SallyStrange , to Non Political Twitter
@SallyStrange@eldritch.cafe avatar

Jonathan Chait is real mad that leftists aren't taking liberal shit anymore. I got the link from archive.is to avoid giving his BS any extra clicks. It's way longer than it needs to be. This paragraph caught my attention though because it's at least an attempt at clarifying what liberals see as leftism and why they're wrong (which is why they should shut the fuck up, because they have been proven so very fucking wrong, so often, and for so long):

I don’t want to bore you...

lol

by attempting the umpteenth definition of liberalism,

Funny how liberals hate defining liberalism

so I will lay out the distinction as briefly as possible. On economic questions, leftists have an overwhelming bias for state action over markets, while liberals are more selective.

This is incorrect. Leftists differ radically on how much state action over markets is needed. What unites leftists is the belief that we need democracy in economic realms as well as political ones. (I personally don't accept fully authoritarian MLs as leftists, one can debate that, but that's where I stand.) Liberals think it's just fine for us to have democratic politics but for most people to work for institutions that are run as dictatorships.

...On politics, liberals take very seriously notions of individual rights and universally applicable principles, while leftists tend to criticize political liberalism as a recipe for maintaining inequalities of power between the privileged and the oppressed.

Sort of true, but Chait tellingly leaves out the substance of the leftist critique, the reason why they think that political liberalism is a recipe for maintaining inequality, to wit: the lack of democracy in most people's workplaces. If economic power is concentrated while political power is distributed, then inevitably political power will become concentrated as well. Because money is power.

Anyway, Chait hates "Solidarity" the book and he also hates solidarity the concept. Of course he gets paid to represent left-of-center thought at major USA publications. Feel free to discuss your disgust for this type of guy further in replies.

https://archive.is/GBEBG#selection-1529.0-1533.83

#politics #liberals #liberalism #communism #socialism #anarchism #neoliberalism

MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
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Today in Writing History May 9, 1981: Nelson Algren, American novelist and short story writer died. His most famous book was “The Man With The Golden Arm,” which was made into a film in 1955. He was called the “bard of the down-and-outer” based on his numerous stories about the poor, beaten down and addicted. Algren was also called a “gut radical.” His heroes included Big Bill Haywood, Eugene Debs and Clarence Darrow. He claims he never joined the Communist Party, but he participated in the John Reed Club and was an honorary co-chair of the “Save Ethel and Julius Rosenberg Committee.” The FBI surveilled him and had a 500-page dossier on him.

@bookstadon

MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
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Today in Writing History May 7, 1867: Polish author Wladyslaw Reymont was born. His best-known work is the award-winning four-volume novel Chłopi (The Peasants), which won him the 1924 Nobel Prize in Literature. Also in 1924, he published his novel “Revolt,” about a rebellion of farm animals fighting for equality. However, the revolt quickly degenerates into bloody terror. It was a metaphor for the Bolshevik Revolution. Consequently, the Polish authorities banned it from 1945 to 1989. Reymont’s farm animal rebellion predated Orwell’s by 21 years.

@bookstadon

MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
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Today in labor history April 28, 1896: Tristan Tzara was born. He was a Romanian-French poet, journalist, playwright, literary and art critic, film director. He co-founded the anti-establishment Dada movement. During Hitler’s rise to power, he participated in the anti-fascist movement and the French Communist Party. In 1934, Tzara organized a mock trial of Salvador Dalí because of his fawning over Hitler and Franco. The surrealists Andre Breton, Paul Éluard and René Crevel helped run the trial. In the 1940s, Tzara lived in Marseilles with a large group of anti-fascist artists and writers, under the protection of American diplomat Varian Fry. These included Victor Serge, Claude Lévi-Strauss, Andre Breton and Max Ernst. Later he joined the French Resistance, writing propaganda and running their pirate radio station. After the Liberation of Paris, he wrote for L'Éternelle Revue, a communist newspaper edited by Jean-Paul Sartre. Other contributors to the newspaper included Louis Aragon, Éluard, Jacques Prévert and Pablo Picasso. Varian Fry, and his communal home for radicals in hiding, was portrayed in the historical drama series “Transatlantic.”

@bookstadon

MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
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Today in Labor History April 16, 1994: Ralph Ellison died on this day. Ellison was a member of the Harlem Renaissance, best known for his book, The Invisible Man. He was friends with Langston Hughes and Richard Wright. He became active in the Communist Party, as did many of his peers. But he became disillusioned with them during World War II when he felt they became reformist. He wrote The Invisible Man during this era (published in 1952), in part, as a response their betrayal. But the book also looks at the relationship between black identity and Marxism, the reformism of Booker T. Washington, and issues of individuality and personal identity.

@bookstadon

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  • protimetheft , to Random stuff
    @protimetheft@defcon.social avatar

    People worried that communism or socialism would take your freedom: capitalism stole your pension, took your savings, destroyed the climate, shipped more jobs overseas, robbed you of quality healthcare, defunded the educational system, shackled you with constant and mounting debt, and left you with only fear in the form of racism, xenophobia, patriarchy, and imaginary enemies you feel the need to hoard guns to protect against.

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today In Labor History April 4, 1866: Russian revolutionary, Dmitry Karakozov attempted to assassinate Czar Alexander II. He failed and the government executed him. Some believe that Karakozov chose the year 1866, since that was the year in which a character in Chernyshevsky’s “What Is To Be Done?” planned to launch a revolution. In the book, the protagonist, Vera Pavlovna, escapes a controlling family, and an arranged marriage, to start a socialist cooperative and a truly egalitarian romantic partnership. She starts a seamstress commune, with shared living quarters, profit-sharing and an on-site school to further the women’s education. Chernyshevsky wrote the novel in response to Turgenev’s “Fathers and Sons.” He wrote the book while imprisoned in the Peter and Paul fortress. The book inspired generations of Russian radicals, including the nihilists, anarchists and even many Marxists.

    @bookstadon

    YusufToropov , to China
    @YusufToropov@toot.community avatar

    Hong Kong’s Regime Devours Its Children | yet another superb piece by Aris Teon | Apr, 2024 | Medium

    @politics @uspolitics
    @politicalscience
    @geopolitics

    https://medium.com/@aeonjournal/hong-kongs-regime-devours-its-children-aabae6546387

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
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    Today in Labor History April 1, 1929: Textile workers struck at the Loray Mill, in Gastonia, N.C. Textile mills started moving from New England, to the South, in the 1890s, to avoid the unions. This escalated after the 1909 Shirtwaist strike (which preceded the infamous Triangle Shirtwaist fire), the IWW-led Lawrence (1912) and (1913) Patterson strikes, which were led by Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, Big Bill Haywood and Carlo Tresca. The Gastonia strike was violent and bloody. Dozens of strikers were imprisoned. A pregnant white woman, Ella Mae Wiggins, wrote and performed songs during the strike. She also lived with and organized African American workers, one of the worst crimes a poor white woman could commit in the South. The strike ended soon after goons murdered her. Woody Guthrie called Wiggins the pioneer of the protest ballad and one of the great folk song writers.

    Wiley Cash wrote a wonderful novel about Ella Mae Wiggins and the Gastonia strike, “The Last Ballad.” Jess Walter wrote a really great novel about the Spokane free speech fight, featuring Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, called “The Cold Millions.” Other novels about the Gastonia strike include Sherwood Anderson’s, “Beyond Desire,” and Mary Heaton Vorse’s, “Strike!”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dJj65ZmjnS8

    @bookstadon

    marxismoacido , to Random stuff Portuguese
    @marxismoacido@catodon.social avatar

    Technically, however, the most impressive story is Ignus Nilsen’s fall from the canon — a Mazovian school teacher turned prophet. Likewise a significant figure in the history of the communist movement, he became a disembodied spirit under the hands of Vaasa’s censors. The character of Mazov’s apocalyptic shrike suddenly became somewhat burdensome for the image of the social-democratic north. That’s how they engineered the disappearance of Nilsen with Graad, which had recently repelled the revolution. To the dismay of the censors, dozens of hours of film footage of Mazov had been captured during the technically progressive Eleven Day Government, where the revolutionary icon was almost always accompanied by his best friend and comrade in arms, Nilsen. Destruction of all material would have raised suspicion. That’s how it came to be that a ghostly grey cytoplasm is permanently floating in Mazov’s right hand. It took decades for historians to solve this blood-curdling mystery.
    Even today, many believe that the cytoplasm is Communism itself.

    — Robert Kurvitz, Sacred and Terrible Air (Group Ibex translation)

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
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    Today in Labor History March 25, 1931: The authorities arrested the Scottsboro Boys in Alabama and charged them with rape. The Scottsboro Boys were nine African American youths, ages 13 to 20, falsely accused of raping two white women. A lynch mob tried to murder them before they had even been indicted. All-white juries convicted each of them. Several judges gave death sentences, a common practice in Alabama at the time for black men convicted of raping white women. The Communist Party and the NAACP fought to get the cases appealed and retried. Finally, after numerous retrials and years in harsh prisons, four of the Scottsboro Boys were acquitted and released. The other five were got sentences ranging from 75 years to death. All were released or escaped by 1946. Poet and playwright Langston Hughes wrote it in his work Scottsboro Limited. And Richard Wright's 1940 novel Native Son was influenced by the case.

    @bookstadon

    Radical_EgoCom , to Random stuff
    @Radical_EgoCom@mastodon.social avatar

    Remember, it's the wealthy capitalist, landlords, and self-serving politicians depriving the working class of affordable housing, NOT refugees.

    appassionato , to History
    @appassionato@mastodon.social avatar

    Popular Opinion in Totalitarian Regimes: Fascism, Nazism, Communism by Paul Corner

    Fascism, Nazism, and Communism dominated the history of much of the twentieth century, yet comparatively little attention has focused on popular reactions to the regimes that sprang from these ideologies.

    @bookstodon







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  • AnarchoKitty , to Random stuff
    @AnarchoKitty@kolektiva.social avatar

    Finding out there's a not insignificant amount of people think that a means creating little isolated island prisons is a whole new level of human idiocy that I wasn't expecting to ruin my day today.

    Alright fuckers listen up. 15 minute cities are simply a city designed around the basic fucking principles of and having actual walkable streets so that wherever you are in the city, or wherever your neighborhood is, you have all the basics necessities you need to go about your day within a 15 minute trip. This isn't isolated to singular neighborhoods or "zones". It's an interconnected network accross the entire city, in any place you are, in the city as a whole.

    This isn't some new agenda, or just about or the , it's about designing our cities around human needs and . It's how we used to have our cities before cars took over. If you need to go further, or prefer to go further, you can easily do so by or . It's just going to take longer than 15 minutes. That's it. Shocking I know.

    Why are people like this? Just take the train you fuckwits.

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Labor History February 27, 1902: John Steinbeck was born on this date in Salinas, California. He wrote numerous novels from the perspective of farmers and working-class people, including “The Grapes of Wrath,” “Tortilla Flats” “Of Mice and Men,” “Cannery Row,” and “East of Eden.” In 1935, he joined the communist League of American Writers. He faced contempt charges for refusing to cooperate with HUAC. The FBI and the IRS harassed him throughout his career. Yet he wrote glowingly about U.S. troops during the Vietnam War. He won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1962 and the Pulitzer in 1939.

    @bookstadon

    thetyee , to Random stuff
    @thetyee@mstdn.ca avatar

    According to “limitarianism,” no one deserves to be a billionaire. Not even Taylor Swift. Crawford Kilian explains Ingrid Robeyns’s compelling case.

    https://thetyee.ca/Culture/2024/02/26/Set-Maximum-Wage-Rich/?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=editorial

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  • rsmedia ,
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    @thetyee unfortunately, even if the headline is enticing, nope. And I am not a .
    The problem is - Swift's success is indeed measured by record sales etc...therefore she can afford her 150 million real estate portfolio or whatever.
    Maximum wage for the rich? How about, nationalize everything? Oh, wait, that's been actually done already, and I am pretty sure it didn't go well (I live in an ex-commie country).
    And who's gonna oversee the rightful re-distribution of wealth? The all-powerful ?
    The problem is a general even among those who proffess etc... just let them to smell money long enough..and those advocates for the poor swiftly (no pun intended) change their tune.
    Sorry, but this is still albeit with a nice facade...and communism is still evil. So, nope.

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Labor History February 23, 1882: B. Traven was born on this date in Poznan, Poland. Traven’s real name was probably Ret Marut. He was active in the Bavarian uprising and the Bavarian Soviet Republic of 1919. When the German state quashed the Republic and started arresting and executing activists, he fled to Mexico, where he began writing novels. Traven was a brilliant satirist and wrote novels sympathetic to workers and peasants, including the “Treasure of the Sierra Madre,” “The Death Ship,” “The White Rose,” as well as his Jungle Series of novel depicting the plight of Indigenous campesinos in Mexico.

    @bookstadon

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  • MikeDunnAuthor , to Media Industry Discussions
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    Today in Labor History January 19, 1920: Crystal Eastman, Roger Nash Baldwin, Elizabeth Gurley Flynn (from the IWW) and others founded the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Their original focus was freedom of speech, primarily anti-war speech, and supporting conscientious objectors. In 1923, they defended author Upton Sinclair after he was arrested for trying to read the First Amendment during an IWW rally. In 1925, they persuaded John T. Scopes to defy Tennessee's anti-evolution law in The State of Tennessee v. John Thomas Scopes. Clarence Darrow, an ACLU member, headed Scopes' legal team. The ACLU lost the case and Scopes was fined $100. In 1926, they defended H. L. Mencken, who deliberately broke Boston law by distributing copies of his banned American Mercury magazine and won their first major acquittal. However, they kicked Elizabeth Gurley Flynn off their board in 1940 because of her Communist affiliations. And they refused defend Paul Robeson and other leftists in the 1950s.

    @bookstadon

    whitedove , to palestine group
    @whitedove@pixelfed.social avatar

    Deal Now. All for All

    2023-12-23
    At a demonstration in Tel Aviv calling for a ceasefire, hostage deal, impeachment of the government and equal rights from the river to the sea.

    @israel @palestine

    rameshgupta ,
    @rameshgupta@mastodon.social avatar

    @cwtshycwtsh
    >> It is either ➡️ ➡️ or capitalism ➡️ .

    IDK I'd rather be extinct than live under communism

    >> IDK I’ll rather look childish than be a genocide supporting right wing troll.

    YDK you are BOTH — childish & -supporting in

    >> Don’t feed that Falsehood Sandwich troll

    Do you have anything meaningful, or just personal insults?

    @chiraag @globalpilgrim @drgs100 @whitedove @israel @palestine @TruthSandwich

    rameshgupta ,
    @rameshgupta@mastodon.social avatar

    @cwtshycwtsh

    >> Classless, stateless and moneyless society does not work for fascists.

    Two extra words at the end in that statement 😂

    >> Mastodon is one step towards communism, maybe you should reconsider your social media platform choices.

    I did reconsider my social media choices, and that's why I'm now on . I haven't looked back.

    Can you please explain how Mastodon is one step towards ?

    @chiraag @globalpilgrim @drgs100 @whitedove @israel @palestine @TruthSandwich

    rameshgupta ,
    @rameshgupta@mastodon.social avatar

    @cwtshycwtsh

    I asked you to explain your statement about being one step toward and you think that is entertainment?

    You are unable to explain it out of your ignorance.

    A communist society is not classless. There's a ruling class.

    A communist society is not stateless. Ask or .

    Mastodon does not control means of production. I produce my own content how I want and when I want 😂

    @chiraag @globalpilgrim @drgs100 @whitedove @israel @palestine @TruthSandwich

    rameshgupta ,
    @rameshgupta@mastodon.social avatar

    ⬆️ @cwtshycwtsh

    When you explain your OWN thought about being "one step toward ," don't limit yourself to 500 chars.

    Use multiple toots, if neccy, but try not to waste precious characters personally insulting people as right-winger, troll, galaxy brain, Falsehood Sandwich, or Sandy.

    I produce ✨ my own ✨ content, & it is more "grounded into material reality" than your nebulous communist drivel 🙄

    @chiraag @globalpilgrim @drgs100 @whitedove @israel @palestine @TruthSandwich

    catrionagold , to History
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  • MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
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    Today in Labor History December 5, 1928: The Colombian military slaughtered up to 2,000 people in the Banana Massacre. Workers had been on strike against United Fruit Company since November 12. They were participating in a peaceful demonstration, with their wives and children. The Columbian troops set up machine guns on the rooftops near the demonstration and closed off the access streets so no one could escape. The soldiers threw the dead into mass graves or dumped them in the sea. U.S. officials in Colombia had portrayed the workers as communists and subversives and even threatened to invade if the Colombian government didn’t protect United Fruit’s interests. Gabriel García Márquez depicted the massacre in his novel “One Hundred Years of Solitude,” as did Álvaro Cepeda Samudio in his “La Casa Grande.”

    United Fruit, which is now called Chiquita, controlled vast quantities of territory in Central America, and the Caribbean, maintained a near monopoly in many of the banana republics in which it operated (e.g., Honduras, Guatemala, Costa Rica). By 1930, it was the largest employer in Central America and the largest land owner. In 1952, the government of Jacobo Arbenz, in Guatemala, began giving away unused land, owned by United Fruit, to landless peasants. In 1954, the CIA deposed the Arbenz government, leading to decades of brutal dictatorship and genocide of Guatemala’s indigenous population. The head of the CIA at that time was former board member of United Fruit, Allen Dulles, who also oversaw the over throw of the democratically elected prime minister of Iran, the Bay of Pigs invasion, and the MK Ultra LSD mind control experiments.

    @bookstadon

    politicscurator , to archivistodon group
    @politicscurator@kolektiva.social avatar
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