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Submitted by Mavis on Wednesday, 23 April, 2008 - 15:10
Glen Ford re-posting from the [reclaim-spaces] list, originally in Black Agenda Report Tear Down the Ghetto: The Price is Wrong What the misanthropic Jenkins calls a "small mental adjustment" is subject: Economics | Epidemic | Fictitious Capital | Financial Crisis | Slums | War
OpenPublishing |
Submitted by unterschreber on Friday, 18 April, 2008 - 20:06
Gary Leupp Overview of the maoist victory in the Nepalese Constitutent Assembly election by long-term observer and sympathiser Gary Leupp, a US academic and regular Counterpunch (www.counterpunch.org) contributor. It's not necessary to agree with Leupp that the maoists stand for 'communism' to recognize that the election result represents a major strategic success for the provisionally demilitarized 'people's war' and a geopolitical upheaval at the borders of India (where the Naxalite maoists continue to wage war) and China. More open to question, perhaps, is Leupp's claim that the event is overlooked or unreportable in Western media. The FT ran a remarkably positive full-page feature the day before yesterday, followed up yesterday with renewed emphasis on Party assurances the immediate agenda is not 'socialism' but the replacement of 'feudalism' with 'capitalist development'. (This is what Leupp says too, and it's the only part of his article to be criticised on the Kasama maoist website, where the article is reproduced (http://mikeely.wordpress.com/).) Incidentally, the article is tagged 'site-specific' (as in 'art') here because the maoists say they want to put a red flag on Mt. Everest that's big enough to see from the moon. subject: Asia | Government | Insurgency | Site-Specific | Strategy | War
OpenPublishing |
Submitted by unterschreber on Monday, 24 March, 2008 - 02:53
Private Eye (In the Back section) From Private Eye, a brief update on the lie detector system soon to be used across the UK on suspected 'benefit thieves'*, i.e. all claimants. The system comes from Mossad, but what's really alarming is that it is administered by scorched-earth PFI war machine Capita. subject: Biopolitics | Class | Identity | Information | Policy | Precarity | Psychology | State | Surveillance | Technology | War | Other
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 28 November, 2007 - 15:33
Angela Mitropoulos The notion of the 'failed state' is recurrently invoked to justify military and security interventions. Reviewing two books which take so-called failed states in Africa and South America as their object of enquiry, Angela Mitropoulos questions the founding premises of 'successful' national sovereignty subject: Africa | Government | Insurgency | Latin America | Nationalism | Politics | Postcolonial | War | War on Terror
Editorial content |
Submitted by unterschreber on Wednesday, 15 August, 2007 - 21:36
Vijay Prashad In 'Lobster' 53 Robin Ramsay notes that the US 'military-industrial complex', in its perpetual need to generate enemies, "has just landed a big one: Africa". While the Bush administration has created the long-lobbied for Unified Command for Africa, it's the NGOs, Hollywood liberals, Clinton functionaries and other sundry 'multilateralists' of the Save Darfur Coalition who are leading the charge. subject: Africa | Energy Resources | Occupations | Oil | Strategy | War
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 15 August, 2007 - 15:28
Andrea Brady Our country's enemies snore in the safety catch, in the neighbourhood which is just their accessorydream about owning everything, like achenes they take to the air to advertise their species. What viewer could believe themthat a locum spirit floats life through it, connecting all in death and harmony,that there is a god for forces: in spring he’s allergic to their fuzzy fertility, a diverse countryblots moving randomly in vacuums which are actually everywhere full of water, and so full of life.
subject: Finance & Trade | Literature | Markets | Poetry | War
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 8 August, 2007 - 15:05
Nick Brooks This year Europe has experienced what has been touted as 'the summer of art'. With the rare cyclical alignment of the Venice Biennale, Art Basel, Documenta 12 and Munster Skulptur Projekte, organisers of the four events have collaborated on a website [www.grandtour2007.com] to help coordinate the itineraries of those jet-set art lovers that would follow in the edifying footsteps of their 18th Century precursors. In 2007 Art has never been so big and apparently neither have the wallets of those stalking it. subject: Art | Europe | Globalisation | Politics | Regions | Relational Aesthetics | War | War on Terror
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