Dan S. Wang on Mon, 30 Jan 2017 00:13:33 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Digital leftism in a globalised world? |
Alexander, a late reply to your original post and later: >>Can we please raise the quality of postings on this forum to at least >>slightly above the junior high school level? >>Best intentions from Cape Town I accept your best intentions. A provocation in a spirit of impatience and with a sense of urgency is just what I want now. Thank you. That said, you went to a different junior high than I did. Also, having sorta grown up with/on nettime, I can say that some, maybe even a lot, of what I can say about neoliberalism comes from the years of discussion that happened on this list. I'm talking about since when I first subscribed in '98 or so, when the movements that emerged to critique, contest, and confront the orgs imposing the, yes, what many called neoliberal restructuring of state economies. Those orgs included the IMF, the WTO, and the roving bodies of bankers, finance ministers, and heads of state that assembled for regular meetings and one-off gatherings. Seattle crystallized the antagonism. We were on one sidean anarchic-but-organized Movement of movements, a kind of pan-Left, global in composition. Our enemies were titans of global reach, organization and influence. Into this came the attack of 9/11, which of course induced and enabled an imperial flail for the better part of the next decade. Obama supposedly tried to reimpose some sort of managerial order to the chaos, and not very well. But his presidency, in turn, exposed and revitalized the ugly career of anti-black racism within US society. Of course, that race-based hatred of Obama was led at times very notably by none other than Donald Trump. So, yes, a lot has changed since the rising neoliberalism of twenty years ago. The neoliberal order and the corresponding term, have suffered blunting since thennow there are many vectors invested with considerable power and neoliberalism is just one that the others cross. Yeahthat period when people in nettime worlds (including myself) were reading Empire to make sense of the pessimistic, retrograde imperium of Bush and his neocons. As for the neoliberal orgs since, their power has contracted some, partly due to the economic meltdowns brought on by their own contradictions. The limits to their power seem to have been exposed. Massive banks and financialization are worse than ever in some ways, but the neoliberal frame has also suffered in the priorities of state, at least in the US, relative to the advance of the security state and all its associated industries. The ideological residue of neoliberalism remains for sure, especially in mainstream economy-speak. Particularly in the tech sector, where language valorizing market "disruptors" still holds sway in a sector driven at least as much by the demands of the military-surveillance state as by the needs of the retail consumer. Okay, so it's different time; more than anything, the question of whether Trump is "neoliberal" or "anti-neoliberal" reveals our jumbled global moment. There are variously coherent sets of concepts and vocabularies that make sense of different operations and different sub-logics of global capital, while the whole falls ever further into an overall incoherence; this incoherence is of course mirrored by tremendous chaos on the ground. The Left worries about the proper meanings of various terms and labels, how to accurately discuss various people or issues. These are not unimportant. But as we do so, the Republicans have accepted this intellectual incoherence as the price of power. There is no way they could win otherwisethe conservative coalition in the US is a patchwork of differing priorities and emphases, not all of them in mutual alignment. This is at once their strength and their fragility. I agree with you and Piketty about taxation being the proven mechanism for blunting the accumulation of capital/power (same thing in the US). Conveniently for proganda and consciousness-raising efforts, we now have a billionaire tax cheat in the White House. As Americans face their own looming deadline for filing annual tax returns on April 15, this issue has the potential to galvanize the millions once again. Conveniently for the already-assembled movement of Movementslarger and more varied subculturally and generationally than what we saw in '99this same man is a sexual predator, a virulent racist and xenophobe, a climate liar, and a political panderer of supreme corruption. To issue a clear and sustained demand to, say, raise taxes on corporations and 1% incomes, under the conditions of a churning and multi-faceted opposition will be unlikely. A tax strike by ordinary people might be more available as an action, closer to the spirit of the war resisters tradition, ie denying the government $$ to murderbut that's a different message, not synonomous with the egalitarian project and not necessarily light years removed from the anti-tax, anti-government position. So even on the level of a taxation solution to the runaway power and wealth of the 1%, the Left has its own internal contradictions to resolve. If those practicalities of movement politics are not your thing, and this is only about what would be the properly or faithfully Marxist position, then you will have fallen into the trap you called out others for, i.e. not seeing the morass of terminologies as a blockage. Because I think there is a clearer definition in play, usefully so, for "neoliberal" and "neoliberalism than there isconsidering the complexity of capital and its hydra-headed crisis (only a few years ago we could say "dual crisis" and know what we were talking about; now there are too many to count, all somehow interlocked)for "Marxist." I mean, speaking as a Marxist. All best from Madison, Dan w. -- http://prop-press.typepad.com/ http://www.prop-press.net/ http://www.madmutualdrift.org/ http://midwestcompass.org/ Instagram: type_rounds_1968 # 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://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: