• 0 Posts
  • 10 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
cake
Cake day: June 8th, 2023

help-circle

  • Ukraine’s strategy is to expel the invader and ask for any and all assistance in the defense of their country from Russia’s war of conquest.

    Ukraine is not a sovereign country. Its affairs are dictated by the Western countries that pushed Euromaidan, selected its subsequent president, ensured the failure of Minsk II, and now support endless war to the last Ukrainian. So far as I can tell, there is not much strategy to Ukraine outside of “keep fighting”, and their overall strategy has been absolutely desolating for the population, throwing people into meat grinder after meat grinder, which Russia finds an acceptable status quo.

    All of the help from Poland, the UK, the US, Baltics, Germany, and other European countries is massively appreciated.

    Is it appreciated by those being forcefully conscripted? What about the majorities who want a negotiated peace? Perhaps they do, but don’t let this get in the way of understanding that endless escalation and war is not popular, and this is nevertheless what is happening.

    More is requested and it’s good to see the UK is stepping up in a much bigger way to assist in their defense.

    If you had read the article, you would know that it’s about (1) austerity cuts justified by (2) general fund increased “defense” spending, not specifically for Ukraine-based arms. The only mention of Ukraine is Starmer’s unhinged comments about potentially sending troops to Ukraine, i.e. NATO member troops to Ukraine, which is, again, only an escalation.

    As I already mentioned, the goal of endless arms to Ukraine is one of escalation and using Ukrainians as fodder against Russia, not actually helping the country. The country is already ruined, it has been sold off to these OECD countries for a song (or for “defense”, as the propaganda term would put it). Some “aid”, getting UA’s land and industries in return! Some “aid”, i.e. loans with interest!






  • Yes but he’s doing it in a way that is not a threat to the ruling class and arguably even helps it. They like it when people that would otherwise radicalize adopt a false catharsis of arriving at nice-sounding conclusions with no concrete actions to take. They also like the implicit nationalism in his selective telling of history. They will also like his hand-waving away of “left vs. right” about anything that isn’t explicitly labeled economic, as rather than forcing a focus on the political economic basis of oppression and poverty, it lends itself to a liberal class reductionism where you cannot align your thoughts and demands with those marginalized and oppressed at the behest of the ruling class. “The culture war” is not just distracting rhetoric, it directs violence and oppression. It is a false consciousness for those who follow it and do the oppressing, e.g. racists, but it is generally not that for the oppressed, it is, for example, poverty and alienation and exclusion and internalized racism.

    Presenting it like Gary has done fails to reach the correct synthesis, again likely because of his poor understanding of history, politics, and economics, and it creates a choice for the marginalized who listen. Do they:

    • Just try to look past it, seeing yet another guy that mostly doesn’t get it but has useful tidbits?

    • Buy in and begin denying their own experiences and robbing their politics of oppression that is not explicitly economic?

    • Reject him as someone dismissive of oppression and their experience?

    I am normally pretty charitable with people trying to spread even vague class consciousness but Gary’s ignorant, liberal, and reductionist form tends to backfire on top of being incorrect.


  • The core motivation is more or less correct, as is the base of the analysis: the political duopolies in the UK and US are a reflection of ruling class interests and preside over policies that pick your pocket.

    But it is robbed of its essential political economic essence via an anemic look at history and politics, and the biggest indicator of this is that the only “solution” provided suggests a liberal policy outcome (“tax the rich”) without any vehicle for doing so. You can also see how detached this is from the actusl mechanisms of struggle and geopolitics, as he describes your great-great grandparents as being poor and the only reason things got better was that people voted for taxing the rich and voting for the NIH, etc. Were the politicians of yore not beholden to ruling class interests? If not, why not? It is easy to say, “oh they just had different opinions” without questioning why they carried weight or why ruling class politicians would capitulate or why there were parties not fully aligned with the immediare interests of the ruling class that were permitted to exist. There was no discussion of colonialism or neocolonialism, imperialism, the primary source of differential wealth for the OECD countries. There was no discussion of the historical development of the welfare state and what powers were at play, the role played by labor, the role played by imperialists getting shamed by socialist-run countries and made to fear their iwn workers doing the same.

    There was no real discussion of what Starmer and his faction represent, which is not “sensibilism”, they are just a bulwark against the left. Starmer is the punch left, he does not have any real policy changes outside of placating his TERF base and he will turn (and increasingly has) turned on immigrants. Starmer is in power because ruling class interests aligned with taking down Corbyn and his faction. They threw their entire media apparatus at him with bullshit accusations of antisemitism and turned this into a loss and a purge if the left, such as it is, from labour. Starmer’s faction led that charge internally. How would “vote to tax the rich” ever contend with that? Your votes are fptp and subject to a duopoly. You at least require the death or subjugation of labour by a new party, something that requires much more than voting. It requires organizing an institution not beholden to ruling class interestd, an organization that will oppose them, and that requires having an anti-capitalist program, not a “tax the rich” slogan.