Archive for June, 2017

An attack on democracy, on all of us – mySanAntonio.com

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An attack on democracy, on all of us

There is much we dont know about the shooting Wednesday at a GOP congressional baseball practice in Alexandria, Virginia. But we know enough to suspect that the tone and tenor of our current political disagreements are acting as an unhealthy accelerant for what were already-over-the-top passions.

We know the lone gunman, who shot and wounded five before he was killed in a shootout, made his anti-Trump sentiments known on social media. And we know his victims were Republican members of a congressional baseball team. In other words, members of the same party as President Donald Trump.

We know that the shooter identified as James T. Hodgkinson, 66, from Belleville, Illinois reportedly posted this: Trump is a traitor. Trump Has Destroyed Our Democracy. Its Time to Destroy Trump & Co. Hodgkinsons brother said he was very distraught over Trumps election. He was apparently a volunteer in the presidential campaign of Sen. Bernie Sanders, who condemned the shooting.

And we know that Rep. Jeff Duncan, R-South Carolina, was asked by a man he believes was the gunman about the party affiliation of the practicing team. He replied Republican.

Among those shot was House Majority Whip Steve Scalise of Louisiana, two law enforcement officials, an aide for Texas GOP Rep. Roger Williams and a lobbyist for Tyson Foods.

In a statement, the president said, We may have our differences, but we do well in times like these to remember that everyone who serves in our nations capital is here because, above all, they love our country.

Wed broaden that definition of people who love their country to include most Americans why the need to calm our disagreements are necessary.

But this shooting is different in a noteworthy way.

The shooting is reminiscent of the one that claimed U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Tucson, as a victim in 2011. She survived with brain injury, but six were killed in that shooting. The gunman, Jared Lee Loughner, was ultimately judged incompetent, didnt stand trial and was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia. He was reportedly fixated on Giffords, though his specific motives remain unclear.

But a theme was present in Wednesdays shooting, as it was in the one that claimed Giffords as a victim. Among those shot was a U.S. representative.

Any shooting of any innocent person is a tragedy. When the victims are those elected to serve us, this is an attack not just on individuals but on our democracy. While its clear that the 2011 Tucson shooting was an assassination attempt, its less clear if Scalise was the intended target or just a random victim at a GOP gathering.

Nonetheless, the fact that he was shot is noteworthy. Intended or not, this was an attack on our system of government.

We live in a time of conflict, of deep divisions about the president and about political ideology generally. The proper channels for such disagreements are the ballot box, free speech that entitles us to voice our disagreements, our institutions of checks and balances, and values that say we can have such disagreements and all be equally American.

There is, however, a lot of us and them plaguing the country. Among the more recent examples: deadly attacks on two brave men in Portland defending a young girl wearing a hijab; and the shooting of two Indian men in a bar in Kansas, killing one.

The culprit here is not the left, nor in previous shootings the right. It is that deranged extremist who believes that grievance channeled through the barrel of a gun is acceptable. It is not. Not in America. Not anywhere.

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An attack on democracy, on all of us - mySanAntonio.com

In Miami, Trump Applauds Cuban Victims of Communism: ‘Now We Hold the Cards’ – Breitbart News

Opening with a recognition of recent victims of leftist violence U.S. citizen Otto Warmbier, recently released by Cuba ally North Korea, and Representative Steve Scalise (R-LA) Trump called for the audience to pray for them and all the American and Cuban people. He then listed some of the Cuban dissidents present for his speech in Florida, including Jorge Luis Garca Prez (Antnez), who suffered 17 years in prison for objecting to communism, and Cary Roque, a dissident who Trump allowed to deliver a few short words.

Trump also took a moment to acknowledge two dissidents not present in Miami Jos Daniel Ferrer of the Patriotic Union of Cuba (UNPACU) and Berta Soler of the Ladies in White who were banned from traveling to the event by the communist regime. The president honored the great people who fought at Bay of Pigs, the 2506 Brigade veterans present at the event, and the children of Operation Peter Pan.

Wewant to thank you all for being a voice for the voiceless, Trump concluded. The exiles and dissidents here today have witnessed communism destroy a nation, just as communism has destroyed every nation where it has ever been tried.

Trump listed those crimes in detail. You look at what happened and what communism has done, he listed. Believers persecuted for preaching the word of God,you watch the Women in White bruised, bloodied, and captured on their way fromMass,you have heard the chilling cries of loved ones orthe cracks of firing squads piercing through the ocean breeze not a good sound.

This is the simple truth of the Castro regime: my administration will not hide from it, excuse it, or glamorize it, and we will never, ever be blind to it. We know what is going on and we remember what happened, Trump promised.

Last year, I promised to be a voice against repression. You went out and you voted, and here I am, the president told the audience. Now that I am president, America will expose the crimes of the Castro regime now we hold the cards.

Those cards, the president promised, would be used to pressure a regime that harbors cop killers, hijackers, and terrorists, and has shipped arms to North Korea and fueled chaos in Venezuela.

Trumps new policy, signed shortly after the speech, would enforce the ban on tourism, enforce the embargo take concrete steps that ensure investments float directly to the people so they can open private businesses and begin to build their countrys future, according to the president.

The new policies, Trump continued, would require Cuba to put an end to the abuse of dissidents, release the political prisoners, stop jailing innocent people, open yourselves to political and economic freedoms, return the fugitives from American justice, including the return of the cop killer Joanne Chesimard before America would be open to a deal with them.

In another nod to the Cuban-American community, Trump acknowledged the murder of U.S. citizens in the 1996 Brothers to the Rescue incident. With their family in attendance, he promised them, they did not die in vain.

We challenge Cuba to come to the table with a new agreement that is in the best interests of both their people and our people, and alsofor Cuban Americans, Trump concluded, before sitting down to sign the new policies into action.

The new policies followed a thorough White House review of President Obamas normalization shift, as well as consultations with Cuban policy experts in Congress, including members of the Cuban exile community who were present at Fridays event, like Rep. Mario Daz-Balart (R-FL) and Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL).

In anticipation of the announcement, Cuban anti-communist dissident leaders praised the changes to American policy, calling them a positive step for the democratization of the island. The White House invited a number of prominent Cuban dissidents to the announcement, including the head of the Ladies in White movement, Berta Soler, who was banned from leaving Cuba to attend.

President Trump made reforms to benefit the Cuban people and limit the power of the communist regime a staple of his presidential campaign, earning him the first endorsement from the Bay of Pigs Veterans Association in the history of that group.

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In Miami, Trump Applauds Cuban Victims of Communism: 'Now We Hold the Cards' - Breitbart News

Hermeneutic Communism as (Weak) Political Phenomenology – Telos Press

Critique of phenomenology amounts to a tiny piece of the puzzle that is Gianni Vattimo and Santiago Zabalas thought-provoking Hermeneutic Communism: From Heidegger to Marx.[1] According to the spot allocated to it, phenomenology fits in with the other manifestations of classical metaphysics, bent on preserving the transcendental privilege of immutable truth. In what follows, I will argue that such placement may not do justice to phenomenology, which, in its most critical manifestations, is an ally of hermeneutic communism. This particular piece of the puzzle belongs on the other side of the intellectual and historical barricades, and, more importantly, holds the potential for mediating between the various opposed campsdescription and interpretation, realism and anti-realism, the strong and the weak, metaphysics and postmetaphysicsthat Vattimo and Zabala keep apart.

To appreciate the unique position of phenomenology, let us take one of the original terms, with which Hermeneutic Communism operates, namely, framed democracy.[2] An ingenious turn of phrase, framed democracy has a double sense. First, it means democracy enframed, restricted within a set of limiting parameters of parliamentary liberalism and militant capitalism wherein its procedures largely devoid of substance are allowed to unfold. Presented as the only legitimate political regime in existence today, it is a paradigm that claims for itself the universality of law and order, while viewing everything that falls outside its confines as chaotic, anarchic, and fraught with violence. Second, framed democracy implies the framing of those who subscribe to its logic, a situation where the oppressed are duped into believing that its system works in circuitous ways also to their advantage. It reveals a thoroughly ideological construction of the paradigm that highjacks the place of political universality. The beauty of the expression is that the two meanings are actually inseparable one from the other: the parameters of contemporary liberal democracies are set up in such as way as to frame their subjects.

Throughout their book, Vattimo and Zabala insist on the rigidity of the frame that separates not only different accounts of truth but also opposing sets of interests, histories, and classes. Clearly, they redraw these active front lines, so as to demonstrate the limitations of framed democracy that, in its most delusional moments, has pictured itself as wholly unframed, trans-historical, objective, and universally applicable. It should not be a surprise, they write, that democracy and science have become indissoluble. And it is this indissolubility that situates framed democracy outside history, where its ideal of objectivity can finally be fulfilled (HC39). Still, even in their account, the frame acts more as a membrane; it is porous, and, thanks to this porousness, it is able to draw on what lies outside it, just as it can expel what was previously captured within its confines. If, for instance, the weak are the discharge of capitalism (HC7), then there must be a way for them to be ejected outside the system of framed democracy and, whenever necessary, to be reincorporated and exploited from within this system once again. Echoing the industrial reserve army in Karl Marxs Capital,[3] these discharges provide the much-needed flexibility to the political economic system during the alternating periods of growth and contraction that depend on the periodic crises of capital.

On the epistemological plane, too, the paradigmatic frame is more of a porous membrane, creating the lines of communication between the two sides it separates. As Jacques Derrida convincingly showed in The Truth in Painting, frames, in their materiality, are not one-dimensional, inasmuch as they have a width and thickness of their own, outer and inner edges, elaborate or austere parergonal elements, and so forth.[4] Following Vattimo and Zabalas account, framed democracies thrive on the imposed descriptions of what they consider to be true and relegate flexible interpretations to the hither side of the frame. But what if, instead of scrutinizing the inside and the outsidethe staple categories of metaphysics properwe focused on the frame itself? What does it consist of? What is interjected between presumably objective descriptions and free interpretations?

I submit that this place in-between is occupied by the appearing (not the appearance) prior to its transformation into materials for either description or interpretation. Phenomenology is concerned, precisely, with the appearing in the how of its appearance, that is to say, with the modes of givenness of phenomena. It thus deals with the infrastructure common to descriptions and interpretations, which is why it could influence both John Searl and Martin Heidegger or Hans-Georg Gadamer. Phenomenology oversteps its metaphysical confines, inasmuch as it is interested in the problem of givenness, in all its finitude; its crucial question is how the world appears to an embodied, emplaced, mortal, and fallible subject. Already in the thought of Edmund Husserl, phenomenological investigations of givenness are intensely perspectival. His term for perspectivism is givenness through adumbrations, or being faced with a seemingly inexhaustible array of physical dimensions of the appearing object. Least of all does phenomenology impose a prefabricated mold of objectivity onto ontology. Far from it, phenomenological practice liberates our not yet formalized life-world from the projections of the scientific and natural attitude (common sense) that suffocate the very thing they are meant to express.

Let us take up the distinguishing features of phenomenology, which finds itself under siege in Hermeneutic Communism, one by one, paying close attention to the way that they, in fact, shore up Vattimo and Zabalas project. Having slotted this piece of the puzzle into its proper place, we will observe how a certain critical spirit of phenomenology resonates with the spectrality of communism, on the one hand, and with the weakness of hermeneutics, on the other. It is my hope that the effects of their multiple resonances would enrich hermeneutic communism, create new alliances with its supposed adversaries, and, especially, defend it against the charges of a dualist or dichotomous world-view reminiscent of classical metaphysics.

Quite rightly, the authors accuse the self-proclaimed objectivity of metaphysical and scientific descriptions of serving as support mechanisms for the worst excesses of the political status quo: A politics of descriptions does not impose power in order to dominate as a philosophy; rather, it is functional for the continued existence of a society of dominion, which pursues truth in the form of imposition (violence), conservation (realism), and triumph (history) (HC12). Although the word description is embraced by phenomenological philosophy, it has nothing whatsoever to do with the violent, realist, and triumphalist pretense of objectivity, associated with its scientific-metaphysical form. Phenomenological descriptions are the positive results of a meticulous work of reduction, which is tasked with stripping away layer after layer of unexamined presuppositions projected onto what is. In other words, they are not imposed but derived from the ever-shifting relation between the subject and the object of knowledge. Nor are they realist (Husserl has always insisted that his thought was suspended between realism and idealism), in that they are the description of givenness in its infinite manifestations, not of reality itself. And they are not triumphalist, since the work of reduction must recommence every time anew, preventing rigorous descriptions from ossifying into new metaphysical dogmas and commonsensical propositions.

We might say that the political case-in-point of phenomenological description is E.P. Thompsons 1963 book The Making of the English Working Class. A courageous history from below, it is an attempt to rescue from the oblivion of the winners history the poor stockinger, the Luddite cropper, the obsolete hand-loom weaver, the utopian artisan, and even the deluded follower of Joanna Southcott.[5] In describing these characters life-worlds, Thompson sets aside the general methodological assumptions of traditional historiography and hence, like Husserl, produces descriptions that are avowedly interpretative and that educe their legitimacy from the fabric of existence, not from an alien ideality.

The role of reduction in phenomenology should not go unremarked, especially because it is allergic to the impositions of truth and to the effects of framing Vattimo and Zabala likewise resist. The goal of reduction is to unhinge the frames that surround the given in its givenness, to reject all sorts of bonuses (idealizations, immediate associations, preconceived images) surreptitiously superadded to the given, and to receive what is given within the limits of its givenness. In doing so, phenomenological reduction estranges what seemed to be intimately familiar and sheds light on the being-frame of the frame, its structuring determination of our cognition and perception as well as of the strata that accrete over and suffocate our cognitive-perceptual capacities.

The ideology critique, inherent in Vattimo and Zabalas interpretation of liberalism, is analogous to the workings of reduction. Hermeneutic communism is to the frames of the liberal state what reduction is to the frames of metaphysical and natural attitudes. Both streams of theoretical practice expose the dead and deadening character of what they reduce. The natural attitude presents the world to us in such a way that the presentation blocks from view what appears in the minutiae of its appearing. Liberal democracy occludes the viability of local alternatives to its impositions, so that the presence of this democratic frame means not only the imposition of our systems but also the exclusion of the invaded states cultural and political systems (HC57). While all framing inevitably reveals the enframed at the price of concealing something else, liberal and metaphysical violence inflicted on the given denies the most vital (existential) possibilities, relegated to the realm outside its frame.

The interplay of revealing and concealing in the movement of dis-closure will be readily recognized as the hallmark of Heideggers truth as aletheia. Vattimo and Zabala acknowledge their debt to the German philosopher when it comes to this notion of truth (HC22), as well as to his idea of being-framed, Ge-Stell (HC145). At the same time, they deem Husserls definition to truth one of the most successful... within contemporary analytic and continental philosophy (HC19). Success, of course, is the effect of the winners history and way of thinking, to which Husserlian phenomenology is said to adhere. The authors of Hermeneutic Communism contend that Husserl advances a metaphysical definition of truth, which

depends on the difference between the mere intention of the phenomenological Being and the matter itselfin other words, between the manner in which something appears and the manner in which it is itself... [T]hat is, a proposition would be true only if it refers to things in a way that permits them to be seen as they are in themselves (HC20).

Unlike Kantian transcendental philosophy, Husserls phenomenology, however, does not postulate the existence of things-in-themselves, somehow distinct from phenomenal appearances. The methodological slogan Back to the things themselves! merely signals the aim of phenomenological reduction and description to re-experience the life-world without the impositions of the metaphysical and natural attitudes. Husserl was preoccupied, above all, not with truth claims, condensed in formal propositions, but with the truth of experience, the necessarily imperfect fit between the emptily intended (or the signified) object and the fulfillment of intentionality in intuition. This meant examining every discrete experience on its own terms, with its own specificities, modes of givenness, and ways of appearing. It required, moreover, going back both to the experiencing subject and to the experienced as it was experienced. After the reduction of what was transcendent vis--vis pure consciousness in IdeasI, no matter itself' remained;[6] rather, it was bracketed and set aside, along with everything that fell outside this newly discovered field for phenomenological operations. The idea of a disembodied, objective, God-like point of view is, actually, the first to be submitted to the knife of reduction, which recognizes in it a groundless imposition on experience.

Looking up to Descartes, Husserl resorts to the Ur-gesture of radical philosophizing, which consists in brushing away all unexamined presuppositions and truth claims and winning a new ground for thinking. Now, this ground is not won once and for all; reduction is an infinite task that must recommence as soon as experience gets buried under the sediments of concepts, theories, assumptions, and representations that grow over it. That is why Husserl is so skeptical with regard to the scientific method and rationality, which, as Vattimo and Zabala concede, he declared to be in crisis (HC13). Given his critique of the European sciences, Husserl refuses either to strengthen their stranglehold on existence or to contribute to their justification of political domination. His project of liberating the life-world from the yoke of scientific rationality is of one piece with the hermeneutic communist demand to let multiple and dispersed existences interpret themselves, revitalizing the active sense of existence as interpretation (HC87ff.). A return to the life-world opens the same horizon of emancipation as hermeneutic communism (HC93), delving beneath the death masks of facts to the facticity of existence in its infinite variations that do not fit on the Procrustean bed of the sciences.

To sum up, phenomenology offers a non-positivist version of description, compatible with interpretation; reduces or brackets extraneous impositions on experience; operates with a pre-prepositional notion of truth; and interferes with the scientific justification of political metaphysical domination. But exactly what is political phenomenology? And what can it contribute to the endeavors of hermeneutic communism?

A history of the political applications of phenomenology runs parallel to that of the political applications of hermeneutics: despite their critical, emancipatory, and anarchic potential, both have been used to promote conservative programs and worldviews. What I refer to under the title political phenomenology has to do with (1) the givenness of political phenomena, (2) the modes of appearance of political actors on the institutional and the informal stages, and (3) the re-activation of political energy, suffocated by the empty proceduralism of the established systems of domination. All three characteristics mentioned above are also crucial to hermeneutic communism, which advances a critique of how political possibilities are precluded, withheld, and decidedly not-given by the status quo (framed democracy); envisions, through the example of the South American Left, the appearance of previously excluded, marginalized, or discharged weak actors on the national, regional, and international scenes; and calls for the exercise of active interpretation, coextensive with existential dispersion, as a way to re-energize an equally dispersed, anarchic politics. Having said that, in the title of the present analysis, I qualify hermeneutic communism as a weak political phenomenology. A few words are, therefore, in order on the sense of this weakness or of this weakening.

The minimal and chronologically first meaning of weak thought denotes, according to Vattimo and Zabala, the abandonment of pretensions to absolutes that had characterized the metaphysical traditions (HC96). Proceeding along the path of the reductions, Husserlian phenomenology, too, did not spare the idols of absoluteness, including reality in itself, scientific rationality, and God. But it did insist on describing the being of pure consciousness, which remained after the operations of reduction were complete, as absolute. Henceforth, in Husserls vernacular, absolute will acquire a very specific signification of absolutely irreducible. While it may be argued that, with this notion, the old chimeras of metaphysics re-enter thinking through the backdoor, there are also traces of such irreducibility in other postmetaphysical philosophies, influenced by the founder of phenomenology. For Heidegger, absolute irreducibility will have stood for the temporality of Dasein. Emmanuel Levinas considers the alterity of the other irreducible. And, in Derridas corpus this idea assumes the shape of the un-deconstructable. In any event, the negative version of absoluteness is consistent with the tenets of weak thought that absorbs into itself the remains of the absolute (in Zabalas terms, the remains of Being[7]) and that, subsequently, produces a positive interpretation of the weakening inherent in the metaphysical tradition itself.

In Husserls phenomenological universe, absolute consciousness has a constituting function: it is the ground, on which experience as such and the world will be reconstructed in the aftermath of reduction. The political equivalent of this function is sovereignty, or the right to decide upon and constitute the political sphere, to give it a determinate shape. This is where we must insist on the weakening of political phenomenology (as much as of political metaphysics), in keeping with the argumentative thrust of Hermeneutic Communism. Although Vattimo and Zabala do not openly engage with the concept of sovereignty, they gesture toward its breaking-up into sovereignties (in the plural) that invalidate the assumption of a unitary and preponderant will of the sovereign. Consistent with the current theories of popular self-determination, this multiplication is possible thanks to the grounding of hermeneutic communism in existence, which cannot be gathered into a totality without losing its existential character. If the right to interpretation is coeval with the right to existence, then the active exercise of both rights by all those who have been dispossessed due to the global system of domination is tantamount to the egalitarian distribution of sovereignty that shatters its unified core. Politics without truth as much as anarchic interpretation (HC9899) are the corollaries to a politics without sovereignty, though not without sovereignties.

As the books subtitle indicates, Hermeneutic Communism is entrusted with an ambitious task of charting backwards an intellectual itinerary that leads from Heidegger to Marx, that is to say, from existence to justice. If Marx emphasized the significance of keeping our feet anchored to the earth, Vattimo and Zabala write, it is Heidegger who indicated through the thought of Being how such earth is constantly moving and changing, constantly in conflict (HC5). Husserls phenomenology combines these divergent relations to the earth, much in the same way hermeneutic communism wishes to do. Phenomenology appeals to the concreteness of the earth as the ground from which our abstractions are born and to which they are bound to return if they are to retain their meaningfulness. But it also recasts the grounds of experience through reduction, by depriving us of the conceptual ground we thought secure and by rooting thinking itself in the life-world, in existence, and, ultimately, in something self-grounded, ungrounded, and groundless, i.e., Being itself. Hence, the hypothesis of my brief intervention: the road leading from Heidegger back to Marx must traverse the philosophy of Husserl, which stands in a somewhat unexpected proximity to hermeneutic communism.

Notes

1. Gianni Vattimo and Santiago Zabala, Hermeneutic Communism: From Heidegger to Marx (New York: Columbia Univ. Press, 2011). Cited hereafter as HC within the text.

2. Cf. part one of Vattimo and Zabala, Hermeneutic Communism.

3. Karl Marx, Capital: A Critique of Political Economy, vol. 1, trans. Ben Fowkes (London and New York: Penguin, 1992), pp.781ff.

4. Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting, trans. Geoffrey Bennington and Ian McLeod (Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press, 1987). Cf., especially, the section on the parergon.

5. E. P. Thompson, The Making of the English Working Class (New York: Vintage, 1966), p.12.

6. Edmund Husserl, Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and to a Phenomenological Philosophy, first book, trans. F. Kersten (Dodrecht, Boston, and London: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1983), esp.33, Preliminary Indication of Pure or Transcendental Consciousness as the Phenomenological Residuum, pp.6366.

7. Santiago Zabala, The Remains of Being: Hermeneutic Ontology After Metaphysics (New York: Columbia Univ. Press, 2009).

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Hermeneutic Communism as (Weak) Political Phenomenology - Telos Press

The truth about Jeremy Corbyn staring us smack in the face: Socialism isn’t bad – Salon

This article originally appeared on AlterNet.

The signal couldnt have been clearer if the entire British electorate had beamed it into the clouds Thursday night, standing with 13 million flashlights on hills and towers to project a blinding new sun over the Eastern Seaboard. No, Corbyn didnt win the election outright, but nobody else did either. This was supposed to be a rout, the final destruction of left-wing electoralism, a tiny and barely formed thing crushed under Theresa Mays heels; instead, Labour has denied the Conservatives their majority, and destabilised the government to the extent that it might have to call another election within a few months, one which theyre well on course to win.

Corbyn has shown that while centrism and fascism gurgle mindlessly over a landscape flattened by low voter turnout and mass political apathy, its socialist politics that can drive the optimism and engagement needed to stop them. And if a left-wing platform can flourish here in Britain, a country toxified by decades of assault on the commons and centuries of racism, it can win anywhere even in a country that elected Donald Trump.

Similarities between Corbyn and Sanders can be overplayed yes, theyre both kindly white-haired socialists despised by their party apparatuses but immensely popular among younger voters, but Corbyns socialism is situated in a far deeper internationalist tradition, while also being considerably more inflected with recent theoretical developments than Bernies Cold War New Dealism. And while its still unfortunately important to keep relitigating the 2016 election, Corbyns triumph offers a blueprint for the future. Its left the dominant myths of 21st-century politics crushed along with the Tory majority, namely thatelections are won from the center.

For 20 years, Labour governments under Tony Blair and Gordon Brown pitched themselves to everyone and no one, jettisoning socialist dictums like public ownership and a general suspicion towards finance capital. The result was 20 years ofsteadily fallingvote shares. In 2015, Ed Miliband abandoned his leftist leanings for more of the same, and he barely improved on the previous election.

This year, as the entire country appeared to have lurched sickeningly to the right, while newspaper columnists lauded a rabidly nationalistic Conservative party for occupying thenewmiddleground of British politics, as every numbers-obsessed party wonk urged Labour to drift rightwards with what appeared to be the national tide, Corbyn stood on an unashamedlyradicalmanifesto. The newspapers, almost without exception, derided it as a fairy tale, bordering on Bolshevism. And it delivered a 9.6 percent shift towards Labour, a swing that outstripped Blairs victory in 1997, the biggest increase in the partys vote share since 1945.

Its not just that centrism is unpopular; theres simply no such thing. The center is a fiction, believed in only by politicians and the people who would like to become them; political science majors and the people who teach them; journalists and the people who imitate them. Nobody else has ever identified themselves with something as vapid and empty an ideology of no ideology, the plan to keep everything the same, the residue of class power disguised as a doctrine. Its the imaginary space between parties, a desert, a wasteland. For most people, the world doesnt revolve around a happy stable core: its a nightmare, in which the rich want to fill their veins with the blood of the poor, in which the old promises of health and security are vanishing, in which everything has gone and continues to go monstrously wrong.

The Tories did not have a workable plan to actually improve things for the people of Britain. Instead, they demonised Corbyn personally. As the campaign whirred to a finish, a vast media campaign excoriated him for supposed links to the IRA, mostly based on meetings he held with the Irish Republican Sinn Fein party, and supposed sympathies for Hamas, Hezbollah, and Iran. After the brutal attacks in Manchester and London, the Daily Mail cynically tried to spin the horror into a campaign issue, devoting a fullthirteen-pageattack on aLabour party it claimed was led by a terrorist ideologue under foreign influence. It didnt work. None of it really stuck. Nobody really cared.

This experience should haunt Democrats as they pursue a byzantine investigation into Trumps alleged Russian ties. In a world that still hasnt recovered from the 2008 crash, most voters simply do not care about geopolitical conspiracy theories; they want politics that will make a difference to their own lives. And the Democrats cant offer that either: whatever its merits, the Russian probe offers a distraction from the fact that the mainstream offers noideological alternative to Trumpism. After all, if Trump is impeached, the country is left with Mike Pence, and then after him a catalogue of further monstrosities, degenerating and without end. Even if the collusion narrative is true and its become so vast and convoluted it seems unlikely to prove Trumps undoingthis is not the terrain on which modern conservatism should be fought. Political change doesnt come out of Senate hearings; it comes from the people, and people are far more receptive to good progressive policies than they are to shrieking about treason.

The questions that the reactionary right offers itself as the answer to, it turns out, are actually far better solved by socialists. Trumps Republicans as well as the Tories and UKIP launch themselves happily into questions of identity and community. People, and older people especially, feel like they have lost their country and want to get it back; theyre concerned by the disintegration of close-knit social ties, the anonymity and alienation that comes in the wake of a world surrendered entirely to market forces and lacerated by international free trade.

These are genuine and important concerns. The rights solution, whether tacit or overt, is anti-immigrant hysteria and ethnic homogeneity: we can restore a mouldered social fabric just by making sure that nobody has to see any Muslims on the street. And there are people who will embrace this answer, if its the only one offered. But the better answer that we can take a country back by wresting it away from private interests and into communal ownership; that we can restore communal ties by restoring the sphere of the commons will always be more popular.

America is no exception. The Democratic Party still sees two distinct working classes: a core, traditional working class that is white and intrinsically, helplessly racist, and a more peripheral working class, ethnically differentiated, its own kind of special interest. The only difference is that while British centrists desperately try to appease this imaginary proletariat with witless flag-waving and a constant tilt towards social exclusionismis this racist enough for you? how about this? American centrists tend to write it off altogether in favour of a minority coalition who, presumably, dont need a roof over their heads or anything to feed their kids.

Corbyns success shows that none of this is necessary. Instead of a politics based on the triangulation of various evils unfettered capitalism, institutional racism, endless war abroad, endless immiseration at home something good is possible, and not just possible, but viable.

But it wouldnt be right to talk about what the American left can learn from Corbynism without also thinking about what we in the UK can learn from the American left. The Outline hascataloguedthe immense enthusiasm among Americans for Corbyn; Ive seen it first hand. Throughout election night I received a constant stream of congratulations from friends across the Atlantic; comrades Id visited in New Orleans let me know that theyd crammed themselves into a bar to watch the BBC live stream. Others sent pictures of themselves in Corbyn T-shirts and badges.

Throughout the difficult two years of Corbyns leadership, plagued by petty in-fighting and the occasional terrifying doubts, every American leftist I knew was absolutely confident that he could pull it off. They could see something a lot of voters and commentators here, even those of us on the left, couldnt. While British people contended with the heavy historical baggage of Labourism and the questions of the partys future, Americans saw only a politician who had the chance to do something good. And they were right.

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The truth about Jeremy Corbyn staring us smack in the face: Socialism isn't bad - Salon

Indivisible movement takes hold in Bradenton – Bradenton Herald


Bradenton Herald
Indivisible movement takes hold in Bradenton
Bradenton Herald
Formed shortly after Trump was elected president in November, staff members for Democratic members of Congress drew up the blueprint for the Indivisible movement. They borrowed freely from the example of the Tea Party movement. And, like the Tea Party ...

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Indivisible movement takes hold in Bradenton - Bradenton Herald