Tag: society (Page 3 of 3)

The Violence of OWS

Note: This is an older post from my Blogger days.

To begin, I am no a pacifist. Revolutions seldom reach their climax without plenty of blood being spilled. However, systemic change of the kind we desperately need will not come simply from random violence or guerrilla tactics. The state very much has the upper hand in terms of the means of violence. Any movement needs to consider a variety of approaches but always based on objective conditions at the time with an eye on the future. Continue reading

Letter to Joe Bageant – Liberals And The Anti-War Movement: Enablers For Empire

Note: This is an older post from my Blogger days. Sadly Joe passed a number of years ago. I really do miss his insights and straight from the heart delivery. RIP Brother.

What’s up Joe! It is your friend from Brooklyn wanting to say hello as well as weigh in on your latest piece. As always, you express your opinions in the most colorful manner. I am glad that in your piece prior to the present one you connected with folks from the other side of town so to speak. My parents are from Dominican Republic and when I was there last summer I witnessed the extreme poverty but also the greater sense of community. I mean people actually visit each other’s homes for no particular reason and social life is not mediated through the mall, the mass media/entertainment complex or cell phones. Continue reading

In Defense of Cuba Dave

David Strecker or, as he is commonly known as, “Cuba Dave” is a 65 year old man from Florida who became known for his blog and youtube videos covering the sex tourism scene in places like Costa Rica and the Dominican Republic. As well as chronicling his own exploits Cuba Dave became the go to source for  tips, pointers and How Tos for both novice and experienced “Hobbyists” (clients). It all came crashing down for Cuba Dave in September 2015 when he was arrested in Costa Rica under a new and untested (until him) 2012 law passed to combat (among other things) “human trafficking.”  Nevermind that actual prostitution in Costa Rica is legal, Cuba Dave was dragooned under this law in a country notorious for high levels of corruption and judicial malfeasance. Not uncommon for third world countries. Below is my response to a comment (appearing below and also found here: http://www.ticotimes.net/2016/11/16/cuba-dave-verdict#comments-100140) in defense of Cuba Dave. Anyone wanting to learn more or donate to Cuba Dave’s defence can go here: http://www.cubadave.com/ . 

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King Kong (Or How I learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Blonde Bombshell)

Note: This is an older post from my Blogger days.

When I first caught the trailers for the latest version of the 1930’s classic “King Kong” all I could do is roll my eyes. ‘Not this again,’ I said to myself. While I have yet to see the latest version of the movie, from what I saw from the trailer and heard from those who saw the latest edition of the movie, except for the special effects, the basic plot has not changed much from earlier incarnations of the movie. In all its editions, whether the 1933, 1978 or the new 2005 version, the movie remains a story about an over sized ape living on a isolated island with all kinds of pre-historic creatures who falls for a blonde bombshell that had arrived as part of an expedition to the island. 

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Book Review – The Production of Money: How to Break the Power of Bankers

Hardcover: 192 pages
Publisher: Verso (March 28, 2017)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 9781786631343
ISBN-13: 978-1786631343
ASIN: 1786631342

I began this book with not a lot of hope and sure enough, after just the first chapter my fears were confirmed. Pettifor correctly poses the problems of the economy being over-leveraged,  hyper-financialized, and threatened by deflation. All of it rooted in a political system  bought lock, stock and barrel by the same financial interests that by a whisker nearly collapsed the economy in 2008. The wider public, she bemoans, lacks “a wider understanding of where money comes from and how the financial system operates” while the official Left, blind-sided by the crisis beginning in 2007 but blooming in 2008, essentially put its collective head in the sand when they weren’t, that is, helping implement austerity (see Syriza in Greece) which, along with Quantitative Easing, was the solution chosen by the system. As a corollary to the system’s response to the crisis, she rightly notes, ours is not a robotic future devoid of human labor, which is another way to attack the tendency of the rate of profit to fall, because “this vision is touted as if the supply of minerals essential to robots, . . . and the emissions associated with their extraction, are infinite.”
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