic reality (I try to explain that in La Part > inconstructible de la Terre, to be published in English as The > Unconstructable Earth at Fordham UP). > Best, > Frederic > > On Thu, Jun 14, 2018 at 12:07 PM, Brian Holmes wrote: > Mason really captures the intensity of the breakdown, not only of > neoliberalism, but of the post-WWII interstate system. He also manages > to keep Asia in the picture, which is essential, because it is the > emergence of the China-centric economy that destabilized the former > Trilateral hierarchy of the US, Western Europe and Japan. However I > have always found Mason's prescriptions incoherent, and in this > case he goes off into some fantasy about Keynes that is totally > invisible on the actual political landscape. Except maybe in the UK > itself? If that's true, as David suggests, it would explain what I > don't get about the article. It would be really great to hear more > detail about the Corbynites' analysis of the international > situation and how they translate that into a domestic policy program > (Barbrook, where are you?). > In the US there is no broad discussion about the need for what Alex > calls a "new pact," and the reason for this is that, quite unlike the > situation in the 1930s, the economy is currently booming and there is > (as yet) no credible threat of authoritarian control over the > prosperous sectors. The professional-managerial types of the digital > economy, yesterday's "new class," have firmly hitched their > fortunes to the rising oligarchs, and there's far more interest in > the sales of Elon Musk's flamethrower than in any transformation > of the social order. We cannot currently produce anything on the order > of Keynes, much less Marx, because the macro-level breakdown of the > postwar system has really been caused at the micro level by the > ethical-political decay of the science-based professions that Felix > has analyzed. The emergence of the professionals as a force in their > own right, based on education and therefore distinct from the > capital-accumulating bourgeoisie, lent the consistency of a quest for > objective truth to all the properly political discussions about how to > organize a complex society. Neoliberalism dissolved that ethical > component of technocratic society by encouraging professionals to > abandon the state and any notion of public service, in favor of > entrepreneurship with its self-interested disruption of legitimate > rules and norms (something that Paolo Virno analyzed perfectly over 20 > years ago in his text on Opportunism, Cynicism and Fear, which in > English is tepidly called The Ambivalence of Disenchantment). > Alex writes: > to stave off nationalism, racism, authoritarianism we need a new > social pact (similar to fordism in its macro elements) that > distributes the productivity of machine learning to all - a pact > between the forces representing the female and multiethnic precariat > and those of digital oligopoly > Alex, I totally agree about the new pact but I think the reason > it's not happening lies precisely in the description of its > potential partners. The precariat as theorized in the 1990s and 2000s > totally ignored the impoverished industrial workers outside major > metropolitan areas and the agricultural sector, paying only lip > service to migrant farm workers. It had nothing to say to the former > artisanal and commercial middle classes whose "included" status was > shattered by the opportunistic disruption of business models and the > retreat of the state from anything to do with social reproduction. > Unlike Fordism, it offered no productive pathway toward membership in > any kind of social pact, but only dangled the promise of a > redistribution of financial wealth whose spigot has now dried up. It > is true that machine learning will unleash a new flood of industrial > productivity comparable to that released by the cynical relocation of > Fordist industry to Asia during the neoliberal period. But without any > corresponding form of productive inclusion, that flood when it comes > will only drown people in more meaningless and abusive products, > exactly as the flood of cheap Asian "goods" - which should be called > "bads" - has destroyed the social fabric in the US and led to things > like the opioid crisis and the election of Trump. Let me be clear that > this was no fault of the Asians, but instead, it was down to the > owners of capital who sought a fast buck, and to the politicians who > enabled them. The evil twin of precariat theory in the US was nothing > other than Clintonian entrepreneurialism, which appealed to the vote > of women and minority sectors in order to increase the agency of > bankers and the emerging digital oligarchs. > Anywhere you go in the world, the contrast between the glittering > metropolis and the toxic countryside is now obvious. It is > underwritten everywhere by equally stark divides within the > metropolitan order, which remain invisible to people who move only > between their jobs, their entertainment palaces and whatever they call > home (from cheap flat to luxury penthouse). The thing that has now > started and happening and is about to intensify radically is not just > labor instability and household debt. Instead the cheap flats, decayed > middle class houses and rural shacks are going to start getting > massively destroyed by climate-change phenomena, as they already have > been in places like Puerto Rico or during the flooding in India. The > real opportunity for collective investment and a new form of > productive citizenship lies in eco-technics, by which I do not mean AI > or centralized geo-engineering but instead, dispersed transformation > of the energy and agricultural systems accompanied but pervasive > reworking of the patterns of inhabitation and entirely new forms of > ecological stewardship, based on the logic of ecosystem services > (which needs to be amplified by a new concept of human services to > ecosystems). Keynes has no blueprint for this situation. Neither do > any of the anarcho-libertarian theorists of more recent years, > including the Accelerationists with their absurd rallying cry of > luxury communism. > I actually think there's a theoretical/practical emergency > unfolding before our eyes, except it's still dinner hour below > decks on the Titanic, and most people are just anxiously wondering how > low they can go on the tip to the waiter. At least Paul Mason went up > for a look-see at the ocean. > Although we all surely disagree from the get-go, let's produce > some converging ideas on the scale of the current planetary weather. > > Brian > > # distributed via : no commercial use without permission > # 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 [2] > # archive: http://www.nettime.org [3] contact: > # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: > > > > Links: > ------ > [2] http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l > [3] http://www.nettime.org > > # 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: