Showing posts with label news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label news. Show all posts

#OccupyWallStreet and the new forms of revolt


Wall Street Occupiers, Protesting Till Whenever

N. R. Kleinfield and Cara Buckley, New York Times
A man named Hero was here. So was Germ. There was the waitress from the dim sum restaurant in Evanston, Ill. And the liquor store worker. The Google consultant. The circus performer. The Brooklyn nanny.

The hodgepodge Lower Manhattan encampment known as Occupy Wall Street has no appointed leaders, no expiration date for its rabble-rousing stay and still-evolving goals and demands. Yet its two weeks of noisy occupation has lured a sturdily faithful and fervent constituency willing to express discontentment with what they feel is an inequitable financial system until, well, whenever.
They arrived by design and desire. Or by sheer serendipity.

Like Jillian Aydelott, 19, and Ben Mason, 20. They are a couple, both having taken an indefinite leave from school in Boston to travel across the country, very much on the cheap. Stopping in Providence, R.I., five days ago to sleep at a homeless shelter, they encountered a man who called himself Germ and said he was an activist. He was coming to the protest. They figured why not. They have yet to leave.

Ms. Aydelott’s feeling was: “Nothing is happening. People on Wall Street have all the power.”
... It all began when a Canadian advocacy magazine, Adbusters, posted a call for action on its blog in July. A New York group naming itself the General Assembly, inspired by recent meetings in Madrid, began to hold organizing meetings in Tompkins Square and other public places, leading to a Sept. 17 march near Wall Street. Shooed away from Wall Street, the protesters wound up in Zuccotti Park, which is bounded by Broadway and Liberty Street and has become their base.
Most of the demonstrators are in their teens or 20s, but plenty are older.
(30 September 2011)

We've passed the point of the media avoiding the subjct of Occupy Wall Street. We're now in the stage of condescension -- "aren't they cute?". The problem is that the NY Times reporters approach this as infotainment. The accounts in the alternative media, in constrast, are serious journalsm. They try to figure out what is going on, what the significance is. To me this is a further indication that the cutting edge of journalism is in the blogs and independent media. -BA


We Are the 99 Percent

We Are the 99 Percent
We are the 99 percent. We are getting kicked out of our homes. We are forced to choose between groceries and rent. We are denied quality medical care. We are suffering from environmental pollution. We are working long hours for little pay and no rights, if we're working at all. We are getting nothing while the other 1 percent is getting everything. We are the 99 percent.
Brought to you by the people who occupy wall street. Why will YOU occupy?



I am 27 years old. I have $40,000 in student loan debt. I still have no degree to show for it, but cannot continue school because I have no money to survive. I have not been able to find ANY work in over a year, and only short term temp jobs for nearly two years prior to that. I will likely be homeless in less than two weeks. My car just broke down, and I have no money to pay for the repairs. I live off of $200 per month in food stamps. I can no longer provide for myself, let alone for my girlfriend and her 3 year old son. I came from a military family with a history of service to our country in multiple wars. At places like McDonald’s and WalMart I am considered “over educated” and thus unemployable.



(continuously updated)
A brilliant use of "people telling their own stories." -BA


The Nuts and Bolts of #OccupyWallStreet

Pham Binh, The Indypendent (NYC)
On day 12 of Occupy Wall Street (OWS), I helped moderate a meeting of the “open source” OWS working group by keeping a list of speakers and co-chairing. I am not sure what the open source group is supposed to do exactly, but I decided to attend this meeting after watching a middle-aged man call in the General Assembly for developing demands and goals on the OWS live feed and people in the crowd telling him the open source working group was tasked with this.

After the daily 1 p.m. General Assembly meeting ended, OWS divided into its working groups, including media, labor, outreach, and a number of others. I walked over and sat down next to the point person (or “ leader”) of the working group, a young white guy in his twenties who looked like a 60s throwback with his long, straight hippy-style hair, rainbow tights, fatigue shirt, and Ziploc bag of rolling papers. Of course, you can never judge a book by its cover — he is also a student of behavioral economics and mentioned that academic studies have shown that the OWS’s decentralized, highly participatory, and lengthy process of dialogue is the best way to organize.

The open source meeting swelled very quickly to 20 or 30 people, an indication that a lot of people want to figure out what OWS’s demands should be. The group moderator remarked that the group was so big it was practically a “second General Assembly.” His brief introduction to the process whereby OWS would define its vision (he repeatedly used the phrase “visioning”) was interrupted as many hands went up, asking to be called on; at least 10 people wanted to speak and each was allowed a minute and a half.

What emerged from the discussion was that there is no consensus that demands are even necessary. Quite a few protesters argued along the lines that this is movement or process of dialogue is the demand/goal and that therefore demands are not necessary; one said our demand to the world should that they “join us.” Two older people, one in his sixties, the other in his thirties, spoke out for having clear, specific demands as being a very necessary step to creating a sustainable protest, much less a movement.

... The OWS political process is very participatory, cumbersome, and time-consuming. One strength of their process is that it avoids the top-down control that Wisconsin’s union leaders exercised to scuttle the protests and developing strike wave that shook the state in favor of harmless (and ultimately fruitless) recall efforts.

To participate and help shape OWS politically requires dedicating many, many waking hours every day to ongoing, continuous debates and discussions. This is not necessarily a bad thing but in practice ends up favoring the participation of those who can afford to skip work and/or school for a week or more. With unemployment over 9% (a figure even higher for the 18-25 age group), it should be no surprise that these are the people taking the fight to the enemy’s lair.
(29 September 2011)


The Danger of Simplicity

David Swanson, War is a Crime
... chess isn't simple. But compared to fixing the mess our nation and our world are in, it's child's play. Yet, we are constantly bombarded with demands for the "one simple move" to fix everything in our politics. How insane is that? And the "news" media tell us what's happening in a manner that could not possibly report coherently the complexity of a single chess game yet attempts to inform us about the entire world.

Now, I have no quarrel with short pithy posters and sound bytes. I'm not proposing that we mumble doctoral theses into television cameras. But we need to bear in mind that the medium is the moron.

The people on the receiving end of television chatter are not as stupid as television itself. There is such a thing as diminishing returns in the arms race of dumbness through which we dumb everything down until we reach the ultimate perfection of pure political messaging and grunt a single syllable.

We've taken the reasonable idea of a simple unifying cause that requires little explanation. We've combined it with the self-flagellation of progressive framers and messagers who imagine they aren't getting on the tee-vee because evolution deniers are wittier and pithier, rather than because of who owns the networks.
(29 September 2011)


Leninist assumptions and cult hierarchies

Simon Pirani, Weekly Worker (Communist Party of Great Britain)
Simon Pirani was part of a panel of three who addressed the CPGB's Communist University under the title of 'They fuck you up, the left'. This is an edited version of his speech
---
I was a member of the Workers Revolutionary Party from 1972, when I was a teenager, until 1985. For a year before that I was in the Young Communist League, along with friends from school, and after I left the WRP I was in its largest offshoot until the early 90s. Since then, although I have been active in politics, including writing about contemporary Russia and a book about the Russian Revolution, I have not been a member of any organisation.

I am going to talk not about the particular politics of the leftwing groups, but about their culture. In other words, the way they operate, the way their members live their lives. This includes the relationship between members of the group and other people; what we might call their ‘moral code’; and the often unspoken assumptions that group members have about the way they behave - about big things, such as work, family, enjoyment, friendships; and about smaller things, such as the way we speak, the way we dress, etc.

It is very easy to think of things we do not like about the behaviour of leftwing groups. An obvious example is the way members of some of them unquestioningly repeat the party line and behave intolerantly towards those who do not accept it. I would argue that these symptoms are part of the culture of these groups in a wider sense.

Context

Leftwing groups, including those that resemble sects, operate in a society dominated by a ruling class that is hostile to their aims. Inevitably they are profoundly influenced by the morals and culture of that society, and find it difficult to counter that influence.

This is partly because they limit themselves almost entirely to political questions and do not think about or discuss morals and culture. They do not think about how we live and how we behave, and so everything remains on a superficial level. In my opinion the movement to communism cannot be defined merely as a political movement: it is something much deeper than that.

Arising from this context, there are cult-like and highly negative aspects about the vast majority of the groups - including some that were relatively successful in their own terms.

... I think there is a problem with the legacy of Bolshevism - although there is also plenty of evidence of hierarchy, authoritarianism or intolerance in anti-Leninist groups, such as anarchists.
(29 September 2011)

The behavior that Pirani describes is not restricted to leftist groups. I've experienced it in the "Teenage Republicans" and observed it in religious groups. As poliitical activism heats up, I think we will see more of it. -BA


Murdoch and Berlusconi: the fall of two media empires and the network multitudes

Giorgio Griziotti, Open Democracy
The simultaneous fall of the Murdoch and Berlusconi media empires – symbolic of an epoch – is not a coincidence but part of a deep global change in which the exponential growth of horizontal communication networks plays a central role. In this global epoch, despite the thin line between new democratic opportunities and the old threats of control, unforeseen democratic movements are demanding a new kind of democracy.

The fall of the two most symbolic and influential media barons of the last thirty years might strike one as at most an important and pleasant coincidence. Here, I will reflect on the causes and implications of this double event and on how it could be a decisive model for a certain manner of exodus from the previous era. My argument is that what happened was no casual coincidence but rather determined by a movement of multitudes that, using networks of horizontal autonomous communication, has drained power from the vertical media empires. I address certain links between the two people in question in order to shed light both on their behaviour and the ideology that animates them.

One thing is certain: nothing will ever be able to restore the terrible power that they have exercised throughout all these years.

... I fully concur with the recent analysis of Judith Revel and Toni Negri, in which they highlight the common denominators of the social movements that have emerged from Tunisia to Spain, passing through England, Italy, Greece, Egypt, Syria and a growing number of important countries, including Israel:

"These are revolts born, in Egypt, Spain, or England, out of the simultaneous refusal of the subjection, exploitation and plunder this economy has prepared for the lives of entire populations of the world, and the political forms within which the crisis of this biopolitical appropriation has been managed. And this is also true for all the so-called “democratic” regimes. Such a form of government appears only preferable for the seeming “civility” with which it masks the attack on the dignity and humanity of the existences it crushes, but the vanishing of political representation is now at the point of collapse.[xxi]"

Still, I’d like to add that the main and indispensable tool of these developing movements is precisely the autonomous, horizontal communication network of the multitude. The use of internet and its progressive integration with mobile networks, are breathing life into a new paradigm, as we shall see. This is the crux of the matter for democratic communication and also the main cause of the fall of media empires.

The exponential growth of user-generated media such as social networks, blogs and the joining of mobile internet with the body (bio-hypermedia) are visibly generating an effect of critical threshold in which a new creation of the commons in all its forms – including revolt – are developing not only more and more rapidly and in vaster and vaster spaces, but are overwhelming the old world in ways and in locations that are quite unpredictable: first in Tunisia and now in Brasilia, Santiago del Chile and Tel Aviv.

(30 September 2011)

Top 10 New Distro Titles of 2011 (So Far!)

Well hello there, folks! Hopefully by now you’ve all perused our list of the new AK Press titles of the past six months and started updating your reading lists. We like to keep you on your toes, so here’s another fun list for you: the top 10 bestselling new DISTRO titles in the first half of 2011. These are titles that have been released this year by other independent publishers, that we carry in our distribution catalog—and like everything else we carry, they are available to both individuals and wholesale customers. So whichever you are, if you haven’t picked them up yet, consider this your friendly reminder…

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Fair Game: A Strategy Guide for Racial Justice Communications in the Obama Era
Praxis Media Productions
Praxis Project

A workbook-style guide from the good folks at The Praxis Project (some of the same folks who were involved in producing the AK Press book Talking the Walk)! This was debuted at the US Social Forum last year, and now updated and available for the first time to the general public, this guide is designed to help racial justice advocates navigate new political waters, explore proven strategies, and to consider what we must do over the long term to regain lost ground.

The Listener: Memory, Lies, Art, Power
David Lester
Arbeiter Ring Publishing
You followers of our blog already know that this one has been getting reviewed all over the place—and that we think it is good! You will too! It’s a graphic novel by David Lester (Mecca Normal guitarist and bestselling—for us!—author of The Gruesome Acts of Capitalism). A compelling tale of art, power, and murder (!) weaving weighty historical events together with modern-day art and life, all presented through eye-catching black-and-white drawings.

Art Gangs: Protest and Counterculture in New York City
Alan W. Moore
Autonomedia
An enlightening new contribution to the study of art history from a radical view. From the Art Workers Coalition through Art & Language, Colab and Group Material in the 1980s, in Soho and the Lower East Side, the collectives described in this book built the postmodern art world. This is the essential background story of today’s politicized international art world.

Post-Car Adventuring: The San Francisco Bay Area
Justin Eichenlaub & Kelly Gregory
Post-Car Press
This one got a nice write-up in the East Bay Express over the winter, and found its way onto many a bookstore counter in Oakland, Berkeley, and San Francisco. If you local bike enthusiasts haven’t gotten a copy yet, please do! But we encourage folks outside the area to pick it up, too—it’s tourist-friendly, and you’ll find it a unique approach to a travel guide for the more adventurous Bay Area visitor.

The Revolution Starts at Home
Ching-In Chen, Jai Dulani, & Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha (eds)
South End Press
Nearly one in three women in the United States will experience intimate violence in her lifetime. And in order to effectively resist violence out there—in the prison system, on militarized borders, or other clear encounters with “the system”—we in activist communities must challenge how it is reproduced right where we live and work. Expanded from the popular zine by the same name, this essential book offers alternatives for survivor safety while building a revolution where no one is left behind. Authors and contributors are on tour now—keep an eye out, but definitely check out the book in the meantime!

Work: Capitalism. Economics. Resistance.
Crimethinc.
Crimethinc.
From the folks who brought us such recent classics as Days of War, Nights of Love, Recipes for Disaster, and Expect Resistance comes a new intervention into the world of work, and a larger analysis of capitalism: what it is, how it works, and how we might dismantle it. Not just an attempt to describe reality but also a tool with which to change it!

What Lies Beneath The Clock Tower: Being An Adventure Of Your Own Choosing
Margaret Killjoy
Combustion Books
From a new publisher of “dangerous fiction,” Combustion Books, comes a choose-your-own adventure book for grown-ups! This one is chock full of political struggle, drunkenness, gnomes, goblins, and clever steampunk sensibilities. Plus it comes highly recommended by Alan Moore (author of Watchmen) as well as BoingBoing, so you don’t even have to take our word for it!

Grammar Matters: The Social Significance of How We Use Language
Jila Ghomeshi
Arbeiter Ring Publishing
It is hard to find someone who doesn’t have a pet peeve about language. Self-appointed language police worry that new forms of popular media are contributing to sloppiness, imprecision, and a general disregard for the rules of grammar and speech. This book addresses the politics of language: what insistence on “proper” use of language reveals about power, authority, and various social prejudices.

The ABCs of Anarchy
Brian Heagney
An anarchist book suitable for children of all ages (as long as they like to color)! Every page includes questions relevant for children or adults. Whether you want to go through the alphabet with a little one, or have a thoughtful engaging discussion about life with your mother, this book is for you! Seriously, it’s great… check it out, you won’t be sorry.

How to Rock and Roll: A City Rider’s Repair Manual
Sam Tracy
Black Kettle Graphics
Here’s one from the vault (luckily, bike repair hasn’t changed too much over the years)! This book was believed to be out of print—but now, for a short time only, we have it back in stock. By the author of Bicycle! and Roadside Bicycle Repair! We’re down to our last 30 copies, so get yours now or forever wonder how great this book could have been.

AK Press New Title Roundup: 2011 (So Far)!

We’ve just closed out the first half of 2011, and at a time like this I think it’s always nice to look back and give ourselves a pat on the back for all the good work. Not to mention—for you dedicated readers, and you bookstores stocking our books, it’s a good chance to look back and make sure you haven’t missed anything.

We would be remiss not to say a big THANK YOU to the Friends of AK Press for your continued support. We couldn’t do it without you! If you’re not already a Friend of AK Press and you like what you see here, please consider signing up. We’ve already got another great season of books in the works—beginning with Bifo’s After the Future, David Price’s Weaponizing Anthropology, Abel Paz’s Story of the Iron Column, our long-awaited Colin Ward Reader, and Captive Genders! Sign up now and you’ll get them all, and more…

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AK PRESS NEW RELEASES—First Half of 2011:
 

Fear of the Animal Planet: The Hidden History of Animal Resistance
Jason Hribal

In the most provocative book on animal rights since Peter Singer’s Animal Liberation, historian Jason Hribal argues persuasively that escapes and attacks by animals in captivity are deliberate, that the animals are acting with intent, and that they are asserting their own desires for freedom. Fear of the Animal Planet is a harrowing, and curiously uplifting, chronicle of resistance against the captivity and torture of animals.

“Yellow Kid” Weil: The Autobiography of America’s Master Swindler
J.R. “Yellow Kid” Weil, as told to W.T. Brannan

The latest addition to our popular Nabat Series! Bilked bankers, grifted gamblers, and swindled spinsters: welcome to the world of confidence men. You’ll marvel at the elaborate schemes developed by The Yellow Kid: fixed horse races, bad real-estate deals, and even a money-making machine! Dozens of schemes are laid out in full detail, told with wit and style—you won’t be able to put it down!

Oppose and Propose: Lessons from Movement for a New Society
Andrew Cornell

The second book in the Anarchist Interventions series, co-published with the Institute for Anarchist Studies!
Many ways of doing radical politics pioneered by Movement for a New Society in the 1970s and 1980s have become central to anti-authoritarian social movements: consensus decision making, spokescouncils, communal living, unlearning oppressive behavior, and co-operatively owned businesses. Andrew Cornell uses the story of the Movement for a New Society to raise crucial questions for activists today.

Property Is Theft!: A Pierre-Joseph Proudhon Reader
Pierre-Joseph Proudhon

Pierre-Joseph Proudhon’s social and economic ideas have been a source of inspiration and debate since 1840. Mikhail Bakunin called Proudhon “the master of us all,” while for Peter Kropotkin he laid “the foundations of anarchism.” Property Is Theft! collects his most important works in one (giant!) volume, making many available in English for the first time. Extensively annotated and introduced by editor Iain McKay (author of An Anarchist FAQ)!

Marshall Law: The Life and Times of a Baltimore Black Panther
Marshall “Eddie” Conway & Dominque Stevenson

In 1970, the feds framed Eddie Conway for the murder of a Baltimore City Police officer. Forty years later, still incarcerated for a crime he didn’t commit, Eddie Conway continues to resist. Marshall Law is a poignant story of strength and struggle. From his childhood in inner-city Baltimore to his political awakening in the military, from the rise of the Black Panther Party to the sham trial, the realities of prison life, escape attempts, labor organizing on the inside, and beyond, Eddie’s autobiography is a reminder that we all share the responsibility of resistance, no matter where we are.

Zapatista Spring: Anatomy of a Rebel Water Project & the Lessons of International Solidarity
Ramor Ryan

Eight volunteers converge to help campesinos build a water system in Chiapas—a strategy to bolster the Zapatista insurgency by helping locals to assert their autonomy. These outsiders come to question the movement they’ve traveled so far to support—and each other—when forced into a world so unlike the poetic communiqués of Subcomandante Marcos; a world of endemic rural poverty, parochialism, and shifting loyalties to the movement. From the author of Clandestines!

The Right to Be Lazy: Essays by Paul Lafargue
Paul Lafargue

At once a masterpiece of critical theory and rip-roaring radical humor, this is one of the most spirited attacks on the notion of the “work ethic” ever to be published! This collection also includes four of Paul Lafargue’s lesser-known critiques, as well as a biographical sketch by Wobbly organizer Fred Thompson,and  a new introduction by editor Bernard Marszalek. Released in collaboration with Kerr Company to celebrate their 125th anniversary year, and including a tribute to Kerr by labor journalist Kari Lydersen.

Revolt and Crisis in Greece: Between a Present Yet to Pass and a Future Still to Come
Edited by Antonis Vradis & Dimitris Dalakoglou

How does a revolt come about and what does it leave behind? This timely new volume traces Greece’s long moment of transition from the revolt of 2008 to the economic crisis that followed. In its twenty chapters, authors from around the world—including those on the ground in Greece—analyze how December became possible, exploring its legacies, the position of the social antagonist movement in face of the economic crisis and the arrival of the IMF, and the potentialities that have opened up in face of the crisis.

I Mix What I Like!: A Mixtape Manifesto
Jared A. Ball

In a moment of increasing corporate control in the music industry, where three major labels call the shots on which artists are heard and seen, Jared Ball analyzes the colonization and control of popular music and posits the homemade hip-hop mixtape as an emancipatory tool for community resistance. Blending together elements from internal colonialism theory, cultural studies, political science, and his own experience on the mic, Jared suggests that the low-tech hip-hop mixtape may be one of the best weapons we have against Empire.

Peace, Love & Petrol Bombs: A Novel
D.D. Johnston
Wayne Foster is fed up. How long can you work in a dead-end job as a full-time burger-flipper in a small town in Scotland before you start to wonder what comes next? Add a likeable geek with a love of Karl Marx, an angry French anarchist, and a country schoolteacher’s daughter in search of excitement, and soon you’ll have a rebellion on your hands. Rife with dry wit and disaffected humor, Peace, Love & Petrol Bombs is the modern working-class novel, and the perfect antidote to “serious” political fiction.

AK Distro Books Get Some Buzz!

Hopefully all you news hounds have been faithfully following the recent press coverage related to AK Press releases such as I Mix What I Like, Revolt and Crisis in Greece, and Peace, Love & Petrol Bombs. But we’re not the only ones publishing kick-ass books these days; several of our distributed publishers have gotten some great recognition recently for their recent titles, and we highly recommend all of these … read on and check them out, if you haven’t yet!

The Listener, a new graphic novel by artist and Mecca Normal guitarist (and Gruesome Acts of Capitalism author) David Lester, and published by Arbeiter Ring, has been getting quite a lot of press. Besides the early reviews we’ve already mentioned, it’s gotten write-ups from the Baltimore City Paper and The Onion A.V. Club. And most recently, Publishers Weekly called The Listener “a dense and fiercely intelligent work that asks important questions about art, history, and the responsibility of the individual, all in a lyrical and stirring tone.” And School Library Journal, calling it one of the best books of the year so far(!!), recommended it in the “Adult Books 4 Teens” category:

“This is an excellent graphic novel for teens who appreciate history or have an interest in contemporary politics as well as for young artists and writers who can both learn from and appreciate the storytelling that brings the past to life while focusing on a character’s present. From the opening passages, the tension never lets up, yet the story remains accessible and memorable.

And check out this brand-new arrival, the steampunk choose-your-own-adventure What Lies Beneath the Clock Tower by Margaret Killjoy (also the author of the AK Press book Mythmakers and Lawbreakers), published by Combustion Books! It was featured recently on BoingBoing, where Cory Doctorow complimented the author’s “pitch-perfect steampunk sensibility” and continued: “There are many different ways the story can proceed, of course, but if you make your way through to the end, you’ll discover that Killjoy’s not just spinning a shaggy-dog story—there’s a surprising amount of heart and adventure to be had if you’re bold enough to choose the path of heroism.”

Last but certainly not least: Defying the Tomb—a collection of artwork and writings by political prisoner Kevin “Rashid” Johnson, published by our friends at Kersplebedeb—was recently featured on the Black Agenda Report‘s morning shot. It’s also been at the center of a fight between the publisher and Pelican Bay Security Housing Unit, where prison administration has banned the book, alleging “promotion of gang activities.” In Rashid’s own words (from the book): “Repression of “gangs” serves as a fig leaf for the repression of any collective action or organization by the oppressed that does not suit the plans of the oppressor. This dynamic exists in oppressed communities throughout the united states, but like most oppressive dynamics it appears in its most concentrated form within the prison system.” Check out Sketchy Thoughts for more on the banned-book fiasco, as well as links to more information about the prisoner struggles currently taking place at Pelican Bay.

All of these titles (and thousands of others!) can be ordered directly, by individual customers or wholesale, from AK Press Distribution.

Andrei Platonov, the Bush doctrine, and Robin Blackburn on human rights—new issue of New Left Review out now

The new issue of New Left Review (NLR 69 May/June 2011) is out now. Highlights include:

* Andrew Bacevich tracing the origins of the Bush doctrine of preemptive war to the thought of Albert Wohlstetter.

* Robin Blackburn, whose latest book, The American Crucible, examines the relationship between the struggle for emancipation and the discourse on human rights, reviewing The Last Utopia: Human Rights in History by Samuel Moyn.

* A study of Spain—last frontier of the Eurozone crisis and recent site of mass resistance to the austerity project—in which Isidro López and Emmanuel Rodríguez track the development of the Iberian bubble economy.

* A review of François Dosse’s biography of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari by Peter Osborne, author of The Politics of Time.

* ‘On the First Socialist Tragedy,’ an article from 1934 by Andrei Platonov, in which he reflects on man, technology and the dialectic of nature.

* Tariq Ali, whose book The Obama Syndrome is out in paperback soon, reviewing Manning Marable’s biography of Malcolm X.

For information on how to subscribe, visit New Left Review.

On Libya and liberal interventionism—Mike Marqusee

Mike Marqusee cuts through much of the liberal confusion over Libya, and explains why such 'liberal' interventions cannot be seen in separation from the economic and geopolitical interests of the countries carrying them out:
No one proposed a No Fly Zone when Israeli aircraft were pummelling Gaza. Nor did they when the Sri Lankan government killed some 20,000 civilians in its final assault on the LTTE. In Burma condemnation has never been matched by the merest hint of military action, while millions have perished in a war in the Congo financed and armed by western corporations Had the Egyptian army jumped the other way and repressed the uprising, would western powers have treated them as they"re treating the Gaddafi regime? Not a chance. And then there's the flip-flop over Gaddafi himself, from pariah to partner and back again in record time.
“So what?” some will respond. If the western powers are hypocritical and selective, that doesn't mean that in this instance they're wrong. Our guilt elsewhere is not an excuse for failing to protect the innocent in Libya. We cannot cure our governments' double standards with double standards of our own.
But what are these “double-standards of our own”? We don't demand the invasion of Burma or the bombing of Tel Aviv and no one called for NFZs over the townships during the apartheid years. We want an end to western support for repressive regimes everywhere, we stand in solidarity with democratic struggles, but our solidarity is not expressed at the tip of a Cruise missile.
The critical point about the hypocrisy, double-standards and selectivity is that they unveil the real motive forces driving the intervention. And motives here are anything but incidental factors; they guide and shape the intervention and therefore tell us a great deal about its likely impact ...
Liberal interventionists treat great powers as neutral agents, disinterested entities that can be inserted into a situation for a limited purpose and time, like a surgeon's knife. In reality, however, these powers have clear and compelling interests—in Libya as elsewhere—and their deployment of military force will be guided by those interests. In action, western troops are accountable not to the people they're supposed to be protecting but to a chain of command that ends in Washington, London and Paris.
The unleashing of the great military powers undermines the universalism the liberal interventionists claim to honour: outcomes are determined by concentrations of wealth and power remote from the scene of suffering. If we're to build any kind of just, sustainable world order, then we must (at the least) restrain and restrict great powers, not license them to act where and when it's convenient for them.
Or, to put it even more succinctly:
In the Guardian, Jonathan Freedland writes that liberal interventionism is “fine in theory” but goes wrong “in practise”. I'd suggest that it goes wrong in practise because it's deeply flawed in theory.
Visit mikemarqusee.com to read the article in full.

“First as tragedy ...”—Mahmood Mamdani on Libya

Writing for the Al Jazeera English website, Mahmood Mamdani examines the way in which UN resolution 1973 came about, and what this means for the conflict
The second thing notable about the UN process is that though the Security Council is central to the process of justification, it is peripheral to the process of execution ...
Having authorised the intervention, the Security Council left its implementation to any and all, it “authorised Member States, acting nationally or through regional organisations or arrangements.”
As with every right, this free for all was only in theory; in practise, the right could only be exercised by those who possessed the means to do so. As the baton passed from the UN Security Council to the US and NATO, its politics became clearer.
Mamdani goes on to look at the freezing of Libyan assets held in the US & Europe, noting that:
Libyan assets are mainly in the US and Europe, and they amount to hundreds of billions of dollars: the US Treasury froze $30bn of liquid assets, and US banks $18bn. What is to happen to interest on these assets?
The absence of any specific arrangement assets are turned into a booty, an interest-free loan, in this instance, to US Treasury and US banks.
Mamdani goes on to predict that the likely outcome of the intervention will be an “Afghanistan-type civil war”. He concludes:
The logic of a political resolution was made clear by Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, in a different context: “We have made clear that security alone cannot resolve the challenges facing Bahrain. Violence is not the answer, a political process is.”
That Clinton has been deaf to this logic when it comes to Libya is testimony that so far, the pursuit of interest has defied learning political lessons of past wars, most importantly Afghanistan.
Marx once wrote that important events in history occur, as it were, twice—the first time as tragedy, the second time as farce. He should have added, that for its victims, farce is a tragedy compounded.
Visit Al Jazeera English to read the article in full.

May Day International—a new initiative to debate the financial crisis

Some of our favourite radical blogs have collaborated to create May Day International—a new forum for debating the financial crisis and alternatives to austerity measures. The site will be a space for discussion and host content from sites from four countries (at present)—Ireland, Greece, the USA and the UK.
The contributing websites are Crisisjam, Greek Left Review, New Left Project, ZNet and Irish Left Review.
The initiative was launched on the Guardian's Comment is Free site with an article by Costas Douzinas, Gavan Titley and David Wearing:
Neoliberalism—audaciously, given the historic humiliation suffered by its market fundamentalist dogma in the autumn of 2008—is on the comeback trail, with a renewed and reinvigorated assault on the fundamental democratic principle of economic governance in pursuit of the common good. The public itself—with its “generous” pensions, social safety nets and other unaffordable luxuries—is now portrayed as a burden on the economy.
A choice must be made, we are now effectively told, between sharing our common wealth to support one another in living dignified lives as human beings, or maintaining a sound fiscal policy. It is one or the other, and that being the case, good sense dictates that the latter must win out.
Meanwhile, the economic and policy elites who caused the crisis appear to be suffering no material penalty. “Socialism for the rich and capitalism for the poor” hardly begins to describe the absurdity, the irony, and the sheer, rank injustice of the situation in which we now find ourselves.
Visit the Guardian to read the article in full.

Bin Laden's death: 'Why kill the goose?'

In the wake of various White House accounts of the killing of Osama Bin Laden, Tariq Ali comments on internal tensions within Pakistan—“the ally Americans love to hate”—for the Guardian, warning that “stories are changing rapidly, and nothing can be taken at face value.”
Bin Laden had apparently been in a safe house near the Pakistan military academy for six years. Nobody believes this could have happened without the knowledge of senior intelligence officials. A meeting with one such person in 2006, which I recounted in my last book on Pakistan, confirmed that Bin Laden was in the country and being kept safe. The person concerned told me the Americans only wanted Bin Laden dead, but that it was in Pakistan's interest to keep him alive. In his words: “Why kill the goose that lays the golden eggs?” — a reference to the billions in aid and weaponry being supplied to the army ...
Pakistan is in the grip of a fierce debate, its politico-military establishment damned whatever the case. If they admit they were in the know, they stand condemned within their own ranks. There is a great deal of dissension among junior officers and soldiers unhappy about border missions in which they are forced to target their own people. If it turns out that the US didn't even bother to inform the Pakistanis that helicopters were on the way to clip Bin Laden, they stand exposed as leaders who permit the country's sovereignty to be violated at will.
Ali concludes,
In reality, Bin Laden's death changes nothing, except perhaps to ensure that, economy permitting, Barack Obama is re-elected. The occupation of Iraq, the Af-Pak war and Nato's Libyan adventure look set to continue. Israel-Palestine is stalemated, though the despotisms in the Arab world that Obama has denounced are under pressure—except the worst of them all, Saudi Arabia.
In Afghanistan, the Taliban leaders will be relieved that they can no longer be tarred with the Bin Laden brush, but his killing does not change the situation there one bit. The insurgents might not be in a position to take Kabul, (they never could even during the Russian occupation) but elsewhere they control a great deal. The US cannot win this war. The sooner it gets out, the better. Until it does, it will remain dependent on Pakistan.
Visit the Guardian to read the article in full.
Ali also joined Marwan Bishara for 'Beyond bin Laden,' an “Empire” special on Al Jazeera, to discuss “the symbol of the small group of terrorists” in depth with fellow guests Farwaz A. Gerges, director of the Middle East Centre at the London School of Economics, and Vali Nasr, a professor of international politics at Tufts University, and former senior advisor to the Obama administration for Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Visit Al Jazeera to watch the programme in full.

Tons of new books! AK Press

Below you’ll find the latest installment in our bi-weekly mailorder email blast, written especially for you by our awesome sales person, Suzanne! Doesn’t it make ya want to go to the website and order books right now???

The Right To Be LazyHappy spring from AK Press!




Despite this awesome photo of AK collective member Macio “getting lazy” with The Right to Be Lazy, it’s been an incredibly busy and productive month for us!

We’ve just published two long-awaited books: Property Is Theft! (the Proudhon reader) and Andrew Cornell’s Oppose and Propose. Plus, we’ve finished up work on Eddie Conway’s autobiography, Marshall Law, which will be arriving at the warehouse next week! Read on, below, for more about these new titles.

As if that’s not enough for one month, we’ve put out an exciting “surprise” release that wasn’t even part of our previously announced publishing season: the aforementioned The Right to Be Lazy, which is a co-publication with our comrades at the Charles H. Kerr Company. PLUS, we’re sending off another “surprise” release to the printer: Revolt and Crisis in Greece, edited by the folks at Occupied London (preorder yours now!!!).
So you can see we’re going a little publishing crazy. And it’s you, dear readers (we’re looking at you especially, Friends of AK Press) who will reap the benefits!
Spring is also our busiest events season of the year. Next weekend we will be tabling simultaneously at anarchist bookfairs in San Francisco and New York! Next stops: Toronto, Houston, and Los Angeles! Check out our upcoming events schedule to see if there might be an AK Press table near you…

New from AK Press: 25% Off

Property Is Theft
Property Is Theft
A Pierre-Joseph Proudhon Reader
Edited by Iain McKay · AK Press · Order Now for $18.70
(25% off regular list price of $24.95)
Pierre-Joseph Proudhon (1809-1869) was one of the most important and influential political theorists of the nineteenth century, and the first man to call himself an “anarchist.” His social and economic ideas have been a source of inspiration and debate since 1840. Property Is Theft! collects his most important works in one volume, making many available in English for the first time. An indispensable resource for anyone interested in the history and development of anarchist principles and practice.
The Right to Be lazyThe Right To Be Lazy
Essays by Paul Lafargue
Edited by Bernard Marszalek · AK Press/Charles H. Kerr · Order Now for $12.00
(25% off regular list price of $16.00)
At once a masterpiece of critical theory and rip-roaring radical humor, this is one of the most spirited attacks on the notion of the “work ethic” ever to be published! Featuring a revised edition of the original English translation by Charles Hope Kerr, this collection also includes four of Paul Lafargue’s lesser-known critiques (including the “Cathecism for Investors”), as well as a biographical sketch by longtime Wobbly organizer Fred Thompson and a new introduction by the editor. Released in collaboration with Charles H. Kerr Company to celebrate their 125th anniversary year, and including a tribute to Kerr by labor journalist Kari Lydersen.
Oppose and ProposeOppose and Propose
Andrew Cornell · AK Press · Order Now for $9.00
(25% off regular list price of $12.00)
Where do the tactics, strategies, and lifestyles of today’s activists come from? Many ways of doing radical politics pioneered by Movement for a New Society in the 1970s and 1980s have become central to anti-authoritarian social movements: consensus decision making, spokescouncils, communal living, unlearning oppressive behavior, and co-operatively owned businesses. Andrew Cornell’s important contribution to US political history uses this story to raise crucial questions for activists today.
This is the second book in the Anarchist Interventions series, co-published with the Institute for Anarchist Studies. Also check out the first book in the series, Cindy Milstein’s Anarchism and its Aspirations.

Coming Soon from AK Press: 25% Off

Marshall Law
Marshall Law
The Life & Times of a Baltimore Black Panther
Marshall “Eddie” Conway & Dominque Stevenson · AK Press · Preorder Now for $11.96
(25% off regular list price of $15.95)
In 1970, the feds framed Eddie Conway for the murder of a Baltimore City Police officer. Forty years later, still incarcerated for a crime he didn’t commit, Eddie Conway continues to resist. Marshall Law is a poignant story of strength and struggle. From his childhood in inner-city Baltimore to his political awakening in the military, from the rise of the Black Panther Party to the sham trial, the realities of prison life, escape attempts, labor organizing on the inside, and beyond, Eddie’s autobiography is a reminder that we all share the responsibility of resistance, no matter where we are.
Revolt and Crisis in GreeceRevolt and Crisis in Greece
Between a Present Yet to Pass and a Future Yet to Come
Edited by Antonis Vradis & Dimitris Dalakoglou · AK Press/ Occupied London · Preorder Now for $13.50
(25% off regular list price of $18.00)
How does a revolt come about and what does it leave behind? What impact does it have on those who participate in it and those who simply watch it? Is the Greek revolt of December 2008 confined to the shores of the Mediterranean, or are there lessons we can bring to bear on social action around the globe? A collaboration with the anarchist publishing collective Occupied London, this timely new volume traces Greece’s long moment of transition from the revolt of 2008 to the economic crisis that followed. In the essays collected here, over two dozen writers from around the world offer historical analysis of the factors that gave birth to December and the potentialities it has opened up in face of the capitalist crisis.

Be Our Friend… With Benefits.

Friends of AK PressFriends of AK Press

With so many great books on the horizon, there’s no time like the present to become a Friend of AK Press! It’s a great way to support AK Press’s publishing work, and in return you get every new book we publish, delivered right to you.
Sign up now, and get a stylish tote bag featuring the Friends of AK logo designed by Josh MacPhee! If you’re already a Friend, just refer someone else, and if they mention you when they sign up, you’ll both get a tote bag. And that’s not all-if you keep referring more people after your first, you’ll get a $20 AK Press gift certificate for each additional new Friend you sign up!


New Titles from AK Press Distro

Burn Collector #15
Burn Collector #15
Al Burian · Microcosm · $3.00
The expatriated Al Burian reflects on a year spent living in Berlin, Germany. His wildly free-range topics include: freedom, happiness, animal liberty, Aristotle, modern dentistry, riots as rituals, uncomfortable proximity to drunken teenagers, and how to best color co-ordinate an outfit that includes a Black Flag T-shirt and a baby stroller. Bonus: “When You Realize the Freedom,” an illustrated essay by Anne Elizabeth Moore.”
If you like Al Burian’s work, also check out: Things Are Meaning Less, Burn Collector: Collected Stories from One through Nine, Natural Disaster (which collects issues 10 through 13), and Burn Collector #14.
Fair GameFair Game
A Strategy Guide for Racial Justice Communications in the Obama Era
The Praxis Project · $20.00
A workbook-style guide from the good folks at The Praxis Project, designed to help racial justice advocates navigate new political waters. Through case studies, planning tools, and the latest research, Fair Game invites readers to explore proven strategies that offer promise for future success and to consider what we must do over the long term to regain lost ground. First introduced at the US Social Forum in Detroit, Fair Game is now available to the general public (and stores!) for the first time through AK Press Distribution.
And also be sure to check out this related title from AK Press: Talking the Walk: A Communications Guide for Racial Justice
3 Dead Princes3 Dead Princes
An Anarchist Fairy Tale
Danbert Nobacon & Alex Cox · Exterminating Angel · $13.00
A kids’ picture book from one of the founding members of Chumbawamba! Princess Stormy lives in a semi-detached castle with her family and a Fool. When an unhappy neighboring kingdom decides to invade, Stormy must go on her quest, meeting giant Cats, Mermangels, Giggle Monkeys, a Gricklegrack, and Flying Lizards on the way. Oh, and she kills three princes. But that’s by accident, and anyway it’s their own fault …
“An alternative fairy tale for anarchist/punk/fello traveler parents to read with their kids!” says Jessica Mills, author of My Mother Wears Combat Boots.

The South Is Still RisingThe South Is Still Rising
Contemporary Radical and Anarchist Activism in Richmond, Virginia from 1994-2004
Mo Karnage · Wingnut Collective · $21.95
The South is Still Rising explores the little-known story of radical organizing in Richmond, VA in terms that Mo’s mom (and by extension you!) can understand. It’s a history that places what’s happening in Richmond in relation to the area’s history, as well as to what’s going on nationally and internationally. Despite what you would discover from traditional media outlets, there is a lot of activism and anarchism to be found in Richmond!
True Cost of CoalTrue Cost of Coal Poster
Beehive Collective· $22.00
In 2008, the Beehive Design Collective allied with Appalachian grassroots organizers fighting Mountain Top Removal Coal Mining, a practice which blasts mountains into moonscapes to fuel the ever-growing global demand for electricity. Their team of volunteer artists and educators have put countless hours into designing “The True Cost of Coal,” a visually stunning graphic multi-tool for activists and ordinary folks seeking real solutions. This poster is 60″ X 31″ (about 5 feet by 2.5 feet, for those of you who are less mathematically inclined).
We also carry the Beehive Collective’s Plan Colombia Poster.
VenezuelaVenezuela
Rafael Uzcategui · See Sharp · $16.95
Both leftist supporters and rightist opponents of the Chávez government will be outraged by the book’s premise that the Chávez regime is neither dictatorial nor revolutionary, but rather is one of a long line of Latin American populist regimes that are ultimately subservient to the U.S. government and to the transnational corporations. This well documented book covers a wide range of topics: Venezuela’s political history and the long involvement of the military in that history; Venezuela’s economy; Venezuela’s indigenous rights and human rights movements; Venezuela’s labor movement; and the social policies of the Chávez government and its predecessors.
CIA Makes Science Fiction Unexciting
Lee Harvey Oswald
Abner Smith
· Microcosm · $5.00

At long last it’s the new issue of Microcosm’s continuing CIA zine series! For the tenth anniversary issue, we get an intimate, never-seen-before examination of the life and death of Lee Harvey Oswald. Using exclusive info and newly declassified documents,  CIAMSFU #6 puts into perspective a richly-detailed version of the Oswald story, from birth in 1939 to his historic televised assassination. Packed with interview text featuring figures as close to Oswald as his wife and mother, CIAMSFU #6 shows us Lee as a confused Marxist, an employee, a soldier, a lover, a people person, a trouble-starter, a world traveler, a show-off, even a “real cutie.” Shocking, humanizing-whatever you take away from it-this is the most fascinating and fast-moving CIA zine to date. A great addition to this well-loved series.
Also check out these other zines from the series.
Dream Whip 1-10
Bill Brown · Microcosm · $12.00
Spanning 1994 to 1999, this 352-page pocket sized anthology collects issues 1 through 10 of the long-running Dream Whip zine. Inside, Bill Brown hits the road and finds adventure far and wide. Each page is lovingly handwritten or typed and illustrations and photographs abound. It’s tornadoes and pet cemeteries, Alaskan highways and the lonely ruins of government missile sites. Bill Brown’s America is seen with the big, dreaming heart of a romantic, everything recorded in sweet, smart, funny, beautifully-simple prose.
Also check out Dream Whip #14, a book-length issue in itself!
Vegan Baking Classics
Delicious, Easy-to-Make Traditional Favorites
Kelly Rudnick
· Surrey Books · $17.95

Whether you are new to the world of vegan baking or are an old pro, this book will be invaluable. These reliable recipes use high-quality ingredients that are widely available and affordable. You’ll find delicious vegan versions of all the traditional favorites (brownies, muffins, breads,  bars, cookies, cupcakes), many with mouth-watering photos!
How It All Vegan
Irresistible Recipes for an Animal-Free Diet (10th Anniversary Edition)
Tanya Barnard & Sarah Kramer
· Arsenal Pulp · $22.95

Since it was first published, How It All Vegan! has become a bible for vegan cooks, both diehard and newly converted. This tenth-anniversary edition includes a new color photo section and new recipes; it also includes a new introduction by co-author Sarah Kramer, who speaks personally and passionately about the impact of veganism on her life over the past decade.
Also available from the same author(s): The Garden of Vegan, La Dolce Vegan, and Vegan A Go-Go!