Aaron Bastani
"A section of the left, what I call the ‘fuck you dad left’, think it’s progressive that police officers are outsourced, have lower wages or are precarious. Let’s get that straight: it isn’t "
And
"The 'fuck you dad' left would jettison an emerging social democratic hegemony on the economy to have a culture war we'd currently lose. We can only win that culture war if we engage with people, where they are, and persuade them. Thats a lot harder than choosing a left 'scene' over a left movement granted - but its something we have to do. It means having conversations with people we disagree with".
"Astonished at how many *still* don’t get cheering on protest whatever it’s demands and whatever the political context. Any breakdown in Iranian regime *could* make Syria look like theme park. Yet many Brits still cheer on regime change"
"Saudi’s and Israel would aid separatists in Baluchistan/Khuzistan, Iranian Kurdistan too. Any power struggle would see a straight military junta replacing current polyarchy and distribution of power. More suffering, more unrest, more refugees, ISIS spreads. Think!"
From the guy who brought you "What is Libertarian Communism? On this week's show Aaron Bastani and James Butler discuss libertarian communism. What does it mean and how should we relate to it? "
I imagine the ‘fuck you dad left’,phrase is one he's going to use in his imminent book, yet another stage in his attempt to furtherr his career in a forthcoming Labour regime
https://www.newstatesman.com/
https://www.newstatesman.com/politics/media/2017/09/luxury-communism-now-rise-pro-corbyn-media
If he believed any different,
If he believed any different, he wouldn't be where he is. Same as you and i.
I don't see the point of critiquing/beefing with 'influential' people other than for kicks. If your stuff is tight then they'll be irrelevant, if they weren't to begin with, soon enough.
This misses the point
This misses the point entirely.
You're very welcome haha.
You're very welcome haha. yolo
Quote: Aaron Bastani "A
Don't see what's "progressive" in police officers beating striking workers or siding with employers against workers as they historically have. I guess he didn't get the memo police aren't the working class's friends.
zugzwang wrote: Quote: Aaron
zugzwang
Is any of that actually happening to those poor oppressed cops?
My understanding is that the state usually makes sure cops are looked after pretty well even when other public sector workers are getting shafted.
Wasn't the payrise cap for
Wasn't the payrise cap for police and prison wardens recently abolished (as opposed to caps for other public sector workers)?
It was very funny in France
It was very funny in France when Sarkozy was President, the cops went for everyone who protested against cuts. And then got upset when they got cut, funniest of all they started talking about strikes, marches and demonstrations. They just took it instead.
His sterling defence of a new
His sterling defence of a new green card system and hard migration limit on their Brexit podcast (which would apparently undermine racism in Britain) was similarly eyebrow-raising. At one point he jokingly suggested that in his passionate defence of the superiority of the British constitutional system to formal written ones (while talking about how Lexit was definitely going to be a real thing) he might be channeling Edmund Burke. Mm.
He seems to be in an accelerating process of jettisoning all non-Labour views from his oeuvre, presumably so when he goes for the MP/senior apparatchik job he can answer media quote-miners with "yeah but here's a quote showing definitively that I changed my mind ages ago, youthful indiscretions etc etc." It's not terribly surprising given his political trajectory for the last while tbh.
Good post by Rob Ray. The
Good post by Rob Ray.
The Novara Media Editorial Team also currently contains an erstwhile anarchist who seems to know which side his bread is buttered.
As this lot are probably the next bunch of wankers who we could feasibly see take up positions in the Labour Party or in significant media roles — what do we do about them?
Maybe nothing? Maybe a relentless critique of social democracy? Maybe a smart smack in the gob next time we spot one of them?
Jack Straw, David Blunkett,
Jack Straw, David Blunkett, etc. of the future innit.
removed
removed
Battlescarred wrote: "The
Battlescarred
Eh, if you change out 'social democratic' and ignore the lack of hegemony, this could have been said on here any time since libcom started. It's ok when other anarchists say it, right?
I think 'fuck you dad' is funny, I remember seeing this graffiti in social centres and housing projects in Berlin over ten years ago.
Bit of comedic self insight.
Shorty wrote: Eh, if you
Shorty
It's a specific line of argument, most explicitly put forward by Paul Mason (who recently started writing for Novara - has already been appearing on panels and interviews with them) that the Labour Party should focus only on 'opposing neoliberalism' (meaning increasing social funding and infrastructure investment, 'national investment bank' and similar), while maintaining the UK's military, police and border regimes intact, with only the mildest critique, if any. The idea being that such an approach will gain support from the CBI and other establishment groups who aren't happy with the current Tory leadership - so might support, or at least not actively sabotage as much, a Corbyn government as long as they don't mess with the repressive functions of the state too much.
So 'we engage with people, where they are, and persuade them' is an appeal to public opinion (pro-Trident, anti-immigration, pro-police), an approach to online and media discourse, rather than for workplace or community organising. In other words it's talking about positioning and triangulation, rather than methodology. Specifically, it's a way of defending Labour's calls for more police funding, where a police abolitionist framework is conveniently dismissed as simply wanting lower-paid, less-well-trained police and a well funded police force is expected to have more capacity for 'reform'.
This comes at a time where there has been some recent anti-police campaigns with the demonstrations for Edson da Costa and Rashan Charles in London towards the end of last year.
rat wrote: Good post by Rob
rat
Is that a joke? Either way a daft thing to put on a public forum.
Does anyone think the
Does anyone think the lamentable trajectory of the Novara project might be used for more general reflections on the turn of events since 2010-11?
It seems like quite a lot of people were introduced to or seemed receptive in one way or another to anarchist ideas around this time. Subsequent to the 'turn' to statist approaches there are any number of examples of individuals or organisations in the UK and beyond whose ideological drift and caving in on basic questions seems to vindicate the classic anarchist position. However, rather than making that position more visible and giving libertarians increased confidence, there seems to be more confusion than before, with 'anarchists' coming up with all kinds of justifications for involving themselves in statist projects... Is that a fair assessment and if so could we have made a better effort to avoid it?
Social democracy doesn't have
Social democracy doesn't have anything to offer in terms of social change, but it has a lot to offer people who'd like to make a living either as politicians or journalists, at least since there's been a collapse in the Progress wing of Labour since 2008. What shouldn't have surprised me but nevertheless has is the rapid jettisoning of positions even with the merest whiff of proximity to power, would have expected that to happen after an election win.
Mike Harman wrote: Social
Mike Harman
Now while, I think you are correct in your assessment, there are plenty of people who've turned towards social democratic reform, but do not have a desire to be a journo or politician. It may simply also be the case that people want to see some change and think that with the lack of anarchist projects getting anything done, it is better to settle for at least something. While I can't really speak to the UK situation, I have quite a few friends in North America who've softened up on electoralism. This has also something to do with the general political confusion that reigns and with the rise of the (alt) right; it is seen as more important to combat them through the ballot box and electing more friendlies/less shitty people in power. In Canada, there was the "anyone but Harper" line of agitation that got Trudeau (who is but a liberal Trump) elected.
When you say softened up
When you say softened up though, are they just hopeful about someone half-decent getting in or are they actually expending energy on electoralism? Either way that's a more interesting point.
With the UK situation, I think there had not been a pressing need for a consistent critique of electoral politics for at least two decades. With Blair vs. Major or Brown vs. Cameron it was pretty obvious to anyone in vaguely left wing circles that there was 'no difference' between them.
This meant that the Trot groups mostly tried to erect new political parties to run against Labour (and the extent of soft-anarchist involvement might have been voting Green or something) - both of which are pretty marginal political projects - so actual communists and anarchists could mostly ignore these completely. Equally projects to 'move the Labour Party to the left' were written off with scorn. So Corbyn actually getting elected surprised a lot of people and some of the older boilerplate critiques did not apply to that situation.
With Theresa May at the very right of the Tory party, and Corbyn at the very left, it does not really make sense to say "they're all the same" - so you get into what the constraints would be - all the other Labour MPs, the local councils, the state as opposed to the government), capital itself, or examples from other countries like Syriza. That's a much less obvious thing to get across.
Mike Harman wrote: When you
Mike Harman
It's been both, though more of the hopeful kind than actual electioneering (among people I know at least).
Rob Ray wrote: His sterling
Rob Ray
Do you have a link to that particular podcast?
I know he changed his mind on brexit during the campaign going from leave to stay (iirc).
Personally I just find them insufferably arrogant and very much n their own cosy little bubble.
Reading Paul Mason argue that we should get on the streets if May quits - but only insofar as to press for another election - was disappointing.
I doubt any working class types really pay them much heed.
EDIT: Generally agree that
EDIT: Generally agree that these types aren't worth wasting brain space on, but felt no list of Bastani's most cringe inducing tweets would be complete without the above absolute gem.
Think it was this
Think it was this one
http://novaramedia.com/2018/01/12/lexit-2019/
Also this from literally just
Also this from literally just now:
jolasmo wrote: Also this from
jolasmo
That is typically awful for contemporary Bastani.
However I think it's a pretty good example of the change in perspective people go through when they move from a radical perspective to a social democratic politician's one. When you cease to view the working class as something you are part of, whose task is to liberate itself and each other, and instead view it as a mass you can direct for your own ends (which you probably see as being "for their own good").
I mean I'm sure that Bastani wouldn't have wanted to join the Army himself, nor would he have wanted to force his uni mates to do likewise. But now I guess we are just an amorphous mass, who can be whipped into shape to serve a mythical future Labour administration…
By the way to the person above suggesting violence, sorry but that is completely stupid and embarrassing thing to suggest. Yes, this is someone who has quickly abandoned any of the radical principles he briefly at least claimed to hold, in return for a couple of brief segments on Sky News and some selfies with Corbyn, but violence is in no way justified. If I were you I would remove that comment.
Prince Charles is “a decent
Prince Charles is “a decent person” and “the Queen is one of the most remarkable individuals of the 20th century”. - Aaron Bastani, Any Questions, BBC Radio 4, 9th Nov 2018.
@Red do you mean Any
@Red do you mean Any Questions? I'm going to do myself a favour and not listen to that.
Grace Blakeley, who was a fairly recent addition to the Novara line-up iirc, has just landed a job as economics columnist for the New Statesman.
https://www.newstatesman.com/politics/economy/2018/11/grace-blakeley-appointed-new-statesman-economics-commentator
She's written lexit-y stuff like this, pitting national capital against global finance capita:
Grace Blakely
https://novaramedia.c om/2018/06/24/financial-globalisation-has-been-a-disaster-brexit-gives-us-a-chance-to-resist-it/
MH wrote: @Red do you mean
MH
Yeh, my mistake, I've edited in the correction. Bastani started by getting slagged by the rest of the panel (and Dimbleby) for his Youtube video apparently criticising Poppy Day etc. But he's a natural as a media politico, able to opportunistically modify his words according to his audience and to which way the wind is blowing.
These are probably daft
These are probably daft questions, but I wonder what would happen to Novara Media if Corbyn fails to get elected?
Also, how long before some of the Novara Media Editorial Team work for the BBC?
rat wrote: These are probably
rat
Yes, they probably are daft questions - this is evidenced by the fact that I’ve been wondering them myself.
I also wonder what line they’ll take if he does get elected when the inevitable failure to implement policy happens. Either way, I’ve not doubt that strong anti emetics will be required!
Yeah I've been wondering
Yeah I've been wondering about this too! Have any of the older posters got relevant memories from the 80s? What happened to the 'in and against the state' people after Foot's defeat? I'm guessing there was a mixture of some people drifting further right and some bowing out of activity - did any ex-radicals leave Labour and reflect critically on the experience?
Not to my recollection. The
Not to my recollection. The only ones who ever came our way were occasional disillusioned trots from the Militant, etc. I'm aware of one former non-trot Labour Party member who joined the ACF in the late 80s/early 90s. I don't think he was ever an 'in and against the state' type when he was in the Party though.
Yeah, my experience is the
Yeah, my experience is the migration is always in the other direction. I also know of at least a couple of tub thumping Millitant Labourites from days of yore that now see Corbyn as too far to the left which is as hilarious as it is pathetic.
Thanks for the responses.
Thanks for the responses. It's a pity. I'd have thought by any measure the last time a bunch of radicals decided to throw in their lot with Labour it was (at best) a waste of time, but it seems like there's no collective memory of that, or even an acknowledgement that it might be a relevant or comparable experience to draw on.
Ah, but what you’re not
Ah, but what you’re not getting Danny, is that as always, it’s going to be different this time!
Danny wrote: I'd have
Danny
Don't people get media/advisor jobs out of it though? That seems to be pretty clearly the trajectory of most of the Novara people.
I do wonder a bit more about Plan C and the people around New Socialist though, who are less obviously going for the pundit/talking head route.
Mike Harman wrote: Danny
Mike Harman
Yeah I'd forgotten the thread is about Novara tbh, was thinking more about the latter types.
Yeah, I think focusing on the
Yeah, I think focusing on the career trajectories of the Novaraites themselves rather than the politics they represent is a bit of a red herring - we're talking thousands and thousands of people, who obviously aren't all going to end up with their own column in the New Statesman or wherever.
On memories of last time round, one of the worse Plan C articles from around this time last year tried claiming that "The roots of Corbyn’s journey into the LP... was historically encouraged by comrades in the ‘autonomist feminist/Big Flame‘ milieu of the late 60s/70s" which is not a claim I've ever seen made anywhere else, and feels like a kind of weird attempt to reverse-engineer a genealogy, or an apostolic succession or something.
D. Harvie comments below the
D. Harvie comments below the Plan C article;
Bastani doesn't focus on rank
Bastani doesn't focus on rank and file workers does he? He seems to promote McCluskey at home and never comments on labour struggles and repression in Iran, despite emphasizing his Iranian heritage and writing about its government.
wojtek wrote: Bastani doesn't
wojtek
From what I remember, he came out with some really bad stuff about Iran earlier in the year - he started off with the "regime change" line that tries to conflate workers' struggles and the possibility of revolution with imperialist wars, and then shat himself so badly that he accidentally denied that the American Civil War ever happened. Fair play to him for leaving it up though, if I'd come out with something like that I'd be very tempted to quietly delete it when no-one was looking.
Wow that take is half way
Wow that take is half way between defending the confederate south's right to self-determination against yankee imperialism and historical denialism, which seems about where his politics are on international issues generally.
Quote: Aaron Bastani defines
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=372&v=6Z-85q3eE0U
Is this a case of live by the media — die by the media?
Or does Aaron Bastani survive well on TV? Although this clip is from July 2018, Novara Media posted it up on their Twitter account recently as Bastani was also on BBC Radio 4 yesterday:
https://www.facebook.com/novaramedia/videos/vb.404716342902872/445042282917193/?type=2&theater
R Totale
I see what you mean, but maybe the politics that the actual editorial group of Novara Media represent are also linked to their career trajectories?
rat wrote: I see what you
rat
Yeah, quite probably, but I'm less interested in the actual Novara group themselves, and more in the people you might run into in your union, or tenants' group, or anti-fascist group or whatever who read/watch Novara and think it's good and are influenced by it. Those are the people we should be arguing with, and calling them careerists is a bit of a non-starter.
R Totale wrote: rat
R Totale
So this is true, but how much do people actually absorb the ideology/positions of Novara vs. treating them like a media organisation that supports the Labour left? (to the extent that it does, increasingly it's clear that Novara are to the right of some sections of the Labour membership/Corbyn supporters, particularly in comparison to the people around New Socialist). I don't mean this as a rhetorical question it's a real question I don't know the answer to.
'Anarchism is for children,
'Anarchism is for children, has no plan, doesn't achieve anything'
http://tomballard.com.au/151-michael-walker/
Lol Walker can talk, he's the
Lol Walker can talk, he's the least capable mind on Novara - his endless inane smugness makes their Tysky Sour show almost unwatchable.
What is it about people moving away from a political position which inspires so many of them to get so pathetically pissy about it? It's like they see politics as some sort of relationship where they need to distance themselves from an old flame by badmouthing them to their new mates.
Michael Walker is a
Michael Walker is a ...
Fucking hell, I’ve heard it all now!!!
Rob Ray wrote: What is it
Rob Ray
I think it may have something to do with some kind of self-hatred one feels towards ones former self for having had a different political opinion or religious faith or whatever.
Rob Ray wrote: What is it
Rob Ray
When he was an anarchist, it was probably at a time when he was shopping in the marketplace of political ideologies, moving from one position to another. He was probably not very much committed to anarchism. This just reminds me of an old friend of mine, who was discussing politics with another friend, and one of the topics was anarcho-syndicalism. This was before I even became a leftist. What I took away from this discussion was that my friend basically admitted he was looking for a label that made him sound like an intellectual. Today he's just a liberal.
This is a prime example of
This is a prime example of why I really don't like the turn to audio/video over written content - if this was a written interview I'd skimread it, maybe even think of writing a reply if there were any actually interesting points there, but there's no way in hell I'm going to spend a full hour of the only life I'll ever live listening to some social democrat explain why he's a social democrat.
It's not worth it. If your
It's not worth it. If your curious, you can fast forwarded it to the five minute mark, and then listen to the next seven minutes or so that covered their discussion of his brief involvement in and eventual abandonment of anarchism for "class struggle" social democracy. After that, the discussion moves on to another topic, so you just turn it off right there. That's what I did. I didn't find anything substantial worth responding to; pretty typical stuff you'd expect from social democrats.
Roberts (and Carchedi) do a
Roberts (and Carchedi) do a good demolition job on the Novara Media and New Statesmen commentator Grace Blakeley's new book, pulling in criticism of Lapavitas, Harvey and Piketty along the way but then Roberts falls back on his bank nationalisation as the next step to democratic control of, what else, but still an essentially (state) capitalist economy! which he likes to describe as 'socialism' .
Still worth a critical read here:
https://thenextrecession.wordpress.com/2019/09/13/theft-or-exploitation-a-review-of-stolen-by-grace-blakeley/
It seems Blakeley is also a
It seems Blakeley is also a regular contributor to Jacobin and Tribune (is that still going) and is promoting her book next week in Manchester, I'm away but if anyone else is going I'd recommend the above linked critical article again.
Noticed as well that the academic anarchist Ruth Kinna is on Novar Media offering up a version of anarchism as some kind of contribution to the resolving of the current UK constitutional crisis!!
Tribune collapsed and was
Tribune collapsed and was bought by Jacobin, amidst quite a lot of controversy because there were allegations that Bhaskar Sunkara misled and failed to pay redundancy to the previous editorial staff.
While Tribune has always been something to ignore, it's now a horrible combination of Guardian columnists, Novara contributors, Jacobin, and Morning Star types.
They did a statement about
They did a statement about it, on Tumblr a little weirdly. Sounded like a mess.
Great masthead though.
rat wrote: As this lot are
rat
I’ve long seen the appalling Novara crew as being in training for high paying BBC jobs. I’d rather associate with a thousand Tories than any of these smug liberal fucks - their self seeking careerism seems blatantly obvious to me although plenty of people seem to hold them up as paragons of journalistic integrity. Whether I’ve judged their character correctly or not, it makes me sick to listen to their insipid bleatings. Ugh.
Good praxis comrade, good praxis!
Does anyone know Ronan
Does anyone know Ronan Burtenshaw's background/political affiliation, btw? Editor of Tribune doesn't seem like something you just walk into, but I'd never heard of him before a few months ago.
I see he has a website that says "He was recently installed as editor of Tribune Magazine, leading its relaunch as part of the Jacobin stable where he had previously worked as Europe editor. Ronan has ten years of experience in politics and media. His writing has appeared in outlets across Europe and the United States, while his work in politics has ranged from political advisor in Dáil Éireann to consulting work for think tanks Transform and the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation." But that doesn't really say too much.
His background is more Irish
His background is more Irish which might account for it. He was vice-chair of ICTU Youth in 2015 or so, then seems to have gotten into the Jacobin writing team when he guest edited Jacobin's Easter Rising special back in March 2016 and was listed as their Europe editor last year, so looks like a "safe pair of hands" parachute job.
Given that Novara Media and
Given that Novara Media and company are in overdrive supporting the Corbyn lead Labour Party during the current UK elections thought this previous longer analysis of their fault-lines from MH was worth another plug here:
https://libcom.org/blog/poverty-luxury-communism-05042018
Full circle for the man who
Full circle for the man who made his name castigating the tendency of media pundits to get everything wrong about elections followed by a brazen "oh of course this is why the other pundits were wrong" U-turn/memory hole.
December 11th
"28 seat majority for Tories. I think that’s optimistic & unlikely. Make no mistake Labour, with their get out the vote campaign on day & youth turnout, can win this."
December 14th
"No, we aren’t going to talk about rejoining the EU before we’ve even left, we are going to talk about class - finally.
Places Labour generally failed to defend from 35 years of economic stagnation no longer vote for them by default."
Is ACAB still bad?
Is ACAB still bad?
wojtek wrote: Is ACAB still
wojtek
He doesn't seem all that inspired by US protests and is posting about the need for more "socialist" MPs
https://twitter.com/AaronBastani/status/1266730889620398087
I had more the other
I had more the other presenter in mind who once disagreed with the slogan and its utility.
Michael Walker thinks
Michael Walker thinks strategically a diversity of tactics should be rejected and the oppressed need to be non-violent in the face of state violence to reach a critical mass of supporters. The state *wants* a violent reaction, hence agent provocateurs.
He said 'moral leadership' is needed, that MLK provided that for black people in the past and such a figure as landlord liberal Killer Mike can do so today.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=5neYJqmYksM
At least he is consistant in
At least he is consistant in thinking people (workers, black people) ought to be subserviant.
Black liberal, your time is up
Novara Media seem a bit hot
Novara Media seem a bit hot under the collar tonight.
rat wrote: Novara Media seem
rat
What have the liberal luvvies got to say for themselves then?
It's just their latest video
It's just their latest video after Corbyn was suspended. Mainly Bastani ranting.
Freedom Press seem a bit fed up too:
https://freedomnews.org.uk/against-anarcho-smugness/
Quote: A writer at the
Fixed it for you. Freedom hosts writers, it doesn't collectively sign off on every article.
Thanks for that Rob Ray. That
Thanks for that Rob Ray.
That does make much better sense now.
I have a fair bit of sympathy
I have a fair bit of sympathy for that Freedom article. I mean, does anyone really want to argue with "My contention is that we in the British anarchist movement are way overdue such a period of radical reassessment. Capitalism is in crisis, fascism is in the ascendency and yet we have never been more politically irrelevant. Now is not the time for smugness or schadenfreude."?
I’d say that whining about a
I’d say that whining about a few unnamed people in a bookshop and some unidentified posts on Urban75 is not the radical reassessment that we need.
Anarchists may have no reason
Anarchists may have no reason to 'crow over all this' but then what kind of anarchist thinks the Corbynista defeat involves ''... the defeat of the first mass movement for socialism.'' ?
Yeah, there is something to
Yeah, there is something to that I suppose. Also, I bet you that there must be a few trots who've been wanking themselves silly with excitement these last few days over the possibility that Corbyn may have to end up joining TUSC or something.
Spikymike wrote: what kind of
Spikymike
Leftists?
Quote: Not only are such
I agree the brief reversal of popularity for the Labour party under Corbyn was a product of growing desperation but I don't get why naivety and desperation are being treated as distinct and oppositional positions, surely this desperation was born at least in part by naivety?
I also agree that there is a culture of smugness around anarchist/communist circles that is pretty self isolating and largely useless, but a couple of people who hang around a bookshop and Urban 75 seem like small fries, and this is probably the worst hill to try and stand your ground on the issue, since as infuriating as the Itoldyouso crowd are, they were completely correct here. Corbyn is possibly the best example we've ever had of the inability of an established and entrenched political party to be a vehicle for social change even when its built up a large populist base of support and a solid core in the highest levels of leadership.
Though as for "Mass movement for socialism" unless things are very different in London it wasn't a mass movement for Corbyn never mind socialism. Momentum were essentially just another of Labour's many caucuses, one that was made up exclusively of long time Labour members (some lapsed, others spending months or years as paper members) and a handful of Trots from a couple of entryist organisations.
The Labour vote went up under Corbyn in 2017 as did the membership but, most of those were rejoiners or were just taken under the wings of the party branches, because Corbyn had zero interest in challenging the fundamental structure of the party. If you wanted to actively support Corbyn and his policy ideas, you had to go out of your way to join a momentum group and most of what they did was just campaign for labour candidates anyway, including the anti Corbyn ones.
I think also the anarchist
I think also the anarchist triumphalism needs to be seen in the context of Corbynista triumphalism.
Over the last five years we’ve been repeatedly told that we’re irrelevant (fair enough), wrong (not so) and that if we were serious about creating social change we would get on board the Labour bandwagon.
During that time most of us have been pretty quiet tbh and have not suggested that an anarchist utopia is on the horizon. Whereas the Corbynistas have been very loud and have suggested that socialism is within their reach.
Personally I don’t see Corbyn’s defeat as a victory for us. I think a lot of working class people will now see anything left of centre as unworkable and a waste of time.
And we will need to be welcoming (and not dickheads) to the comrades we lost (many of whom I have huge affection for) who are now licking their wounds.
History is a
History is a circle
https://www.marxists.org/archive/foot-paul/1982/3letters/letter2.htm
Waiting for the Novara
Waiting for the Novara intelligentsia to give in-depth coverage to the IWGB victory/any grassroots trade unionism rather than LP gossip... closest I've seen is AB lionise McCluskey as a 'w/c scouser' on twitter.
I mean, not wanting to be
I mean, not wanting to be Billy Buzzkill, but that's a bit of a weak criticism, if you really want to read Novara coverage of IWGB stuff then there's this from Lydia Hughes. Granted, that's about a month old by now, but since then they've also published stuff like "voices from the care sector", Jane McAlevey's strike school thing, and one about renters' unions the other day. That probably holds up pretty solidly in comparison to Freedom or libcom newswire's coverage of similar issues over the same period. On the other hand, if you're just looking at Bastani's twitter page, then that's not really a problem I can help with, beyond reminding you that no-one really has to look at Bastani's twitter page.
I mostly watch their video
I mostly watch their video content. My point is that electoralism takes precedence.
R Totale wrote: That probably
R Totale
Lining Novara, which has paid staff and a serious income aimed ata broad audience, up against Freedom and libcom, neither of which have this and which regularly ask people to write things (usually to no avail, as people seem to have endless time to complain about the things we've written/not written but none to fix the problem themselves) because there's very limited energy or time for our volunteers to write is a bit of a weird comparison to make tbh.
I reckon Novara would cover
I reckon Novara would cover the IWGB stuff if a young ambitious wannabe pitched it and did all the work. They have nothing to lose by chucking out as much content across the left as possible. Like the very good prison abolition podcast they did - why not? It’s all clicks and Bastani can gently mock it on one of the bigger vehicles to reassure the more cautious members of the audience.
Clearly they won’t prioritise this stuff, but they’ve not made a political decision to exclude all mention of it.
Rob Ray wrote: R Totale
Rob Ray
I can't speak for R but that comment read less as a criticism of freedom and libcom and more as a mild defense of at least part of the Novara groups content by saying its about as good as them. Which given its cashflow and greater resources is still a bit damning with faint praise.
Has Novara been reading this
Has Novara been reading this thread? https://novaramedia.com/2020/11/04/hasta-la-victoria-university-of-london-cleaners-win-ten-year-battle-against-outsourcing/
Anyway, yeah, point taken, but surely we're all required by statute to get at least one mostly unconstructive moan about the UK anarchist movement not being as good as it should be in per year? I suppose I just think it's always worth being aware of when we're in glass houses when we criticise Novara/social democrats for some stuff.
Despite evidence that even
Despite evidence that even loyal leftists are starting to question Cuban state policy; https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/25/cuban-leftists-begin-to-turn-their-fire-on-the-harmful-practices-of-the-state - Novara repeats the official line that recent protests have just been whipped up and manipulated by 'outside agitators' and defends the Cuban state and its repression of dissent;
Novara
Helen Yaffe being, I'm around
Helen Yaffe being, I'm around 95% sure, the kid of the RCG's guru - see, for instance:
https://www.revolutionarycommunist.org/author/9:david-yaffe
https://www.revolutionarycommunist.org/shop/product/44-we-are-cuba-how-a-revolutionary-people-have-survived-in-a-post-soviet-world
That would make sense, Cuba
That would make sense, Cuba having always been RCG's sacred socialist paradise.
Aren't RCG the ones that
Aren't RCG the ones that think WWIII is going to happen between Europe and the US?
That's a new one on me, but
That's a new one on me, but then I'm not an expert on their doctrine. Mostly notable for being the closest thing to proper third-worldists you're likely to run into in the UK?