Merijn on Sun, 9 Nov 2008 22:03:36 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> American elections |
Hey Ben, Alex and others, in this entire discussion on the American elections, I feel I'm missing the substance. Also from my experience in home town Amsterdam, it's like the radical left is still stuck on the archaic distinction between revolutionary/ reformist politics.. In the present, with no broad movement to press for anything close to utopian, it seems much more logical to focus on shifting the immanent balance of power, which i think Obama's campaign is exactly aiming at doing. The only other option seems to bet on verelendung. knowing that the trade unions have played an essential role in the Obama campaign ("yes we can" is a literal translation of the SEIU Justice for Janitors campaign "si se puede"), and that in exchange they have brokered the promise that the Obama government is going to make unionizing more easy in the US, it looks they are trying to push through the same kind of structural shift in power paradigm that Reagan did in his years. Look at this financial times article: Corporate America gears up for labour battle http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/09b21e5c-ac3e-11dd-bf71-000077b07658.html And this one, where chief candidate for the Treasury Lawrence Summers, who we know from the Clinton years to be a moderate neoliberal, now pleads for more power for organised labour and more government investment in social services http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/62cfa31e-a528-11dd-b4f5-000077b07658.html The question, of course, is not whether the U.S. is going to shift to Keynesian policies. The U.S. government has always been secretly Keynesian, through it's large investments in the military-industrial complex and zero tolerance politics, meaning a massive police and prison industry. It's what sociologist Lo?c Wacquant has called the neoliberal penal state, reinforcing the right hand of government at the detriment of the left. We have seen on election night that every area with a large military base is voting Republican, so no doubt the Republican Keynesianism has created it's own power base. Imagine the amounts of people that have come through military service, what an amazing political device the American military is. I think what the unions and the Obama campaign will be trying to do, is to undermine and shift that power base to the left, by channeling investment back to what Wacquant calls the "left hand" of the state. Of course, remaining well within the insitutional limits of American politics, which are quite narrow, and knowing that even these reformist strategies are likely to fail, i think this is still something to be cheerful about. greets, M -------- Original-Nachricht -------- > Datum: Sun, 09 Nov 2008 12:00:03 +0100 > Von: nettime-l-request@kein.org > An: nettime-l@kein.org > Betreff: nettime-l Digest, Vol 14, Issue 7 <...> > Today's Topics: > > 1. the green and the black digest [seymour/byfield x2, hart] > (nettime's_charterhouse) > 2. what's green and black and second digest [yacub, touchon, > cubitt, (net)] (nettime's_recount) > 3. More thoughts on the American election (Wade Tillett) > <...> -- Psssst! Schon vom neuen GMX MultiMessenger geh?rt? Der kann`s mit allen: http://www.gmx.net/de/go/multimessenger # 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://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org