ALB

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  • in reply to: Additions to MIA Hardy archive #220199
    ALB
    Keymaster

    Added to the Edgar Hardcastle Internet Archive, 8 more articles from the Socialist Stadard of the 1920s:

    The capital levy, August 1923
    Why Socialists Oppose Nationalisation, November 1924
    The Capitalist and his Case, April 1925
    The shorter working day, January 1926
    Shall we emigrate?, July 1926
    The Struggle for World Trade, August 1926
    Personalities and Socialist politics, October 1926
    Is Britain over-populated?, August 1927

    in reply to: Keir Starmer New Labour Party Leader #220185
    ALB
    Keymaster

    ”Socialist Appeal sources argue that they don’t allow anyone to stand against Labour, they always call for a Labour vote . . .”.

    Of course and they will continue to call for a Labour vote even after they’ve been booted out. As other Trotskyist groups that have voluntarily withdrawn from the Labour Party, such as the SWP, always do. In fact “Vote Labour till Doomsday” could almost be said to be a basic tenet of Trotskyism. They certainly behave as if it is.

    The Labour leaders won’t mind. Volunteer vote-catchers for them which they can disclaim responsibility for.

    in reply to: Keir Starmer New Labour Party Leader #220182
    ALB
    Keymaster

    I saw that in the papers this morning. The Times, presumably on the basis of something Labour HQ told its journalists, describes “Socialist Appeal” as “communist”. This is wrong both in terms of the logical meaning of the term (a society based on common ownership of productive resources, what we call socialism) nor in the popular misusage of it (to mean support for Stalin and the overseas agencies called “communist parties” that the rulers of state capitalist Russia sponsored). They are of course our old friends, the Militant Tendency (the relatively honest section that didn’t try to usurp our name). And of course they have been banned before by Neil Kinnock.

    in reply to: More on Brexit #220180
    ALB
    Keymaster

    That seems a reasonable analysis and interpretation. Brexit does seem to have been an issue that interested ordinary non-political people more than the sham Tory/Labour fight at elections. Pity it revealed how narrow-minded most were. But I suppose that was predictable in view of the years and years of patriotic and nationalistic propaganda that people have been subjected to.

    I also noticed, despite the idiot adverts in the link, another point Steve Coleman made:

    “ you have Conservatives up here in the North, who are voting because they think the Conservative Party is going to do what Labour used to do which is spend more on them,”

    They’re in for a shock, not that Labour did much for them either. Isn’t this what in US is called pork barrel politics?

    in reply to: MIA Archive for Gilbert McClatchie #220167
    ALB
    Keymaster

    Three more articles from the Socialist Standard added:

    The Class Struggle, March 1925
    Henry Ford or Karl Marx?, August 1926
    The Mirage in Spain, April 1934

    in reply to: quantitative easing #220150
    ALB
    Keymaster

    QE does cause inflation but limits this to “asset” prices which increases the nominal wealth of “wealthy asset holders” as the House of Lords calls them. It doesn’t seem to do much else.

    MMT would cause a massive and uncontrollable rise in the general price level as in Weimar Germany and present-day Zimbabwe. Only a big player like the US (possibly only the US) could get away with it without too much of this because most of the extra money would be used by other countries.

    QE is not currency crankism. MMT is.

    in reply to: Coronavirus #220143
    ALB
    Keymaster

    Yes, herd immunity is back on the agenda in Britain. The policy is to achieve this by a combination of vaccinating as many as possible and letting the virus rip amongst the unvaccinated who are assumed to be mostly the young and so less likely to end up in hospital and/or die. That way enough people should have enough anti-bodies to keep the virus at bay.

    I hope they know what they are doing as many informed commentators are referring to it as an “experiment”, which suggests that they are not sure whether it will work, ie achieve herd immunity.

    in reply to: Left and Right Unite! – For the UBI Fight! #220142
    ALB
    Keymaster

    I think we should stop calling this sort of scheme UBI and start calling them VBI — very basic income.

    For a start they are not universal (ie not for everyone) and, second, they are just tweaks to the system of how to deal with people who would otherwise be destitute. In other words, a reform of the Poor Law system.

    in reply to: The Cuba Sanctions #220141
    ALB
    Keymaster

    Yes, some people are taking delight in the situation that sanctions has largely brought about. “Sanctions” are an act of war, legalised by the UN charter. They have replaced gunboat diplomacy but their effect on the population of the country attacked is worse.

    in reply to: quantitative easing #220138
    ALB
    Keymaster

    Here’s what the Report says in its own words:

    “We conclude, on balance, that the evidence shows quantitative easing has had limited impact on growth and aggregate demand over the last decade. To stimulate economic growth and aggregate demand, quantitative easing is reliant on a series of transmission mechanisms that operate primarily in and through financial markets. There is limited evidence to suggest that these increase bank lending or investment, or boost consumer spending by wealthy asset holders. (Paragraph 50)

    Quantitative easing is an imperfect policy tool. Its use in 2009, in conjunction with expansionary fiscal policy, prevented a recurrence of the Great Depression and in so doing mitigated the growth of inequalities that evidence shows are exacerbated and deepened during economic downturns. (Paragraph 67)

    However, the mechanisms through which quantitative easing effectively stabilised the financial system following the global financial crisis have benefited wealthy asset holders disproportionately by artificially inflating asset prices. On balance, we conclude that the evidence shows that quantitative easing has exacerbated wealth inequalities. (Paragraph 68)”

    in reply to: quantitative easing #220137
    ALB
    Keymaster

    The report in today’s Times is ever more damning. It says the report says that the only thing QE has done is to increase “asset” price (ie the price of bonds and shares on the stock exchange”) but “has done little for growth, consumer spending and investment during the past decade”

    Another failed attempt to control capitalism and one that has in fact made matters worse. The original idea was to make it easier for firms to invest by supplying them with cheap money. That didn’t work (because it’s the prospect of making a profit not cheap money that moves firms to invest). They brought the horse to water but it didn’t drink.

    Predictably, causing “asset” prices to rise was going to benefit those who own them and the more the more stocks and shares they owned. This has increased inequality (even though the increase in “asset” prices is only a paper increase in wealth not an increase in the real things that make up wealth).

    in reply to: American workers turning right #220083
    ALB
    Keymaster

    Why is it assumed that “American workers” are only “white”? What about the others? They would seem to have turned “left”.

    in reply to: ‘Capitalism’ has become a bad word #220031
    ALB
    Keymaster

    More detail on this latest poll, bringing out what is considered to be “socialism”. Still, it appears that quite a few people under 35 don’t like what they consider to be capitalism.

    “A Forefront Market Research poll commissioned by the IEA of just under 2,000 people aged between 16 and 34 in the UK, carried out between February and March 2021, found that:

    67 per cent say they would like to live in a socialist economic system.

    75 per cent agree with the assertion that climate change is a specifically capitalist problem.

    78 per cent blame capitalism for Britain’s housing crisis.

    72 per cent support the (re)nationalisation of various industries such as energy, water and the railways.

    72 per cent believe that private sector involvement would put the NHS at risk.

    75 per cent agree with the statement that ‘socialism is a good idea, but it has failed in the past because it has been badly done’.”

    No wonder the mad marketeers are having a fit. On the other hand, Publishing scare stories (as far as private corporations are concerned) like this — two in the sane week from two different conservative think tanks — may just be a ploy on their part to drum up more funding from business.

    in reply to: ‘Capitalism’ has become a bad word #220001
    ALB
    Keymaster

    This poll, by the sane Niemietz, claims to show that 67% of young people in Britain would want to live “under a socialist economic system”. Unfortunately, when he explains what “socialism” means, it seems they would prefer to live under state capitalism rather than private capitalism. Anyway here he is being interviewed on GB News:

    in reply to: ‘Capitalism’ has become a bad word #219979
    ALB
    Keymaster

    “Propertarian” would be too wide as it would include feudalism and ancient slave society which were also based on private property.

Viewing 15 posts - 2,836 through 2,850 (of 10,406 total)