Archive for August, 2017

Why Young People Fall For Socialism – National Review

A huge part of the socialist project, going back to the 19th century, was to capture the commanding heights of thought within society, from which the socialists would control the peoples beliefs. That meant taking control of publishing, the churches, and the education system. They were remarkably successful. They never thought theyd take over business, but now we find many companies run by executives with scant understanding of capitalism and who warmly embrace lots of socialistic drivel. (Yes, Google, I mean you.)

In todays Martin Center article, lawyer Arch Allen explains that Millennials are to an alarming extent imbued with the anti-capitalistic mindset (borrowing the phrase from von Mises). Allen writes, Clearly, Millennials rejection of capitalism and acceptance of socialism show that they know little about either and do not know their comparative histories. Instead, they have learned relativism, postmodernism, and other academic fads. In much of the humanities and soft social sciences especially with literary theorists and social justice warriors in the race, class, and gender grievance disciplines capitalism is caricatured as racist, sexist, etc., and generally bad. And where did they learn that toxic nonsense? In their schooling, and especially in college.

Perhaps the most distressing instance Allen points to is the nasty gestures of young SJW types toward the Victims of Communism Memorial. Communist regimes killed millions of people in the 20th century, but these ignorant kids have been trained to see the dictators as enlightened leaders and their victims as the bad guys. Could anything speak more loudly about the failure of our educational system?

Allen closes with an excellent suggestion for college leaders: instead of assigning leftist puff books to incoming freshman each summer, how about instead having them read something enlightening, such as a great essay by Alan Kors, Can There Be an After Socialism? Rather than reinforcing the socialist brainwashing so many students have gotten, college ought to challenge it.

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Why Young People Fall For Socialism - National Review

Letter: Nazis are Socialist like Obama is Kenyan – INFORUM

Most, though, didn't actually know what it meant. They were scared of the word Socialism, despite that Socialism is how we maintain our libraries, our roads and bridges, our fire department, our local co-ops, and even the North Dakota state bank.

Socialism is how we can improve health care and how we can fight the unjust income/wealth inequality in our country.

It's apparent from his letter published online Aug. 18, Garrett Boyer has no idea what Socialism is, and it cannot be more apparent than when Boyer makes the completely unfounded non sequitur to call the Nazis a Socialist group.

Nazis are Socialist like Obama is Kenyan, like Trump is "presidential," or like the KKK is Christian; we know better. None of the Socialists I know are Nazis and none of the Nazis I know about are Socialist, there is a reason for this.

In particular, us Democratic Socialists of America are not intolerant of other people or other religions based on a false sense of superiority, we embrace comrades from a large variety of the world population, we fight alongside our Jewish, LGBT, immigrant, refugee, Muslim, etc. friends with equal fervor.

The Nazis want us all dead. I dare you to talk to any one of us in the Red River Valley DSA and you'll find absolutely no reason to ever think we are anything like the Nazis you saw in Charlottesville.

We spent the past couple of days organizing against Chris Berg's POV show for giving a platform to Nazis like Pete Tefft. A few weeks ago, many of us did our part to help settle unpaid school lunch debt for families in Moorhead. So, how exactly is it possible that we could be the same as Nazis? It's not.

Nazis aren't organizing against Nazis, we are. Nazis aren't working to help their community at-large, we are. We are Socialist, we fight for the people, listen to the rest of us in the Red River Valley Democratic Socialists of America, join us.

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Letter: Nazis are Socialist like Obama is Kenyan - INFORUM

How to define socialism – The News International

In our contemporary global society, socialism has become a clich that denotes a vast array of political approaches and ideologies that purportedly defy the political, economic and cultural status quo. It is in vogue to refer to a person as a socialist if he or she has an intellectual bent that advocates vague notions of religious freedom, economic equity, cultural revivalism and political egalitarianism.

While it is true that socialist ideals are founded on an alternative political and economic order from capitalism, they do not advocate an interpretive theoretical model that lumps together religion, culture, the economy and politics as mere analytical categories.

One must make a clear distinction between socialist idealism as an interpretive scheme with a set of moral narratives of an imagined egalitarian society and scientific socialism as an objective critique of capitalism. Despite all its variants, socialist ideals have somehow become a symbol of resistance and aspiration for a better society no matter how ill-founded these ideals of a new society are.

Far removed from working class movements, a large number of social democrats, anarchists, Maoists, civil society groups and human right activists consider themselves to be socialists. Under the rubric of socialism as we understand it today, little attention is paid to the most significant ideological contribution of socialism as a form of economic advancement. Scientific socialism unleashes the force of transformation through an organic political movement of the working class without recourse to a messianic political narrative of an exalted society.

In an ideological state like Pakistan, political non-conformity to the state ideology is socialism. This is sacrilegious, condemnable, treasonous and one of the key factors that promote moral turpitude in society. Socialism, secularism, atheism and profanity are used interchangeably as concepts that are inimical to the integrity of state and religious morality. Religious moralists argue that socialists do not practice what they preach and are, therefore, hypocrites. This interpretation of socialism by religious moralists in Pakistan emanates from real-life experiences as all alterative political thoughts are dubbed as acts of disloyalty to the state.

Elsewhere in the world, socialism has been distorted for short-term political mileage and often as a form of disdain and resentment to neoliberalism. Former US president Barrack Obama was seen wearing a T-shirt bearing the picture of Che Guevara during his visit to Cuba as a political symbol to resist the visible return of the far-right in America.

In the recent past, at political rallies against the execution of Mumtaz Qadri for killing former Punjab governor Salmaan Taseer a group of students of religious seminaries were seen carrying placards with pictures of Che Guevara. When asked what made them carry these placards, the students had no clue about the political ideology of Che. But they knew one thing: the man on the placard was a revolutionary who had fought against injustice and corruption. Che Guevara has also become a brand for trendy young people who can be seen wearing a Che cap and a T-shirt with his picture.

According to some political analysts, the revolutionary ideals of Che have been decontextualised. This has diluted the spirit of the class struggle through the political frivolity of religious infighting, the symbolic defiance to the status quo by liberals and by the attempts to turn political resistance into an insignia for brand-loving trendy lads. Che is for sale in supermarkets as a product that fits into an economic proposition of value for money and a means of political mileage.

This is, of course, not new in human history where change-makers and revolutionaries have been turned into the statues of grandeur, political supremacy and control. Che is also subjected to the tyranny of the history of the ruling class albeit with slightly better treatment than what Romans did to Christ.

Regardless of their religious or sacrilegious significance, reformers and revolutionaries have either been vilified or glorified in the political and cultural narratives as a means of establishing the ideological hegemony. Che may continue to be a symbol of resistance for millions of people across the world with the sting of his political ideology taken out. But the revival of Che is not only frivolous. It is easy to lose sight of the political and historical context of his struggle. However, resistance against neoliberalism is much deeper than the political frivolity today.

Whistle-blowers like Joseph Stiglitz and Al Gore have been vocal against the neoliberal economic and political onslaught on a variety of global issues, ranging from international trade to climate change. Local manifestations of resistance against the adverse trickledown effects of neoliberalism vary from moral narratives of religion and the cultural discourse of nationalism to the politico-economic counter-narratives of socialism. It would, therefore, be simplistic to discount the impact of religious and cultural movements on anti-neoliberal narratives of globalisation.

Many liberal and progressive thinkers in Pakistan dismiss religious movements as intrigues of the establishment. But in doing so, they also discount the transformative potential of millions of the wretched poor associated with these movements. These liberal thinkers and their political tactics become irrelevant to a clear majority of the working class whose wretchedness is left for religious zealots to exploit.

Nationalist groups in Balochistan, Sindh, KP, Gilgit-Baltistan and AJK have their own political narratives that are essentially territorial in nature borrowing the phrase of late Professor Hamza Alavi. These territorial narratives are confined to a political discourse of cultural purity, ethnocentricity and geographical grandeur, with an aspiration for equitable access to national resources within the context of a nation-state.

Owing to their narrowly defined ethnocentric agenda, nationalist movements are less effective than religious movements in asserting their political influence on policymaking. As a result, they have, at times, been neutralised by religious forces. Left-wing political groups have traditionally entered into alliances with nationalist groups because of their secular outlook.

In many instances, the left was submerged into these nationalist groups. For instance, the ANP, the Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF), the Balochistan Liberation Front (BLF), the Jeay Sindh and the Karakoram National Front (KNM) could attract a sizeable number of progressive political activists who became the intellectual core of these nationalist forces.

It has been one of the biggest failures of left politics in Pakistan that a vast majority of poor people were left at the mercy of religious bigotry. With a strong intellectual tradition, left politics lacked praxis and therefore could not penetrate the rank and file of the people and the working class. Socialism is, of course, about a post-capitalist economic system, ie the economic and political advancement of a society with collective ownership of the means of production. Socialism is not a moral theory that provides scholastic interpretation of morality, values and normative/prescriptive political solutions from the outside. Instead, it is all about an objective and scientific analysis of material conditions under the capitalistic mode of production and aims to strategise for a transformation by linking together the organic working class movements. Socialism is not about individual purification, self-cleansing and moral sublimity, which are the products of the interplay of political and economic forces that the moral systems are founded upon.

In a nutshell, socialism is all about the qualitative political and economic transformation of capitalism into a system of political and economic democracy. The qualitative transformation of a system requires a systemic view rather than groping in the darkness of individual morality, which is as ephemeral as a chimera in the darkness and a mirage in the desert.

With all the wrong moral assumptions, we, perhaps, expect too much from a socialist to surrender all worldly pleasures like a hermit and become a pauper to show disdain towards capitalism. Socialism is not anti-capitalism. It is post-capitalism, a much-refined and developed economic system for which socialism lays out well-defined principles. One may disagree with the economic principles of socialism without getting into an irrelevant moral debate of individual purification.

Email: [emailprotected]

The writer is a freelance columnist based in Islamabad.

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How to define socialism - The News International

‘Lay it on the line’: Judge in tea party case orders IRS to disclose employee names, reasons – Washington Times

A federal judge on Thursday ordered the IRS to name the specific employees the agency blames for targeting tea party groups for intrusive scrutiny and said the government must prove it has ceased the targeting.

Judge Reggie B. Walton also said the IRS must explain the reasons for the delays for 38 groups that are part of a lawsuit in the District of Columbia, where they are still looking for a full accounting of their treatment.

Judge Walton approved another round of limited discovery in the case and laid out six questions that the IRS must answer, including the employees names, why the groups were targeted and how the IRS has tried to prevent a repeat.

At a hearing earlier this week, Judge Walton said it was time to get everything on the table.

Lay it on the line. Put it out there, he told attorneys for the IRS, who are continuing to fight some tea party groups demands for full disclosure.

The targeting scandal burst open in May 2013 when the IRS admitted it had been pulling conservative-leaning groups nonprofit status applications out of the usual processing queue and subjecting them to extra scrutiny and extraordinary delays because of perceived political activity.

IRS senior executive Lois G. Lerner initially said the problem was rogue employees at an Ohio office who botched the handling. But subsequent investigations revealed that IRS officials at the highest levels of Washington were aware of the delays and extra scrutiny.

Some applications are still awaiting approval, though the IRS as of late last month had agreed to a process for deciding on one of the key outstanding cases.

Still, some tea party groups say they feel they are being treated unfairly.

Carly Gammill, a lawyer at the American Center for Law and Justice, which is representing some of the groups in the lawsuits, told Judge Walton that they are concerned about an email sent by IRS employees during the initial targeting speculating that they would approve applications but would review them later for follow-ups.

We suspect we will have to approve the majority of the c4 applications, Holly Paz, a top Lerner aide, said in one 2011 email. We will also refer these organizations to the Review of operations for follow-up in a later year.

Ms. Gammill said the case against the IRS has been open for four years and that its time the agency explain what it did and whether its still treating tea party applications differently.

She had hoped for a broad series of inquiries that Judge Walton would make the IRS answer.

But Laura Conner, the Justice Department lawyer defending the IRS, said the inquiries would absorb too much time and effort, with no evidence that they would produce any new evidence.

The United States should not be held to respond to far-reaching inquiries, she said.

Judge Walton came down in the middle, writing his own set of inquiries for the IRS.

Why hide the ball? he asked the tax agency. If theres nothing there, theres nothing there.

Mr. Walton told the IRS to go beyond searching a basic agency database for records and ordered it to scour other relevant resources containing documents from the relevant time period.

The judge said that time frame runs from 2009 to March 27, 2015. The IRS had been arguing for a shorter period.

Furthermore, to the extent that the plaintiffs have already received information produced by the government indicating that the plaintiffs were allegedly discriminated against, and that information provides a basis to believe that other such documents exist, the government must search all relevant sources to ensure that all documents responsive to the document request is identified and produced, the judge wrote in his order.

He gave the IRS until Oct. 16 to finish the search.

In addition to the Washington cases, the IRS is battling a class-action lawsuit in Ohio against hundreds of groups that were on the agencys target list.

Ms. Lerner and Ms. Paz have given depositions in that case but have asked that their testimony be kept secret, saying they fear death threats.

The judge in the Ohio case is deciding what information to make public.

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'Lay it on the line': Judge in tea party case orders IRS to disclose employee names, reasons - Washington Times

Ukraine central bank warns of new cyber-attack risk – Reuters

KIEV (Reuters) - The Ukrainian central bank said on Friday it had warned state-owned and private lenders of the appearance of new malware as security services said Ukraine faced cyber attacks like those that knocked out global systems in June.

The June 27 attack, dubbed NotPetya, took down many Ukrainian government agencies and businesses, before spreading rapidly through corporate networks of multinationals with operations or suppliers in eastern Europe.

Kiev's central bank has since been working with the government-backed Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT) and police to boost the defenses of the Ukrainian banking sector by quickly sharing information.

"Therefore on Aug. 11..., the central bank promptly informed banks about the appearance of new malicious code, its features, compromise indicators and the need to implement precautionary measures to prevent infection," the central bank told Reuters in emailed comments.

According to its letter to banks, seen by Reuters, the new malware is spread by opening email attachments of word documents.

"The nature of this malicious code, its mass distribution, and the fact that at the time of its distribution it was not detected by any anti-virus software, suggest that this attack is preparation for a mass cyber-attack on the corporate networks of Ukrainian businesses," the letter said.

Ukraine - regarded by some, despite Kremlin denials, as a guinea pig for Russian state-sponsored hacks - is fighting an uphill battle in turning pockets of protection into a national strategy to keep state institutions and systemic companies safe.

The state cyber police and Security and Defence Council have said Ukraine could be targeted on Aug. 24 with a NotPetya-style attack aimed at destabilizing the country as it celebrates its 1991 independence from the Soviet Union.

Writing by Alessandra Prentice; editing by Mark Heinrich

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Ukraine central bank warns of new cyber-attack risk - Reuters