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Editorial content |
Submitted by unterschreber on Thursday, 10 April, 2008 - 19:19
Steven Morris (presumably not the New Order drummer) Confirmation that 'Stewart Home' is not alone (so to speak) in populating (anti-)social networking sites with pathological quasi-doubles, incubi, revenants or whatever else. Cornwall police claim that schoolchildren have been 'impersonating paedophiles' on MSN and Bebo chatrooms in an evil plot to scare 'rival'[sic] kids. Are these the same chatrooms that the ever-vigilant, Hardworking Families-friendly Guardian recently warned have had their Family Filters hacked to pieces by precocious but somehow still defenceless infants? And how, exactly, doe subject: Education | Identity | Law | Pathopraxis | Performance | Science Fiction | Web 2.0
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Thursday, 14 February, 2008 - 16:42
Elizabeth Povinelli On the pretext of a child sexual abuse crisis in Australia’s Northern Territory the Howard government passed emergency legislation and prepared a land invasion of aboriginal areas by police, doctors and the army. Elizabeth Povinelli locates this latest state of exception in a wider neoliberal project to impose work and austerity. Images and text box by Benedict Seymour
subject: Australasia | Biopolitics | Drugs | Law | Multiculturalism | Mute Vol 2 #7 | Nationalism | Neoliberal | Policy | Race
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Friday, 8 February, 2008 - 15:13
Javier All immigrants are equal, but some are more equal than others. The introduction of a points-based immigration system in the UK will intensify workers’ vulnerability to the state and employers, reports Javier subject: Globalisation | Government | Immigration | Law | Mute Vol 2 #7
OpenPublishing |
Submitted by unterschreber on Wednesday, 9 January, 2008 - 19:23
Chris Marsden From World Socialist Web Site (http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/jan2008/guar-j09.shtml), a telling example of what 'the real world' means when invoked by government, unions and sympathetic media. The story of a group of women care-workers employed by Cleveland and Redcar council who were forced to turn to 'no win no fee' lawyers after to obtain back-pay withheld through a council-Unison stitch-up. Guess whose side the 'Guardian' was on... subject: Debt | Feminist | Government | Labour Struggles | Law | Media | Money | State
OpenPublishing |
Submitted by unterschreber on Friday, 21 December, 2007 - 22:30
Robert Shrimsley A Peter Linebaugh piece on the Magna Carta auction appeared on Counterpunch a few days ago (http://www.counterpunch.org/linebaugh12152007.html). A columnist in yesterday's FT promptly answered the historian's question, "Yet can liberty be bought or sold?"... The news that David Rubenstein, co-founder of the private equity firm Carlyle, has bought a rare copy of the Magna Carta raises some concerns for the future. subject: History | Law | Private Equity
OpenPublishing |
Submitted by unterschreber on Thursday, 16 August, 2007 - 02:32
Angela Mitropoulos This extract from an unfinished text by Angela Mitropoulos, posted on archive : s0metim3s (http://archive.blogsome.com/2007/08/07/indigenous-land/#comments), gives part of the historical background (which some European readers may have overlooked) to the current military-medical invasion of Aboriginal land in Australia's Northern Territory. Most importantly, the text explains the concrete connection between intervention in the name of 'health' and 'ed subject: Australasia | Class | Energy Resources | Government | History | Law | Mapping | Money | Multiculturalism | New Enclosures | Occupations | Policy | Politics | Precarity | Race | State | Surveillance
OpenPublishing |
Submitted by unterschreber on Wednesday, 15 August, 2007 - 20:54
Richard Walker & Daniel Buck From New Left Review (http://www.newleftreview.org/?page=article&view=2678) some solid statistical evidence -- particularly strong on intersections of national, municipal, private and foreign capital -- for a point that might have seemed to border on truism but apparently is not gasped in mainstream 'China studies: the expansion of Chinese industrial capitalism in the last 20 years can is broadly comparable to the same process in Europe and America in the 19th century, and speculation over notions like 'the paradoxes of market socialism' is useless. (Anyone who doubted this s subject: Asia | Business | Class | Debt | Economics | Finance & Trade | Government | Law | Markets | Money | New Enclosures | Politics | State
OpenPublishing |
Submitted by unterschreber on Thursday, 28 June, 2007 - 00:08
Mick Hume Spiked-online column that describes mass surrender to the health police – or maybe just to middle class aesthetic prejudice – but falls far short of a suitable pitch of outrage. The discontinued Bio-Power Digest calls on non-smokers everywhere to wear symbols of a Pledge to take the Filthy Habit up from July 1. Seeing through the smoking ban subject: Drugs | Government | Law | Libertarian | New Enclosures | Policy | State
OpenPublishing |
Submitted by matthew hyland on Friday, 16 March, 2007 - 02:25
Tao Ruspoli / Peter Linebaugh The Counterpunch video interview with Peter Linebaugh is at: subject: Africa | AntiCapitalist | Central America | Class | Commons | Communism | Europe | Globalisation | History | Identity | Immigration | Insurgency | Labour Struggles | Latin America | Law | Mapping | N. America | Politics | Race
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Thursday, 22 February, 2007 - 11:22
Matthew Hyland Creative and professional class squatters are being lauded in The Financial Times as socially responsible agents of regeneration. Meanwhile, the UK’s market-driven housing crisis is making squatting more necessary and more insecure.
subject: Architecture | Autonomist | Film | Gentrification | Labour Struggles | Law | Media | Occupations | Politics | Precarity | Urbanism
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 5 September, 2006 - 16:37
Demetra Kotouza The spectre of poverty has always been used by the powerful as a stick to goad those wishing to live without working. Here Demetra Kotouza explores the intimate relationship between the management of the pauper and the (re)production of the labourer, overseen by state and philanthropic institutions. Whether stigmatised by the workhouse, cushioned by welfare or patronised by the neoliberal rhetoric of self-help, she argues, the poor are a necessary constant of capitalism subject: History | Labour Struggles | Law | Neoliberal | New Enclosures | NGO | Society | State
OpenPublishing |
Submitted by matthew hyland on Saturday, 8 July, 2006 - 01:11
John Ross Description of the Mexican election circus elaborately suspended by rusty chains and pulleys over the class confrontation summarized by the same author a few days ago (see: Mexico, there's a riot going on, also from 'Counterpunch', posted here last week). Inasmuch as it documents plain facts of fraud whose 'exposure' seems likely to change precisely nothing, perhaps the text can be read as a sort of funeral sermon for the faith in representative democracy recently renewed on Latin America's behalf by Western leftist well-wishers. subject: Conspiracy | Law | Media | N. America | Politics
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Monday, 12 January, 2004 - 00:00
Florian Cramer The fate of OpenContent is starting to resemble a bad joke: how many licenses doesit take to enforce the 'freeness' of certain content? Too many to be funny, as FlorianCramer explains
subject: Intellectual Property | Law | Media
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Sunday, 29 September, 2002 - 23:00
Matthew Hyland
In the border country Swell Maps, "Border Country" (1980) subject: AntiCapitalist | Biopolitics | Class | Immigration | Law | Politics | Post-Autonomist | Race | State
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