ALB

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  • in reply to: Raul Castro lays down the law (of capitalism) #107058
    ALB
    Keymaster

    This is standard stuff in the state capitalist countries and could have been said at any time in the last 50 or so years — and was, even by Che Guevera when he was Minister of Industry.

    in reply to: Nineteen Eighty-Four #107053
    ALB
    Keymaster

    Yes, it was. Orwell did see a parallel between between totaliarian fascism and totalitarian "communism", both of which used the word "socialist". 1984 was a criticism of the CP's fellow travellers. For more on Ingsoc see here:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ingsoc

    in reply to: Russell Brand and Nigel Farage on Question Time tonight. #106829
    ALB
    Keymaster
    Socialist Punk wrote:
    If Brand starts to promote anti-semitic ideas and fascism, then I think it would be safe to conclude he is a dickhead.

    I think the basis of this accusation is his taking some of David Icke's ideas seriously, the New Age spiritual mumbo jumbo not the stuff about shape-shifting lizards and some Jewish world conspiracy. There is also the Laurence Easeman incident. Brand met Easeman at one of the housing protests he was supporting and invited him to speak at his book lauch without realising that Easeman was an out-and-out fascist. Naturally there was an outcry and Easeman didn't speak. I'd put this down to Brand's political naivety. Brand can be criticised for  things many (his New Age spirituality for one, his rejection of class struggle for another) but not for being anti-semitic.The Easeman incident does have a political lesson in that it brings out that it is not only leftists but also rightists who denounce bankers and get involved in social activism. In other words, another illustration that social activism does not automatically not lead to socialist understanding (as some of Brand's anarchist and direct-actionist pals claim) but that the case for socialism has to be expressed explicitly.

    in reply to: Russell Brand and Nigel Farage on Question Time tonight. #106822
    ALB
    Keymaster

    Just come back from the pub myseld. Don't catho;ics call christmas the Feast of the Consumption?

    in reply to: Designs for proposed new Head Office signage #90318
    ALB
    Keymaster

    It looks as if Alan's dream of turning Head Office into a cafe and events centre has already been achieved:https://www.facebook.com/revolution.clapham?fref=ts

    in reply to: Russell Brand and Nigel Farage on Question Time tonight. #106813
    ALB
    Keymaster

    Actually, I agree that celebrity intervention probably does help to spread anti-capitalist ideas.  As another comrade put it on our facebook page:

    Quote:
    I don't think Brand is a 'diversion' for the working class, because he speaks with little or no authority and is not presenting a coherent philosophy. I think it's his very woolliness that makes him useful. What he does appear to be doing is giving many people permission to open up to and consider certain ideas and perspectives which they may not have done before. I could be wrong but I doubt whether Brand will survive for very long as a political figure. I suspect, though, that before he goes he will have planted a lot of seeds in people's minds where they did not exist before, seeds that have the potential to be developed into something more coherent than he is offering. Ideas don't spread through society in a simple, closely boundaried way, they evolve and change. They all, though, need to have a taking-off point.
    in reply to: Russell Brand and Nigel Farage on Question Time tonight. #106811
    ALB
    Keymaster
    alanjjohnstone wrote:
    I have no pat answers to offer. I don't know how we can change the discussion. But i think Solidarity had it generally right.

    Quote:
    Meaningful action, for revolutionaries, is whatever increases the confidence, the autonomy, the initiative, the participation, the solidarity, the equalitarian tendencies and the self -activity of the masses and whatever assists in their demystification. Sterile and harmful action is whatever reinforces the passivity of the masses, their apathy, their cynicism, their differentiation through hierarchy, their alienation, their reliance on others to do things for them and the degree to which they can therefore be manipulated by others – even by those allegedly acting on their behalf.

    This should be guiding our attitude as regards Russel Brand and other things such as some in the environmental campaign, Zeitgeist and many others.

    In the discussion raging on the Urban 75 forum about him, apart from his dodgy past on sexual behaviour, the main criticism of him is that as a celebrity endorsing struggles he is undermining "the autonomy, the participation, the solidarity, the equalitarian tendencies and the self-activity" of those engaged in grass-roots struggles. According to the critics, this applies to all celebrity endorsements. I'm not sure that it necessarily does. It could help publicise the struggle and would depend on the attitude and perhaps the character and reputation of the celebrity. But that's a side issue.I'm not sure either that Solidarity's definition of "meaningful action" is one "for revolutionaries". It's more for those involved in day-to-day struggles of various sorts within capitalism and, for that, is in line with what say — that these should be conducted democratically by those immediately involved. But Solidarity and most of the critics on Urban 75 believe that "the revolution" will emerge from these struggles while we don't. Of course the political struggle for socialism should be conducted on the same basis but we are not there yet. We are still involved in the battle of ideas. So, at the moment, it is from this perspective that Brand's intervention (and in fact of any other celebrity) should be judged: does it promote the spread of anti-capitalist ideas or impede them?

    in reply to: Party X #97118
    ALB
    Keymaster

    Here is Pablo Iglesias having a go at the traditional Leninist left:https://www.jacobinmag.com/2014/12/pablo-iglesias-podemos-left-speech/He makes some telling points (though he'd probably say something similar about us). The trouble is the type of "possibilist", "realistic" approach he is advocating has failed to deliver too.

    in reply to: An Open Letter to Russell Brand #106687
    ALB
    Keymaster

    I don't know what this is but Clifford says you can vote for (or against) the Open Letter here:http://opnlttr.com/letter/open-letter-russell-brand-his-book-revolutionor tweet it or whatever people do.

    in reply to: CND protest ! #106915
    ALB
    Keymaster

    And here's our leaflet for demonstrations like this one:http://socialismoryourmoneyback.blogspot.co.uk/2009/10/protests-without-end.html

    in reply to: Climate change ! #106917
    ALB
    Keymaster

    I think this article was turned into a leaflet for demonstrations like this. Don't know if there are any still around:http://www.worldsocialism.org/spgb/socialist-standard/2000s/2008/no-1247-july-2008/too-little-too-late

    in reply to: Russell Brand and Nigel Farage on Question Time tonight. #106807
    ALB
    Keymaster

    Actually, it does say something but it doesn't say it all. The two statements could be true. I think they probably are true, i.e she does care and is endeavouring (though not succeeding) to improve things for people.  Not that it makes any difference. Sincere reformists can do no better at trying to make capitalism work for the majority than self-seeking ones.

    in reply to: North East Regional Branch #100596
    ALB
    Keymaster

    Was the meeting interrupted for the Newcastle Sunderland match?

    in reply to: Russell Brand and Nigel Farage on Question Time tonight. #106799
    ALB
    Keymaster
    jondwhite wrote:
    Bet Farage gets more votes than Brand at the next election.

    Not if Brand is able to count non-voters as his.

    in reply to: Ian Birchall ex-SWP #106912
    ALB
    Keymaster

    I knew him when we were both students in 1962 and went to the "International Socialism" meetings he mentions. He's a decent bloke. We always said hello to each other when we bumped into each at demonstrations.I have just read all the way through the article and of the various "turns" which it has been suggested led to the SWP's degeneration, I'd put the one in 1968 when IS (as it then still was) decided to consciously become an organisation based on Leninist organisational principles.What struck me is Birchall's continuing adherence to the idea of leadership:

    Quote:
    … a revolutionary leadership needs to know what is going on in the working class. It cannot do this by reading the Financial Times, it has to listen to comrades who have roots in different sections of the class and who can report on what is happening on the ground. As Cliff argued: “… they have to learn from their fellow workers as much as – or more than – they have to teach. To repeat, the job is to lead, and to lead you have to thoroughly understand those you are leading. Leadership is a two-way process….many see the party leadership as the repository of doctrine, of theory, of organisational skill and knowledge. Of course it has to be all these things to some degree. But mainly it has to be the most apt learner, the most sensitive ear and the firmest will.”[emphasis added]

    and also his description of how the "slate" system of election worked and its consequences:

    Quote:
    Yet all too often we have allowed democratic mechanisms which are quite adequate on paper to fall into disuse. Back in the eighties, when strong branch committees existed, the branch committee would nominate a slate of conference delegates. While it was obviously possible for members to nominate an alternative slate, this was frowned on, and in practice was relatively rare. I recall a chairperson telling us the agenda for a branch meeting and saying “and then the conference delegates will be announced”. In practice he was right – this was what usually happened.
    Quote:
    However recent events have shown the limitations of the slate system. It has become a means whereby the CC can indefinitely propose itself for re-election, co-opting approved individuals as it goes. Moreover, a career path has now clearly emerged – comrades, generally former students, become full-timers, and if they are successful, they rise in the apparatus and become CC members. Thus we get a CC almost entirely composed of people who have spent most of their political life as full-timers and have very limited experience of work or trade unionism.

    One passage I liked and which we can use against all those who think in terms on confronting the state:

    Quote:
    Neither the SWP nor any other group on the British far left could confront a bunch of drunken football hooligans, let alone a bourgeois state.

    He also repeats immediately following this passage the quote he gave in another article from the Statement of Principles of the Hammersmith Socialist Society:

    Quote:
    The important thing at present is the battle of ideas; as William Morris put it, “it should be our special aim to make Socialists”.

    Which is what I tried to tell him in 1962 !

Viewing 15 posts - 7,801 through 7,815 (of 10,408 total)