Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Politicians and economists no longer have the words to describe the gravity of the
situation: "at the edge of the abyss", "An economic Pearl Harbor" "A tsunami on
the way" "The 9/11 of finance"[1]...only the reference to the Titanic is missing.
What exactly is happening? Faced with the unfolding economic storm, a number of
agonising questions are being raised. Are we going through a new crash like 1929?
How did it come to this? What can we do to defend ourselves? And what kind of
world do we live in? Towards a brutal deterioration in our living conditions There
can be no illusions on that score. On a planetary scale, in the months to come,
humanity is going to see a frightful deterioration of its living conditions. In its
recent report, the International Monetary Fund has announced that between
now and early 2009 50 countries are going to join the grim list of countries hit
by famine. Among them are numerous countries in Africa, Latin America, the
Caribbean and even Asia. In Ethiopia, for example, 12 million people are already
officially on the verge of death from starvation. In India and China, these so-called
new capitalist Eldorados, hundreds of millions of workers are about to be hit by
brutal poverty. In the USA and Europe as well a large part of the population is
facing unbearable deprivation. All sectors of activity are being affected. In the
offices, the banks, the factories, the hospitals, in the hi-tech sectors, in the car
industry, in building or distribution, millions of redundancies are on the cards.
Unemployment is about to hit the roof! Since the beginning of 2008 and in the
USA alone, nearly a million workers had already been thrown onto the street. And
this is just the start. This wave of redundancies means that housing yourself,
eating, and taking care of your health is going to be increasingly difficult for
working class families. This also means that for the young people of today
capitalism has no future to offer them. Those who lied to us yesterday are still lying
to us today! This catastrophic perspective is no longer hidden by the leaders of the
capitalist world, the politicians and the journalists who serve the ruling class. How
could they? Some of the biggest banks in the world have gone bust; they have only
survived thanks to the hundreds of billions of dollars, pounds and euros injected by
the central banks, i.e. by the state. For the stock markets of America, Asia and
Europe, it's a never-ending dive: they have lost $25 trillion since January 2008, or
the equivalent of two years of the USA's total production. All this illustrates the
real panic that has seized the ruling class all over the world. If the stock markets
are crashing today, it's not just because of the catastrophic situation facing the
banks, it's also because the capitalists are expecting a dizzying fall in their
profits resulting from a massive downturn in economic activity, a wave of
enterprises going bust, a recession much worse than all the ones we've seen
over the past 40 years. The principal world leaders, Bush, Merkel, Brown,
Sarkozy, Hu Jintao, have gathered together in a series of meetings and ‘summits'
(G4, G7, G8, G16, G40) to try to limit the damage, to prevent the worst. A new
summit is planned for mid-November, which some see as a way of ‘founding
capitalism anew'. The only thing that equals the agitated state of the politicians is
the frenzy of the experts of TV, radio and newspapers... the crisis is the number one
media story. Why such a barrage? In fact, while the bourgeoisie can no longer
hide the disastrous state of its economy, it is trying to make us believe that it's
not a question of putting the capitalist system itself into question, that it's a
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question of fighting against ‘abuses' and ‘excess'. It's the fault of speculators! It's
the fault of greedy bosses! It's the fault of tax havens! It's the fault of ‘neo-
liberalism’! To make us swallow this fairytale, all the professional swindlers are
called into action. The same ‘experts' who yesterday were telling us that the
economy was healthy, that the banks were solid... are now falling over
themselves on the TV screens to pour out new lies. The same people who were
telling us that ‘neo-liberalism' was THE solution, that the state had to step back
from intervening in the economy, are now calling on the governments to intervene
more and more. More state and more ‘morality', and capitalism will be fine!
This is the lie they are trying to sell us! Can capitalism overcome its crisis? The
truth is that the crisis ravaging world capitalism today does not date from the
summer of 2007, with the bursting of the housing bubble in the US. For over 40
years there has been one recession after another: 1967, 1974, 1981, 1991, 2001. For
decades unemployment has been a permanent plague, and the exploited have been
suffering from mounting attacks on their living standards. Why? Because
capitalism is a system which produces not for human needs but for the market
and for profit. There are vast unsatisfied needs but they are not solvent: in
other words, the great majority of the population does not have the means to
buy the commodities produced. If capitalism is in crisis, if hundreds of millions
of human beings, and soon billions, have been hurled into intolerable misery
and hunger, it's not because the system doesn't produce enough but because it
produces more commodities than it can sell. Each time the bourgeoisie gets
round this problem by resorting massively to credit and the creation of an
artificial market. This is why the ‘recoveries' always pave the way for even
bleaker tomorrows, since at the end of the day all this credit has to be
reimbursed, the debts have to be called in. This is exactly what is happening
today. All the ‘fabulous growth' of the last few years has been based entirely on
debt. The world economy was living on credit, and that now it's time to foot the
bill, the whole thing collapses like a pack of cards. The present convulsions of
the capitalist economy are not the result of ‘bad management' by the political
leaders, of speculation by ‘traders' or the irresponsible behaviour of the bankers.
All these people have done no more than apply the laws of capitalism and it is
precisely these laws that are leading the system towards ruin. This is why the
billions and billions injected into the markets by all the states and their central
banks will change nothing. Worse! They are only piling debt on debt, which is
like trying to put a fire out with oil. The bourgeoisie is only showing its impotence
with these desperate and sterile measures. Sooner or later all their bail-out plans
are abound to fail. No real recovery is possible for the capitalist economy. No
policy, whether of the right or the left, can save capitalism because this system
is racked by an incurable, fatal illness. Against mounting poverty, solidarity and
class struggle! Everywhere we are seeing comparisons with the crash of 1929
and the Great Depression of the 1930s. The images of those times are still in our
memories: endless lines of unemployed workers, soup-kitchens for the poor,
factories closing everywhere. But is the situation today identical? The answer is
NO. It is much more serious
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Observation 2 is Consequences-
The bourgeoisie only answer in the face of crisis is war, war and
more war, in the attempts to sustain itself. At the brink of
economic collapse we will see the beginning of World War 3,
and a state of absolute poverty.
International Communist Current 10-28-2008, “1929-2008 - Capitalism is a bankrupt system,
but another world is possible: communism!” http://en.internationalism.org/icconline/2008/10/crisis_leaflet
The terrible depression of the 1930s led to the Second World War. Will the
present crisis end up in a Third World War? The flight towards war is certainly
the bourgeoisie's only answer to its insurmountable crisis. And the only force
that can oppose this is its mortal enemy, the international working class. In the 1930s, the world
working class had been through a terrible defeat following the isolation of the 1917 revolution in Russia and it allowed itself
to be dragged into a new imperialist massacre. But since the major struggles that began in 1968, today's working
class has shown that it is not ready to shed its blood on behalf of the exploiting
class. Over the last 40 years it has been through a number of painful defeats but it is still standing; and all over the world,
especially since 2003, it has been fighting back more and more. The unfolding crisis of capitalism is
going to mean terrible suffering for hundreds of millions of workers, not only in the
underdeveloped countries but also in the developed ones - unemployment, poverty, even famine, but it is also
going to provoke a movement of resistance by the exploited. These struggles
are absolutely necessary for putting a limit on the bourgeoisie's economic
attacks, for preventing them from plunging us into absolute poverty. But it is clear
that they cannot stop capitalism from sinking deeper and deeper into its crisis.
This is why the resistance struggles of the working class respond to another need, an even
more important one. They allow the exploited to develop their collective strength, their
unity, their solidarity, their consciousness of the only alternative that can offer
humanity a future: the overthrow of the capitalist system and its replacement
by a society that operates on a completely different basis. A society no longer based on exploitation
and profit, on production for a market, but on production for human need; a society organised by the
producers themselves and not by a privileged minority. In short, a communist society. For eight decades, all the sectors of
the bourgeoisie, both right and left, have worked hand in hand to present the regimes which dominated Eastern Europe and
China as ‘communist', when they were no more than a particularly barbaric form of state capitalism. It was a question of
convincing the exploited that it is futile to dream of another world, that there was nothing on the horizon except capitalism.
But now that capitalism is so clearly proving its historic bankruptcy, the struggles of the working class must be animated
more and more by the perspective of a communist society. Faced with the attacks of capitalism at
the end of its tether; to put an end to exploitation, poverty, and the barbarism of
capitalist war: Long live the struggles of the world working class! Workers of all countries, unite!
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The exact pace that these tendencies will work out their logic in the world
economy is impossible to foresee. For the moment, despite enormous pressures, the
bourgeoisie is aware of the stakes in the current situation and its more lucid
segments will do everything in their power to prevent such a disintegration taking
place. Nonetheless, it seems possible that we could have reached a point that will
have as crucial repercussions in the world economy as the collapse of the Eastern
bloc had nearly 20 years ago. They also demonstrate clearly the growing impasse
of the entire capitalist system. So far, the world economy has not suffered the
spectacular effects of decomposition that have been visible in the social and
political spheres. If the economic sphere begins to disintegrate, then all the
other self-destructive tendencies of decomposing capitalism will be unleashed
on a new and unprecedented scale. The only solution to this growing threat to
human civilisation is the conscious dismantling of capitalist society and its
replacement with one based on truly human values. The bourgeoisie cannot
entertain this as an option while the other classes in society have no alternative
vision. Only the working class, the revolutionary proletariat, can destroy this
rotting system before it destroys humanity.
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Thus the plan:
We demand that the United States Federal
Government pass a policy removing all debt.
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Observation 3 is Inherency-
In order to bridge the gap between the status quo and Marxism
we must go thought a process of transitional demands. The plan
is key to exposing the true side of our government, their
allegiances are to the people who put money in their pocket, not
to the proletariat they are supposed to represent.
Arthur Rymer, winter 1999, “The Specter of Economic Collapse,” Proletarian Revolution No. 58, http://www.lrp-
cofi.org/PR/collapsePR58.html
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Observation 4 is Solvency
Once the system is exposed for what it really is the working
class will realize their alienation. It is only through this process
of alienation that the proletariat will rise up against the system
and build a new society free of poverty and exploitation
International Review 1993, “Communism is not a nice idea, but a material necessity, part III: The alienation
of labour is the premise for its emancipation,” No. 70, 3rd Quarter 1993,
http://en.internationalism.org/ir/070_commy_03
The alienation of labour is the premise for its emancipation For it must not be
forgotten that Marx did not elaborate the theory of alienation in order to bewail
the misery that he saw around him, or to present, as did the various brands of
'true' and feudal socialism, human history as nothing but a regrettable fall from an
original state of fullness. For Marx the alienation of man was the necessary product
of human evolution, and as such contained the seeds of its own supercession: "The
human being had to be reduced to this absolute poverty in order that he might
yield his inner wealth to the outer world" [17]. But the creation of this vast
"outer wealth", this wealth estranged from those who have created it, also
finally makes it possible for human beings to emerge from alienation into
freedom. As Marx puts it in the Grundrisse: "It will be shown ...that the most
extreme form of alienation, wherein labour appears in the relation of capital and
wage labour, and labour, productive activity, appears in relation to its own
conditions and its own product, is a necessary point of transition - and therefore
contains in itself, in a still only inverted from, turned on its head, the dissolution of
all limited presuppositions of production, and moreover creates and produces the
unconditional presuppositions of production, and therewith the full material
conditions for the total, universal development of the productive forces of the
individual" [18]. There are two aspects to this: in the first place, because of the
unprecedented productivity of labour achieved under the capitalist mode of
production, the old dream of a society of abundance, where all human beings,
and not just a privileged few, have the leisure to devote themselves to the
"total, universal development" of their creative powers, can cease to be a dream
and become a reality. But the possibility of communism is not simply a matter of
technological possibility. It is above a social possibility linked to the existence of a
class which has a material interest in bringing it about. And here again Marx's
theory of alienation shows how both in spite and because of the alienation it
suffers in bourgeois society, the proletariat will be driven to rebel against its
conditions of existence: "The propertied class and the class of the proletariat
present the same human self-estrangement. But the former class feels at ease and
strengthened in this estrangement, it recognises estrangement as its own power and
has in it the semblance of human existence. The latter feels annihilated in estrange-
ment; it sees in it its own powerlessness and the reality of an inhuman existence. It
is, to use an expression of Hegel, in its abasement the indignation at that
abasement, an indignation to which it is necessarily driven by the contradictions
between its human nature and its conditions of life, which is the outright, resolute
and comprehensive negation of that nature" [19]. The theory of alienation is thus
nothing if it is not a theory of class revolt, a theory of revolution, a theory of
the historic struggle for communism. In the next chapter we will look at the first
sketches of communist society that Marx 'deduced' from his critique of capitalist
alienation.
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Observation 5 is Framework- the stacked deck of
policy debate.
A) Link: Current Practice in policy debate cast the judge in the
role of a federal policy maker in the pre-eminent capitalist nation
State
C) Implications:
1- Topicality is evaluated post-advocacy. The negative must first
win that capitalism is good before topicality should be
evaluated.
The task of this text [1] is to lay bare the structure of assumptions and its relation to the workings of the regime of capital and
wage-labor (what I have articulated as “post-al logic”), [2] that unites all these seemingly different text as they recirculate
some of the most reactionary practices that are now masquerading as “progressive” in the postmodern academy.
Analyzing the post-al logic of the left is important because it not only reveals 9
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how the ludic left is complicit with capitalism but, for the more immediate purposes of this text-of-
response, it allows us to relate the local discussions in these text to global problems and to deal, in OR – 2’s words, with the
“encompassing philosophical issues” [3] that are so violently suppressed y the diversionist uses of “detailism” [4] in these
nine text. Whether they regard themselves to be “new new left,” “feminist,” “neo-
Marxist,” or “anarchist,” these texts—in slightly different local idioms—do
the ideological work of US capitalism by producing theories, pedagogies,
arguments, ironies, anecdotes, turns of phrases and jokes that obscure the
laws of motion of capital. Post-al logic is marked above all by its erasure of
“production” as the determining force in organizing human societies and their
institutions, and its insistence on “consumption” and “distribution” as the driving force of the social. The
argument of the post-al left (briefly) is that “labor,” in advanced industrial “democracies,” is superseded by
“information,” and consequently “knowledge” (not class struggle over the rate of
surplus labor) has become the driving force of history. The task of the post-al left is to deconstruct the
“metaphysics of labor” and consequently to announce the end of socialism and with it the “outdatedness” of the praxis of
abolishing private property (that is, congealed alienated labor) in the post-al moment. Instead of abolishing private property,
an enlightened radical democracy—which is to supplant socialism (as Laclau, Mouffe, Aronowitz, Butler and others have
advised)—should make property holders of each citizen. The post-al left rejects the global objective conditions of production
of the local subjective circumstances of consumption, and its master trope is what R-4 so clearly foregrounds: the (shopping)
“mall”—the ultimate site of consumption “with all the latest high-tech textwares” deployed to pleasure the “body.” In fact,
the post-al left has “invented” a whole new interdiscipline called “cultural studies” that provides the new alibi for the regime
of profit by shifting social analytics for “production” to “consumption.” (On the political economy of “invention” in ludic
theory, see Transformation 2 on “The Invention of the Queer.”) To prove its “progressiveness,” the
post-al left devotes most of its energies (see the writings of John Fiske, Constance Penley, Michael
Berube, [Henry/Robert] Louis Gates, Jr., Andrew Ross, Susan Willis, Stuart Hall, Fredric Jameson), to demonstrate
how “consumption” is in fact an act of production and resistance to capitalism
and a practice in which a utopian vision for a society of equality is performed!
The shift from “production” to “consumption” manifests itself in post-al left
theories through the focus on “superstructural” cultural analysis and the
preoccupation not with the “political economy” (“base”) but with
“representation”—for instance, of race, sexuality, environment, ethnicity,
nationality and identity. This is, for example, one reason for R-2’s ridiculing the “base” and “superstructure”
analytical model of classical Marxism (Marx, A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy) with an anecdote (the
privileged mode of “argument” for the post-al left) that the base is really not all that “basic” To adhere to the
base/superstructure model for him/her is to be thrown into an “epistemological gulag.” For the post-al left a good society is,
therefore, one in which, as R-4 puts it, class antagonism is bracketed and the “surplus value” is distributed more evenly
among men and women, whites and persons of color, the lesbian and the straight. It is not a society in which “surplus
value”—the exploitative appropriation of the other’s labor—is itself eliminated by revolutionary praxis. The post-al left’s
good society is not one in which private ownership is obsolete and the social division of labor (class) is abolished, rather it is
a society in which the fruit of exploitation of the proletariat (surplus labor) is more evenly distributed and a near-equality of
consumption is established. This distributionist/consumptionist theory that underwrites the economic interests of the
(upper)middle classes is the foundation for all the texts in this exchange and their pedagogies. A good pedagogy, in these
text, therefore is one in which power is distributed evenly in the classroom: a pedagogy that constructs a classroom of
consensus not antagonism (thus opposition to “politicizing the classroom” in OR-1) and in which knowledge (concept) is
turned into—through the process that OR-3 calls “translation”—into “consumable” EXPERIENCES. The more “intense” the
experience, as the anecdotes of OR-3 show, the more successful the pedagogy In short, it is a pedagogy that removes the
student from his/her position in the social relations of production and places him/her in the personal relation of consumption:
specifically, EXPERIENCE of/as the consumption of pleasure. The
post-al logic obscures the laws of
motion of capital by very specific assumptions and moves—many of which are rehearsed in the texts
here, I will discuss some of these, mention others in passing, and hint at several more. (I have provided a full account of all of
these moves in my “Post-ality” in Transformation 1.) I begin by outlining the post-al assumptions that
“democracy” is a never-ending, open “dialogue” and “conversation” among
multicultural citizen; that the source of social inequities is “power”; that a post-class
hegemonic “conversation” among multicultural citizens; that truth (as R-2 writes) is an “epistemological gulag”—a construct
of power—and thus any form of “ideology critique” that raises questions of “falsehood” and “truth” (“false consciousness”)
does so through a violent exclusion of the “other” truths by, in OR-5 words, “staking sole legitimate claim” to the truth in
question. Given
the injunction of the pist-al logica against binaries
(truth/falsehood) the project of “epistemology” is displaced in the ludic
academy by “rhetoric.” The question, consequently, becomes not so much
what is the “truth” of a practice but whether it “works” (Rhetoric has always
served as an alibi for pragmatism.) Therefore, R-4 is not interested in whether my practices are truthful
but in what effects they might have: if College Literature publishes my texts would such an act (regardless of the “truth” of
my texts) end up “cutting our funding?” he/she asks. A post-al leftist like R-4, in short, “resists” the state only in so far as the
state does not cut his/her “funding.” Similarly, it is enough for a cynical pragmatist like OR-5 to conclude that my argument
“has little prospect of effectual force” in order to disregard its truthfulness. The
post-al dismantling of
“epistemology” and the erasure of the question of “truth,” it must be pointed
out, is undertaken to protect the economic interests of the ruling class. If the “truth
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question” is made to seem outdated and an example of an orthodox binarism (R-2), any conclusions about the
truth of ruling class practices are excluded from the scene of social contestation as
a violent logocentric (positivistic) totalization that disregards the “difference” of the
ruling class. This is why a defender of the ruling class such as R-2 sees an ideology critique aimed at unveiling false
consciousness and the production of class consciousness as a form of “epistemological spanking.” It is this structure of
assumptions that enables R-4 to answer my question, “What is wrong with being dogmatic?” not in terms of its truth but by
reference to its pragmatics (rhetoric): what is “wrong” with dogmatism, she/he says is that it is violent rhetoric (“textual
Chernobyl”) and thus Stalinist. If I ask what is wrong with Stalinism, again (in terms of the logic of his/her text) I will not get
a political or philosophical argument but a tropological description.[5]
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