Alexander Bard on Mon, 19 Jun 2017 14:51:55 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Can the Left Meme? |
On an added more speculative note to these excellent aesthetics excursions: It doesn't take much for Trump voters to discover that no new factories with any new jobs are being built in Michigan and Indiana. Consequently, American terrorism is hardly imported any longer but quickly escalates from the one factor that the American mainstream refuses to see: The alt-right going openly violent and the Oklahoma Bomber rather than 9/11 being the precedent of extreme right terror and violence in the 21st century. The likely response is a second American Civil War based not on Cascadia peacefully leaving the Union (why would it be allowed to) but on Antifa-inspired hipsters in say Portland, Oregon, picking up arms in reponse to alt-right terror cells. Castrated pacifism is after all only the trait of the current mid-life leftist generation, the ones who turned American leftism into "Occupy t-shirts" and Bernie Sanders campaign buttons. The next generation may very well regard all anti-capitalist struggle from a necessary pro-violence starting point. But is that through a return to blind and contingent 19th century urban anarchist struggle? Or with a proper vision for a just and fair America and The World in this century? But where is that Marxist vision in that case? Because if large-scale violence is back from the right, then why would it not sooner or later return from the left? How could it be otherwise? But with which direction? Maybe we even should look for the birth of this movement among "leftist fans" of Jordan Peterson and Pankaj Mishra in the You Tube Self-education Generation? Best intentions Alexander Bard 2017-06-18 21:43 GMT+02:00 t byfield <tbyfield@panix.com>: On 16 Jun 2017, at 13:25, Gabriella "Biella" Coleman wrote: Lots of bad bits too. No amount of theory can paper over basic flaws in analysis. Thanks for your points below. But I am just not seeing the connection between your analysis of left vs right language politics and the basic flaws in the analysis. Could you elaborate? The analysis seems fine as far as it goes �he problem (IMO, natch) is that it doesn't go far. For example: <...>
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