Sean Cubitt on Tue, 24 Nov 2020 22:58:26 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Thoughts on coups |
Brian hits the nail on the head when he writes "paying out fiat money to smooth the
jagged edges of the business cycle and thereby making proletarian consumption into the very engine of capitalist growth."
As Felix adds, capital absolutely requires externalised nature - a cost-free resource which can be mined and dumped into at no cost.
The model also applies now to the proletarian consumer: once merely formally subsumed under capital, the new form of consumption has been 'really' subsumed: the form of consumption is fully integrated - all consumption is also productive, generating data for
further exploitation. The mass production of debt is a crucial part of the process: as is the mental health epidemic that it generates - this is one way capital dumps its unwanted product, just as it dumps unwanted heat into the atmosphere.
Waste is not marginal: it is integral to capital - and that includes wasting excess humans, ie those that are not in the inner circle of obscene wealth. The destruction of the state by capital under Brexit / Trumpism is one strategy for ensuring a) the proletarianization
of the real subsumption of consumption under capital and b) the externalisation/environmentalisation of the bio-mass and - in a way that must terrify all post-autonomists - the general intellect.
Ex-communist polities (populist cronyism in its Putin/Xi variants) still seem to prefer state capture; neo-con/neo-libs go for state destruction: but the distinction is blurry (Georges Monbiot has a suggestion why:
More depressing is the failure of the Left - while half believed the EU was a flawed but viable system for controlling the worst excesses of capital (which is why Murdoch and other gang members wanted it wrecked), the other half, including Corbyn, saw it as
a capitalist conspiracy. Given that nationalism is such a hallmark of the rhetoric of neo-populists, one obvious experiment to make is a post-nationalist left - which instantly implies not rebuilding globalisation as it existed prior to the GFC but one that
builds on what now constitutes the material infrastructure: populations, networks and ecologies.
Nationalism builds on the other great crisis of our times, migration. Post-nationalism means opening borders. Only that way will the wealthy learn that removing the causes of migration - war, pandemic, climate change, colonialism - is the only way to survive
(unless of course you're one of the billionaire class)
Any 21st century politics has to be formed by an alliance of the excluded - human, ecological and - I would add, though it needs a longer argument - technological
sean
Sean Cubitt | He/Him
Professor of Screen Studies
School of Culture and Communication W104 John Medley Building University of Melbourne Grattan Street Victoria 3010 AUSTRALIA scubitt@unimelb.edu.au
New Book: Anecdotal Evidence https://global.oup.com/academic/product/anecdotal-evidence-9780190065720?lang=en&cc=au# Message: 1 Date: Tue, 24 Nov 2020 10:58:52 +0100 From: Felix Stalder <felix@openflows.com> To: nettime-l@mail.kein.org Subject: Re: <nettime> Thoughts on coups Message-ID: <2a74602d-d71a-2175-62ad-29b62760e568@openflows.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8" On 24.11.20 04:14, Brian Holmes wrote: > Here's my two cents: Keynes aimed to save capitalism from itself. Double > down on Keynes, unleash vast new creative energies on the basis of fiat > money, and maybe, instead of sapping capital's foundations, we can push it > over the top into ecosocialism. There are probably two distinct political strategies here. And it would be interesting to work out their relation. The first is move capitalism towards a different regime of accumulation, one based less on extractivism and consumerism but rather more on renewable energy and "eco-system services" for repairing some of the damage already done (I know, this term is conventionally used in a different sense). A little bit of this we are already seeing, with the EU's project to become a first climate neutral continent by 2050, China commitment by 2060 and new Biden admin making similar gestures. So far, actual effects, in terms of reducing the output of CO2 and and ending/slowing down the loss of biological diversity, have not been achieved. The big question is: is that too little too late, unable to overcome very real system barriers to substantial change? Or can this be made into the beginning of a self-accelerating shift in the energy regime of global civilization? In the longer run, it's hard to imagine how capitalism can still be capitalism without treating "nature" as an externality. So the question then becomes, what are the condition under which a 'greener capitalism' can be pushed into something else. In a way that is like an update of the old Marxian idea that capitalism will produce productive forces on which communism can be realized. all the best. Felix -- | |||||||||||||||||| https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/b7quCvl0E5u7vp9LAIXkohl?domain=felix.openflows.com | | Open PGP | https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/1COxCwVLG5hGoJjVys9yMFM?domain=felix.openflows.com | -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: OpenPGP_0x0BBB5B950C9FF2AC.asc Type: application/pgp-keys Size: 3192 bytes Desc: not available URL: <http://mx.kein.org/pipermail/nettime-l/attachments/20201124/9ee66756/attachment-0001.key> -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: OpenPGP_signature Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 495 bytes Desc: OpenPGP digital signature URL: <http://mx.kein.org/pipermail/nettime-l/attachments/20201124/9ee66756/attachment-0001.pgp> ------------------------------ # 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: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/bMvNCr8Dz5s8xPqn2T7Q76k?domain=mx.kein.org End of nettime-l Digest, Vol 158, Issue 30 ****************************************** |
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