At 10:09 AM 3/8/2002 -0500, Alfredo wrote: >Dear all, > >I have read with interest the document that Jerry mentioned earlier today. > >I think we owe much to Jerry for his tremendous effort over many years, >trying to build an open and inclusive forum for the discussion of Marxian >political and economic issues. I hope that the list will continue to exist >for many years to come in its current form. Dear comrades, I agree completely with Alfredo. I think that Jerry has made an important contribution to Marxist scholarship by his maintenance of this list and, especially, his continuing efforts to raise questions, to goad lurkers into involvement, etc. (Having had the experience of a running a political list in Vancouver for a year, I know what that involves.) I think, though, there is more than a question of a contribution to scholarship; there is also the essential process of helping to create a community. In contrast, I view the mindset revealed in Alan's letter to be representative of the old politics and precisely the opposite of what is necessary and desirable. (For me, it seems like more of the same behaviour that marked the disgraceful RRPE episode.--- Please note that my language, although not vetted by a lawyer, is carefully chosen.) I'm sure it has nothing to do with any organised political tendency he or Andrew represent or with their specific theoretical emphasis, and I would guess their co-believers would be dismayed themselves. Personally, I find particularly repugnant Alan's triumphalist statement that Jerry 'is on the hook. His list is dying....'--- an observation which leads him to propose strategies ('while we are on the offensive') because under these circumstances 'he can't really avoid us'. Us. Pretty comradely stuff, eh? Of particular concern, though, is the realisation that there are people out there who are viewing periods of inactivity and the non-involvement of lurkers on the list as victories! We're all over-extended (and I'm way behind in preparing a paper for a conference in Beijing right now), and I don't think we should be moved by the fear of being seen as 'consorting with the enemy'; however, maybe it is worth our taking some time to help in building this community. (This should be understood as self-criticism.) One thread that has opened up recently is on imperialism, and one aspect that emerged was the question of the aristocracy of labour. While the paper I presented at the Globalisation Conference in Havana last month is not on imperialism as such, there is an aspect of it that does relate to the question of an 'aristocracy of labour' that may be of interest. A passage from that paper reads as follows: >Certainly, even outside the framework of capitalist relations as such, >there is the potential for considerable conflict. Whereas the poverty of >some producers reflects their lack of access to the productive forces >created historically by the collective worker, others have secured high >standards of living as the result of their privileged access to those >productive forces and their struggles to capture the fruits of the >resulting social productivity The problem, in short, is that there are inherent contradictions within the global working class in part as the result of the successes of organised workers in the developed capitalist countries. The solution is not, however, to level them downward (ie., to remove the 'aristocracy') via competition with low wage workers but to channel their resistance into support for the struggles of workers elsewhere and for real transfers of resources (ie., to level upward). Not always an easy matter (with racism and xenophobia always lurking), as I'm sure some comrades know, but something worth exploring when talking about imperialism. If anyone is interested in my paper, which explores the concept of a 'communist globalisation' as a basis for critiquing capitalist globalisation, I can send it on. It's only 3000 words, and I thought about attaching it (after all these months of silence, it's not much on a daily basis!), but this would violate our usual practice. in solidarity, mike Michael A. Lebowitz Economics Department Simon Fraser University Burnaby, B.C., Canada V5A 1S6 Office: Phone (604) 291-4669 Fax (604) 291-5944 Home: Phone (604) 872-0494 Fax (604) 872-0485 Lasqueti Island: (250) 333-8810
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