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Letters for April | Letters to the Editor – The Critic

This article is taken from the April 2023 issue of The Critic. To get the full magazine why not subscribe? Right now were offering five issues for just 10.

Plane untrustworthy

A sincere thank you for the helpful, fact-filled (unlike Wikipedia) and ultimately depressing article WHO WATCHES THE WIKIPEDIA EDITORS? (MARCH).

As an example, I would like to point readers to the Wikipedia entry for Norwich City Station (checked 20 March 2023). It states, The station was further damaged when a badly damaged USAF B24 Liberator bomber was deliberately crashed there to avoid greater loss of life, with no reference to check this.

Suffice it to say that proper history books, for instance A J Wrottesleys The Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway, and N J L Digbys The Stations and Structures of The Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway: Volume 2, Norwich to Peterborough and Little Bytham, a magisterial work of great depth and erudition, fail to mention this at all.

While there are many easily found photos of the bombing raid, one would have thought that such a significant event as a deliberately crashed bomber would have been of great interest. How do you deliberately aim a badly damaged bomber at a specific site in the middle of a lot of housing with no recorded loss of life from crew or civilians on the ground?

In our house Wikipedia is avoided as much as possible, and rudely labelled Wankipedia as it is load of old cock.

R Lincoln

Groby, Leicestershire

Green screen

In his interesting article about Henry Green (AN OFF-KILTER VISIONARY, MARCH), Alexander Larman stated that there is no definitive biography.

I would be interested to learn of what he thinks are the shortcomings of Jeremy Treglowns biography, Romancing, published in 2000.

He also believes that none of Greens books has been filmed. However, a film of Loving was made by BBC Northern Ireland in 1996, starring Mark Rylance.

Graeme Creffield

Hemel Hempstead, Herts

A swift correction

Fergus Butler-Gallie (SOUNDING BOARD, MARCH) quotes Jonathan Swifts Gullivers Travels but misplaces the condemnation of humans as the most pernicious race of little odious vermin.

This does not occur in Book IV of the novel as might be expected with its portrayal of the Yahoos but at the close of Book Two Chapter VI where the King of Brobdingnag draws his scathing conclusion after listening to Gulliver eulogising his homeland.

Swifts irony is so pointed that at the beginning of the next chapter (Book Two Chapter VII) he has Gulliver point out that I artfully eluded many of his questions and gave to every point a more favourable turn by many degrees than the strictness of truth would allow which results in the reader wondering just how savage the Kings conclusions would have been had he been told the truth by Gulliver.

Tony Macilwraith

Worcester

Figures and form

Please remind Simon Heffer (HAVE WE LOST OUR MINDS? MARCH) that 29 Labour MPs were elected in 1906 three years before the Peoples Budget, not two.

On the subject of Russian aggression (Mark Almond, THE BALLOON GOES UP, MARCH), India has form. She failed to condemn Moscow over Hungary in 1956 or Czechoslovakia in 1968.

Mark Taha

Ealing, London

Failing the test

I enjoyed reading Christopher Snowdons balanced perspective on grammar schools (THE ROOTS OF SCHOOL RAGE, MARCH). One of the issues mentioned, but not contested, was Hitchens champions selection by ability. There is no psychological reason that a test should be set at eleven years, it is for administrative purposes. The idea that development is set in stone at this age is untenable.

The belief that one test, on one day, can accurately measure academic ability is problematic. For example, an individual may be ill or nervous, and fail to fulfil their potential. There is also confusion about the construct validity of the test: does it actually measure academic skills/intelligence? (Never mind the excessive private tutoring for the test which tests the idea of selection by ability.)

In a democratic country there would need to be some overwhelming reason to segregate people, and if that community is not even prepared to set up a comprehensive and valid diagnostic tool as the starting point, there may always be many people who will be critical of grammar schools.

Michael Moore

Loughton, Essex

Sideways mobility

Christopher Snowdon has some telling observations in his piece on grammar schools. The head of my South London grammar school wrote in his autobiography that he had seen an important part of his job being to turn working-class boys into middle-class men. One of my old schoolmates observed when I told him this, Not necessary in my case. Not necessary in most cases.

Harry Harmer

Shrewsbury, Shropshire

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Letters for April | Letters to the Editor - The Critic

Sprouts Permanently Closing Major California Location at the End of … – NewsBreak Original

The company has blamed performance-related issues for the closure.

Authors Note

This article is based on corporate postings and accredited media reports. Linked information within this article is attributed to the following outlets: Wikipedia.org, ScrapeHero.com, and ABC10.com.

Introduction

Wikipedia features a comprehensive overview of the Sprouts Farmers Market chain, that was founded in July of 2002: Sprouts Farmers Market, Inc., is a supermarket chain headquartered in Phoenix, Arizona, U.S. The grocer offers a wide selection of natural and organic foods, including fresh produce, bulk foods, vitamins and supplements, packaged groceries, meat and seafood, deli, baked goods, dairy products, frozen foods, natural body care and household items. Sprouts employs more than 35,000 workers and operates more than 380 stores in 23 states. A typical store is around 30,000 square feet.

California presently hosts the most Sprouts locations in the United States.

For an up-to-date location count, according to ScrapeHero.com: There are 394 sprouts retail stores in the United States as of March 27, 2023. The state with the most number of sprouts locations in the U.S. is California, with 134 retail stores, which is about 34% of all sprouts retail stores in the U.S.

Now comes word that a deluxe California location will soon be permanently closing its doors.

Let us explore further.

Sprouts, 2023

According to a report from Sprouts Closing Roseville Location Near Costco, the entity is permanently shuttering due to performance-based issues.

As excerpted from the report: Sprouts Farmers Market is closing one of its Roseville locations at the end of April. Sprouts, located near Costco on 6760 Stanford Ranch Road, will close Sunday, April 30. The store will be open seven days a week from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. until it closes for good. Lucas Larson, a Regional Vice President of Sprouts, said in a statement this location is about 30% larger than other locations and underperformed financially.

Conclusion

This is a developing story. In the event of pertinent updates to this matter, inclusive of official announcements of potential replacement stores, I will share them here on NewsBreak.

Thank you for reading.

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Sprouts Permanently Closing Major California Location at the End of ... - NewsBreak Original

Who owns the Water? The Tragedy of Commons! BigWire – Big Wire, news that matters

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Who owns the Water?- remaining within the cuddle of my grandfather, I asked this question to my genius, non-digital Wikipedia.

In those early childhood days, my grandfather used to be my one-stop solution, having answers to all the queries as well as ready to fulfill all my wishes.

If I get caught up by any issues or messed up with any puzzle then I looked at him for the solution. On one occasion, while playing football I felt thirsty as I had forgotten to carry my water bottle to the playground.

I asked my friend Rohit, to lend me his water bottle to which he vehemently refused by saying that I wont give it to you, this is my Virat Kohli Wala Black Water.

I felt offensive by his rejection; however, I held my emotion at that point of time and converted that unhappiness to philosophical one during my story time with grandpa.

Smilingly he said, no one owns the water my dear, it is a free good, a gift from Mother Nature to all her children.

You can only collect it and use it but cannot own it. Each species on this earth should have equal access to this pollution free and natural free good as it is the primary requirement to hold life on this planet.

This validation by my paladin erupted the underneath anguish and gloominess.

Immediately I asked him then why did Rohit said, it is my water and did not lend me to drink?

May be he could understood the pain of denial of few sip of water during intense thirst for which his casual grip around me converted to a hold, filled with warmth.

His voice got infused with kindness, compassion and he said, Rohit didnt do the right thing by denying water to a thirsty boy. You know dear, in our time declining the request for water to a thirstful person used to be a very bad manner.

To move on from that sorrow and misery of mine he shifted the conversation to a higher philosophical engagement.

You see! Claiming ownership over water is a modern day concept propelled by the market oriented temperament.

Water exists on earth in all its three forms and rotation in these stages of water making completion of hydrological cycle thus balances the availability of water for consumption by different species.

Mostly when it remains in the liquid form, it flows towards the sea and along its path it quenches the need of different species like trees, animals, birds and humans.

Off all the species, humans have discovered the ways to harness the maximum benefit out of it along with polluting, exhausting and claiming ownership over the waterbodies.

Further continuing his dialogue with me he said, Half a century back, water sources used to be venerated with great respect and utmost care were taken to refrain from polluting the water bodies.

Springs were considered to be the most prized possessions of communities and rivers as well as big water bodies were treated as holy and place of worship.

However, the reverence and respect for the water bodies slowly disappeared over time with the supply of tap water at home.

Instantly a question pop-up in my head, did you have tap water as well in your childhood days?

We used to drink water directly from our open wells.

Listening to my question a nostalgic smile emerged on his face as if he was remembering his old days. With a fixed gaze somewhere, as if he were encountering his old good days, he said, we didnt have any tap water in our village rather open wells were our supplier of water for household consumption and for cattle, agricultural purpose we were dependent on ponds and flowing river channels.

A sudden rush of happiness emerged in grandpas face, looking straight into my eyes he said, Our open well water used to be very cool and pleasant during summer and during winter it used to be slightly warm and regarding taste, it had a poignant, sweet taste, sweetest among all the village households.

My mother used to complain that as I drank too much water my stomach got filled and I barely feed anything. A happy smile surfaced on his face while my mind got encapsulated with another question.

So abruptly I intervened in to his dialogue by saying, but grandpa, water is color less, odorless and tasteless, then how come your water was so tasty and cool without refrigeration?

With a convincing smile he said, What you are saying are text book writings, but practically the taste and smell varies depending upon the source of water that you are drawing from.

If you take tap water, the taste and odor remains the same across most of the regions as it is being processed in a standard procedure in a purified plant.

But if you take water from a well, depending on the layer of stone that the water has travelled through, the taste changes.

Different layers of mineral stone have their add-on effect on the water quality and taste.

The stream water, the pond water and the water from river has their own unique taste, odour because of the presence of different mineral component.

With regard to color, as the water travels through the soil or rock it gathers the color of the material. Black Water, as your friend mentioned, is blackish in color as it passes through fulvic minerals and captures the black color.

In our childhood days to purify the river water we used to adopt this method of cleaning the water by passing it through sand and charcoal.

In order to make me understand the importance of water he caressed my head and said, You know dear, water is a very prominent component in our daily life. Without food we can survive for a couple of days but without water it is very difficult to survive even two days.

That is why the erstwhile wealthy people used to dug ponds and wells for the larger cause of the humanity.

Liquid water is a gift of Mother Nature to all her children inclusive of all the species.

While celebrating the World Water Day on 22nd March, the erstwhile conversation with my grandfather cropped up in my mind.

The water scarcity is looming large over the earth due to mismanagement of surface water and un-mindful drawing up of groundwater.

It is high time that the humanity should work together to ensure water conservation is promoted so that there is enough water available for each and every species.

If we fail in saving enough water, probably the days are not far ahead that we may end up in war for water only.

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Who owns the Water? The Tragedy of Commons! BigWire - Big Wire, news that matters

Libertarians Weren’t Always Apologists for the Rich and Powerful – Jacobin magazine

Review of The Individualists: Radicals, Reactionaries, and the Struggle for the Soul of Libertarianism by Matt Zwolinski and John Tomasi (Princeton University Press, 2023).

I have always found it quaint and rather touching that there is a movement [libertarianism] in the US that thinks Americans are not yet selfish enough.

In his 1995 book Self-Ownership, Freedom, and Equality, socialist thinker G. A. Cohen serves up a scathing critique of Robert Nozicks libertarian philosophy. Nozick made such a fetish of property rights, Cohen charged, that a millionaire could light his cigar with a $5 bill in front of a starving child and go home with a spotless conscience. After all, the childs suffering may be regrettable, but she has no entitlement to the millionaires five dollars no matter how much good it may do her.

Libertarians have a well-deserved reputation as the most zealous defenders of gloves-off capitalism. Along with Nozick, the canon includes gems like Ayn Rand, who infamously described businessmen as the real persecuted minority in the heyday of the civil rights movement, and Dickensian defenders of sweatshops. From Ludwig von Misess flattering words about fascism to the thinly veiled racism of so called bordertarians, many freedom-talking libertarians seem fine with authoritarianism as long as it protects property and the almighty dollar.

And yet, as Cohen himself observes, there has always been a strange but abiding attraction between the socialist and libertarian traditions.

In their new book, The Individualists: Radicals, Reactionaries, and the Struggle for the Soul of Libertarianism, philosophers Matt Zwolinski and John Tomasi showcase the many historic sides of the libertarian movement. This includes lengthy and candid discussions of paleolibertarian figures like the late Murray Rothbard (19261995) and Lew Rockwell (founder and head of the Mises Institute), whose blend of hyper-capitalist economics and hard-right social conservatism has frequently descended into open racism and homophobia.

But as self-identified bleeding heart or left-libertarians, Zwolinksi and Tomasi identify with a more radical libertarian past one that aligned with socialists on specific issues like the elimination of the military-carceral state, support for racial equality, and a wariness of the power of big business.

While Zwolinski and Tomasi trace the origins of libertarianism back to classical liberal figures like John Locke, they argue that primordial libertarianism as a distinct doctrine emerged in the nineteenth century in Britain and France through the writings of Thomas Hodgskin, Herbert Spencer, Frdric Bastiat, and Gustave de Molinari. As they put it, for the first time, libertarianism formed an intellectual system pivoting around six core ideas: individualism, private property, skepticism of authority, free markets, spontaneous order, and negative liberty. In Britain and France, libertarians staunchly opposed the aristocratic order, invoking everything from natural rights to economic efficiency to speed its extinction.

But as the century wore on and the workers movement rose to prominence in Europe, figures like Spencer directed much of their energy at a new rival: socialism. Support for toppling hierarchies dissipated into anti-egalitarian, revanchist defenses of market society. While few would go as far as Ludwig von Mises in offering apologetics for Italian fascism, Zwolinski and Tomasi acknowledge that early right-libertarians had an unfortunate tendency to invoke broadly evolutionary ideas in a way that seemed almost designed to invite uncharitable readings. This directly contributed to the ideological formation of what became known as social Darwinism. Spencers infamous comment in Man Versus the State is representative:

Generations ago there had existed a certain gutter-child, as she would be here called, known as Margaret, who proved to be the prolific mother of a prolific race. Besides great numbers of idiots, imbeciles, drunkards, lunatics, paupers, and prostitutes, the county records show two hundred of her descendants who have been criminals. Was it kindness or cruelty which, generation after generation, enabled these to multiply and become an increasing curse to the society around them?

With that kind of toxicity in the intellectual bloodstream, a certain kind of right-libertarian could easily fashion a xenophobic, racist libertarianism. Indeed, they still do. While Tomasi and Zwolinksi are more than willing to describe Spencers comments as offensive, they could stand to go further, particularly given the influence of such doctrines on contemporary far-right figures like Stefan Molyneux or Curtis Yarvin.

Interestingly, Tomasi and Zwolinski claim that libertarianisms trajectory was different in the United States, where libertarianism emerged out of the abolitionist movement with a deep antipathy toward concentrations of economic and political power that allowed elites to expropriate unpaid labor. They write:

Toward the end of the nineteenth century in America, socialism was regarded as not only compatible with libertarianism but as the most effective means of realizing freedom. State socialism was of course regarded by all libertarians as an unmitigated evil. But late in the nineteenth century, it was still possible for American libertarians to distinguish between voluntary and coercive socialism and to recognize the former as at least compatible with if not positively required by their creed.

Things began to change with the New Deal and the Cold War, when American libertarians often aided by a generous infusion of cash from the rich, as Tomasi and Zwolinski note soured on socialism and largely embraced the political right, often under the influence of European migrs like Ayn Rand, Mises, and F. A. Hayek. Many libertarians took up distinctly right-wing causes like opposition to labor unions and the welfare state. Barry Goldwater, the first major presidential candidate of the New Right, pilloried civil rights legislation as federal government overreach.

Tomasi and Zwolinksi acknowledge that right-libertarianism remains the dominant strain of the tradition and they do a very good job summarizing its hegemonic forms but theyre keen to discuss the less familiar left-libertarian tradition.

In Anarchy, State, and Utopia, Robert Nozick mused that if we take the libertarian position on natural rights seriously, slavery and Jim Crow constituted a centuries-long violation of the property rights of black Americans. Consequently, justice in rectification might require mass transfers of wealth to those whod been wronged. This would naturally be unpalatable to many right-wingers who ape libertarian rhetoric but also despise anything to do with racial justice. But as Nozick pointed out decades ago, this might be nothing more than mere prejudice inconsistent with the radical demands of libertarian principles.

Zwolinksi and Tomasi argue that even on issues like economic inequality and unionization, libertarians are more divided than it might appear. While some are comfortable with mass inequality and regard unions as a threat to private property, bleeding-heart libertarians tend to recognize that massive wealth inequality generates plutocratic control.

Some support redistributive measures and the labor movement. After all, unions can be viewed as free associations where workers cooperate voluntarily to raise the price of their labor. Similarly, workplace democracy can be seen as extending the libertarian skepticism of authority to the domain of private government.

Yet it is hard to see how things can go beyond intellectual overlap. While there is fruitful coalescence in the foreign policy arena see the cross-ideological, anti-interventionist Quincy Institute on most issues a political relationship is a nonstarter because left-libertarianism simply isnt a force in the real world.

In Self-Ownership, Freedom, and Equality, G. A. Cohen chastised libertarians for not taking moral equality sufficiently seriously, or even regarding it as important. Most libertarians, if I can elaborate on the point, see nothing wrong with a world where billionaires can launch themselves into space while crushing labor movements back on Earth or, for that matter, with a world where the free speech rights of white supremacists provoke hot tears of outrage, but Black Lives Matter activists can be thrown in jail because their activism has damaged private property.

When they switch from describing to editorializing, Zwolinksi and Tomasi are eager to rebut this charge by pointing to a long history of organizing against oppression from the abolitionist movement onward. Bleeding-heart and left libertarians share the conviction that all are moral equals, and consequently are entitled to what Ronald Dworkin called equal respect and recognition of the importance of their lives. Yet, again, left-libertarianism is dwarfed in the actual world by its right-libertarian brethren.

And that much more influential, much-better-known strand of libertarianism has explicitly rejected the notion of moral equality remarkably, even as classical liberals understood it. These libertarians agree with Mises that:

Men are altogether unequal. Even between brothers there exist the most marked differences in physical and mental attributes. . . . Each man who leaves her workshop bears the imprint of the individual, the unique, the never-to-recur. Men are not equal, and the demand for equality under the law can by no means be grounded in the contention that equal treatment is due to equals.

Or they agree with Rand that there are demonstrably superior and productive people in society who are responsible for virtually every human advancement, who owe nothing to anyone else, and who are in eternal conflict with the looters and parasites that contribute nothing yet demand a leveling down of the creative individuals.

At their most egalitarian, right-libertarians defend market society and property on utilitarian lines, somewhat begrudgingly holding that equality under the law is a precondition for genuine competition. But more often, they echo Quinn Slobodians point about free marketers tendency to ascribe mystical qualities to the market and competition: whereas once the visible hand of God sorted out the deserving from the undeserving, now the invisible hand of the market does the trick.

These anti-egalitarian libertarians, echoing social Darwinian rhetoric, regard feudalism as unjust not because it threw up vast disparities of authority and power, but because those in power werent the deserving elite: they had received aristocracys entitlements due to law and inheritance. By contrast, capitalist competition demanded the constant winnowing of the excellent and rarefied from the common and mundane, something that left it vulnerable to the resentments and interference of the masses. As Peter Thiel put it in his essay The Education of a Libertarian, the higher ones IQ, the more pessimistic one became about free-market politics and the future of market society because capitalism simply is not that popular with the crowd. Thiel apocalyptically intoned that the fate of the world may depend on the effort of a single individual the entrepreneur who may create a new world of capitalist freedom safe from the interfering resentments of the mass.

Ironically, such libertarians conform to Hayeks observation that illiberal conservative convictions boil down to a mythological belief that there are recognizably superior persons who are more deserving and so deserving of more. This leads them to see the market less as a utility-maximizing set of exchanges between free and equal persons, and more as a mechanism to ensure the recognizably superior persons wind up on top.

Zwolinski and Tomasis historical survey of the libertarian movement, warts and all, is uncommonly honest and comprehensive. Purely as exegesis, the book is without peer, and anyone who wants to know what libertarianism is should run, not walk, to pick it up.

If all, or at least most, libertarians were left-libertarians like Zwolinksi and Tomasi, socialists would have a lot more to say to them. Wed all be committed, on paper, to a world where freedom and equality were respected, even if wed have fierce disagreements on the best way to get there.

But it isnt clear that democratic socialists and mainstream libertarians will have much in common unless left-libertarianism vastly expands beyond intellectual circles. Until then, socialists will be forced to draw a line in the sand against those who reify and admire inequality for its own sake. To update a line from Max Weber, we must recognize in the Peter Thiels of the world one of the oldest and crassest human instincts: insisting on ones right to immense power and resources out of alleged superiority.

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Libertarians Weren't Always Apologists for the Rich and Powerful - Jacobin magazine

The Independent National Convention ’23: A reactionary political freakshow, part two – WSWS

Many of the same political forces behind Februarys Rage Against the War Machine rally reconvened at the Independent National Convention, held April 3-5 in Austin, Texas. Participants included the Libertarian Party, the Peoples Party, 2020 Democratic Party presidential candidate Tulsi Gabbard and journalist Chris Hedges.

Promoted by its founder, Christopher Life, as a venue to unite the independent political sector, the INC did not appear to draw more than 100 people and was constantly plagued by technical difficulties. It was, overall, a thoroughly right-wing and degraded affair.

Like the Rage rally, far-right libertarianism was by far the most dominant political and social element present at the convention. Nearly every panel featured a self-professed entrepreneur, libertarian, cryptocurrency promoter, anti-vaccine zealot, Republican politician or Texas Nationalist.

Life, one of the four moderators, opened the event by explaining that our independence is what unites us. He founded the One Nation Party USA in 2018 on the basis of a program that includes supporting Trumps tax cuts for the rich and backing the far-right Supreme Court justices that he nominated.

This is the second time Life has organized a coming together of independents in Austin, Texas. On March 14, 2022, he sponsored the first Independent National Union conference, which featured as its main speaker Robert Kennedy Jr., who is now primarily associated with the most intense opposition to vaccines. Kennedy Jr. has said that limited mitigation measures aimed at stopping the spread of COVID-19 are worse than the conditions faced by Anne Frank, the 15-year-old Jewish girl and famed diarist who died in a Nazi concentration camp in May 1945.

While Kennedy Jr. was not at this years event, anti-vaccine and COVID-19 denialism was present throughout. In addition to sponsoring the main panel of the event, Angela McArdle, the chair of the Libertarian Party, provided the INC Keynote Morning address.

McArdle is an anti-Semite who has worked to integrate the Libertarian Party with fascistic militias. Just last month she promoted German New Medicine (GNM) on right-wing commentator Tim Pools podcast. GNM was devised by German ex-physician Ryke Geerd Hamer as a Germanic alternative to mainstream medicine, which he claimed was a Jewish conspiracy. The now-deceased Hamer asserted that diseases were not real, and in a 2009 interview said that almost all Jews survive cancer without chemotherapy, and that AIDS is a Talmudic fraud.

In her short speech opening the event, McArdle denounced the deep state and, in an attack on COVID-19 mitigation measures, un-elected bureaucrats. McArdle repeated the mantra that the event transcended left-right politics.

The first major panel after McArdles speech was titled Independent Parties Working Together. It again featured McArdle, as well as Nick Brana, founder and chair of the Peoples Party. In their comments, both McArdle and Brana pointed to the Rage Against the War Machine Rally as an example for others to follow.

Just a month ago, we came together Brana said, referring to himself and McArdle, a party on the left and the right, and held the largest anti-war demonstration since the Iraq war. In fact, the rally was sparsely attended, attracting primarily an assortment of libertarians and far-right elements.

The entire event served as Trojan horse for far-right politicians and operatives to push their agenda on an unsuspecting, and mostly non-existent, audience.

On Mondays main stage, the afternoon seminar, titled Education/School-Choice Reform, featured Corey DeAngelis, an adjunct scholar at the Cato Institute and a senior fellow at Reason Foundation, a Libertarian Party think tank. DeAngelis heads the American Foundation for Children, an organization that is bankrolled by former Trump education secretary and billionaire Betsy DeVos. Its aim is to defund public schools and transfer money to for-profit charter and religious schools.

At the same time as DeAngelis was hawking parents rights, the upstairs stage had a panel titled Texit & State Sovereignty, which featured three members of the Texas Nationalist Movement (TNM). Speakers for TNM, a far-right secessionist movement, included Kyle Biedermann, a former Republican member of the Texas state House; Daniel Miller, the president of TNM; and Matt Frazier, another member of TNM and cryptocurrency snake-oil salesman.

Biedermann attacked Texas Republican Governor Greg Abbott and Attorney General Ken Paxton from the right, denouncing them for not declaring an invasion along the Texas-Mexico border. That should be done right now, Biedermann said, adding, Texit would make that happen As a sovereign state we will take care of that border. Texas could take care of that border.

Miller agreed with the former Republican state representative, adding, We obviously know there is an open border crisis. The source of the border crisis is the federal government. The best people to govern Texas are Texans, not the 2.5 million people that make up the Washington District of Criminals. The only way to secure the border, have a sensible immigration policy, is to become a self-governing nation and set our own policy.

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One of the moderators of the event, Trent Pool, praised the border policy of Israel as an example to be followed.

At another panel, Diane Sare, an adherent of the fascistic Lyndon LaRouche cult, talked with Christopher Life and his sibling, Benjamin Life, about Art & Movement building. Sare referred to the ongoing political kinship between herself, McArdle and Brana, noting that together they were offering classes on political interventions. Sare, backing Trumps false claims that the 2020 election was stolen, said the interventions were needed because, In these times, when we cant be certain that votes are being counted fairly, how do you get your Congress to change?

Journalist Chris Hedges was brought in as the featured speaker on the second day. As was the case in the Rage rally, Hedges function was to represent the left in the ostensibly left-right coalition.

In a panel on Ending the Forever Wars, Hedges reiterated many aspects of his Rage speech, reflecting on the costs of war and the obliteration of civil liberties. Seeking to ingratiate himself to the right-wing audience, Hedges claimed that the media silences opinions on both the left and right that challenge capitalism.

The faux unity continued into the evening during the keynote address delivered by Hedges.

In his speech, titled Reclaiming our Country, Hedges called for a left-right coalition to wrest power back from corporations and the billionaires. Hedges said this could be done by organizing workers and supporting mass strikes, the one weapon workers possess that can cripple and destroy the billionaire classs economic and political power.

While Hedges took a left tack in his speech, what was more significant than what he said was the forum in which he said it. Hedges homily, delivered to a crowd of far-right nationalists, right-wingers and libertarians, had the character of a Salvation Army preacher delivering a sermon to a brothel.

When Hedges first made his turn to the far-right prior to the Rage event, he justified his new orientation as a temporary alliance made under extraordinary circumstances due to very real threat of nuclear war. He wrote before the February rally that he was participating in the event because the rally was not focused on anything but ending the war, and should these right-wing participants organize around other issues, I will be on the other side of the barricades.

Hedges appearance at the Independent National Convention, a thoroughly right-wing affair aimed at promoting a unity of the far-right, reveals his previous demagoguery as empty, and his new orientation to the right wing as more than a fleeting arrangement.

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The Independent National Convention '23: A reactionary political freakshow, part two - WSWS