Archive for January, 2012

WE ARE AT A TURNING POINT

Posted on January 28 2012 by admin

  Much closer to the start of a great global revolt against the plutocracy Notes from  the Editors Monthly Review , January 1912 In a little more than two months at this writing (December 3, 2011) the Occupy Wall Street movement has ushered in a new dialectic of world revolt. Occupy movements now exist in [...]

SPRING CONFRONTS WINTER

Posted on January 28 2012 by admin

  In great upheavals, analogies fly like shrapnel. The electrifying protests of 2011—the on-going Arab spring, the ‘hot’ Iberian and Hellenic summers, the ‘occupied’ fall in the United States—inevitably have been compared to the anni mirabiles of 1848, 1905, 1968 and 1989. Certainly some fundamental things still apply and classic patterns repeat. Tyrants tremble, chains [...]

Reports on Oil Workers’ Struggle in Kazakhstan

Posted on January 24 2012 by admin

  The following reports are from Socialist Resistance of Kazakhstan.  Their website is <www.socialismkz.info/>. The background to all this is that the oil sector in western Kazakhstan has been hampered for seven months now by strikes and work stoppages (see Joanna Lillis “Kazakhstan: Labor Dispute Dragging Energy Production Down,” Eurasianet, October 13, 2011).  According to [...]

Contradictions of Finance Capitalism

Posted on January 24 2012 by admin

  Over the last thirty years, capital has abstracted upwards, from production to finance; its sphere of operations has expanded outwards, to every nook and cranny of the globe; the speed of its movement has increased, to milliseconds; and its control has extended to include “everything.” We now live in the era of global finance [...]

America Beyond Capitalism: Is It Possible?

Posted on January 15 2012 by admin

  “Black Monday,” September 19, 1977, was the day 34 years ago when the shuttering of the Youngstown Sheet and Tube steel mill threw 5,000 steelworkers onto the streets of their decaying Midwestern hometown. No local, state or federal programs offered significant help. Steelworkers called training programs “funeral insurance”: they led nowhere since there were [...]

The spectre of barbarism and its alternative: eight theses

Posted on January 15 2012 by admin

  A note from the author The following two documents are presentations made or prepared for different purposes in Venezuela. The first (‘The Spectre of Barbarism and its Alternative: Eight Theses’) was presented at a conference of Venezuelan intellectuals organized by Centro Internacional Miranda (CIM) in Caracas on ‘The New International Situation and Construction of [...]

The Unifying Element in All Struggles Against Capital Is the Right of Everyone to Full Human Development

Posted on January 15 2012 by admin

The Unifying Element in All Struggles Against Capital Is the Right of Everyone to Full Human Development Michael A. Lebowitz Interview     The following is a portion of an interview that took place in Caracas, December 4, 2009, published in Hak Mücadeleleri, edited by Yalçin Bürkev, Metin Özugurlu, Yasemin Özdek, and Ersin Vedat Elgur (Ankara: [...]

Food as a Commodity

Posted on January 12 2012 by admin

  Food is one of the most basic of human needs. Routine access to a balanced diet is essential for both growth and development of the young, as well as for general health throughout one’s life. Although food is mostly plentiful, malnutrition is still common. The contradiction between plentiful global food supplies and widespread malnutrition [...]

The Global Reserve Army of Labor and the New Imperialism

Posted on January 10 2012 by admin

  In the last few decades there has been an enormous shift in the capitalist economy in the direction of the globalization of production. Much of the increase in manufacturing and even services production that would have formerly taken place in the global North—as well as a portion of the North’s preexisting production—is now being [...]

Women, Labor, and Capital Accumulation in Asia

Posted on January 10 2012 by admin

  The trend towards feminization of employment in Asian countries resulted from employers’ needs for cheaper and more “flexible” sources of labor, which meant more casualization of labor, a shift to part-time work or piece-rate contracts, and insistence on greater freedom of hiring and firing. All these aspects of what is now described as “labor [...]