Last 3 Posts @ August 21, 2008 3:09:39 PM EDT
| The family and the private sphere (10 mins ago) | Refresh |
Reading this post over at Socialist Unity regarding the media frenzy towards Gary Glitter. It also made me think how the media says little when it is sexual abuse wit...
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Harpymarx |
| Women Migrant Workers Cheated Out Of Minimum Wage (13 mins ago) |
Gawd bless the TUC. You can't rely on them to organise workers to fight back, or to say boo to a goose, but they come up with some useful research every now and again...
| stroppyblog |
| Secular sermon (38 mins ago) |
I often find that the most interesting discussions of the whole notion of liberty arise when the there are conflicting understandings of what liberties are. Northern I...
| Never Trust a Hippy |
There's a great review of this book over at the Mutualist Blog. It's always a refreshing blog to read because it's built on actual philosophy and economics, and is thus free of assumptions about what and who are 'left' or 'right', and discussions about the 'characters' of individual politicians and potential leaders. You might point out that this detachment from 'everyday' politics is an unaffordable luxury; then again, it beats the current wave of Labour factionalism, and the attempts to define (or, more likely, resurrect) policy frameworks off the tops of people's heads, largely concerned as they are with reshuffling public spending, and marked by a lack of a consistent philosophical backing.
Shermer asks why people reject Adam Smith's theory of economics, despite its being so profound and proven. The answer just might be that the rhetoric of free markets, so closely associated with Adam Smith, has been misappropriated to defend a system of corporate power far closer to what Smith condemned than to what he supported. Adam Smith, like the other early classical liberals, was a revolutionary thinker who attacked the entrenched privileges of the landed oligarchy and the mercantile capitalists. It's almost impossible to go to a mainstream "libertarian" website these days without seeing the thought of Adam Smith misappropriated to defend the modern institution most closely resembling the landed interests and privileged monopolists of the Old Regime: the giant, state-subsidized, state-protected corporation.Read the whole thing.
As I suggested earlier, most people who display egalitarian reactions against existing inequalities and concentrations of wealth may well believe that what they hate is the "free market." But that's only because the rhetoric of "free markets" has been perverted, for the most part, by apologists for those concentrations of wealth which result from privilege and other forms of state intervention. [...]
Labels: economics, leadership, libertarianism, Mutualism, the state
One of the indulgences of election-watching is to attempt to interpret what the electorate - aggregating across millions of individual decisions - 'really meant' . In defeat, this usually turns out to be a desire for greater movement on the writer's own pet policies; in victory, proof that the electorate's flirtations with the other side meant those half-baked ideas of yours were merely ahead of their time... Ideas do come cheap, and no-one spares a thought for the intelligent people within Government who developed what appeared to be a sound idea into legislation that the mainstream media, and those who lost most from it, insisted was a thoughtless or callous attack, and which now takes the blame for electoral defeat. That's a general point, not a defence of the 10p tax change (has there been one?)
Labels: Church of England, criminal justice, education, Elections, Gordon Brown, inheritance tax, land ownership, minimum wage, Mutualism, referenda, Taxation
I'm not really looking forward to these results. I won't make predictions, but I suspect Labour will achieve a fairly derisory vote. That's unfortunate for a lot of existing councillors, and for many candidates who might have felt they had a chance.
Labels: Elections, Labour Party