Submitted by playinghob on 22 April, 2008 - 16:55.
Last night I attempted to log in, and what came up was a white screen with numerous postings in blue, along with a lot of 'computer language', you know, all codes and symbol type things. Now the postings related to recent topics - made yesterday or possiblly the day before - and have never appeared on the forums. Before the screen suddenly went black I caught a glimpse of a couple of cheeky comments on the "1968 and all that" thread and one from battlescarred about the Mumia Abu Jamal referring to the Sparts. Whats going on here or was I hallucinating!!!!!!!!!
Nepal's Maoist Party has won around 220 seats in the recent Constituent Assembly (CA) election, about one-third of the total. Though the largest party, they don't have an overall majority; they have stated their wish to lead a coalition government.
A steady trickle of publications about the situationists testifies to the market value of their ideas, but it also reminds us of the continued requirement for revolutionaries to engage with them. In this review we look at two recent books. Ken Knabb's Public Secrets illustrates the self-obsessed nature of the situationist milieu after the heady days of 1968. What is Situationism? A Reader includes Barrot's important critique of the Situationist International for their one-sided emphasis on circulation rather then production.
Last night I attempted to log in, and what came up was a white screen with numerous postings in blue, along with a lot of 'computer language', you know, all codes and symbol type things. Now the postings related to recent topics - made yesterday or possiblly the day before - and have never appeared on the forums. Before the screen suddenly went black I caught a glimpse of a couple of cheeky comments on the "1968 and all that" thread and one from battlescarred about the Mumia Abu Jamal referring to the Sparts. Whats going on here or was I hallucinating!!!!!!!!!