Reich's importance still actual: — Number2018
Yet, we can try to understand what is going on. — Number2018
We can not consider a kind of cause and affect chain, and we can not explain Tramp's phenomenon by "extinction of working class and peasantry".What is his true motivation? — Number2018
I think Reich missed this angle completely, and gave too much importance to psychological failings. The way it goes, the leader makes impossible promises to unify at least a voting bloc, and then has to blame someone - the forces of darkness - the press, the Mexicans, the Marxist liberals, the Jews, the deep state, for the failure to deliver. The mistake is to think that Trump, or Hitler, or even the collective psyche of their supporters are in control in any way. They are riding a wave, and trying to stay on the board. On this view, desire is manufactured by the economy at need, and conflict likewise. — unenlightened
According to Berardi, we are now experiencing conditions similar to those in Germany and Italy in 1920s. — Number2018
desire will become completely fascistic. — Number2018
I loathe Donald Trump and his allies, but whether he will usher in a fascist episode of history is unclear -- of course; the future is always unclear. The extremely tight control over politics wielded by the Democrat and Republican parties is not conducive to the political disorder that fascists quite often exploit. Our representative system is harder to crack than parliamentary systems. The economy is less healthy than it could be, but it doesn't appear to be on the verge of collapse. Were the economy to collapse (I mean, really fall apart here and globally) all bets would be off about political developments.
41 minutes ago — Bitter Crank
This is a very important point. Foucault in his preface to Anti-Oedipus differentiate between two kindsCan we not say that desire is fascistic by nature. Whether i desire to make America great again, or make unenlightened great again, or some other thing - make Jesus crucified again, whatever, it takes no account of what you want unless I want it to? In which case, desire becomes fascistic whenever it is able to overwhelm the opposition. — unenlightened
It is right. However,Hitler and Mussolini were, in many ways, unsuccessful in exploiting the masses. Hitler, for instance, usually received no more than the 30%-40% of the popular vote.
Neither Hitler nor Mussolini were swept into power by popular landslides — Bitter Crank
It does not look like they can get kind of massive support. When Berardi attributed "new fascism"American fascists did a reasonably good job of it too -- white robes and hoods, marching around in circles out in the woods, burning torches, burning crosses, some half-baked rigamarole, and a lynching every now and then. — Bitter Crank
Essentially we have the (university-indoctrinated, NGO/HR-Department-employed) equivalent of a decadent, periwigged, pompadoured rentier "elite" (or rather, in modern terms, rent-seeking crowd) that's leeching off the body politic, whose way of life, whose ideology, language and manner, and whose dominance of the cybernetic industries, are absolutely hated by the average working person. — gurugeorge
There are so many versions and interpretations why the French Revolution happened. Yet,there is no working explanatory model that can be applied to our situation.To understand what's going on, I think you have to go back a bit further, to the causes of the French Revolution. — gurugeorge
On the face of it, it makes far more sense to say that loss of worker power through trade unions, loss of the benefits of colonial exploitation, loss of power and income is what is driving the search for scapegoats, - lefties, feminists, others of any kind. — unenlightened
On the face of it, it makes far more sense to say that loss of worker power through trade unions, loss of the benefits of colonial exploitation, loss of power and income is what is driving the search for scapegoats, - lefties, feminists, others of any kind. — unenlightened
The tail that's wagging the dog of those things is the vampirism of the elites that I've mentioned (being paid more and more bloated incomes to strangle the system more and more), just as the cause of the French revolution was an absentee aristocracy putting an ever-heavier tax burden on the peasants. — gurugeorge
I think the elite is always vampiric — unenlightened
Just after the 2016 election I had this conversation with a friend at my house to do with riots erupting as a reaction to Trump’s victory by mobs of angry anti-Trumpers where shop fronts were smashed and looting occurred.
He: Those riots show how divisive he is.
Me: So as you and I have a different political opinion and after this conversation you leave feeling pissed off with me about that, on your way down my street you break the windows of a nearby shop and some neighbors houses.
Is you doing those acts a consequence of me “being divisive” or just you being a vandal? — raza
Could you explain how Taine can be applied to our situation? Do we have a kind of revolution coming soon? — Number2018
Fascism too (which was admired by many "progressives") was another example of the same sort of general idea. Huxley's Brave New World is a much more accurate depiction of the dystopia we've been in danger of getting into than Orwell's book (though of course Orwell's ideas are relevant too.) — gurugeorge
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