Monday, November 11, 2024

Lifestyles of the Poor and Alienated

 “Living a Marxist Life: Why Marx is a Drug You Should Probably Take” by Andrew Pendakis, 2024

On the cover of the book is a picture of Che looking like a hipster, reading Goethe.  This is a ‘cool’ book from a cultural angle that turns being a Marxist into becoming some kind of hip intellectual and activist. It’s a work about what Pendakis thinks of as a subculture and lifestyle, an almost declasse boho strata, a romantic cohort of cosmopolitans who know the real truth. Pendakis is an Associate Professor at Brock University in Canada, yet his father was a truck driver and his home-life religious.  He imbibed this negative class lesson into his angle, so shopping, work, a house, family, love, careerism and money are all approached with irony, alienation and ambivalence through a Marxist lens.  The book is aimed at young people – or precisely ‘students’ – and so being hip is essential to his ‘drug’ dealing.

It’s not based on a survey of the many different types of Marxists across the world or prior books or studies about being a Communist - it’s a work of informed imagination.  That information is gleaned from the work of hundreds of famous or prominent Marxist revolutionaries, activists and academics, the ones he constantly lists – people like Adorno, Badiou, Benjamin, Ghodsee, Luxemburg and Zizek.  It is not clear he’s in a socialist organization or been in class combat.  The book only intersects with those experiences – which seem to be essential to actual Marxism – in the last chapter. He once calls Lenin and Engels ‘vulgar’ Marxists, but he did use quote marks on the word ‘vulgar.’ He’s a good writer, with many clever turns of phrase, and jokes at capital’s expense. He over-emphasizes, then auto-corrects like a zig-zag train. And he needs an editor in this chatty book.  So what has he got to say?

In his celebration of alienation, he thinks Marxists do as little on an employed job as possible.  However, as anyone who has actually worked for a long time in a blue, service or white collar occupation knows – lazy or incompetent people get no respect, usually because this impacts their co-workers.  It doesn’t matter how ‘brilliant’ they are or how pro-union.  They’re seen as sad dicks.  This is part of his flawed description of Marxists as knowing hipsters, though that type certainly exists too.  As Vivian Gornick pointed out in her book “The Romance of American Communism” party members were from many ‘walks’ of life, though most were poor or working class but also included artists, the middle class and intellectuals.  She said “there was not one CP type.”  (“Romance” reviewed below.)  My contact with older, organized Marxists from the 1970s to today shows many were union people, some were down and outs, some profs, but solid and established comrades.  This is unlike the generations coming up now as the ‘Boomer’ good times slide away.  ‘Who’ is a Marxist changes depending on what historical stage a society is at.

Pendakis makes a point about the enormous and omnivorous intellectual influence of Marxism in many fields – sociology, geography, politics, history, anthropology, psychology, environmental and natural sciences, culture, military studies, political economy, philosophy, religion even cosmology.  No wonder the Right wants to shut down universities outside of the business school and the technical or hard sciences and focus high school only on the 3 ‘Rs’. This is because Marxists are autodidacts – always learning; and because Marxism is a holistic method of actuality and flux that recognizes few barriers.  In this context he objects to simplified bumper-sticker / Facebook© thinking, to repetition, reduction and the bureaucratized groupthink of the Stalinized Communist Parties in the Twentieth century, as it mitigates against Marxist methods. Marxism is a method and mentality clearly not frozen in amber, much as some wish it so.

Wadya' smokin' boys?

Pendakis spends a long time on how Marxism is in a deep sense true – an almost ‘documentary’ vision of the world, not one clogged by veils, lies, ideology, intentional blindness or complacent comfort.  It reads like a pat on the back for all us Reds.  He paints it not as a dark vision but believes that knowledge and clarity are their own rewards.  This insight he gained out of a depressing working-class childhood and then brought it into the professional academic arena.  Instead he makes a plea for anger, a very un-academic recommendation.  Liberals and technocrats see politics as “little more than rational conversation” (Ha!) so rage is the province of thugs and crazy people. Religion and yoga want to banish anger too. Pendakis sees it as fuel for action if properly directed and applied creatively.  This is nothing new of course.

According to Pendakis, liberals identify rage with fascism, which makes Marxists … fascists.  As historically stupid as this co-identification may be, it’s a lie told to maintain immediate control.  Marx’s own combativeness is held against him, though it was to sharpen his own theories and defeat opponents – an intellectual version of the class war. In this context Pendakis keeps on mentioning Zizek’s clever demolition of the lazy thinking of Canadian conservative Jordan Peterson, who seems to be his bĂȘte noire. 

Pendakis finishes with a discussion of organization.  He describes the dedication of a Maoist in 1962 trying to reconstruct a city in China and an Adivasi Naxalite guerilla in India - both to show that hard conditions can be the most fulfilling to a socialist.  In the process he dismisses Maoism as a product of its time and place, and guerilla war as almost extinct. In this context he points out that Marxists have repeatedly been the subject of anti-communist pogroms in many countries, so ‘courage’ is one of the ingredients of being one.  He says he’s a supporter of some kind of Leninist party, but describes all the other forms of organizations Marxists might participate in – unions, cooperatives, united fronts, specific activist organizations, community and ad hoc groups.  His definition of “Marxist’ here is broad – actually including anarchists and unions, with a nod to social-democrats and others in a ‘big’ church.  He does a non-specific roundup of debates between socialists over the possibility of revolution, the nature of socialism, the question of violence and the overwhelming need for organized politics as part of a ‘spiritual’ atheistic Marxism. He makes a passionate plea for a Marxist morality but most of all, for the value of a politically organized life against individual or performative isolation.    

Will this book win over the kids?  Pendakis is obviously a highly literate writer with an intimate knowledge of various philosophers, so ‘headier’ youth might be recruited to join a Marxist subculture.  But as they say, acts speak louder than words.  Profs are impressive to students, but not so much to others.  This book itself is hard to get through because of its somewhat endless, rambling and repetitive nature, along with its tiny print. Nevertheless it is a good introduction - for some - to the “constantly expanding theoretical universe” of Marxism – being personal without being too theoretical after all.   

Prior blog reviews on this subject, use blog search box, upper left, to investigate our 17 year archive, using this term:  Marxism.”    

And I bought it at May Day Books!

Red Frog / November 11, 2024

Celebrate Armistice Day!

Friday, November 8, 2024

A Friggin' Saint

“Vera Drake” film by Mike Leigh, 2004

This is a realist, ‘kitchen-sink’ film about providing secret abortions in London in 1950.  Abortion, like it was in the U.S., was against the law at the time.  So it’s view of our future in a bunch of states in the U.S., if not the whole country.  Vera Drake is a kind and happy working class woman who takes care of her ailing mother and a sick neighbor, works in a light-bulb factory, works as a cleaner for a wealthy woman and takes care of her family by cooking and cleaning. A spot of tea and cheerfulness are her methods. She’s a friggin’ saint.

Vera’s motivation towards the various women she works with is to help them, a kindness when they are overwhelmed with too many children already, were raped, are destitute or can’t handle a child at their young age.  She uses a solution pumped into the uterus that produces a miscarriage, which is disposed of in the toilet.  Her methods have worked for years.  She does not take money and treats this as an act of charity and concern.  She works with another woman who connects her to the pregnant, who collects 87 pounds in 2023 money from each.

Eventually one of the women gets sick and goes to the hospital where the miscarriage is thought to be suspicious.  The police get involved and eventually they trace it back to Vera.  Vera is totally cowed by the court and is tried and sent to prison with a longer 2.5 year sentence as a legal warning to others.  The sentence is carried out based on an archaic law – the “Offences Against The Person Act” of 1861.  There she meets other women also in the stir for the same ‘crime.’  They tell her she will get out sooner than that.

A gut punch of a film, as her family did not know about her secret activities. Vera is only dimly aware of the illegality of what she is doing. The cruelty of the austere police system towards these women is obvious.  There is no happy ending – except that in 1967 most abortions were made legal in the U.K. up to 22 weeks.  They were based on a ‘risk to woman’s mental health,’ along with threats to the mother’s physical health, or that the child will suffer from physical or mental disabilities.  This is six years before the U.S. national Roe v Wade decision.  The NHS provides the care for free. Scotland and Wales followed English law in 1967.  Northern Ireland liberalized their laws in 2019 upon a decree of the U.K. Parliament, as the prior government had been under the control of the ‘Democratic’ Unionist Party of conservative High-Church Tories.

Mike Leigh is one of the best proletarian filmmakers in the U.K., who along with Ken Loach nearly always produces films of gravity and social realism.  The blog has reviewed two of his films: “High Hopes” about working-class Lefties under Thatcherism and “Mr. Turner,” about the idiosyncratic impressionist painter J.M.W Turner.

Prior blog reviews on this subject, use blog search box, upper left, to investigate our 17 year archive, using these terms:  “Abortion,” ‘Without Apology,” “Obstacle Course,” “Abortion Referendum in Ireland,” “Fetal,” “Let’s Rent a Train!,” “Marxism & Women’s Liberation,” "High Hopes," "Mr. Turner."

The Cultural Marxist / November 8, 2024

Tuesday, November 5, 2024

The Great Dictator

 “The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui,” by Bertolt Brecht, 1941. Adapted, 2016. Frank Theater Reading

Frank Theater’s planned production of this play at one of their movable sites didn’t happen, so instead they staged a free reading at the St. Thomas College Library in St. Paul, MN, USA. It is an adaptation of Brecht’s original play about the rise of fascism in Germany, now fitted to respond to the rise of Trump in 2016.  I’m not sure the adaptation worked, but then I do not have a copy of each play before me.  Nor did anyone else. Certainly lines were inserted into the text that reference quotes by Trump, or allude to him and the MAGA movement. 

2013, Duchess Theater

Arturo Ui (Hitler) in this satire is a Depression-era gangster in Chicago in the 1930s who liquidates anyone who opposes him in his quest to take over the “Cauliflower Trust” (Really the German Junkers and the petit-bourgeoisie) in the city.  The Trust is all of the town’s vegetable dealers, so the whole bourgeois segment of society. He’s sort of an Al Capone on the surface.  In the process he corrupts a powerful Chicago city council person (really von Hindenberg), every vegetable dealer, liquidates a newspaper man (The Chancellor of Austria); and blames others for his crew’s arson and shootings – all part of his protection racket.  He manages to get a huge loan from the city to build a dock and the Trust steals all the money, based on a real scandal in Germany about aid to eastern farmers that was stolen by Junker landowners.  The gang (Nazi Party) and two of its prominent leaders (Goebbels and Goring) resort to continual lies, fabrications and plots. Then the complicated story expands to Cicero (Austrian Anschluss), a formerly notorious mob hangout near Chicago.  Ui pretends to be diplomatic at all times, yet finds himself killing his closest confidant (Ernest Rohm, leader of the Brownshirts) as he’s fearful of anyone opposing him.

The humor, satire and sarcasm are engaging, the unctuous blather obvious, the occasional rhyming dialog great, the frequent crude swearing somewhat shocking even to me.  The machine-gun killings are repetitive but I guess that is the point.  The key link between Trump and Ui is that both pledge to protect the ‘good people’ from evil – criminals, immigrants, Commies, labor people, Jews, Muslims, demons, what have you.  This when the real problems are being caused by Ui and Trump’s allies, who do things like light vegetable warehouses on fire (Reichstag fire).  Blaming others for your own crimes to hide the real perps is the method.  It’s the projection of fear onto ‘the Other’ - Jews, communists, gays, Gypsies, Mexicans, Blacks, Haitians, Chinese, trans people.  It is a purely emotional tactic playing on identity and obscuring real power. 

So the question becomes political in this version – is Trump a fascist like Hitler? Some Democratic leaders now seem to think so. Certainly he has fascist allies on the Christian Dominionist Right, in the various militias, in the bellicose podcast milieu, in MAGA.  The 3%ers, the Proud Boys, the Oath Keepers are all mobilized, armed and threatening anyone who gets in their way. Yet fascism’s full control of state power requires the adherence of the majority of the ruling class and the military, neither of which he will have or need if he wins.  Trump can still wreak havoc even without full state power.  At least that is their plan.

Trump’s actually a demagogic authoritarian who will use threats, presidential power, legislative power and police power to carry out the aims of his right-wing capitalist backers, as shown in Project 2025.  Orban’s Hungary is the ‘democratic’ ethno-state that they aspire to ape. He won’t need to kill every enemy, or jail them, as did Hitler or Ui.  He will use the U.S. judiciary, journalists, police, educational institutions, church and military powers instead.  His base in the South is already moving in that direction.  Whether he can achieve that nationally is another matter. The resistance of the advanced elements of the working class will make all the difference to defeat any moves towards more authoritarianism.  This is a group which is not mentioned in the text, as the ‘resistance’ inferred by the title – ‘Resistible’ - does not have a parallel in the play except for a tough investigator in Chicago. Evidently the audience is the resistance, which in this case was full of mostly older liberals, sad to say.   

Frank Theater will possibly put on the full play in the spring or summer.

Prior blogspot reviews on this subject, use blog search box, upper left, to investigate our 17 year archive, using these terms: “Fetal,” “Things of Dry Hours,” “Love and Information,” “The Cradle Will Rock,” “The Convert,” “Revolt. Revolt She Said. Revolt Again,” The Good Person of Setzuan,” “The Visit,” (All plays by Frank Theater); or the words ‘fascism,’ ‘Trump’ or ‘Hitler.’  

The Kultur Kommissar / November 5, 2024       

Saturday, November 2, 2024

The Social Geography of Harlem

 “Harlem Shuffle” by Colson Whitehead, 2021

There’s a 1963 R&B song called “The Harlem Shuffle.”  In a way there’s some literary ‘swing’ in this book too – the sights and sounds of early 1960s Harlem in the characters that tread the streets and work the dives, the not so hidden chorus of money, power, violence and theft, the African-American songs of life and ire.  Carney is a high-end furniture shop owner in Harlem that cannot escape his father’s criminal background.  He lives in two worlds, while maintaining he’s on the up and up all the time.  He’s a small-time fence for stolen goods, with connections to bigger ‘jewelers’ downtown, but you wouldn’t know that from his impressive showroom packed with fancy couches and dining sets. 

Other than the buyers and young couples that come in looking for a new settee or love seat, there are scheming prostitutes, crooked cops, dueling criminal operations, drug markets and a steady stream of thieves and thugs.  It’s also an examination of the class structure in Harlem, especially the “Dumas Club” full of the bankers, real estate moguls, politicians and businessmen that really ran Harlem in 1959-1964. Poverty is also evident, people all over scrambling to make a dime. This contrast is for those who don’t understand class even in a ‘minority’ community.  You might note that last date, because that is when the Harlem Rebellion happened, an event that tore the neighborhood apart and was avoided by both the petit-bourgeois rich and lumpen thug alike.  Like so many others, it started when a pale face cop shot a dark-skinned 15 year old for nothing.  Whitehead’s political take on it however is vague, given the players he has chosen to focus on.  No Malcolm X, no Bill Epton, no Progressive Labor, just short mentions of CORE, the Muslims and the NAACP. 

Whitehead knows the streets, from Lenox Avenue, 125th Street, Striver’s Row to Riverside Drive, the old, shabby businesses and the still existing Apollo Theater.  Even Mt. Morris Park where the bodies are dumped.  In a way its a nostalgic description of those times.  It was in 1959 at the upscale and still existing legendary Hotel Theresa that Carney is dragged into a criminal robbery by his ne’er-do-well boyhood cousin Freddie.  It is one of three criminal events that Whitehead gets Carney involved in.  Another risky moment is him getting a wealthy and powerful Manhattan family’s huge jewel dumped on him to hold, also by Freddie. This bit gives a window into the power of the ‘white’ rich downtown and Park Avenue real estate developers who have criminals, cops and politicians at their beck and call.  But most sweet is his complicated plot to torpedo a rich and crooked banker in the Dumas Club who took $500 from him on a lie.     

The story is also a depiction of ‘black’ small business and middle-class success. It’s another Horatio Alger tale, like so many. Carney expands his shop, hires more help, moves from his crowded apartment to Riverside Drive, and even contemplates giving up fencing, as his wife Elizabeth has a good job at the Black Star travel company. He’s finally admitted to the private Dumas Club, which he’d been wanting to get into for 5 years.  What he has to hide is the $30K in seed money he used to start his furniture store – money from one of his dead father’s robberies.  So the intertwining of legal and illegal success is clear in Harlem.  Harlem is a geography of hidden and obvious wealth and crime.

Whitehead is not a political writer, though his prior book “Nickel Boys” (reviewed below) exposed a racist reform school in Florida called the Dozier School.  He’s more of a sociologist and a humanist, with heroes and villains, with people who change, tracing how society functioned in Harlem at the time.  To my mind there seem to be a surfeit of criminals in this story, and other than many dark skinned ladies working proletarian jobs, a dearth of males doing the same thing.  Everyone's a hustler? ‘Crime’ stories capture readers nowadays, as it is the main axis of fiction, streaming and TV – detective, noir, heist, assassin, cop, murder, sexual violence, true crime, high tech swindles, serial killers and the like. Perhaps that is his method of getting readers to read about Harlem, which might reinforce preconceived bigoted ideas.  It is an early picture of late-stage U.S. capitalism, including it’s strivers, as it disintegrates into inequality, poverty and racism. 

Prior blogspot reviews on this subject, use blog search box, upper left, to investigate our 17 year archive, using these terms: “The Nickel Boys” (Whitehead); “Amiable With Big Teeth” (McKay); “Summer of Soul” (Questlove); “How to be a Revolutionary,” “Really the Blues” (Mezzrow); “Go Tell It on the Mountain” (Baldwin); “A Terrible Thing to Waste,” “Red Hook Summer” (Lee); “Black Radical” (Peery); “Capitalist Shadows.”

The Nickel Boys will soon be a movie.

The Cultural Marxist / November 2, 2024

Wednesday, October 30, 2024

Who Rules the World Again?

 “The Titans of Capital – How Concentrated Wealth Threatens Humanity," by Peter Phillips, 2024

This is an update of Phillips’ excellent 2018 book, “Giants – the Global Power Elite,” also reviewed on this blog.  It shows that capital and power controlled by the transnational capitalist class (TCC) has grown since then to $50 Trillion under management, especially after the CoVid epidemic. The number of billionaires and millionaires has also increased. It indicates extreme world poverty has grown since that epidemic, to 700 million.  Here Phillips concentrates on the 117 people who are on the board of directors of the top 10 world money-management firms, all located in the U.S. or Europe.  He shows how they are also involved in government, non-profits, educational institutions, charities, top political and economic bodies, the military, CIA and more.  Overall there are now 31 firms that manage at least $1 Trillion in assets.

This sample provides a look into the “Davos” set – 65% of them attended Davos – and their poisonous effect on wars, climate change, inequality, democracy and poverty. This group is fully aware of the problems of capital worldwide and has endorsed the Davos/World Economic Forum’s toothless ESG program of Environmental, Social and Governance standards.  Phillips includes their names, affiliations and wealth, almost as if the book is a spreadsheet of power. His book is essentially a plea for the TCC to stop the wheels of capital and instead work and spend to halt the damage, much like Nader once proposed.  This is another guy whose touchstone is the 1948 U.N. Universal Declaration of Human Rights.  Who thinks this kind of begging is going to work?  It’s his version of a petition to the new Czars.

The INTERNATIONAL BOURGEOISIE

The top ten firms are, in order:  Blackrock, Vanguard, UBS (Swiss), Fidelity, State Street, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan Chase, Amundi (France), Allianz/PIMCO (Germany), Capital Group.  The ‘vampire squid’ Goldman Sachs is #11.  Among their holdings these firms own positions in war industries, tobacco, alcohol, firearms, gambling, private prisons, carbon firms, pipeline entities, plastics, fast food – all harmful industries in some way. Phillips lists their investments in each.   For instance Blackrock and Vanguard hold $95.5B in Exxon Mobil shares, with $165.7B held by all 10 firms in that one oil company.  Investments in the oil industry are across the board, along with coal and natural gas – giving the lie to their ‘support’ of the environment.  They instead promote the nonsense solution of ‘air capture’ of carbon, which the Biden administration just funded at $1.2B in 2023.  Even Al Gore saw through this, as it promotes continued carbon / methane production and is also an untested method.   

Of special interest is their involvement in military industries. In 2021 there was $2T in military spending world-wide, led by the U.S., China, India, the U.K. and Russia.  Phillips lists the ‘Titans’ investments in the many firms in this ‘industry,’ including firms from the Netherlands, U.K., Italy and France.   Russia has the largest arsenal of nuclear warheads, followed by the U.S., China and so on.  Russian and Chinese military production is mostly controlled by state firms, not private enterprise. 

Much of their wealth is part of financialization instead of the production of use-values.  As the search for world profits gets harder, they focus on privatization of public assets, disaster reconstruction, speculation and war investments.  So to my eyes if a major financial crisis threatens, their wealth is very fragile and fictitious.   What again stands out is the absence of any Russian and one each of Chinese and Middle-Eastern figures on these boards.   

CHINA and RUSSIA

Most of the TCC directors are from the U.S. or western Europe, with 13 individuals from countries like China, Mexico, Bulgaria, India and Kuwait.  The one from China is Fred Hu of UBS, a co-director of the Chinese National Center of Economic Research and a member of the CFR’s advisory board.  He’s a top executive in Ant Group and Yum Brands and has a PhD from Harvard in economics.  This time Phillips has a special section on China, which was really missing from his book Giants.  There is still no data on who owns private Chinese companies other than the Titans, but evidently they are not connected to these 10 firms.  Some data may be hidden, especially in tax havens or in private Chinese records.

Phillips notes that China has taken 800 million out of extreme poverty and created a sizeable ‘middle’ class, though 600 million still live on $150 a month or $5 a day.  Life expectancy in China is 2 years higher than the U.S., at 78.1 years.  Human rights is still problematic in China according to him. China is second in the world in billionaires, with 562, including Hong Kong and Macau.  Phillips quotes the 2014 China Daily as saying “China will allow all forms of capital to equally compete in the financial markets through ease of market access. This quote shows the CCP presides over a mixed economy of a social-democratic type, using state-directed and dominated development.  Xi Jinping spoke at Davos in 2017 and 2022, urging sustainability and advocating the avoidance of the weaponization of issues, U.S./Euro unilateralism and protectionism. The latter three are openly advocated by both capitalist Parties in the U.S. 

Due to the size of the Chinese economy and its leading role in BRICS, an up-and-coming capitalist bloc, it is possible that in the future the yuan will compete with the dollar for convertibility.  Related to China, Taiwan’s chip firm TSMC has significant investments from the Titans.  The Titans are also heavily invested in top Chinese firms, at $1.3T – Tencent, China State Engineering, Sinopec, PetroChina, State Grid, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, Chinese Life Asset, Ag Bank of China, China Construction Bank, China United Network Comm. Grp, Alibaba, Baidu and China State Railway Grp.  24 Chinese corporate and government representatives attended Davos, showing its partial integration in the capitalist world order.  

Russian petro-state.

Russia is a regional extractive power based on minerals, oil and natural gas. Phillips calls it “a shell of its former self” when it was the USSR. In 2022 the Russian GDP was $2.4T, while the USSR had $2.66T in 1990. The U.S. GDP was $25.4T in 2022, 10 times larger.  The USSR endowed Russia with the most nukes in the world however. Titan investments in Russian firms were significant until the 2014 coup and the Ukraine war and invasion.  They owned stakes in VTB Bank, VEB investment firm, Gazprom, Sberbank, Rosneft, among others.  Blackrock and Vanguard stopped doing business with Russia, as did the NYSE.  However most ‘western’ capitalist entities are still in Russia – 32% left from the U.S., 10.6% from the U.K., 7.8% from Germany and less than 5% from other countries.  So the 'western' capitalists are still largely backing the Russian economy.  Philips notes that the government's goal for the ongoing Ukrainian war is to bleed and weaken Russia.  The Titans are planning to rebuild Ukraine as disaster capitalists might – of course if there is a Ukraine left, and it is not partially or totally controlled by the Russian military, or so destroyed as to be impossible to rebuild.  Some investments are pouring into western Ukraine by Nestle, the World Bank and Tattarang, an Australian investment firm.

Solutions?

Phillips’ three sociology questions are:  1. “How much do the wealthy dominate political decisions?”  2. “Who are these powerful people?” 3. “How does influence and domination work?  These 117 enrich about 40 million millionaires and billionaires in the world, who are their real base, out of a population of 8.2 billion people.  They work in 133 companies, in interlocking directorates.  Their profit needs dominate U.S., EU and international governmental policies. Many of their investments are negative as to the health of the world population. They are heavily invested in the U.S. DOD’s “All Domain Command & Control System,” especially through Silicon Valley. I’m not sure he answers all these questions, but the answers can be inferred. 

So the world is not run by Jews, George Soros, the Vatican, Communists, aliens, child abusers, devils or 'the deep state.'  Phillips, as a supporter of Veterans for Peace, has a somewhat vague response to this shit-show.  He mentions degrowth and asks the Titans to ‘share the wealth’ and end their mismanagement of funds. He also wants to create a democratic opposition to global imperialism, which he sees as a manifestation of concentrated wealth. What that means is left unsaid. 

Prior blogspot reviews on this subject, use blog search box, upper left, to investigate our 17 year archive, using these terms:  “Giants” (Phillips); “The Global Police State,” “Secret History of the American Empire” (Perkins); “Ministry for the Future” (Robinson); “The New Power Elite,” “Levers of Power,” “Winners Take All” (Giridharadas); “Trade Wars are Class Wars,” “Time for Socialism” and “Capital in the 21st Century” (Piketty); “How Will Capitalism End?” “The Great Financial Crisis” (JB Foster, Magdoff); “New Cold War on China.”

And I bought it at May Day Books!

Red Frog / October 30, 2024

Sunday, October 27, 2024

Back in the Day...

 “Pacifism as Pathology – Reflections on the Role of Armed Struggle in North America” by Ward Churchill and Michael Ryan; Preface by Ed Mead; Forward by Dylan Rodriguez; 1986 / 2017

This book reflects the after-glow of the anti-colonial revolutions, urban ‘guerrilla’ groups and the Vietnam War, all events that have receded into the past.  Ryan admits the book’s archaic nature in his bit.  It has funny takes on the pathetic spectacle of ritualized protest performances and how pacifists need ‘reality training’ administered by a radical psychology therapist.  It does not come from a Marxist point of view, but closer to revolutionary anarchism in its approach.  Back in the day it might have been called “Third Worldism.”  In this text the issues of the working class, capitalism, class, Marxist formations and fascist groupings are not really addressed. The state is the enemy, labor actions are not on the agenda, poor people are the main actors and violence is the ultimate tactic. 

Mead used to be in the George Jackson Brigade, did long jail time and says their resort to armed actions was premature.  Rodriguez thinks ‘white’ people are the main problem related to pacifism.  Ryan is a Canadian Maoist of some kind.  Churchill was involved with AIM, VVAW and the BPP’s Rainbow Coalition and is a professor.  The main target of the book is ‘revolutionary pacifism’ – a current that barely exists, certainly not anymore.  Most pacifists are reformists or sub-reformists of some kind. 

In his newer intro Churchill embraces the early BLM protests around Trayvon Martin and in Ferguson over Michael Brown, along with the pipeline standoff at Standing Rock, but knows the modern police, military and surveillance state is far more lethal and powerful than in the 1960s-1970s.  This might be one reason for the general success of its pacification program.

Churchill thinks the draft evaders who went to Canada paid no price – though becoming a refugee and leaving your family and home is more than just dealing with loneliness.  He laughs at the small number of draft resistors who actually went to jail and ignores those who were forced into public service. He chides most civil disobedience, though praises some who took larger personal risks.  He later admits that non-violence is one tactic to be used, but it is not an overall strategy. His idea seems to jump from letter writing to marches to military action, with nothing much else.  Most of his ire is directed at the arrogant moralists championing pacifism like Dellinger, Chomsky, Berrigan, Lakey, Spock, Baez, Near, Lynde and Muste, who vociferously insulted and attacked non-pacifist tactics, strategy and people – what we today call ‘canceling.’ 

Churchill targets the myths about successful pacifism – noting that without the threat of violent and radical leftism in India, the U.S. and Vietnam, Gandhi, MLK and the U.S. anti-war movement would have not been able to gain any success. Governments like Britain and the U.S. would rather deal with ‘moderates’ than actual leftists and they cultivate these groupings if necessary, as Johnson did with MLK, the British did with Gandhi and the Democrats did with McCarthy.  Though eventually they had to assassinate MLK as he moved to the Left.

Many of the issues discussed still dominate the progressive movement – ritualized protests, staged events, the use of marshals to control participants, pro-forma and cooperative arrests, ‘bearing witness’ picket lines, candle-light vigils, exhausting long marches to wear out protesters, letter writing to Congress people, endless chanting and various other forms of pathetic opposition.  Yet it was only when the 3rd Precinct burned down in Minneapolis that anyone took the George Floyd protests seriously.  When the police for the most part abandoned streets to the anti-racist crowds, you knew something else was up.

Churchill uses the ‘business as usual’ attitude of the leaders in the Jewish community in Germany and Europe in the 1930s as a touchstone.  The leading rabbis, Zionists and businessmen ignored the path of the Communist Party and other leftists and instead preached accommodation and obedience to the Nazis.  Yet Churchill does not mention the Left in Germany, which was physically fighting the Brownshirts in the streets before the 'democratic' takeover and later led the anti-fascist underground.

Churchill considers pacifism to be a moralistic anti-praxis which has never succeeded on its own in making radical changes. “Speaking truth to power” is actually the message of the powerless.  His psychological and therapeutic solution for pacifists is to have them realize they are probably not for revolution or overturning the system; to have them live in a poor neighborhood or third-world country and, third, to have them become familiar with guns and bombs. He presented this at the Midwest Radical Therapy Association, which is probably now defunct. This 'therapy' seems to be a sophisticated version of trolling.  At one point he praises mass civil disobedience that might shut down a city, then chides the 1971 May Day Tribe as if they didn’t do that in D.C. - which they did.  In his slight promotion of the Weather Underground, he denounces the pacifists for opposing them, yet plenty of Marxists saw them as ultra-left - not from pacifism but from a class struggle viewpoint. 

Ideological pacifism is clearly a middle-class and religion-based attitude.  Churchill contends it also reflects the practitioners’ fear of ever being hurt or paying a price for their performative resistance.  He notes that some pacifists know that guerilla warfare, defensive violence or armed self-defense are appropriate for ‘third world’ countries but not for the U.S., which he sees as an elitist and ‘magical’ attitude. Yet he knows that a peaceful society where violence is absent is a goal of all revolutionaries, even for him.

This book is a reflection of its time, which is why it is surrounded by a more modern preface, forward, introduction and afterword.  It presents a leftist but ultimately futile false dyad between ‘violence versus pacifism,’ when the real praxis is class struggle in all its variations, based on a clear theory and goal.  That clear theory is not here.

Prior blogspot reviews on this subject, use blog search box, upper left, to investigate our 17 year archive, using these terms:  “Non-Violence Protects the State” (Gelderloos); “How to Blow Up a Pipeline” (Malm); “Passages of Rebellion” (Shor); “Daydream Sunset” (Jacobs); “Soldiers in Revolt,” “Ragged Revolutionaries,” “The Panthers Can’t Save Us Now” (C Johnson); “Hippie Modernism,” “The Way the Wind Blew” (Jacobs); “No Fascist USA!,” “Annihilation of Caste” (Ambedkar); “The Plot to Kill King” (Pepper); "The German Communist Resistance."

And I bought it at May Day Books!

Red Frog / October 27, 2024  

Thursday, October 24, 2024

Chicago Bikers

 “The Bikeriders” a film by Jeff Nichols, 2023

This is a somewhat real story of a working-class subculture in the 1960s in Chicago, of guys who liked to ride and work on motorcycles, drink, fight, break traffic laws and hang-out.  It is also how motorcycle clubs turned into criminal gangs in the 1970s.  The Chicago ‘Vandals’ are really a fictional name for the very real Outlaws, who are now one of 4 big international MC gangs.  This is an origin story as told through interviews with one of the women connected to the group.

It features the ‘wild’ and handsome Benny, who lives for his bike and the group.  The club is led by Johnny, played by Tom Hardy, an older guy who works, but was inspired to form the group by the movie The Wild Ones with Brando. Benny is a James Dean knock-off, so that tells you the role of film in culture.  The story is told through interviews by the rather straight Kathy, who falls in love with Benny and marries him quickly. That is the set-up.

The men in the group are a varied bunch – good mechanics where some work, some don’t and are mostly older men.  They ride Harley’s and Indians.  One member from Romania or Hungary dislikes ‘pinkos,’ who he describes as college students wearing sweaters and glasses, and who later burn draft cards.  He is rejected by the military because of his surly attitude.  There is no hint of illegality in what they do except fist fights, running red lights, and other trivial nonsense.  They stick with each other and will resort to violence if one of their members is hurt by an outsider.  They do burn down a bar after hard-head Benny is savagely beaten and injured there.

There is a contrast between the non-motorcyclists and these bikers.  Kathy’s proletarian boyfriend gets angry after she spends a late night drinking with Benny.  In anger he later drives off in his pickup truck and leaves her.  The two men who beat Benny because he won’t take off his club jacket in the bar probably had jobs.  One club member is killed in an accident and Johnny is spit on by the mother at the funeral.  So the club is a transitional group as seen by non-club members, to thuggery and crime of some sort. But they are not there yet.

The Vietnam War is going on and military vets begin returning to the U.S. in the late 1960s and early '70s. Some want to join the Vandals and these ‘new guys’ are a different breed from the original members. They are more violent and rougher than the originals, who are not that inclined to violence and are ultimately kinder to women.  They new guys threaten to kill one older member who wants to quit and become a motorcycle cop. After Johnny solves that problem with unorthodox violence, Benny bails due to the increasingly violent climate.  Other chapters begin to form and younger punks want to join. Johnny rejects one young thug who would abandon his comrades for membership and that delinquent later challenges Johnny for leadership of the Vandals.  Knives or fists?” says Johnny.  The kid says ‘knives.’  They later meet somewhere on Fullerton in an empty lot.  Johnny gets out his knife and approaches and the kid shoots him dead.

This is the moment where the fictional Chicago Vandals become the real Outlaws, a criminal gang involved in drugs, protection, gun running, murder and the like.  This is when proletarianism is abandoned for lumpenism.  In dialectics, this is when quantity turns into 'quality.' “That” is the difference between a real gang and a club, a topic this blog has followed over the role of actual gangs in any revolutionary struggle.

A somewhat romantic portrait of the early Outlaws where life imitates film.  When Benny hears of Johnny’s death, he weeps for the first time in his life, unlike a ‘real’ man and he gives up on motorcycling.  The film is absent any material understanding of how Benny and some others survive financially – for him probably on the wages of his wife Kathy.  The interviewer was a photographer who created a picture book out of this. Nichols has done other films – in particular “Mud” and “Loving.”  Worth watching if you are a biker like me, with a female viewpoint of sorts, but the romanticism is also evident.

Prior blogspot reviews on this subject, use blog search box, upper left, to investigate our 17 year archive, using these terms:  “The Outlaws,” “Shop Class as Soulcraft,” “Mayans M.C.,” “Spring is Here and the Time is Right for Riding in the Streets,” “Gang Politics,” “James-Younger Gang,” “Peaky Blinders,” “City on a Hill,” “Razorblade Tears,” “Fear City,” “Get Gotti,” “How to Become a Mob Boss,” “Athena,” “Drug War Capitalism.”

The Cultural Marxist

October 24, 2024

Saturday, October 19, 2024

Humanitarian Bombs

 “Humanitarian Imperialism” by Jean Bricmont, 2006

This book was written during the invasion of Iraq, so it is infused by Bricmont's contact with pro-war 'humanitarianism' on what he calls 'the Left.' It is never clear what 'left' he's talking about, mostly in France, but he seems to include almost everyone – Communists, Trotskyists, Social Democrats, Greens, anarchists, etc. He does not name names of course, or use quotes, though he quotes many others. At any rate his analysis takes apart various excuses that 'some' leftists, neo-conservatives and democrats use to justify invasions and war by 'the West.' He does not address invasions by others – except Afghanistan by the USSR. This is a pretty tired topic for most leftists, but bear with me. His lodestone seems to be Bertrand Russell and the 1948 U.N.'s Universal Declaration of Human Rights.


Bricmont names 3 issues leftists promote: 1) social control of production; 2) for peace and against imperialism and colonialism; 3) for the defense of democracy, of the rights of the individual, of gender equality, of minorities and the environment.” In his discussion of anti-war activism, he only concentrates on #2, which is not a full-blooded approach. His key point is listing the rationales by various actors to justify various 'humanitarian' wars, as well as ineffective opposition tactics. He includes the interventions or non-interventions in Yugoslavia; Croatia, Bosnia, Iraq I and II; the Afghanistan invasions; Vietnam, Algeria, Rwanda, the Congo and more. WWII is only touched on, though it provides a high profile excuse for alleging every enemy is a new Hitler. This is the 'anti-fascism' rationale according to him, but it should perfected as an 'anti-Hitler' logic, as fascism is still a concern.

According to him Bricmont's essential logic is ethics, not class politics. As someone once remarked there are 'their ethics and ours.” He leans heavily on international law, as if there exists some real enforcement mechanism and these international laws are not just words and occasional courts. International law's reach is impossible in a basic nation-state structure, though it can certainly be used in an argument. Like so many reformists, he ultimately ignores this structural question.

Bricmont recognizes that many right-wing isolationist or realpolitik types oppose international involvement, so they sound like leftists – but for completely different reasons. He himself says one of his main principles is to 'get out of other people's business' – which could also be a certain Republican line. At the same time he understands the enemy is imperialism itself. He does not call it 'empire' or 'colonialism,' as those are past usages. The anti-colonial struggles of the 20th Century seem to him key, not social revolutions. He comes out against cultural relativism as a form of passive support for exploitation and oppression, realizing there are universal values that transcend borders. But certainly bombs will not bring those values into being! Oddly he promotes dictatorships as the best or most practical defense against imperialism, or the logical result.  As if there are no actors with their own agendas. He opposes pacifism as a flawed ideology against war. His main focus is not on imperialist hypocrisy but the consequences of imperialist adventures, both the failures and the 'successes' in what some have called 'the American holocaust.' Essentially every intervention and coup by the U.S. or Europe was against progressive forces within those countries.

Power needs an ideology. Here are the rationales for 'humanitarian' violence peddled to the public, according to Bricmont:

  1. State-directed development is labeled 'communism' or dictatorship.

  2. The military, invasions, cordon and threats against the USSR and 'communism' actually damaged those societies in their ability to move towards socialism.

  3. Hiding or justifying “widespread indifference to criminal policies” on the domestic front.

  4. Labeling enemies terrorists or communists when they aren't.

  5. Human rights” logic is used to justify military or political violations of others' human rights.

  6. Torture is denounced, yet torture grows out of occupations and coups.

  7. There is a double-discourse. For intellectuals it is about the 'duty to intervene.' For the public it is about terrorism, weapons of mass destruction and other fears.

  8. Using rhetoric that divides social and economic rights from political rights.

  9. Or - White-man's burden; enlightened versus barbaric; civilization versus backwardness; liberalism versus fascism; protecting minorities; protecting women; save the Jews; Utopian internationalism versus regressive nationalism.

  10. Foreign aid as humanitarian.

  11. Democracy can be exported.

  12. Cost of war is low.

  13. Intervention will work.

  14. Guilt about world misery.  The need to 'do something.'

Bricmont hinges real opposition to wars, invasions and coups on international law, an anti-imperialist perspective, and ultimately an unnamed 'mass movement' of some kind. He opposes leftists who support reactionaries that oppose imperialism, though only one example is given. Support in this case is mainly 'verbal' as the Left has little ability to materially affect anti-imperialist struggles. He never mentions left or labor formations with international reach. He argues against public 'neither/nor' slogans like “Neither Milosovic Nor NATO.” However comparing them to 'The NLF Will Win' seems to elide the point about the class character of the NLF. Class, again, is not on his menu.

In the end, Bricmont admits he does “not have a satisfactory answer” on how to oppose imperialism. He recommends a country “mind its own business.” He does not endorse peace plans, and claims conservatives are the ones who mourn American deaths, budget deficits and other materiel impacts of war, not the 'idealist' left. He also points to efforts by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch that ignore the issue of the wars themselves as an example of the failure of 'rights' claims.

This book is a mixture, a grab-bag of good ideas and weak ones. After reading it, I'm still not sure what 'Left' he's mainly talking about. At least in the U.S. it seems to miss the mark except perhaps among certain liberal-leftists or plain liberals. He's clearly not a through-going Marxist either. He calls the Bolsheviks 'dictators' without an explanation. He thinks the Soviet entry into Afghanistan was illegal, though they were invited in by the government at the time to combat jihadism backed by the CIA. He seems part of a small current of post-leftist and mild anti-imperialists who have abandoned the goal of socialism and are content to oppose war as an event not prompted by the material needs of the capitalist system.

Prior blog reviews on this subject, use blog search box, upper left, to investigate our 17 year archive, using these terms: “Long Revolution of the Global South”(Amin); “Capitalism in the 21st Century” (M Roberts); “Modern Rhinoceroses,” “Strange Bedfellows,” “Vietnam,” “Iraq,” “Afghanistan,” “Yugoslavia – Peace, War and Dissolution” (Chomsky); “Musings of the Professors.” “Fashionable Nonsense”(Bricmont-Sokal); “Welcome to the Desert of Post-Socialism.”

And I bought it at May Day Books!

Red Frog / October 19, 2024

Wednesday, October 16, 2024

Horatio Algerniski

 “The Lehman Trilogy” a play by Stefano Massini, adapted by Ben Power, Guthrie Theater, 2024

This is the story of most of the history of Lehman Brothers, written by an Italian playwright from Firenze. Massini’s play is both an epic tale of inventiveness and hard work and how it all came to naught in 2008. The explanation of that failure is only sketched, involving the early, rapacious trading of a non-Lehman CEO, Lew Glucksman, which led to the firm’s sale to others and its later failure under Dick Fuld. The role of fraudulent, subprime mortgage bonds and credit default swaps is invisible, nor the drama behind the joint decision to tank Lehman. This is because this is really a family story of the original 3 Lehman brothers from Bavaria and their three sons, one of whom became a politician under Roosevelt. When the Lehman family members are dead and gone towards the end, the play loses interest in the firm.

The Brothers & Sons In Turmoil

This is not an anti-capitalist story unless you are already disposed to that view. It is not an expose of Lehman’s failure in 2008. In a way you are supposed to cheer for the brother’s success, which implies its own message. Every playgoer will see in it what they will.

The brothers Lehman - Henry (Heyum), Mayer and Emmanuel - first settled in Montgomery, Alabama in 1844 and created the firm name in 1850. Lehman Brothers started as a dry goods and textile store, then morphed into a cotton dealer and broker. Mayer owned 7 slaves and the firm expanded its reach, ultimately contracting with 24 slave plantations for cotton to send to the mills up north. Slavery was the root of the Lehman firm's 'primitive accumulation.'  Henry died and Emmanuel moved to New York to be closer to the main center of cotton trading in the city. The Civil War broke out in 1860 and their business was heavily damaged.

After the war Mayer followed his brother to New York and they both invested in the coffee trade, leaving cotton behind. Emmanuel’s son Philip points them to investing in railroads around the same time as his father dies. Philip switched the firm from a commodities broker to a financial behemoth, specializing in IPOs and private investment trusts. From then on, under the leadership of Robert Lehman, son of Philip, they specialized in investing in ‘the new thing’ – tobacco, automobiles, oil, movies, military contracts, computers, then pure asset trading – i.e. money>money+. In a way it is the record of U.S. capitalism. Through all this they weathered the stock market crash of 1929, as Robert knew that if they did not join the first wave of bankruptcies, the government would step in. Robert was the last Lehman on the board, dying in 1969. After that the play gets bored with itself and speeds up.

That is the capsule. The play was adapted to use only three male actors in 2018. It is performed by them playing dozens of roles, changing their voice and a bit of clothing, addressing the audience, dying and being reborn as someone else. The cast performance is bravura, given the length of the play, size of the cast and the difficulty of playing so many people. The play lasts 3.5 hours, with two intermissions, so it is a bit of a slog and needs some editing.

The director thinks it is a history. As we know history is not just ‘history.’ It focuses on the Lehman’s Jewish roots in Bavaria where Henry’s father was a businessman, roots that were carried over to the ‘new’ world. In a way it is the Horatio Alger story of immigrants gaining wealth status, though ultimately ending in failure, unknown to the brothers and sons themselves. It reflects changes in U.S. capitalism from closed family firms to anodyne corporations, from mercantile capitalism to finance capitalism, from immigrant success stories to Americanized children, from small businesses to giant international firms, some too big to fail and some not. These developments are not news but they do reflect the increasing dominance of a huge system over individual gumption. The overall sweep and sadness of this play hint at something beyond that – that even gigantic human efforts in our short time on this planet are ultimately failures, as history and time march on. That is probably the humanist point Massini was trying to make.

The audience was mostly retired, with middle-aged people and a smattering of young people. The play is housed in the beautiful confines of the Wuertle thrust stage which does not have a bad seat. The set is simple and changed 3 times in minor ways, always featuring a carpet seemingly of cotton, torn ticker tape or snow. I can’t say much more than that.

The Cultural Marxist / October 16, 2014

Sunday, October 13, 2024

Pirates of the Crooked Islands

 “Offshore – Stealth Wealth and the New Colonialism” by Brooke Harrington, 2024

This is a book of reporting by a sociologist inspired by C. Wright Mills who joined the world of secretive offshore finance.  After being trained as a wealth manager, Harrington played the ‘dumb’ female outsider and interviewed wealth managers, a fisherman and a debt bounty hunter, who spilled the beans.  Harrington reveals the massive and corrupt nature of ‘offshore’ and onshore money bolt-holes.  Used by billionaires, corporations and millionaires, this archipelago of finance around the world allows them to evade taxes, legal process and publicity, launder money and bribes, and ensure wealth for generations to come. She notes that cash counting machines in the British Virgin Islands broke down due to the suitcases full of banknotes they were required to count, so that tells you something about their money-laundering abilities.

Not surprisingly, these bolt-holes also include Joe Biden’s Delaware, Christie Noem’s South Dakota, Wyoming, Nevada and luxury real estate across the country.  The U.S. is now the #1 haven for hidden billions on the 2022 Financial Secrecy Index, not the Cayman Islands, the Bahamas or the British Virgin Islands. Obama rejected U.S. involvement in the Common Reporting Standards, which would have exposed the owners of many of these accounts.  The OECD and the EU Parliament have also failed to restrain these abuses so far.

Harrington is a pro-capitalist supporter of ‘free’ markets, so she is incensed that the big capitalists who use offshore accounts are getting away with financial murder.  By turns she calls this situation ‘neo-feudalism,’ ‘zombie colonialism’ and old-guard ‘imperial’ behavior, believing we are generally in a ‘post-imperial’ period. As if capitalist oligarchs and their hangers-on wouldn’t use every method for wealth preservation at their disposal!  After all, the initial wealth comes from ‘on-shore’ – from capitalist exploitation, rent and attendant criminal fraud. Off-shore is just the tail end of the profit cycle. She quotes the Libertarian Hayek on the need for rules, honesty, fairness and transparency under capital.  So she feels this is not capitalism, this is ‘theft’ and ‘cheating.’  Then she condemns these offshore havens for being a Libertarian billionaire’s dream. This only confirms she’s a sociologist, not a political economist.

At any rate, let’s see what Harrington has discovered.  The key element in the development of these hiding places is British law and former colonial ‘Commonwealth’ locations and ‘free ports,’ as nearly all of the jurisdictions were originally U.K. linked. The U.K. encouraged their involvement in banking in order to get these mostly poor locations off the British dime.  Secrecy is their main ingredient, allowing shell companies, LLC’s, corporations and individual trusts to hide their ownership, making it very difficult to prosecute the account holders. The British passed the International Business Companies act, which allowed these entities to avoid public audits or bookkeeping too.  Most of them are no-tax or low tax locations to boot, also a U.K. colonial inheritance.  The other aspect is they are based on U.K. ‘common law,’ which allows countries to permit anything not yet forbidden.  Its other benefit is that common law allows an integration of finance across the planet.  Harrington notes that after the Panama, Paradise and Pandora papers, which exposed hundreds of thousands of these underground accounts, only a few people were convicted of financial crimes. After all, what most were doing was still legal or impossible to prosecute.

Drone captures British Virgin Island from above

Harrington’s solution is to go after the ranks of wealth managers – tax advisors, private bankers, trustees - who make it possible for the rich to hide their money, and forbid them from working for tax havens.  Their organization is called the Society of Trust and Estate Practitioners. Exposure and shame is her second weapon. Some jurisdictions have tried this but it hasn’t put a real crimp in the system. She maintains that the 2008 collapse was caused by the failure of 2 hedge funds in the Caymans, so there is also a crisis danger within hidden, unregulated investment hordes. 

In 2022 economists’ estimated that $12T in household wealth was held in these secret accounts across the world.  It is estimated that $110B is lost in taxes per year, and another $500B taxes lost from corporations per year.  21% of rich U.S. citizen’s income goes unreported.  A list of the places that do business outside the U.S. are Nevis, Cyprus, the Cook Islands, the Caymans, Singapore, Mauritius, Hong Kong, Bermuda, Panama, Monaco, Jersey Island, British Virgin Islands, Luxembourg, Switzerland, the Bahamas, Malta and Gibraltar.  She mostly mentions right-wing billionaires using these lock-boxes – Russian capitalists, Nigerian dictators, Robert Mercer, Oleg Deripaska, Putin himself, Peter Thiel, Queen Elizabeth – some using the cash to fund right-wing candidates like Trump and LePen.  

Due to the lack of tax receipts in these cash-holes by the international monied set, the consequence is that the locals pay the taxes. The second thing that happens is that local democracy is thwarted in the interests of the holders of these secret accounts, resulting in a ‘captured state.’  The third thing that happens is that local crime actually increases due to the government-backed impunity of the rich. Rising inequality across the world is the fourth impact, as it solidifies generations of wealth through ‘perpetual trusts’ which live off of rent and investment income far into the future. This is something even Piketty did not – or could not - include in his books. Harrington especially investigates the social situations in the Cook Islands (‘Crook’ Islands christened by some), Mauritius, Panama and the British Virgin Islands to show how being a finance haven has affected the poverty and powerlessness of the locals and indigenous. Harrington calls this an extension of the ‘resource curse’ – it is the ‘finance curse.’  As part of this whistle-blowers, journalists and investigators have been intimidated, jailed, deported or in a case in Gibraltar, done away with.

Colonial theory might allow one to cheer on the looting of the metropolises by these tiny countries, but the benefits go to an international capitalist elite, not to the local working-class, farmers or small shop keepers.  This ‘revenge of the colonized’ is bogus. So what is the real solution?  Clearly the majority of capitalist politicians in hock to their owners will not put a significant dent in international rules around secrecy, money-laundering, estate perpetuity, tax avoidance or legal impunity.  The present capitalist legal system does not function on an international scale, though their economic system does.  So there is a contradiction here.  The capitalist nation-state is still their main operative political and legal vehicle and it is not possible that capital can escape that situation.  The nation-state has to be transcended by the international working-classes in practice, through political power on the local, then national, then international level, with the U.S. being one battleground. In these local jurisdictions some livelihoods are based on secret banking, so that will be a battle there too.  Harrington’s micro-reformist solution cannot grasp the width of the problem.  Blocking wealth advisors might help, but that will force part of the profession underground, as there is still ‘money to be made.’ 

Prior blogspot reviews on this issue, use blog search box, upper left, to investigate our 17 year archive, using these terms:  “The Wealth Hoarders,” “Ozark,” “Capital in the 21st Century” (Piketty); “Yesterday’s Man,” “Life Under the Jolly Roger” (Kuhn); “Black Sails,” “Trade Wars are Class Wars.”

And I bought it at May Day Books!

Red Frog / October 13, 2024