Keith Hart on Mon, 5 Jun 2017 14:07:56 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> merkel, macron: europe on its own |
Welcome back to your thread, Alex and thanks for putting it up. I don't know where you got this: "like gideon rachman, you argue merkel was to rash in saying the hell with the anglos". The US establishment is regrouping against Trump who in turn represents the country even less than before. Whatever the result of the UK election, politics there have been changed irrevocably by this campaign. Where we really part company is on your teleological reduction of mass movements to their immediate consequences . 1968 was Chicago as well as Paris and Prague. The Vietnam war and popular response to it, not only in the US, was the turning point in post-war history, not least as the matrix for the birth of the new financial order. CND was strongly linked to the women's movement in Britain, the only serious political fallout of the 60's. Elsewhere, the main result of 1968, as Brian has long argued brilliantly, was that capital absorbed its cultural side (hence bobos ultimately), while its political side became a dead end. Did 2 million people demonstrate in London against the Iraq war for nothing? One small consequence is that Blair is still at risk. Was Tahrir Square pointless because it ended up as Sisi? People are transformed by the collective experience of large crowds and who knows where that might lead in time? I really have no idea if and how nuclear weapons would play a part in any future war.�The trigger is always contingent and the strategic focus is never the same as the last one. The Pentagon runs virtual war scenarios in half a dozen places all the time. A multitude of unpredictable factors come into play. At present the drum is beating to do something about North Korea, perhaps with some support from China. Again nukes would be the end game, if at all, not the beginning. Anyone can�produce a number of scenarios: mine include a nationalist Japanese fisherman taking a rocket launcher to a Chinese battleship in the disputed islands. Brian fears for a new American civil war. I rehash China's history of breaking up under stress. But my main bet is that Europe could fall into another 30 years war between two brands of market fundamentalism, neoliberal and nationalist. In any case most of the serious wars and revolutions of the last few decades have occurred on its borders and are now coming home to roost. This is not about some minor rearrangement of international trade. Nothing disrupts trade, transport and communications more effectively than world war. This list lends itself to extremist speculation on the one hand and minor ironic asides based on the daily news. The people who are contemplating global strategy in DC, Beijing, Moscow, Berlin, Paris, Delhi, Tokyo and perhaps London (if they can escape from the miasma generated by the tabloid press) do not deal in glib reductions of history nor do they publish their thoughts in media like this one. Ever since 2008, the question is often posed whether we are reverting to the 1930s or perhaps the 1890s. A better analogy would be 1914. Russia was the China of its day with average annual growth rates of 10%, 1890-1913. Look what happened next. My only real point is that we should be aware that the world runs a risk of a major war now, of a sort that none of us can imagine, but the secret manipulators do - all the time. What would it take for some of this to filter into "progressive" discussion of what to do next, how and with what historical antecedents in mind? Ciao, K On Mon, Jun 5, 2017 at 9:36 AM, Alex Foti <alex.foti@gmail.com> wrote: Dear Keith, Dear Brian and All i was part of the 80s antinuclear/ peace movement (my first political experience) - we even thought it was us that brought the wall down. in retrospect it achieved little (ok nuclear energy was phased out after chernobyl), since reagan's missiles bankrupted the soviet union, or am i wrong, keith. the risk of nuclear war seemed greater than, but maybe it's greater now as you rightly point out. <...>
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