Category: Informative

  • When a government isn’t captured by private capitalist interests, it actually delivers real gains for their working-class.

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • I am calling awareness to the continuous misuse of the words, used as a manipulation. 

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • Dr. Fadhel Kaboub’s Remarks  Thank you all for being here. It is a pleasure to join you. I know we have limited time, so I am setting up my timer and I’m going to give you a few messages to start the conversation.   The first message: we cannot decarbonize a system that has not been …

    Stockholm+50 Pre-Summit Address on Global Just Transition from Fossil Fuels Read More »

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • Jared Bernstein, longtime economic advisor to Joe Biden asked the MMT academics some questions. They answered.

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • It is impossible to have an ideological discussion in good faith when people have been misled on the actual meanings of the terms in question. 

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • Alone as individuals we are vulnerable and only human. Those human limitations put a ceiling on our freedom and our power to shape a better world. But collectively as a community we are so very much more.

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • The time has come to throw off the chains of wage labor and create a new society where the workers control the means of production.

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • It is time for the progressive left to move beyond such hollow and aesthetic litmus tests and organize around policies and material improvements for the working class. 

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • In short, federal deficits are the dollars we have to play the game.

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • In all the coverage of the labor shortage by mainstream, corporate media, the human element of the power dynamics of waged labor in the COVID-era has steadily been missing from popular analysis.

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • As the failures of the Squad prove, sending individuals to the heart of the machine will not change the machine, it will change the individuals. The parties and their machinations are too powerful.

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • The two dominant factions of our politics, conservatives and liberals, often wage wars of rhetoric and culture against one another but actually work together.

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • Far from being an anomaly, Tulsa represents one of many black massacres that show a pattern of systemic racism in the United States.

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • Socialists and the lower classes throughout the world must unite behind the fight to free Palestine.

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • “That this dictatorship itself only constitutes the transition to the abolition of all classes and to a classless society.”

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  • Biden and Harris are the two most powerful people on the planet, especially when they want be. They wake up every day and choose mass violence and the preservation of a status-quo that will end all known complex life in the universe.

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • May Day is celebrated internationally as a worker’s holiday. The origin of this celebration came through the fight for the 8-hour workday. One of the greatest battles in this struggle was seen in the violent oppression of striking workers at the Haymarket Square in Chicago in 1886. A brief look at the history of the Haymarket Affair helps illustrate the class struggle that continues today.  

    May 1, 1886 was the start of a general strike with the demand of reduction of the workday from 10 hours to 8 hours. The Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions declared in 1884 that “…eight hours shall constitute a legal day’s labor from and after May 1, 1886.” This demand grew into a call for a nation-wide general strike. On April 24, 1886, the Chicago based anarchist paper The Alarm, edited by Albert Parsons, published the following in a handbill:  

    War to the palace, peace to the cottage, and death to luxurious idleness! 

    The wage-system is the only cause of the world’s misery. It is supported by the rich classes, and to destroy it, they must be either made to work or die. 

    One pound of dynamite is better than a bushel of ballots. 

    Make your demand for 

    EIGHT HOURS 

    With weapons in your hands to meet the capitalistic bloodhounds–police and militia in proper manner.” 

    While anarchists understood it was necessary to destroy the wage-system, they got behind the reformist effort of the 8-hour workday. They understood it would be of benefit to the working class to reduce hours from the typical 10-hour day. This pamphlet was in essence the declaration of a class war. However, when the general strike began, it was not the working class that fired the first shots. On May 1, over 350,000 workers went on strike nationwide. This included 40,000 workers in Chicago. The demonstrations remained peaceful until May 3, when the police engaged striking workers at the McCormick Reaper Works, where workers had already been on strike for six months. During the confrontation, the police fired into the crowd, killing two workers, and injuring several others.  

    The violent confrontation at the McCormick Reaper Works led to a call for a public meeting the following day in the Haymarket Square. This gathering was attended by many people including Chicago Mayor Carter Harrison – who was concerned with the violence the preceding day and intended to disperse the meeting if it appeared to be inciting more violence. August Spies, Albert Parsons, and Samuel Fielden gave speeches that night and Mayor Harrison would testify that none of them called “for the immediate use of force or violence towards any person.” Nevertheless, as the speeches were ending, 175 policemen showed up to disperse the crowd, which at this point only numbered in the hundreds. An unknown person threw a dynamite bomb into the police unit– killing one of them. The police responded by firing blindly into the crowd, killing at least four workers and seven more police.  

    The response was immediately to blame the organizers of the gathering. August Spies, Albert Parsons, Louis Lingg, Michael Schwab, Samuel Fielden, George Engel, Adolph Fischer, and Oscar Neebe were all arrested – even though only two of them had been present at the Haymarket square at the time of the bombing. All eight were convicted, according to the Civil Liberties Defense Center, “The trial, according to most accounts, was nothing short of a sham designed to convict the eight accused and deprive them of any semblance of due process.” Samuel Fielden and Michael Schwab were sentenced to life in prison and Oscar Neebe received 15 years hard labor. Louis Lingg committed suicide in prison before he could be hung. Adolph Fischer, George Engel, Albert Parsons, and August Spies were executed by the state on November 11, 1887. They were not the first martyrs of the labor movement, but they are some of the most well-known.  

    What can we learn today from the events and aftermath of the May Day strikes of 1886?  

    The call for an eight-hour workday differs little from modern day demands for an increase in the minimum wage. Revolutionaries understand this does not go far enough, but it would increase the material conditions of much of the work force – much as the anarchists understood the 8-hour workday was only an incremental reform. The trouble with such incremental demands is they still maintain the exploitative capitalist mode of production. As Marx explained in Value, Price, and Profit in 1865,  

    “At the same time, and quite apart from the general servitude involved in the wages system, the working class ought not to exaggerate to themselves the ultimate working of these everyday struggles. They ought not to forget that they are fighting with effects, but not with the causes of those effects; that they are retarding the downward movement, but not changing its direction; that they are applying palliatives, not curing the malady. They ought, therefore, not to be exclusively absorbed in these unavoidable guerilla fights incessantly springing up from the never ceasing encroachments of capital or changes of the market. They ought to understand that, with all the miseries it imposes upon them, the present system simultaneously engenders the material conditions and the social forms necessary for an economical reconstruction of society. Instead of the conservative motto: “A fair day’s wage for a fair day’s work!” they ought to inscribe on their banner the revolutionary watchword: “Abolition of the wages system!”  

    However, the Haymarket Affair shows us even the call for a modest reform like an eight-hour workday brings about a brutal response from the capitalist state. This response comes in the form of the militarized police force, which brutally repressed the strikers on May 3 and May 4. It must be stated that the police are not a part of the working class. The working class were in the streets in Chicago in 1886, and it was the police who violently oppressed them.  

    The police are used by the state (or the corporate ruling class in the case of privatized security/police forces such as the Pinkertons) as an armed force to maintain control over the lower classes through threat or use of violence. Engels describes the origin of these bodies of armed men, “The second distinguishing feature [of the state] is the establishment of a public power which no longer directly coincides with the population organizing itself as an armed force.” The police hold the role “of holding down and exploiting the oppressed class.” This is why modern day calls for defunding and abolishing the police are met with such resistance from the bourgeoisie. The police uphold the capitalist mode of production. As Engels explains,

    “Society thus far, based upon class antagonisms, had need of the state, that is, of an organization of the particular class, which was pro tempore the exploiting class, for the maintenance of its external conditions of production, and, therefore, especially, for the purpose of forcibly keeping the exploited classes in the condition of oppression corresponding with the given mode of production (slavery, serfdom, wage-labour).”

    This shows why in the United States, many police forces evolved from slave patrols, they simply shifted their role from protecting slavery to protecting wage labor. To abolish the wage system, it will be necessary to abolish the police and the bourgeois state they uphold.  

    On this May Day, and every day, we should remember all those who died in the struggle against capitalism. It will take true revolutionary action to overcome the corrupt system that murdered the Haymarket martyrs and continues to oppress the working class to this day. As the inscription on the Haymarket memorial plaque says,

    “The day will come when our silence will be more powerful than the voices you are throttling today.”

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • Today is Earth Day – but it is also the 151st birthday of Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov. He is better known as Lenin and he had a cool cat. It may be a coincidence but the first Earth Day was held on Lenin’s 100th birthday. I think it’s significant that these two days happen at the same time, since Lenin was fighting for a better planet when he took on capitalism and its byproduct of imperialism. For the future of life on this planet, we must embrace a socialist future where profit is not the driving motive. The for profit capitalist society has ignored climate change and devastated our environment – all for the profit of the ruling class. Before Europeans arrived in the Americas, the indigenous peoples were caretakers of the land. Their stewardship created a thriving environment with ample resources for all – with estimates of 50-100 million or more population. European colonists deliberately slaughtered this population in their search for gold and other trade goods that they could turn a profit on. This was a clear case of genocide that is glossed over in the history books. I recommend Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz’s An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States which I just started reading recently for a more accurate look at history.

    Back to Lenin – here’s a poem by Langston Hughes entitled Lenin:

    Lenin walks around the world.
    Frontiers cannot bar him.
    Neither barracks nor barricades impede.
    Nor does barbed wire scar him.

    Lenin walks around the world.
    Black, brown, and white receive him.
    Language is no barrier.
    The strangest tongues believe him.

    Lenin walks around the world.
    The sun sets like a scar.
    Between the darkness and the dawn
    There rises a red star.

    Famous socialist Albert Einstein was also an admirer of Lenin, saying of him:

    “I honor Lenin as a man who completely sacrificed himself and devoted all his energy to the realization of social justice. I do not consider his methods practical, but one thing is certain: men of his type are the guardians and restorers of the conscience of humanity.”

    Lenin defined imperialism succinctly as follows, “If it were necessary to give the briefest possible definition of imperialism we should have to say that imperialism is the monopoly stage of capitalism.” History has shown him to be correct – as we now live under the dictatorship of transnational capitalist monopolies like BlackRock, which I wrote about here. If we are to truly honor Earth Day, we should follow the anti-capitalist teachings of Lenin and work toward a communist future.

    Happy birthday Lenin and happy Earth Day to everyone!

    Originally published by Birrion Sondahl on April 22, 2021

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • Angela Bradbery, University of Florida

    President Joe Biden caught flak this month when he released his infrastructure plan and named it the American Jobs Plan.

    Republicans said he was being misleading by stretching the definition of “infrastructure,” and they questioned his claims about the number of jobs the proposal would create. It’s neither an infrastructure nor a jobs plan, they groused.

    Controversy over legislative bill names is hardly new. Politicians have long used bill titles as a marketing vehicle, concocting sometimes misleading and outlandish monikers to get media attention, drum up support – who can be against leaving no child behind? – and frame the conversation around the bill before their opponents do.

    A factory with many stacks, one of which is emitting a cloud of smoke.
    George W. Bush’s Clear Skies Act would have done the opposite of clearing the skies, as it weakened environmental protections. Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis via Getty Images

    Stark Naked Act

    Sometimes the whole point of legislation is to get a conversation going and show the public that a lawmaker or a political party cares about an issue. These so-called “messaging bills” won’t pass, but they give lawmakers a chance to hold press conferences and hearings, and go on talk shows.

    U.S. Rep. Pete Stark, D-Calif., in 1997 introduced a bill called the “No Private Contracts to Be Negotiated When the Patient Is Buck Naked Act,” which became known as the Stark Naked Act. It was designed to highlight and address the problem of doctors asking patients to pay more money when they were “in an exposed condition.” It never got a vote.

    President George W. Bush took things a step further, introducing proposals with Orwellian names that were the opposite in substance to what their names indicated. Remember the Clear Skies Act (2002), which would have weakened the Clean Air Act, and the Healthy Forests Initiative, which became law in 2003 and gave timber companies more access to cut down trees in forests.

    Other times, lawmakers try to create a clever and memorable acronym, often stretching the limits of the English language. Take, for example, the Service Act for Care and Relief Initiatives for Forces Injured in Combat Engagements of 2004 – the SACRIFICE Act – which aimed to help military families and recognize the sacrifices of the Armed Forces members injured in combat – and the Regulations from the Executive in Need of Scrutiny, or the perennially reintroduced REINS Act, a GOP bill to, well, rein in the president’s power.

    And let’s not forget the Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism, known as the USA PATRIOT Act, which legitimized domestic spying.

    As if coming up with these mouthfuls weren’t enough, the House Transportation Committee in 2004 was charged with weaving into legislation the name of the wife of then-Chairman U.S. Rep. Don Young, R-Alaska, Lu. The result: the 2005 Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: a Legacy for Users (SAFETEA-LU).

    A photo of Rep. Don Young looking thoughtful.
    In 2004, Alaska Rep. Don Young, left, asked staff to include his wife Lu’s name in a bill. They did: the Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: a Legacy for Users,or SAFETEA-LU. Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc. via Getty Images

    Serious implications

    It’s not just a U.S. phenomenon; University of Stirling (Scotland) researcher Brian Christopher Jones determined in 2011 that bill naming in the U.K. is an important part of the legislative process and even could influence a bill’s passage.

    It’s unclear whether a bill title can affect a congressional vote, but it can have serious implications if the law ends up before the U.S. Supreme Court, where the title can be used to infer legislative intent.

    “The Defense of Marriage Act” was so influential a title that its meaning was debated by Supreme Court justices in United States v. Windsor, in which the court deemed the act was unconstitutional.

    “Both the majority and minority opinions discussed the name and its implications at length, but came to differing conclusions on its importance,” wrote Jones, who was so vexed by that title’s influence on the highest court in the U.S. that he called for a neutral bill-naming office to be created so that lawmakers could no longer be in charge of naming their legislation.

    In fact, lawmakers can name bills as they see fit. They are fortunate that the rules of advertising don’t apply; in 2013, Jones and attorney Randal Shaheen concluded that some bill titles would be deemed deceptive advertising if overseen by the Federal Trade Commission.

    Confusion about naming

    So, is Biden’s plan an infrastructure bill? Or a jobs bill?

    The White House contends it is both. Building new roads and bridges, upgrading transit systems and replacing lead water pipes requires hiring lots of workers.

    [Deep knowledge, daily. Sign up for The Conversation’s newsletter.]

    But trying to brand one proposal as two things violates the rules of branding, and coverage of Biden’s plan highlights the dangers of doing so. Some media referred to Biden’s proposal as an infrastructure measure, while other headlines blared about his jobs plan. Confusing? Yes, especially given the rapid-fire nature of proposals coming out of the White House these days. One could be excused for wondering whether Biden had released two plans instead of one.

    Would lawmakers submit to an independent bill-naming review process, as Jones suggests?

    Unlikely. Chances are they would dub it a “No Onerous Name Surveyor to Ask Regarding Titles Endlessly Released,” or NONSTARTER.

    Angela Bradbery, Frank Karel Endowed Chair in Public Interest Communications, University of Florida

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • “We shouldn’t be looking for heroes, we should be looking for good ideas.”

    Noam Chomsky

    Participatory democracy is a tool. It aims to provide every individual the opportunity to have a direct role in forming and passing political decisions, giving communities a voice outside of elections. If the etymology of democracy translates into “people rule,” then this would make participatory democracy the purest democratic form. It was famously practiced by the Greek in Athens, and in almost all Indigenous American nations throughout their histories. The Iroquois Confederacy is known as the longest recorded example of large-scale participatory democracy. According to colonial emissary Cadwallader Colden they had, “such absolute notions of liberty that they allow no kind of superiority of one over another, and banish all servitude from their territories.” Some think so highly of participism they consider it the only road to Utopia. 

    Swedish political scientist Jörgen Westerståhl identified four distinguishable types of participatory democracy: electoral participation, direct participation using referendum, the use of councils and local assemblies, and meritocratic participation in political organization based on knowledge. None of these have to be exclusive, and the strongest democracies would likely include elements of all of them. We will now look at a few examples of participism.

    “Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité” (“Liberty, Equality, Fraternity”)—also the national motto of France and the Republic of Haiti—was one of the slogans associated with the Paris Commune between March and May 1871. It was a tribute to the old sentiments of the French Revolution, where the slogan first originated, and a testimony to society’s natural commitment to mutual aid and our yearning for social organization which complements this. Arguably one of the most influential events in modern history, the Commune marked the first recorded example of workers establishing government from the ground up, inspiring classically libertarian movements ever since. 

    Enraged citizens founded the Paris Commune following a spontaneous uprising in the echo of France’s defeat in the Franco-Prussian War. A combination of an increasingly radicalized workforce and military—who harbored growing discontent over capitalism, militarism, the patriarchy, and the lack of actual democracy in Europe—along with the power vacuum caused by the collapse of the French government made the political climate ripe for a dramatic leap forward into grassroots populism. Parisians recognized they would rather rule themselves than be ruled by a group of elites.  

    The militant Communards, consisting of Parisian workers assisted by the French National Guard, overthrew the Parisian government on March 18, 1871. They organized the city into several confederal districts—or Communes—which operated on the basis of highly decentralized, semi-direct democracy. The new government focused on democracy and labor rights. Citizens elected  representatives into communal councils, 92 representatives for every 20,000 residents, with instantly recallable councilmen and policies, mirroring the popular libertarian socialist ideas of the time involving imperative mandates.

    This is what Gustave Courbet, a councilman working with the Arts Commission, offered from his perspective working within the Commune: 

    “I get up, have breakfast and preside over meetings for twelve hours each day. My head has begun to spin, but despite this mental torment which I am not used to, I am enchanted. Paris is a true paradise! No police, no nonsense, to exaction of any kind, no arguments! Everything in Paris rolls like clockwork. All the organized bodies are federated and run themselves. . . . The Paris Commune is more successful than any government has ever been.”

    Some evidence, however, suggests this perspective was particularly optimistic. It’s reasonable to imagine that they wouldn’t have needed so many assemblies to challenge council decisions in the first place if proposals had been formed directly from the bottom through similar assemblies. This is all in a participatory democratic fashion meant to facilitate popular leverage—democracy which doesn’t exclude the individual when it comes to matters which affect them. There was relatively honest, transparent, and horizontal representation compared to (let’s say) the United States—where we are intimidated into electing dictators to sit on dangerous amounts of administrative power—but there was still some concern that the lack of direct involvement in the development of certain decisions would leave the people disenfranchised. If upper-class members of the city hadn’t fled or refused to take part in elections, this might have sooner been the case. Luckily for Paris, positions were filled with all kinds of radical members, including anarchists and socialist republicans, and because of this the revolutionary spirit prevailed. 

    The government was centered around the material and political wellbeing of the residents as well as prolonging the life of the Commune. Arthur Arnould, an anarchist councilman and a member of the International Workers’ Association, had this to say on life in Paris:

    “During [the Commune’s] short reign, not a single man, woman, child, or old person was hungry, or cold, or homeless. . . . It was amazing to see how with only tiny resources, this government not only fought a horrible war for two months, but chased famine from the hearths of the huge population which had had no work for a year. That was one of the miracles of a true democracy.” 

    Again, despite these sentiments, there were still many who didn’t believe the Commune was radical enough. There were even some who argued that a factor in the Commune’s defeat was the growing conflict between constituent and councilmen, which took away focus from defense (although given the scale and wealth of the Commune its days were unavoidably numbered). This problem would’ve been avoided under a stronger participatory democracy much like what existed in Paris between 1789 and 1795 during the French Revolution, where citizens had the opportunity to form decisions on an equal authoritative level as their elected councilmen, making politicians facilitators acting in accordance to public desire. Such organization removes the divide between administrator and citizen, and nullifies the arrogant belief plaguing all authorities and authority systems that any amount of privilege is best kept by any one individual.

    As councilmen fought over power and popularity, and were continuously impeached, citizens more and more came to the conclusion that none of them were entitled to any special administrative authority, a perspective which was likely also rooted in the libertarian socialist, especially Proudhonian, currents in Paris at the time. However, the whole affair still served as evidence that the working-class is capable of organizing from the ground-up without imposed administration or the guidance of a dictatorial party. And thanks to working class involvement in government and leverage from the general public, they were able to almost instantly abolish child labor, end the intertwining of the church and politics, eliminate  interests on debt, and abolish the police. This new level of involvement also enabled workers to legally occupy property abandoned by their employer to form co-ops, among a whole plethora of other radical new policies, which again were likely held back by the still impure democracy. The movement was commended by many prominent political thinkers of the time, such as the father of anarcho-collectivism Mikhail Bakunin, who expressed pride for the Commune for resisting the capitalist state as well as a revolutionary dictatorship. 

    The events of the Paris Commune played an influential role in the politics of another revolution 65 years later, during the Spanish Civil War (1936 — 1939). At this time the country was broken up into four governments and two opposing factions: the Nationalists (fascists) and the Loyalists (anarchists, republicans, and Marxists). Most of Spain, especially Revolutionary Catalonia, became one of the most radical times and places of the 20th century. It received plenty of international reception and involvement, including major political figures such as political activist Emma Goldman, founder of Dadaism Tristan Tzara, and influential author George Orwell.

    George Orwell on his arrival in Barcelona, from his book Homage to Catalonia:

    “It was the first time that I had ever been in a town where the working class was in the saddle. Practically every building of any size had been seized by the workers and was draped with red flags or with the red and black flag of the Anarchists; every wall was scrawled with the hammer and sickle and with the initials of the revolutionary parties; almost every church had been gutted and its images burnt. Churches here and there were being systematically demolished by gangs of workmen. Every shop and café had an inscription saying that it had been collectivized; even the bootblacks had been collectivized and their boxes painted red and black. Waiters and shop-walkers looked you in the face and treated you as an equal. Servile and even ceremonial forms of speech had temporarily disappeared. [. . .] Above all, there was a belief in the revolution and the future, a feeling of having suddenly emerged into an era of equality and freedom. Human beings were trying to behave as human beings and not as cogs in the capitalist machine.”

    They achieved a level of liberty and egalitarianism that many Americans think impossible. It was the result of decades of corruption and brutality handed out by the monarchy, military, capitalist robber-barons, and the Catholic Church (many of the revolutionaries were Catholic, for the record), which had the majority of the population turning to radical thought for an alternative. The works of Bakunin, Kropotkin, Marx, Proudhon, Stirner, Élisée Reclus and others became very popular over the course of a generation, especially in Barcelona. Several years before the civil war, workers’ unions across Spain carried out massive general strikes and sabotage campaigns at ever growing numbers, and in 1930 the dictatorship was overthrown. The population quickly established a multi-party republic and began making progressive reforms. This alienated the right-wing tendencies in Spain—fascism, monarchism, liberal capitalism, etc. In July 1936, Francisco Franco, a fascist general under the old monarchy, attempted a coup after uniting these tendencies, facilitating his power with the help of German and Italian forces. Republican Spain managed to form a resistance, but was broken up into three governments: what remained of the Republic, and the more influential Marxist and anarcho-syndicalist governments formed by trade unions and workers’ parties who helped influence the politics of the Republic. The entire region of Catalonia and Aragon quickly established a government on participatory principles. 

    Emma Goldman, who visited Catalonia between 1936 and 1937, attested that after the democratization productivity rose by around 30–50%. This was before Comintern (controlled by the Soviet Union) ordered the destruction of anarchist territory at the hands of Leninist factions with the threat of withholding resources. Fighting between Leninists and anarchists made the Loyalists even more vulnerable to fascist forces, leading to their defeat. These types of incidents are all too common in history, with Leninists (including Stalinists, Trotskyist, etc.) destroying progress because it doesn’t fit their misanthropic, democratically exclusive principles of vanguardism and “democratic centralism” which they think will somehow lead to freedom, or otherwise because anti-authoritarian currents tend not to defend the state capitalism and imperialism of Leninist states.

    In the time of its existence almost all Catalonian communities abolished private property, replacing it with communal housing and a collective of worker-owned co-ops. In the anarchist stronghold of Barcelona, 75% of the economy had been voluntarily collectivised and most resources were distributed on the basis of need. These are the words of Eddie Conlon, written in a publication for the Workers’ Solidarity Movement on the subject of Catalonia: 

    “If you didn’t want to join the collective you were given some land but only as much as you could work yourself. You were not allowed to employ workers. Not only production was affected, distribution was on the basis of what people needed. In many areas money was abolished. People come to the collective store (often churches which had been turned into warehouses) and got what was available. If there were shortages rationing would be introduced to ensure that everyone got their fair share. But it was usually the case that increased production under the new system eliminated shortages. 

    In agricultural terms the revolution occurred at a good time. Harvests that were gathered in and being sold off to make big profits for a few landowners were instead distributed to those in need. Doctors, bakers, barbers, etc. were given what they needed in return for their services. Where money was not abolished a ‘family wage’ was introduced so that payment was on the basis of need and not the number of hours worked. 

    Production greatly increased. Technicians and agronomists helped the peasants to make better use of the land. Modern scientific methods were introduced and in some areas yields increased by as much as 50%. There was enough to feed the collectivists and the militias in their areas. Often there was enough for exchange with other collectives in the cities for machinery. In addition food was handed over to the supply committees who looked after distribution in the urban areas.”

    Some of you still might not be convinced that this kind of world is sustainable; perhaps you think it’s in contrast to human nature. Then we should look at participatory democracy, or anarchism, the opposition to monopolies of administrative power, from a different angle. If you believe that humans are inherently selfish, if you distrust humanity, then decentralize the decision-making so no untrustworthy individual has power over another untrustworthy individual, outside of what society—as a sum of all individuals in a given area—consents to. If you think we act in our own interest, then remember that most people have the same interests, and allowing there to be special privilege creates social division that’s harmful for all social life. Stirner argued for “a Union of Egoists” as both an alternative to the state and his definition of society: people working together as self-owning individuals pursuing their own interests in solidarity, encouraged to speak up about any dissatisfaction and embrace their own cause rather than the cause of someone else. However, there is more than enough evidence suggesting that we are at least a combination of both, evolving instincts of empathy and mutual aid in the name of self-preservation.

    In 1957, archaeologists discovered the remains of a 50,000 year old Neanderthal—“Shanidar”—who had been kept alive for decades despite being blind, deaf, and possessing injuries which would’ve made him unable to walk or hunt on his own. If social Darwinism is the correct interpretation of human nature, then this man should have been abandoned or killed. Yet there was an emotion—an instinct—much higher and much more secure than this almost suicidal style of cutthroat individualism. Besides the fact that organized society would be impossible if humans weren’t inherently concerned for each other’s well-being, through better or worse, this offers additional evidence that we possess a profound level of selflessness. This isn’t a unique experience to humans, or even primates; trees are known to alert each other of danger through their roots, and cows form a herd around their sick and pregnant to defend against predators. Mutual aid is necessary for virtually all living things, just as a balance in the ecosystem is necessary to sustain our environment, which is also made difficult by the anti-democratic principles of our age. Even if deep down we are just selflessly selfish, creating an environment which brings out the worst of our nature with no functioning democracy to give us a say in the matter is a bad idea.

    The anthropologist, sociologist, historian, and anarchist Petr Kropotkin made sure to emphasize our naturally altruistic nature in his book Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution

    This is among my favorite excerpts:

    “It is not love to my neighbor—whom I often do not know at all—which induces me to seize a pail of water and rush towards his house when I see it on fire; it is a far wider, even though more vague feeling or instinct of human solidarity and sociability which moves me. [. . .] It is a feeling infinitely wider than love or personal sympathy—an instinct that has been slowly developed among animals and men in the course of an extremely long evolution, and which has taught animals and men alike the force they can borrow from the practice of mutual aid and support, and the joys they can find in social life.”

    Participatory democracy, then, brings out our most social aspects while still providing us  the means to represent ourselves as individuals.

    Some readers have probably internally summoned the age-old counter involving “mob rule” or “tyranny of the majority.” Tyranny of the majority, says the critic who thinks the minority will represent them. Personally, I’m far more concerned about tyranny of the few than tyranny of the many, and I don’t think it’s unreasonable that the constant emphasis on that throughout history has been propaganda against social liberty. You obviously can’t negate the struggle between the individual and society, which I believe is exacerbated when democracy is non-participatory. The scale and level of involvement in democracy determine the individual’s leverage over society; when political influence never leaves the hands of a few people, especially when those people are owned by multinational banks and corporations, that’s when the individual is truly threatened. People who think the individual is somehow more protected by dictatorial concentration of power into the hands of the few are clearly not thinking things through.

    Participism is based on the idea of consent.

    Participatory economics—because imposed material conditions are a violation of the worker, community, and taxpayer, but not with direct negotiation and consent. 

    Participatory polity—because abuse of power is inevitable unless each community and individual within that community has political leverage, which depends on direct negotiation and consent via assembly and referendum.

    Participatory politics also depend heavily on municipality and decentralized government. If the goal is that people have a say to the same degree they’re affected, then decision-making—especially of the legislative nature—must exist on the smallest functional scale. In other words, while large-scale decisions should remain bottom-up, most decisions should not leave the communities which formed them. It would be unjustifiable for someone living in Alabama to force someone living in Seattle to abide by their decisions. Beyond that, the smaller the scale the more leverage the individual has. Murray Bookchin had this to say on the municipal: “The overriding problem is to change the structure of society so that people gain power. The best arena to do that is the municipality—the city, town, and village—where we have an opportunity to create a face-to-face democracy.”

    You can have overseers, representation, and managers while still having completely direct democracy. Top-down decision-making doesn’t result in better decisions, it isn’t automatically a meritocracy. It just assimilates people and imposes decisions which the public may or may not benefit from; it is elitist and unstable. It creates political struggle and social hierarchies enforced only through violence, fear, and manipulation. It creates separate interests and the erosion of societies. People understand their own interests instinctively without manipulation, and giving them the opportunity to formulate decisions on an equal basis to those they elect will minimize the corruption created by otherwise hierarchical systems. Participatory democracy is opening democracy up and giving people a voice instead of concentrating power in the hands of the few.

    If you need evidence that this could work in the modern world, you must look no further than the Kurds in Rojava. They are probably the best example in a couple of hundred years of how stable this model is even in the most chaotic of circumstances. Rojava practices democratic confederalism, inspired by Bookchin communalism. They are organized into municipal councils which hold assemblies and constrain council authority with mandatory referendum. Any decision which affects the community is brought to a vote, and those who are most affected get the opportunity to state their piece. Their economy is therefore a synthesis of markets and community-planning, and the results are always more socialistic because of human nature itself. All of this while hegemonic powers from around the world destroy themselves and each other from all directions. Despite fascist opposition and constant war and intervention, they’ve consistently pushed and defended advancements in gender equality, environmentalism, pluralism, communalization, restorative justice, direct democracy, and freedom of religion just to name a few.

    The biggest lesson since the peak of monarchical despotism should be that consent is the only way a government can derive its legitimacy; when the majority has practically zero impact on what effects them, and conditions negate free will even in electoral politics, then they can’t possibly consent to what’s happening outside of choosing not to organize. People elect politicians because they think it’s necessary to have people sitting on monopolies of decision-making power; people preferred Biden in America this time because he was pushed on us with selective reporting, and we were afraid.

    “But what about more progressive candidates, like Alexandia Ocasio-Cortez?” you might be thinking. There’s nothing good or justifiable about her, either. I haven’t trusted her or any other self-proclaimed progressive in politics after she kept trying to push to raise Congress’ salary while refusing to even try for the beneficial changes she ran on. Her publicly denouncing her original politics in favor of neoliberal strategies didn’t help. Her downplaying the genocide at the border made her an enemy. She proved to me and a lot of people that there will be no single hero. I also don’t think it’s necessary or stable for any politicians to have any real political power, and I don’t think consenting to their power except for explicitly strategic reasons (like for the purpose of popularizing certain ideas even if you know they will be betrayed) will ever change anything. What we have now is just electing dictators—we can’t think any more highly of it. I for one do not consent to anyone making my decisions, appointing positions, excluding me from the decision-making that affects my well-being. If more people would stop consenting to it, and embrace participatory politics, then we will begin to see actual change.

    I don’t think there needs to be controversy in suggesting there’s a better tactic than begging bought politicians to save us; we should acknowledge that almost anything legal is incapable of making change. So what’s the alternative? It would probably be pointless and even dangerous to put too much faith into any one strategy, but whatever happens we need to highlight horizontal and grassroots principles as much as we can. Working to organize a federated network of mutual aid groups, unions, and platforms would be a good start. I know there are already many people on top of that, so we just need to find and join them. 

    These networks must have a purpose. We gather support by acting, not merely existing. The situation demands a campaign of direct action, community support, and consistent provocation, challenging the state and uniting communities from below, waiting for the right moment to overturn things and institute a better government on the basis of participatory principles. Some seats in local, non-monopolistic government should be filled, for the sake of taking advantage of existing structures without extreme risk of disappointment, but this always requires caution. 

    All of this would be relentlessly attacked, but most things worth doing are going to be difficult, and at the very least it would help spark movements that would inevitably result in progress if active and consistent enough. Most importantly, we can’t hide behind the violence of our corporatocratic state. We should never cheer for the oppression of one group over petty squabbles or prejudice. We can never condone it, we can never condone others doing it, even if they try convincing us that it’s in our best interest for the moment. This means no censorship, no wars, no iron fist leaders, no imprisonment, no interrogation, no neglect, and no coercion imposed by or against any members of our communities, especially the most vulnerable. Solidarity is key.

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • Men  and  women  are  equals. What men can do women can also do.”

    Mao Tse-Tung 

    Marxism and feminism go hand in hand. All too often in this patriarchal society, female Marxists are overlooked in favor of their male counterparts. This is unfortunate as women have often taken the lead in the revolution and will continue to do so.  The Indigenous Marxist group, The Red Nation, has stated, “Cishetero patriarchy is counterrevolutionary. Radical feminism—whether Indigenous, Black, or Marxist—is our path towards revolution.” This was true in the past with Mother JonesLucy ParsonsRosa LuxemburgEmma GoldmanSilvia FedericiClara ZetkinSimone De BeauvoirMarilyn BuckAngela DavisAssata Shakur, and countless others taking a revolutionary role in history.  

    One such Marxist was Mary Marcy, who is little remembered today but had a profound impact on socialism. When Mary Marcy died, Eugene v. Debs wrote,

    “She was one of the clearest minds and greatest souls in all our movement, and her passing into the great silence will be such a loss as will leave an aching void to those who knew her, for her place can never be filled. I admired her for her uncompromising integrity, and I loved her for her high-souled devotion to her ideals and her personal loyalty to her comrades.”

    The lessons of Mary Marcy are lessons that the working class needs today more than ever.  

    Mary Edna Tobius was born in 1877 and orphaned at an early age. She worked as a telephone switchboard operator and provided for her younger siblings, who had been taken away to live with relatives. She switched jobs to stenographer after buying a book on shorthand with her meager salary of $9/week. She lost this job due to making a political statement during the Bryan campaign of 1896 when her employer banned the wearing of Bryan buttons to work. She took a stand and was fired for this resolve. Clarence Darrow took up her cause and secured her a position at the University of Chicago, where she was able to attend classes for free. 

    After three years at school, Mary married Leslie Marcy and the couple moved to Kansas City. Mary joined the Socialist Party in 1903, one year after taking up her position in Kansas City. She began work as a stenographer in the meat packing industry. This work further radicalized her as she experienced firsthand the conditions Upton Sinclair made famous when he wrote The Jungle. Mary chronicled her own experiences in Letters of a Pork Packer’s Stenographer which was published in the International Socialist Review. Her letters brought her to the attention of an anti-trust case against the beef industry, and she testified in front of a grand jury. Mary’s testimony was key in an indictment of the meat packers, but the judge ruled on the side of the corporation and gave them immunity. Mary lost her job while the bosses retained theirs.  

    Mary next found work with the Associated Charities of Kansas City where she set about reforming the charity process. Rather than the traditional process of “investigate first and ‘encourage’ afterwards,” Mary chose to put assistance as the main priority. The meat packing industry pressured Associated Charities to fire Mary but did not cave. Mary retained her j Mary left this position due to health issues. She next found her true calling as a staff member of the International Socialist Review and secretary to the publisher at Charles H. Kerr & Company. She held this position for the rest of her life, and this is where her revolutionary work truly began to shine.  

    As Jack Carney described, “Mary soon came to realize a weakness in the methods by which radicals were attempting to approach the masses. She saw from the outset that Marx had to be simplified if his teachings were to be accepted by them.”  This led to her writing her most famous work – the pamphlet Shop Talks on Economics. This was a work of brilliance that still remains relevant to the class struggle today. 

    In Shop Talks on Economics, Mary described the fundamentals of basic Marxian economics in simple language. She described how workers are a commodity in the following way: 

    “Some of us work many years before we realize that even we wage-workers have one commodity to sell. As long as we are able to work we try to find a buyer of our labor-power. We hunt for a job and the boss that goes with a job.” 

    She simply outlined the value of commodities with the simple statement,

    “Every time more social labor is needed in making commodities–shoes, hats, gloves, stoves or cigars–whatever these commodities may be–their value is increased. Every time the quantity of socially necessary labor is lessened in the production of commodities, their value is decreased.” 

    And the all-important concept of surplus-value,

    “In two hours the miner produces in coal value sufficient to pay for his labor-power, but in the eight succeeding hours of labor, he will produce coal valuing $8.00, all of which the capitalist retains for himself.” 

    Mary took the vital lessons of Capital and Value, Price, and Profit and made them comprehensible for the working class.  

    Not only did Mary present the fundamental issues with capitalism, but she also provided the solution in socialism. She wrote, 

    “This is the chief demand of socialism; that workingmen and women cease selling themselves, or their strength, as commodities. We propose to own the commodities we produce ourselves and to exchange commodities containing a certain quantity of necessary social labor, for other commodities representing an equal quantity of necessary social labor.” 

    She understood the shortcomings and weaknesses of the socialist movement in the U.S. but did not give up hope. The following paragraphs are beautifully crafted and describe the class struggle according to the conditions of the time:  

    “It is true that the working class, as a class, has never been sufficiently well organized to demand a universally higher price for its labor power–a larger portion of the value of its product from the capitalist class. 

    It is equally true that when they shall have become sufficiently organized and class conscious to do so, they will not stop with asking higher wages, but will abolish the whole wage system itself. 

    We must organize along industrial lines to shorten the hours of labor. If an eight-hour day were inaugurated, it would mean the additional employment of millions of men and women in America tomorrow. It would insure us leisure for study and recreation – for work in the Army of the Revolution, and it would mean higher wages in America generally. For the fewer men there are competing for jobs, the higher the wage they are able to demand. 

    To repeat: Modern machinery is throwing more and more men and women into the Army of the Unemployed. Shorter hours will employ more men and women, and will maintain and even increase wages, to say nothing of the tremendous development of the fighting spirit, the solidarity and class consciousness of the workers. 

    Flood the nations with your ballots, workingmen and women of the world. Elect your shop mates, your companions of the mines, your mill hand friends, to every possible office. Put yourselves or your co-workers into every government position as fast as possible to render your court decisions, to hold in readiness your army; to control your arsenals and to protect you with your constabulary, to make your laws and to serve your fellow workers, whenever and wherever and however possible. 

    And organize industrially. With your government at your backs, ready to ward off Capitalism, ready at all times to throw itself into battle for you, you can gather the workers of the world into your industrial organization and sign the death warrant of Wage Slavery!”  

    Over two million copies of Shop Talks were sold throughout the world and it was translated into Japanese, Chinese, Finnish, Romanian, French, Italian and Greek. She wrote many other pamphlets, but “Shop Talks” remained her masterpiece. She taught a correspondence course on Marxian economics and was always busy responding to letters from workers throughout the world. As Carney describes,

    “For radicals the world over found in her a clearing house for their many differences. It seemed as if she had been appointed to keep the radicals from destroying themselves. An I. W. W. member would write criticising the Communists and vice versa. Craft unionist and industrial unionist would write to her and detail their troubles. Mary advised them all and always wrote with a view to keeping them together, for well she knew that in the days when the masses are engaged in real struggle the revolutionists must unite.”  

     She was always a proponent of leftist unity – a lesson which is still relevant today.

    “She foresaw— and how correct she was—that the “reds” would waste their time fighting each other, instead of fighting the boss. She urged them to remember that each side had its faults and that above all they must remember that in dealing with real things they should first, last and all the time be realists.” 

    She continued,

    “If, instead of denouncing the only revolutionary movement that is actually making inroads in industry, we would learn what political action really is, and tell our friends what it is; if, instead of petty criticising, we were to back up this fighting organization and show it that an army is the FORCE that makes the State something besides a few words, or laws written upon pieces of paper; that mass action may be political action and that we are all so close together that we ought to present a solid front to the capitalist enemy, we might then develop a movement in this country that would actually move and grow.“ 

    This is what we need today – a solid front to the capitalist enemy.   

    Mary had joined the Industrial Workers of the World in 1918. She was so deeply involved in the I.W.W. that she twice mortgaged her house to bail out leaders of the movement. First for Secretary-Treasurer A. S. Embree and then again for William “Big Bill” Haywood, one of the founders of the IWW. Unfortunately for Mary, Big Bill skipped bail and fled to Soviet Russia and Mary ended up losing her house. After this setback, she fell into a deep depression and took her own life on December 8, 1922. Jack Carney described this loss,

    “The world’s revolutionary movement has lost one of its best fighters and clearest thinkers in the death of Mary E. Marcy. The loss sustained by the world at large is great, but that of the movement in the United States is greater, for there is no one to occupy the place left vacant by Mary, as she was affectionately known by thousands who knew her only by correspondence.”    

    We would do well to remember her words today, 

    “Nothing has ever been done for the working class until the workers began to exercise power to force these things. Nobody but yourselves is going to do anything for you now. You must organize industrially, as well as politically, and carry on the work of education as you have never done before. And what you want done you will have to do yourselves.”   

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • “I have lived inside the belly of the Monster and know him from within.” 

    Cuban revolutionary Jose Marti  

    I only spent a brief time inside the Democratic Party as an elected delegate for Bernie Sanders in 2020, but it was enough to determine that the monster is indeed irreformable. My delegate journey exposed me to the gross incompetence and corruption within the party. The following reflects my personal experience as a delegate from Colorado’s Congressional District 2. My conclusion from these few months is there is no path forward inside the Democratic Party. This should be no surprise at all, as this is the same party that rigged two primaries to make sure Bernie Sanders would never be president.  

    In order to become a delegate, it was necessary for me to go through the state caucus system. The Colorado caucuses were held statewide at 2:00 PM on Saturday, March 7 – a time, which was certainly not ideal for everyone, especially resort communities such as my home county, Summit County. In a resort community, the ski resorts are the busiest on a Saturday, meaning the working class are most likely to be working at this time. While Saturday may have made sense to city folk whose work week is a more traditional Monday-Friday, in Summit County it immediately disenfranchised a huge part of the working class. Summit County lies in a house district (HD61) where 23.41% of the workforce works in entertainment and recreation. Only 88 people showed up to caucus in Summit County. My personal observation was that the majority of those who showed up to caucus were over 45. I also do not recall seeing a single minority. The attendees of the caucus already were not representative of the actual population of Summit County. Considering at least 6,110 people voted in the Democratic primary in Summit County, the 88 people who showed up to caucus represented less than 1.5% of those who voted. At the caucus in 2016, which was held on a Tuesday night, 698 people showed up to caucus. Such high numbers could not be expected with the presidential primary not being a part of the process but having it in the evening certainly allowed for broader participation than two o’clock in the afternoon on a Saturday. The process was already off to a bad start and would only get worse.  

    While the presidential candidate had already been selected in the primary on Super Tuesday, the caucus served to choose senatorial candidates as well as proposed amendments to the state platform, all of which would be finalized at the state convention. In order to advance from the county caucus, to the county convention, I was required to become a delegate for a senatorial candidate. My choice, Lorena Garcia, was not viable, therefore I had to back Andrew Romanoff in order to continue my journey to become a delegate. My preference was to simply be a Bernie delegate, but this was not an option, I had to become a Romanoff delegate. This was a minor inconvenience but illustrates how convoluted and broken the process truly was. At the caucus, I introduced an amendment to the platform to ban fracking. This would be voted on at the county convention.  

    The county convention was held via Zoom due to the pandemic. My ban fracking amendment passed with a slim majority at the county convention. It was also at this time that delegate presidential preferences were established so I was able to become a Bernie delegate to the congressional district and state conventions. However, this process did not follow the state guidelines and the delegate allocation was completely wrong.  

    As part of my campaign to become a Congressional District Delegate, I was given a list of the delegates and their presidential preferences for each county in my congressional district (CD). This was my first insight into how horribly wrong everything was with the process. For example, my county sent the following delegates to the CD convention: 6 for Sanders, 16 for Biden, and 6 for Warren. The correct allocation should have been: 7 for Biden, 5 for Bloomberg, 10 for Bernie, and 6 for Warren. Other counties were not as far off as Summit, but there were discrepancies throughout the entire district. All my attempts to address these issues were for naught. In the case of Broomfield county I was told, “I’m not sure there’s any way to hold them accountable to the math.”  Out of all the errors, only one was corrected – an incorrectly assigned delegate was switched back to Bloomberg in Grand County.  

    This was a clear violation of the Colorado Democratic Party rules, Article III, Part 1, Section E – “Delegates and, if applicable, alternates to all Party assemblies and conventions shall be chosen in a manner which fairly reflects the division of candidate preference, including uncommitted, expressed by those participating in the nominating process including the representation of minority and divergent views. Delegates to conventions shall be allocated to presidential candidate preferences in a fashion that fairly reflects the proportion of votes each candidate received in the Colorado Presidential Primary.” There is a further rule to address this, Part 3, Article II, F (1) – “Candidate preferences which are represented by more than their countywide allotment shall have the voting power of some or all of their precinct delegates diminished to 1⁄2 votes.” This rule was never implemented.  

    In an election involving a potential total of 769 delegates in CD2, such errors may seem negligible, but as things turned out they certainly could have had an enormous impact on the outcome. The second female Bernie delegate was decided by one vote (Bernie was shorted at least four delegates at the CD level). The Biden female delegate was decided by seven votes (Biden got nine extra delegates in Summit county alone). And there were five votes between first place and last place in the Bloomberg delegate election (Bloomberg was shorted five delegates). As Warren was the only candidate with the correct number of delegates from Summit County, only that race was not potentially changed. One small county incorrectly awarding delegates may have changed 3/4 of the delegate races in CD2. 

    It should be noted that delegates are pledged, not bound, so they can choose to vote whichever preference. This is not an excuse for incorrectly assigning delegates. While Biden delegates were certainly welcome to vote for Sanders delegates, as a Sanders delegate candidate, I was instructed to only contact delegates in their preference group. According to the Colorado Democratic Platform of 2018, one of the key values of the CDP is: “We believe our votes are our voice. The people of Colorado must be assured that all elections are fair and transparent.” There was absolutely nothing transparent or fair about this process. 

    I managed to win my delegate election by a significant amount, so decided not to challenge the process. In hindsight, I should have done so, though I still doubt anything significant would have come from this. I now moved on to the state convention, which was also rife with errors. Once again, due to COVID, the convention had been transformed to a digital affair using a Survey Monkey ballot.  

    Just days before the convention, the news broke that the Sanders and Biden campaigns were negotiating for the return of Bernie’s PLEO (party leaders and elected officials) and at large delegates which had been stolen due to the DNC’s interpretation of Rule 11C. This meant that Bernie delegates were now back on the ballot. Somewhere in this process, the difference between PLEO and at large was blurred – 69 names were put on the PLEO ballot and 72 on the at large ballot. Candidates who had only applied to be on the at large ballot were on the PLEO and vice versa. And it was decided to use ranked choice voting – so the top 9 PLEO’s and top 14 at larges would be ranked by each voter. Two names on both ballots had already been elected as Congressional District delegates. One at large candidate was on the PLEO ballot but not on the at large ballot. At least two names that were on the PLEO ballot in the morning, were not on the at large, then put back on the at large, then removed from the at large ballot in the afternoon. 

    One issue (of many) with the ranking system through SurveyMonkey was if a voter dragged a candidate’s name to put them in order, the rest of the list was automatically ranked by whatever order they were in – which was alphabetically from the start. So, if a voter did this and only chose their top several, the rest would be organized alphabetically. When the results were finally released, they made no sense at all. Only 28 names were on the PLEO results, 69 on the at large. What happened to the other candidates? Candidates with zero votes were recorded on the results, while candidates who definitely received votes were left off. It took well over a month of discussions and negotiations with the Democratic Party leadership to determine what exactly happened here. The CDP finally admitted there was not any sort of ranked voting used. They only counted first place votes. This meant eight of the choices on the PLEO ballot and 13 on the at large ballot were not counted. Voters did not know this beforehand and have still never been informed this was the case. It was only through the due diligence of myself and other Bernie delegates that we were able to determine what happened.  

    This is what the actual results looked like – never released to the public before now. The crossed-out names were all spoiled ballots, as were anyone who did not vote for a winner as ranked choice voting was not actually used. This was a true travesty of democracy and the Colorado Democratic Party did nothing to correct it.  

    At the state convention, the state platform was voted on. The process through which this platform had been created was not open or transparent at all. Those who attend the caucus can introduce resolutions to modify the platform which are voted on within their precinct. These are then voted on at the county assembly by the delegates there. If they pass at the county convention, they are passed onto the platform committee – where no further input from the voters is taken. The overall platform is voted on at state convention, but there is no process whereby it can be modified by anyone outside the platform committee. This is why there was no fracking ban plank inserted into the platform – the platform committee chose to leave it out even though it had passed at my county level and several other counties had passed similar amendments.  

    This is how the platform committee is chosen – “The chair of the platform committee shall be appointed by the state party chair. Each state representative district central committee and each congressional district central committee at its organizational meeting shall designate and certify to the state chair one member to serve on the platform committee of the state assembly, such designation to be subject to change or ratification at any subsequent central committee meeting or assembly of the particular representative or congressional district held prior to deliberations of the platform committee of the state assembly. Each Initiative may appoint one member to the state Platform Committee. In addition, the incumbent Democratic statewide elected officials, state and federal senators and representatives, together with the chair, 1st vice chair, 2nd vice chair, secretary and treasurer of the state central committee, and the national committee persons shall be members of the platform committee.” (Colorado Democracy Rules and Bylaws, Article V, C 1a.)  In other words, the platform committee is full of establishment elites like John Hickenlooper, who do not support a fracking ban. This makes the platform far less progressive than if the people directly voted on it.  

    After the entire state delegation had been selected, the first order of business was to elect a chair. Unfortunately, the CDP chair was the only person running so the election was just a formality. However, several delegates including I chose to vote against her because of the mishandling of the PLEO/At Large delegate election at the state convention. For some unexplained reason, only the names of those who had voted “no” were announced during the meeting. We were strangely singled out for our opposition. This was a minor thing, but I found it noteworthy that our names were called out as opposed to simply reporting on the number of yes and no votes.  

    At some point it was announced we would be getting ‘swag bags’ as delegates. In response to this news, I gave the following speech at one of our all-state delegate meetings: “I am concerned with the amount of money being spent on this convention. We are supposed to represent the people – we’re in the middle of a pandemic. People are suffering, I do not want a swag bag or brochure. I want PPE for our front-line workers. I don’t want a huge ordeal wasting money – I want us to help the homeless and those being evicted during this crisis. This waste of money on the convention makes us look insensitive to the reality of this pandemic.”  The response to this speech was that a charity working group was formed to determine which charities would be suitable to donate to. I was put in charge of this group and spent a lot of time working on it – speaking with other delegates, researching local and national charities, giving updates to the state delegation, and such. I took this responsibility very seriously as I felt it would do much better than electing Joe Biden would. All this work was for naught – as when I had delivered my final report and was expecting action from the Democratic Party, I was told that the FCC did not allow us to actually donate to a charity. I had been sent on a fool’s errand, doing work that would never be acted on. I spent two months working on this just to be dismissed with a few sentences at one of our morning meetings during the national convention. While the party would have happily spent $100,000 on having a physical location in state for the delegates to meet during the convention (which ended up being scrapped for COVID, but it was definitely under consideration), they did not even bother to find a way to divert some funds to the working class who were dying in a pandemic. I also consider it noteworthy that Bernie was able to raise money for Meals on Wheels, and AOC and the People’s Party both raised money for disaster relief in Texas – so it seems these FCC guidelines are not as strict as I was told. This treatment further reinforced my understanding that the Democratic Party does not care about the working class and only serves to defend capitalism and oligarchy.  

    The crafting of the Democratic Platform is a major part of the convention. With other delegates, I spent hours poring over state platforms to help make the case that a majority of state democratic platforms supported much of Bernie’s agenda. The results were that 100% of state platforms that mentioned healthcare supported it as a human right. And 63% of these were in favor of a Medicare for All style single payer healthcare system. Of those mentioning climate, a total of 58% supported retooling the economy to address climate change in a method similar to the Green New Deal. Every single one pointed out that climate change is a dire threat. And 60% of state platforms contained reference to free public college for all. A whopping 86% mentioned specific electoral reforms and 97% supported getting money out of politics. State platforms were much more progressive than the Democratic national platform. And not only were these in favor of these reforms, so were many of the delegates from all candidates. The following were the results from a survey of other delegates

     “On the issue of healthcare, when the data was weighted across all of the pledged delegates (based on the current proportions of delegates), 75.1% of the delegates support Medicare for All, and 75.3% support Single-Payer. 

    On the Climate Crisis, 84.7% of the delegation supports a 10-year mobilization, and 78.9% support the Green New Deal. 

    On education access, 87.0% of the delegation supports cancellation of student debt, and 77.6% support tuition free college. 

    When it comes to elections, 71.9% of the delegation support Rank Choice voting, 90.3% support election audits, and 73.2% oppose party interference in primary elections.”  

    Yet in the end, when the platform was created, the voices of the people were not heard. There was no Medicare for all, no Green New Deal, no free college, no getting money out of politics. The platform committee did not accept any amendments on these matters.  

    I submitted a suggestion to the credentials committee that the Iowa delegation not be seated because the delegates were inappropriately allocated as the caucus errors were never corrected. The Iowa delegation was seated, and we frequently heard throughout the process that Pete Buttigieg was the first gay man to win a caucus. Due to the issues with delegate selection at the state level in Colorado overviewed above, I also suggested that the Colorado delegation not be seated. This was a tough decision as it would have likely negated my position as delegate, but I felt it was the right action to take. Nothing came of this.  

    Delegates truly had no real power. When it came to the actual convention, all delegate business was done beforehand in an email where we voted on the platform and put down our presidential selection. The only option to take part in the virtual convention was by submitting a video waving, screaming, and clapping because we had a known racist and alleged rapist with eight women accusing him of sexual harassment and assault as the Democratic nominee. I refused to take part in such pathetic actions. A heroic effort was headed up by Nina Turner to hold the line and vote No on the platform. Over 25% of the delegates voted no. However, the vote totals were never announced on the livestream of the convention. This was against convention rules – but was never corrected. After sufficient harassment, Tom Perez released the totals on a Zoom call with our delegation, but they were not released to the public.  

    Live Zoom calls every morning were the substitute for the traditional delegate breakfast meetings. During two of these calls, I attended solidarity actions with other Bernie delegates at homeless sweeps that were taking place in Denver at the time. I had the dubious pleasure of live-streaming to the delegation from the sweeps while two of the men responsible, Governor Jared Polis and Mayor Michael Hancock of Denver, were on a call. Our pleas for them to have compassion on the homeless in the middle of a pandemic were completely ignored. The homeless sweeps continue today, despite the winter cold and the continuing pandemic.  

    Amy Klobuchar spent one of these calls complimenting Biden delegates on their hats and saying she loved the Bernie delegations “issue masks.”  The delegation had chosen to wear masks proclaiming our support for Bernie’s policies on each day of the convention as what was often our only form of protest, as chats were often turned off during council meetings at the convention. We had a mask for each day – Medicare for All, Green New Deal, Black Lives Matter, and Native Lives Matter. Even though Klobuchar proclaimed they were great, her actions showed she supported none of the issues.  

    Other than the ability to attend morning breakfast calls and caucuses and councils, which were not interactive once the chat rooms were turned off after those running them tired of hearing calls for ‘Medicare for All’ and ‘I Believe Tara Reade’ in the chat, the role of a delegate at the convention was the same as anyone watching from home. There were no progressive voices highlighted outside of Bernie’s nomination, which was cut incredibly short. More Republicans spoke at the convention than did progressives. Considering Biden’s hawkish cabinet, it was only fitting that his friendship with “Bomb Iran” McCain was highlighted at the “Democratic” National Convention. After this uninspiring display, I was proud to drop my affiliation with the Democratic Party and register as independent. I will not be going back.  

    I was only a delegate for a few months, but it was enough to see just how corrupt the party was. Peter Daou was a democratic operative for years and one of the worst critics of the Bernie movement in 2016. Today he is one of the loudest voices against the corruption of the Democratic Party. He has seen far more than I have and understands there is no reforming the party. Do not just listen to me, listen to Peter Daou and others who have seen just how deep the corruption goes. His story is one of redemption from establishment shill to a strong leftist. We can all learn from his journey.  

    While Biden is known for his lying, it was not a lie when he said, “I am the Democratic Party.”  The Democratic Party is the party of the 1994 crime billNAFTA, and the Iraq War. They are the party that will not give us Medicare for all or forgive student loan debt. They are the party of fracking. They are a corrupt corporate party that will go to bat for insurance companies but will negotiate with themselves to make sure the working class get less relief money. There is no progress in supporting this bourgeois party. If we believe in an eco-socialist future, we must go forward outside of the Democratic Party. There is no victory in incremental reformism – socialist revolution is only the way forward. 

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • United States Africa Command (AFRICOM) carried out an engagement in Somalia at the end of January. AFRICOM’s press release stated, “During the engagement, U.S. forces trained partners on a variety of topics that reinforced combat skills and operational planning.” On February 8, the USS Hershel “Woody” Williams entered the port of Mombasa, Kenya. According to its commanding officer, Captain Michael Concannon, “Our visit to Mombasa confirms our resolve and commitment to the preservation of security and stability in Kenya and Africa.” Meanwhile, US AFRICOM leadership completed visits to Sudan and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Navy Rear Admiral Heidi Berg said of these visits, “U.S. Africa Command understands the importance of combating terrorism and piracy, malign activities, and ensuring safe seas and waterways for shipping and commerce.” These are just a few of the publicly admitted activities of AFRICOM in the last month and the reasons given for them.  

    But why is the United States military so actively involved in Africa? It is not the propagandist talking points given above. Rather it is about the control of the material resources and the strategic location of the African continent. The 2020 AFRICOM Posture Statement makes this quite clear, “Of note, 26 African nations hold reserves of minerals determined to be critical to the U.S economy and national security.” Malcolm X understood this in 1964, when he explained,

    “Africa is strategically located, geographically between East and West; it’s the most valuable piece of property involved in the struggle between East and West…Cobalt and uranium, the largest deposits are right there on the African continent. And this is what the man is after. The man is after keeping you over here worrying about a cup of coffee, while he’s over there in your motherland taking control over minerals that have so much value they make the world go around…Now the raw materials are taken from Africa, shipped all the way to Europe, used to feed the machines of the Europeans, and make jobs for them, and then turned around and sold back to the Africans as finished products.”

    United States foreign policy has changed very little since Malcolm X described it. AFRICOM exists to oversee the extraction of mineral wealth from Africa.  

    Of these mineral rich countries, Niger is one of the richest with an estimated total of 4% of the world’s uranium supply. Niger is home to the Agadez U.S. Airforce base, “the largest troop labor construction project in U.S. history,” with a total cost of 110 million dollars to build and 15 million annually to operate. Niger’s two largest uranium mines are owned by the French corporation Areva. According to Business Insider, “During the period spanning the beginning of uranium exports in 1971 and the 2007 mining contract, French extractors paid no export taxes and left the Nigerien state with only around 5.5% of uranium-industry revenue…” Today Niger receives just 12% of the uranium revenue. Niger is just one example of how transnational corporations benefit from the mineral wealth of Africa at the expense of the African people and AFRICOM is at the center of this exploitation. The presence of AFRICOM in Niger is in defense of the transnational capitalist class for the extraction of uranium.  

    President Biden’s new US Ambassador to the U.N. is former Assistant Secretary of African Affairs, Linda Thomas-Greenfield. In testimony to congress in 2019, she said, “it is crucial that there be sustained U.S. engagement on the continent.” In this same testimony, speaking of Zimbabwe, she claimed, “There were high expectations in 2018 when President Mnangagwa was elected President.” Yet she co-authored an article that was published in the March-April 2019 edition of Military Review which clearly said,

    “As Mnangagwa assembled his cabinet, there was hope he would reach across the aisle and appoint some members of the opposition. That did not happen. Instead, Mnangagwa’s cabinet was heavy on career military officers who traded in their epaulets for pinstripes, confirming for all that this was nothing less than a coup.

    But as Mnangagwa was willing to work with the World Bank and IMF, she testified to Congress that, “There must be continued U.S. engagement with the government of Zimbabwe to show that the transition from the long-time Mugabe regime, recent disputed elections, and protests will ultimately give way to a more democratic and transparent process of governing that will justify removal of sanctions and increased investments.” This is the typical double-speak that can be expected from politicians in defense of capitalism. At the time of her testimony, she knew that Mnangagwa was installed – not elected, yet she did not mention the coup at all and called for renewed United States investments in Zimbabwe. Her position as Ambassador to the U.N. will only give her more power to carry out the U.S. agenda of exploitation abroad.  

    Why is Zimbabwe even of any concern to the United States? The United States Department of Commerce International Trade Administration website notes on Zimbabwe, “The government’s renewed interest in increasing domestic production of value-added mineral products may require larger capital investments in the mining sector than under business models that relied upon the export of unprocessed or semi-processed natural resources.” It is not difficult to surmise that the legitimacy of the Mnangagwa regime in the eyes of the United States will depend on how much access corporations are given to this mineral wealth.  

    President Mugabe, who was deposed by Mnangagwa in the coup, “introduced a law requiring that at least 51% of each of the country’s platinum mines to be owned by local people.” This amendment was just recently removed allowing foreign corporations to fully own Zimbabwe mines. At the time of the coup, Trump administration Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said, “Zimbabwe has an extraordinary opportunity to set itself on a new path.” This new path is now showing itself to be the foreign takeover of the mineral wealth that Mugabe had attempted to put back in the hands of the Zimbabwean people. The state of mining is heading back toward the situation described in the 80s by John Bradbury and Eric Worby in The Mining Industry in Zimbabwe: Mining, Capital, and the State, “The objective of the transnationals in the mining sector in Zimbabwe is still the process of capital accumulation and the inter-regional transfer of value out of Zimbabwe mostly into South Africa, the UK and the USA, the host sites of the major mining transnationals.” This return to a model of international exploitation bodes well for the transnational corporate class and indicates tough times ahead for the working class of Zimbabwe.  

    It is also worth noting that BlackRock Investment Management holds a 2.68% stake in Impala Platinum Holdings Limited, the South African Company that controls much of Zimbabwe’s platinum production. Brian Deese, Biden’s top economic adviser, and Wally Adeyemo, nominee for Deputy Director of the Treasury, both have ties to BlackRock. Even though the United States maintains sanctions on Zimbabwe, transnational corporations such as BlackRock are still profiting from plundering the mineral wealth of the country.  

    Black Panther Party co-founder Huey P. Newton identified the transnational corporate class as being the real ruling power in the United States in 1974, saying “Such a ‘ruling class’ can, in fact, be readily shown to exist. Its locus of power and interest is in the giant corporations and financial institutions which dominate the American economy, and moreover, the economy of the entire Western world.” BlackRock is one example of how a non-state actor can hold vast amounts of control globally. In 2010, BlackRock was referred to as “almost a shadow government” and its power has only grown since then. BlackRock currently has “over $7 trillion in assets under direct management.” In contrast, the national net worth of the entire African continent in 2019 was $4.1 trillion. BlackRock is just one of the three largest investing firms in the United States along with Vanguard and State Street. The Conversation found that these three corporations “taken together, have become the largest shareholder in 40% of all publicly listed firms in the United States.” These transnational firms directly benefit from the agenda being carried out by the United States in Africa.  

    Niger and Zimbabwe are just two examples of what is happening throughout the African continent. The term for this exploitation of the material wealth from the nominally independent countries of Africa is neocolonialism. Neocolonialism is not just about direct control of a nation’s resources via military presence; it is far more insidious than that. As the first president of Ghana, Kwame Nkrumah, described 

    “The methods of neocolonialism are economic control, in the form of ‘aid’, ‘loans’, trade and banking; the stranglehold of indigenous economies through vast international interlocking corporations; political direction through puppet governments; social penetration through the cultivation of an indigenous bourgeoisie, the imposition of ‘defence’ agreements, and the setting up of military and air bases; ideological expansion through the mass communications media of press, radio and television, the emphasis being on anti-communism; the fomenting of discord between countries and tribes; and through collective imperialism…”

    In this statement, made in 1970, Kwame accurately predicted the rise in power of the transnational corporate class. Even something as seemingly benign as food aid is used as a tool for control by neocolonialism. As the Marxist feminist Silvia Federici wrote, 

    “So questionable has food assistance been in its effects, so dubious its ability to guarantee people’s livelihood (which would have been better served by the distribution of agricultural tools and seeds and, first of all, by the end of hostilities), that one has to ask whether the true purpose of this initiative was not the phasing out of subsistence farming, and the creation of a long-term dependence on imported food – both centerpieces of World Bank reform, and conditions for the integration of African countries into the global economy.”

    The exploitation comes from all sides in neocolonialism.  

    Another big factor in neocolonialism in Africa is debt. Fadhel Kaboub described this crisis on Real Progressives’ Macro N Cheese when he said,

    “Well, it turns out that struggle has to do with a massive amount of external debt that most developing countries have. And when you dig for the sources of that external debt, you discover that those sources are trade deficits that are concentrated primarily in the lack of food sovereignty, lots of food imports, a lack of energy sovereignty, lots of energy imports, especially fossil fuels.”

    African debt doubled from 2015 to 2017 with “32% of African government external debt is owed to private lenders, and 35% to multilateral institutions such as the World Bank.” In July 1987, Burkina Faso President Thomas Sankara appealed to the United Nations to end all African debt. As he described in his speech, 

    “We think that debt has to be seen from the perspective of its origins. Debt’s origins come from colonialism’s origins. Those who lend us money are those who colonized us. They are the same ones who used to manage our states and economies. These are the colonizers who indebted Africa through their brothers and cousins, who were the lenders. We had no connections with this debt. Therefore, we cannot pay for it.” 

    Less than three months after making his appeal for debt cancellation, Thomas Sankara of Burkina Faso was assassinated. Although there has been no clear resolution of who was behind the assassination, Cyril Allen revealed in an interview, “The next thing you know, the US had infiltrated the liberation movements and set about overthrowing Sankara, who was leaning too far left. The Americans were not happy with Sankara. He was talking of nationalizing his country’s resources to benefit his people. He was a socialist so he had to go.” After Sankara was assassinated, the debt remained and has continued to grow. This imposition of debt allows outside forces to continue to control the independent countries of Africa.  

    The United States government and AFRICOM continue to wield their immense power to defend the interests of transnational capitalism in Africa. As progressives, it is important to take a global view of affairs. What is happening in Africa may not seem as urgent as children in cages on the border, but it is just as relevant to the socialist struggle. The solution to this problem is clear – shut down AFRICOM and decolonize. These demands must be the part of any revolutionary movement. The revolution must be global in scale and the class struggle in Africa will play a key part in the victory of the proletariat. As Malcolm X said, “Today, power is international, real power is international; today, real power is not local.”  The class struggle is a global struggle between the elite transnational corporate class and the working class of all nations. 

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • The Early 1900’s

    “She said, ‘I may be blind and deaf, but I’m not blind and deaf to the injustices of capitalist society.’ She had this great conflict between with the New York Times, because she had she hated that people were watering down her radical politics she was so mad at them, because that she thought that people, they were all they loved publishing her when it was just when she was just an inspiring story but then they ignored her, or was attributed her politics to her disability… and she was infuriated by that, because she said well they treat me as brilliant. When I’m a success story but when I start saying like, you know, the profit motive is corroding society, all of a sudden the New York Times just isn’t as interested.”

    Nathan J Robinson on the hidden socialist history of Helen Keller

    Hello Internet, I’m Jackie Fox and I’m back with a few of the more recent Socialists from American history.

    Things seemed to change in the early 20th century. The Socialist Party of America was founded in 1901, itself a part of a larger socialist movement that, over the course of twenty years, made significant gains in its attempt to transform American economic life. Socialist mayors were elected in 33 cities and towns, ranging from Berkeley, California to Schenectady, New York, with Victor Berger and Meyer London winning congressional seats. All told, over 1000 American socialist candidates won various political offices. Julius A. Wayland, editor of the socialist newspaper, Appeal to Reason, proclaimed that “socialism is coming. It’s coming like a prairie fire and nothing can stop it…you can feel it in the air.”

    It’s worth noting that while many women gained the right to vote in 1920, the legislation didn’t apply to all women, with Native and Chinese having to wait many more years to gain the right to vote.  Black women, although legally entitled to vote, were effectively denied voting rights in numerous Southern states until 1965, by which time women’s suffrage was near universal in America.

    After winning the right to vote, women would only become even more influential in the late 19th century and early 20th century.  Margaret Sanger was a birth control activist, sex educator, writer, and nurse. Sanger popularized the term “birth control”, opened the first birth control clinic in the United States, and established organizations that evolved into the Planned Parenthood Federation of America which accounts for much of low income women’s healthcare all over the United States. In much of her organizing she was risking imprisonment for violating the Comstock Act, which forbade distribution of birth control devices or information. She wrote articles on health for the Socialist Party paper The Call and wrote several books, including What Every Girl Should Know and What Every Mother Should Know.  

    Florence Kelley pioneered the term wage abolitionism. Her work against sweatshops and for the minimum wage, eight-hour workdays, and children’s rights is still quite relevant in America today.  A high ranking member of the National Consumers League, she would go on to help found the NAACP in 1909.  She successfully lobbied for the creation of the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics so that reformers would have adequate information about the condition of workers. In 1908 she gathered sociological and medical evidence for Muller v. Oregon and in 1917 gathered similar information for Bunting v. Oregon to make the case for an eight-hour workday.  

    Another socialist founder of the NAACP was W.E.B. Du Bois.  He was the first African American to earn a doctorate, he became a professor of history, sociology and economics at Atlanta University.  Du Bois and his supporters opposed the Atlanta compromise, an agreement crafted by Booker T. Washington which provided that Southern blacks would work and submit to white political rule, while Southern whites guaranteed that blacks would receive basic educational and economic opportunities. Instead, Du Bois insisted on full civil rights and increased political representation, which he believed would be brought about by the African-American intellectual elite.  Throughout his lifetime, he strongly protested against lynching, Jim Crow laws, and discrimination in education and employment.  Like many others I’ve mentioned, Du Bois was a prolific writer, and I actually quoted his writing about John Brown.

    Victor Berger, who won a Wisconsin House seat, founded both the Social Democratic Party of America as well as the Socialist Party of America at the turn of the century.  He was known for leading a group that came to be known as the “Sewer Socialists”. 

    As an elected official, Berger was more committed to electoralism than many of his comrades.  According to historian Sally Miller,

    “Berger built the most successful socialist machine ever to dominate an American city….[He] concentrated on national politics…to become one of the most powerful voices in the reformist wing of the national Socialist party. His commitment to democratic values and the non-violent socialization of the American system led the party away from revolutionary Marxist dogma. He shaped the party into force which, while struggling against its own left wing, symbolize participation in the political order to attain social reforms…. In the party schism of 1919, Berger opposed allegiance to the emergent Soviet system. His shrunken party echoed his preference for peaceful, democratic, and gradual transformation to socialism.”

    Meyer London was elected to represent the Lower East Side of Manhattan in Congress.  London started his political career in the Socialist Labor Party of America and would go on to establish the Social Democratic Party of America.  London was active in strikes in New York and in 1901 his Social Democratic Party would join the Socialist Party of America, with London joining as a founding member.  After being elected to Congress, he was one of the few to vote against entry into World War I.

    The turn of the century was interesting for another reason, though it has less to do with socialism directly.  In the same year that Victor Berger would found the Socialist Party of America, William McKinnley would be assassinated and Republican Theodore Roosevelt would take office as our youngest President for 8 years.  When people talk about the “party shift” of the 20th century, they often mention the influence of the civil right’s movement and the Presidency of Franklin D Roosevelt as being influential.  That’s what I did at least…

    But the previous Roosevelt also had an influence on the process of changing the Republican Party to the Party of Nixon or Reagan.  After a series of disputes with the following Republican President, Theodore came out of retirement for a third bid at the Presidency in 1912 just to run against Taft.  Roosevelt formed the Progressive party when the Republicans chose not to nominate him over the incumbent Taft creating a schism in the Republican Party that cleaved its left wing and moral center like the formation of the Socialist Party of America had over a decade before.  I think that these events in 1912 were the beginning of the Republicans as a fully right wing American party. 

    Around thirty years after the Pullman train strike, in 1918, Eugene Debs had led historic strikes and run for president four times on the Socialist Party of America ticket since the party’s formation, but the renowned orator had never given a speech like the one he delivered in a Canton, Ohio, park on June 16.  “The working class have never yet had a voice in declaring war.  If war is right, let it be declared by the people – you, who have your lives to lose.”  This speech got him jailed under charges of sedition for speaking out against involvement in World War I.  “I know of no reason why the workers should fight for what the capitalists own,” Debs wrote to novelist Upton Sinclair, “or slaughter one another for countries that belong to their masters.”   

    The next year, Victor Berger was also indicted under the espionage act for opposing American involvement in the war.  In spite of his being under indictment at the time, the voters of Milwaukee elected Berger to the House of Representatives in 1918. When he arrived in Washington to claim his seat, Congress formed a special committee to determine whether a convicted felon and war opponent should be seated as a member of Congress, resulting in the denial of the seat to which he had been twice elected. That verdict was eventually overturned by the Supreme Court in 1921 in Berger v. United States, and Berger was elected to three successive terms in the 1920s.

    Debs was no stranger to jail; he had been locked up for six months in 1894 for helping to lead the Pullman strike.  Behind bars he spent his time educating himself with the works of Marx and others.  “Books and pamphlets and letters from socialists came by every mail and I began to read and think and dissect the anatomy of the system in which workingmen, however organized, could be shattered and battered and splintered on a single stroke […] It was at this time, when the first glimmerings of socialism were beginning to penetrate, that Victor L. Berger — and I have loved him ever since — came to Woodstock [prison], as if a providential instrument, and delivered the first impassioned message of socialism I had ever heard — the very first to set the wires humming in my system. As a souvenir of that visit there is in my library a volume of Capital by Karl Marx, inscribed with the compliments of Victor L. Berger, which I cherish as a token of priceless value.”

    Debs declared himself a socialist in 1897 and helped found the Socialist Party of America alongside Berger four years later.  In 1912 he managed 6% of the national vote, which beats modern day third party socialists like Howie Hawkins, Jill Stein, and Gloria de la Riva.  He was a powerful and inspiring speaker, drawing tens of thousands to his rallies despite his poor chances of winning the Presidency, and this fueled his popularity.  

    At Debs’ trial in Cleveland in September 1918, the prosecutor argued that Debs’ speech was “calculated to promote insubordination” and “propagate obstruction to the draft.” Debs’ lawyers conceded the facts of the case, and Debs spoke on his own behalf.

    “I have been accused of having obstructed the war,” Debs told the jury. “I admit it. I abhor war. I would oppose the war if I stood alone.” He defended socialism as a moral movement, like the abolition of slavery decades before. “I believe in free speech, in war as well as in peace,” Debs declared. “If the Espionage Law stands, then the Constitution of the United States is dead.”  After losing his trials, he ran for President yet again from jail in 1920 and win nearly a million votes from an Alabama prison.

    After Debs’ long run as the perennial candidate of the Socialist Party of America, minister Norman Thomas took over as the Party’s Presidential candidate as the Red Scare began in America.  Like Debs, Thomas ran six times and fought for a number of issues in his time as candidate, once in opposition to the Second World War.  He also fought alongside Margeret Sanger for women’s access to birth control and greater rights.

    The early 20th century’s Socialist Movement arose in response to America’s new industrial economy. Socialists argued that wealth and power were consolidated in the hands of too few individuals, that monopolies and trusts controlled too much of the economy, that owners and investors grew rich at the expense of the very workers who produced their wealth, and that workers, despite massive productivity gains and rising national wealth, still suffered from low pay, long hours, and unsafe working conditions. According to Debs, socialists sought “the overthrow of the capitalist system and the emancipation of the working class from wage slavery.” Under an imagined socialist cooperative commonwealth, the means of production would be owned collectively, ensuring that all men and women received a fair wage for their labor.

    “They shot one of those Bolsheviks up in KnoxCounty this morning, Harry Sims his name was…  The deputy knew his business, he didn’t even give the Redneck the chance to talk, he just plugged him in the stomach.”  

    Malcolm Cowley, The New Republic 1932

    Over a decade later the Coal Miners of Blair Mountain would launch their own strike.  Called Rednecks for their socialist, pro-worker rhetoric and iconic red bandannas, their little strike would become a small Civil War between laborers, owners, and the state itself.  Frank Keeney, the president of the United Mine Workers of America District 17, gave a stirring speech to thousands of miners on the capitol grounds in Charleston. He told the crowd that there was no justice in West Virginia and declared, “The only way you can get your rights is with a high powered rifle!” 

    He was terrifyingly and prophetically right, and many would come to die in the Battle of Blair Mountain, in which the US government teamed up with strike busters to put the miners of West Virginia back to work mining their coal in conditions that often turned out to be fatal.  At one point US government even went on a bombing run, slaughtering the striking workers of Blair Mountain in cold blood.

    Over 10,000 miners carved a path of rebellion from Charleston to the doorstep of Logan County. Blocking their path were the entrenched forces of local sheriff Don Chafin, dug-in with machine-gun turrets guarding key passes through the steep terrain. After days of fighting, which included bombs dropped from biplanes, the Battle of Blair Mountain ended when federal troops were dispatched. https://tclf.org/battle-blair-mountain-still-being-waged

    “Mine guards and miners fought it out until federal troops intervened. Over 500 “rednecks” were charged with treason, murder, and conspiracy to commit murder. The state used coal company lawyers in the prosecution, and our own governor testified against the miners. Among those charged, of course, were the leaders of the movement: Frank Keeney, Fred Mooney, and Bill Blizzard.”

    C. Belmont Keeney, Frank’s Grandson

    To his grandfather, the mine workers position was common sense,

    “I am a native West Virginian and there are others like me in the mines here. We don’t propose to get out of the way when a lot of capitalists from New York and London come down and tell us to get off the earth. They played that game on the American Indian. They gave him the end of a log to sit on and then pushed him off that. We don’t propose to be pushed off.”

    “Blair Mountain stands as a pivotal event in American history, where working men and women stood up to the lawless coal barons of the early twentieth century and their private armies and fought for their rights as Americans—and indeed​, the rights of working families all over the world. It is a place where we can all be reminded that workers in this nation were literally forced to fight for their rights, and that those rights must constantly be defended or they will be lost. Blair Mountain is a beacon for all those who support American ideals of democracy, fairness, and freedom, which is what the miners were fighting for.”

    Cecil E. Roberts, president of the United Mine Workers of America

    Upton Sinclair was a political activist and 1934 Democratic Party nominee for Governor of California, but perhaps more importantly he was a very influential and prolific writer with a long list of professional achievements that helped changed the world. He exposed the foul meatpacking industry and yellow journalism, and much like the John Oliver effect only capable of doing more than crashing servers, this writing inspired change in the way of the passage of the 1906 Pure Food and Drug Act and the Meat Inspection Act alongside a first ever code of ethics for journalists.  He is well remembered for lines like, “it is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends upon his not understanding it,” which he often used on the campaign trail, and  “Capitalists will not agree to any social progress completely eliminating unemployment because such a program would reduce the supply of cheap labor.  You will never persuade a capitalist to cause himself losses for the sake of satisfying people’s needs.”

    Sinclair’s goal was to attain what he referred to as “democratic socialism” in the United States. He wanted to return to the original idea of the American dream. He wasn’t scared to express his love for country in writing, “passionately, more than words can utter, I love this land of mine. . . . There never was any land like it – there may never be any like it again; and Freedom watches from her mountains, trembling.” Sinclair loved what the United States was supposed to stand for but was concerned that capitalism was interfering with the premises and promises of liberty that founding fathers like Thomas Paine had sought through revolution. 

    One of the over 100 books Sinclair wrote was a short book called: I, Governor and How I Ended Poverty: A True Story of the Future which was illustrative of his ideas – from state takeovers of farms and factories, to the establishment of a state-managed cooperative economy, to a $50-a-month pension for the elderly (approximately $1,000 in today’s money), all to be financed by a California monetary authority.  His alignment with the Democrats in California was out of convenience, and he ran as a part of a larger slate of democratic candidates that was called the EPIC (End Poverty in California). Although he didn’t win his race in ‘34, many of the EPIC candidates did, in an election that helped shift California blue for decades to come. /

    Despite their successes early in the century, Socialists in office in America would become much more rare moving forward, so as we move into the mid-century, we’ll have to shift away from those who wielded (or tried to wield) political power.

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • One of the first challenges the first American Socialists faced was the institution of slavery. This is not to say all abolitionists were socialists, but this was the issue that America’s first self-proclaimed socialists would fight. It was a crucial moment for socialism, a concept that had only been born that century. Slavery is the epitome of everything a socialist opposes, and the movement would have proven itself to be morally bankrupt had it not fought against the enterprise since even before its inception through people like Thomas Paine. If slavery was a moral test of socialism, then abolition was verification that socialism could change the foundations of society, and that perhaps a more just and equal world was possible. 

    Even in the early formation of the Republican Party as a primarily abolitionist organization, there were many social democrats and outright socialists among them. There was a strange time in American socialist history where socialists met under banners of Abraham Lincoln, their championed Great Emancipator. 
     
    Socialists had been so influential in this pursuit that it’s thought perhaps the great right-wing American tradition of denouncing all opposition as ‘socialist’ had its origins among slaveholding elites. Former Vice President John C Calhoun made the connection between the criticism of slavery to criticism of capital as early as 1836:

    “A very slight modification of the arguments used against the institutions which sustain the property and security of the South would make them equally effectual against the institutions of the North, including banking, in which so vast an amount of property and capital is invested.”   

    Virginia Senator Robert M.T. Hunter, March 25, 1850, also recognized this connection:

    “Mr. President, if we recognize no law as obligatory, and no government as legitimate, which authorizes involuntary servitude, we shall be forced to consign the world to anarchy; for no government has yet existed, which did not recognize and enforce involuntary servitude for other causes than crime. To destroy that, we must destroy all inequality in property; for as long as these differences exist, there will be an involuntary servitude of man to man. Your socialist is the true abolitionist, and he only fully understands his mission.”  

    Jefferson Davis, on the eve of the Civil War, agreed:

    “In fact, the European Socialists, who, in wild radicalism… are the correspondents of the American abolitionists, maintain the same doctrine as to all property, that the abolitionists, do as to slave property. He who has property, they argue, is the robber of him who has not. ‘La propriete, c’est le vol,’ is the famous theme of the Socialist, Proudhon. And the same precise theories of attack at the North on the slave property of the South would, if carried out to their legitimate and necessary logical consequences, and will, if successful in this, their first state of action, superinduce attacks on all property, North and South.” 


    It may not be well known in history books today, but as these quotes illustrate, the slave-owning oligarchy of the time knew about it all too well. 

    John Brown was one of the most famous of the abolitionists, and it’s easy to see why. On trial for attempting to incite a slave insurrection in Harper’s Ferry he said this in his speech to the court,

    “I believe that to have interfered as I have done in behalf of His despised poor is no wrong, but right. Now, if it is deemed necessary that I should forfeit my life for the furtherance of the ends of justice and mingle my blood with the blood of millions in this slave country whose rights are disregarded by wicked, cruel and unjust enactments, I say let it be done.” 

    After the trial he was hung and his body dissected.  

    Upon his arrest, Brown had told his captors,

    “I want you to understand that I respect the rights of the poorest and the weakest of coloured people, oppressed by the slave system, just as much as I do those of the most wealthy and powerful.” In many Northern communities on the day of Brown’s execution “church bells tolled; guns fired solemn salutes; ministers preached sermons of commemoration; thousands sat bowed in silent reverence for the martyr of liberty.”

    One journalist wrote, “A feeling of deep and sorrowful indignation seems to possess the masses.” 

    He had been an abolitionist for 20 years before being executed as an insurrectionist, John Brown is the one person on this list that would be as much within the revolutionary tradition as Thomas Paine.  

    One of Brown’s contemporaries was Frederick Douglass, an American social reformer, abolitionist, orator, writer, and statesman. After escaping slavery in Maryland, he became a national leader of the abolitionist movement in Massachusetts and New York, famous for his oratory and incisive antislavery writings. So, he was described by abolitionists of his time as a living counterexample to slaveholders’ arguments that slaves lacked the intellectual capacity to function as independent American citizens.  

    As Jacobin noted in a recent article bearing his name, Douglass was

    “an antislavery leader who devoted his life to seeking the forcible expropriation of property worth more than all antebellum America’s factories, railroads, and banks combined. But the truth is that Douglass’s long political career was rife with contradiction. For half a century, he moved between outside agitation and mainstream political engagement; between pessimism about the depth of American racial oppression and an optimistic faith in struggle and progress; between a wary liberal individualism and a bolder embrace of utopian socialism, working-class struggle, and interracial labor organizing against the ‘tremendous power of capital.’” 

    While it’s unclear whether Douglass was a socialist, he fought alongside them to free the slaves, and carried on in the socialist tradition of a march towards emancipation. Seeking clues from his writing, the Jacobin article notes, “in both pieces Douglass embraces the position, held by many eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Americans (though remarkably few establishment Democrats today), that “wealth has ever been the tool of the tyrant, the readiest means by which liberty is overthrown.” He anticipates arguments that “unbridled accumulation” is simply a part of human nature: in fact, the “mighty machine” of capitalist society is an innovation, which compels, rather than reflects, acquisitive behavior. And he rejects the idea that poverty is an unchangeable fact of social life: it is, rather, the ‘consequence of wealth unduly accumulated.’” 
     
    Douglass and Brown met in 1847 and wrote of meeting one another. Douglass wrote that “Brown denounced slavery in look and language fierce and bitter, thought that slave holders had forfeited their right to live, that the slaves had the right to gain their liberty in any way they could, did not believe that moral suasion would ever liberate the slave, or that political action would abolish the system.” 

    Brown had come to Douglass to convince him to expand the underground railroad into something more like a freedom superhighway. Douglass was not convinced the plan would work, but Brown still had a profound effect on him. He wrote:

    “while I continued to write and speak against slavery, I became all the same less hopeful of its peaceful abolition. My utterances became more and more tinged by the colour of this man’s strong impressions.” 

    According to some, Brown’s actions even helped incite the Civil War. In 1855 wealthy white slave owners tried some dirty tricks to make Kansas a slave state. When a small war broke out between men paid to shift the election in favor of slavery and the abolitionists, Brown and his sons rode to Kansas and took a few of the men prisoner. 
     
    As W.E.B. Du Bois writes in his biography of Brown, the captives

    “were led quickly into the woods and surrounded. John Brown raised his hand and at the signal the victims were hacked to death with broadswords.” Du Bois goes on, “To this day men differ as to the effect of John Brown’s blow. “Some say it freed Kansas, while others say it plunged the land back into civil war. Truth lies in both statements. The blow freed Kansas by plunging it into civil war, and compelling men to fight for freedom which they had vainly hoped to gain by political expediency.” 

    Three years later and with a stockpile of weapons, Brown met with a group of like-minded abolitionists and declared the independence of American slaves stating, “that the Slaves are, and of right ought to be as free and independent as the unchangeable Law of God requires that All Men shall be.”  This lead to a raid on a federal armory in Harper’s Ferry, and by now you know how that ended for him: “John Brown’s body lies a mould’ring in the grave/His soul’s marching on!” (from the song made popular during the Civil War).  

    As Frederick Douglass later declared,

    “If John Brown did not end the war that ended slavery he did, at least, begin the war that ended slavery. Until this blow was struck, the prospect for freedom was dim, shadowy, and uncertain.” 

    Sarah Grimke may not have been an avowed socialist even though she, like Brown, was alive when the Communist Manifesto was published, but she was an abolitionist along with her sisters and was one of the first feminists and suffragettes. She persisted in her belief that the fight for women’s rights was as important as the fight to abolish slavery; and although Sarah had the desire to ‘equip women for economic independence and for social usefulness,’ they continued to be attacked, even by some abolitionists, who considered their position extreme. Abolition of slavery was achieved in her lifetime, but the fight for feminism and the women’s right to vote would only bear fruit after her death. Her fight continues and is championed by those women who would come after her. In her first oral arguments to the Supreme Court in 1973, Ruth Bader Ginsburg quoted Sarah Grimké: “I ask for no favor for my sex. All I ask of our brethren is that they take their feet off our necks.” 

    The fight for women’s suffrage brought a lot of notable female socialists to the front lines of activism as further expression of their political agency beyond what they were fighting for at the ballot box. Charlotte Gilman famously wrote a column on suffrage for The People and later published the semi-autobiographical The Yellow Wallpaper. However, her written body of work is much larger, with many volumes written on feminist issues relevant to her time.  

    Nan Sloane’s book, A Woman in the Room, recounts the stories of the female socialists within the suffrage movement. The book discusses how socialists like Margaret MacDonald, Margaret Bondfield and Mary Macarthur would often, like Grimke, find themselves at odds with less radical elements of the suffrage movement. Bondfield and Macarthur made objections on principle to a campaign that would still leave most poor, working people disenfranchised and denied the chance to use the political system to force change. Beyond just fighting for a woman’s right to vote, socialists of the time were fighting for every American’s right to freedom and emancipation.  

    Eugene V Debs started his political career as a labor organizer turned Democrat who earned the esteem of Democratic and Republican newspapers for his forward thinking. In 1888, Debs wrote, “the strike is the weapon of the oppressed.”   The Pullman train strike he organized in 1894 was one of the single biggest labor actions in American history, stalling trains in 27 states. The rest of his story would unfold in the following century, as socialists all over the country began to take political power into their own hands.  

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • Hello Internet, I’m Jackie Fox and in my last few videos I’ve covered Capitalist Realism: Is there No Alternative? and Why You Should Be a Socialist. I’d like to top that off with a few profiles of people throughout American History who showed what Nathan J. Robinson called the ‘Socialist Ethic’ throughout all the history that happened before capitalism ended history in the 20th Century. Let’s start with the Founding Father you probably heard the least about in History class, Thomas Paine.  

    Paine is famous for his writing, especially the book Common Sense. This protosocialist’s manifesto is said to have paved the way for the American Revolution by swaying moral sensibilities to favor the colonists over the Monarchy. Though, I say ‘protosocialist’ for good reason, over a century before writers like Marx popularized the term, Paine showed a socialist ethic in his revolutionary works like Common Sense.  

    Before we talk about that though, some of his other writing stands out to me, like when he wrote in a magazine that slavery should be abolished a full 100 years before it would be. Paine was also involved in the French Revolution that by many accounts was the first act of socialism in history. Paine published The Rights of Man in response to the events that were beginning to unfold there, meaning his writing was important in not one but two revolutions. He also opposed the private ownership of land and supported universal suffrage, which was another issue over a century ahead of its time. 

    Paine speaks to the need for a functioning society to enable us to do things greater than one can do alone.

    “The strength of one is so unequal to their wants, and their mind so unfitted for perpetual solitude, that they are soon obliged to seek assistance and relief of another, who in their turn requires the same. Four or five united would be able to raise a tolerable dwelling in the midst of a wilderness, but one might labor out the common period of life without accomplishing anything.”   

    While he decries the monarchy, he also recognizes that class is the source of societal inequality. He says humanity:

    “being originally equals in the order of creation, the equality could only be destroyed by some subsequent circumstance; the distinctions of rich, and poor… But there is another and greater distinction for which no truly natural or religious reason can be assigned, and that is, the distinction of people into Kings and Subjects.”   

    In its second chapter, Common Sense makes an unexpectedly powerful Christian argument against the monarchy to really drive home the “no truly… religious reason” part. He believed some scale of revolt against English rule would be an eventuality, and because of this, reconciliation with the Crown would lead only to a civil war within the fledgling colonies, “the consequences of which may be far more fatal than all the malice of Britain.”  Instead, he found it to be a safer course of action for the colonies to stand together in solidarity and dare England to mount the sort of naval invasion they would need to conquer a land so much larger than its own, and so far away. Thinking long term, he also advocated for a powerful defensive Navy. 

    Like many other Founding Fathers, Paine expressed a gratitude for the usefulness of hemp to our young nation as an industrial resource saying, “hemp flourishes even to rankness, so that we need not want cordage.”  I guess rankness was just 1700’s for dankness, but I digress.  

    America’s original T. Paine also used Common Sense to lay a lot of the groundwork for the American government to come. His proposals were in line with and perhaps influential of the views of the other founding fathers, but in at least one notable way they’re considerably different than our current norms and that was the number of representatives we would have in Congress. Paine argued that there should be at least 30 representatives per state in the national assembly, whereas now our minimum is only three. With the average population of a colony in 1776 being around 200,000 people, this works out to a 1:6,667 ratio of Congresspeople to Americans at a minimum. Currently, we have one Congressperson to around every 615,450 people. 

    “There is no political matter which more deserves our attention. A small number of electors, or a small number of representatives, are equally dangerous. But if the number of the representatives be not only small, but unequal, the danger is increased.” 

    He also advocated for reelecting the President annually with 12 candidates per election, one from each colony excluding the colony whose candidate won in the previous year, meaning no one could spend two consecutive years in office. 

    Of course, only having a single representative was worst of all, “the palaces of kings are built on the ruins of the bowers of paradise.” Much of his writing is nearly as anarchistic as socialistic in the way that it looks at the justification of power hierarchies: “Society in every state is a blessing, but government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil in its worst state an intolerable one; for when we suffer, or are exposed to the same miseries by a government, which we might expect in a country without government, our calamities is heightened by reflecting that we furnish the means by which we suffer!”  This, perhaps, is as much a product of the anti-monarchical revolution he was writing for at the time as anything else, which is to say that at the time, for a man like Paine, questioning the justifications of the power of Kings was really just common sense. If we are to consider Paine a socialist, he would likely be the most revolutionary of the socialists I will speak of in this series. 

    “The sun never shined on a cause of greater worth. ‘Tis not the affair of a city, a country, a province, or a kingdom, but of a continent- of at least one eighth part of the habitable globe. ‘Tis not the concern of a day, a year, or an age; posterity are virtually involved in the contest, and will be more or less affected, even to the end of time, by the proceedings now. Now is the seed time of continental union, faith and honor. The least fracture now will be like a name engraved with the point of a pin on the tender rind of a young oak; The wound will enlarge with the tree, and posterity read it in full grown characters.” 

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

    Among the toxic contributors to the financial crisis of 2008, few caused as much havoc as mortgages with dodgy numbers and inflated values. Huge quantities of them were assembled into securities that crashed and burned, damaging homeowners and investors alike. Afterward, reforms were promised. Never again, regulators vowed, would real estate financiers be able to fudge numbers and threaten the entire economy.

    Twelve years later, there’s evidence something similar is happening again.

    Some of the world’s biggest banks — including Wells Fargo and Deutsche Bank — as well as other lenders have engaged in a systematic fraud that allowed them to award borrowers bigger loans than were supported by their true financials, according to a previously unreported whistleblower complaint submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission last year.

    Whereas the fraud during the last crisis was in residential mortgages, the complaint claims this time it’s happening in commercial properties like office buildings, apartment complexes and retail centers. The complaint focuses on the loans that are gathered into pools whose worth can exceed $1 billion and turned into bonds sold to investors, known as CMBS (for commercial mortgage-backed securities).

    Lenders and securities issuers have regularly altered financial data for commercial properties “without justification,” the complaint asserts, in ways that make the properties appear more valuable, and borrowers more creditworthy, than they actually are. As a result, it alleges, borrowers have qualified for commercial loans they normally would not have, with the investors who bought securities birthed from those loans none the wiser.

    ProPublica closely examined six loans that were part of CMBS in recent years to see if their data resembles the pattern described by the whistleblower. What we found matched the allegations: The historical profits reported for some buildings were listed as much as 30% higher than the profits previously reported for the same buildings and same years when the property was part of an earlier CMBS. As a rough analogy, imagine a homeowner having stated in a mortgage application that his 2017 income was $100,000 only to claim during a later refinancing that his 2017 income was $130,000 — without acknowledging or explaining the change.

    It’s “highly questionable” to alter past profits with no apparent explanation, said John Coffee, a professor at Columbia Law School and an expert in securities regulation. “I don’t understand why you can do that.”

    In theory, CMBS are supposed to undergo a rigorous multistage vetting process. A property owner seeking a loan on, say, an office building would have its finances scrutinized by a bank or other lender. After that loan is made, it would be subjected to another round of due diligence, this time by an investment bank that assembles 60 to 120 loans to form a CMBS. Somewhere along the line, according to John Flynn, a veteran of the CMBS industry who filed the whistleblower complaint, numbers are being adjusted — inevitably to make properties, and therefore the entire CMBS, look more financially robust.

    The complaint suggests widespread efforts to make adjustments. Some expenses were erased from the ledger, for example, when a new loan was issued. Most changes were small; but a minor increase in profits can lead to approval for a significantly higher mortgage.

    The result: Many properties may have borrowed more than they could afford to pay back — even before the pandemic rocked their businesses — making a CMBS crash both more likely and more damaging. “It’s a higher cliff from which they are falling,” Flynn said. “So the loss severity is going to be greater and the probability of default is going to be greater.”

    With the economy being pounded and trillions of dollars already committed to bailouts, potential overvaluations in commercial real estate loom much larger than they would have even a few months ago. Data from early April showed a sharp spike in missed payments to bondholders for CMBS that hold loans from hotels and retail stores, according to Trepp, a data provider whose specialties include CMBS. The default rate is expected to climb as large swaths of the nation remain locked down.

    After lobbying by commercial real estate organizations and advocacy by real estate investor and Trump ally Tom Barrack — who warned of a looming commercial mortgage crash — the Federal Reservepledged in early April to prop up CMBS by loaning money to investors and letting them use their CMBS as collateral. The goal is to stabilize the market at a time when investors may be tempted to dump their securities, and also to support banks in issuing new bonds. (Barrack’s company, Colony Capital, has since defaulted on $3.2 billion in debt backed by hotel and health care properties, according to the Financial Times.)

    The Fed didn’t specify how much it’s willing to spend to support the CMBS, and it is allowing only those with the highest credit ratings to be used as collateral. But if some ratings are based on misleading data, as the complaint alleges, taxpayers could be on the hook for a riskier-than-anticipated portfolio of loans.

    The SEC, which has not taken public action on the whistleblower complaint, declined to comment.

    Some lenders interviewed for this article maintain they’re permitted to alter properties’ historical profits under some circumstances. Others in the industry offered a different view. Adam DeSanctis, a spokesperson for the Mortgage Bankers Association, which has helped set guidelines for financial reporting in CMBS, said he reached out to members of the group’s commercial real estate team and none had heard of a practice of inflating profits. “We aren’t aware of this occurring and really don’t have anything to add,” he said.

    The notion that profit figures for some buildings are pumped up is surprising, said Kevin Riordan, a finance professor at Montclair State University. It raises questions about whether the proper disclosures are being made.

    Investors don’t comb through financial statements, added Riordan, who used to manage the CMBS portfolio for retirement fund giant TIAA-CREF. Instead, he said, they rely on summaries from investment banks and the credit ratings agencies that analyze the securities. To make wise decisions, investors’ information “out of the gate has to be pretty close to being right,” he said. “Otherwise you’re dealing with garbage. Garbage in, garbage out.”

    The whistleblower complaint has its origins in the kinds of obsessions that keep wonkish investors up at night. Flynn wondered what was going to happen when some of the most ill-conceived commercial loans — those made in the lax, freewheeling days before the financial crisis of 2008 — matured a decade later. He imagined an impending disaster of mass defaults. But as 2015, then 2017, passed, the defaults didn’t come. It didn’t make sense to him.

    Flynn, 55, has deep experience in commercial real estate, banking and CMBS. After growing up on a dairy farm in Minnesota, the youngest of 14 children, and graduating from college — the first in his family to do so, he said — Flynn moved to Tokyo to work, first in real estate, then in finance. Jobs with banks and ratings agencies took him to Belgium, Chicago and Australia. These days, he advises owners whose loans are sold into CMBS and helps them resolve disputes and restructure or modify problem loans.

    He began poring over the fine print in CMBS filings and noticed curious anomalies. For example, many properties changed their names, and even their addresses, from one CMBS to another. That made it harder to recognize a specific property and compare its financial details in two filings. As Flynn read more and more, he began to wonder whether the alterations were attempts to obscure discrepancies: These same properties were typically reporting higher net operating incomes in the new CMBS than they did for the same year in a previous CMBS.

    Flynn ultimately collected and analyzed data for huge numbers of commercial mortgages. He began to see patterns and what he calls a massive problem: Flynn has amassed “materials identifying about $150 billion in inflated CMBS issued between 2013 and today,” according to the complaint.

    The higher reported profits helped the properties qualify for loans they might not have otherwise obtained, he surmised. They also paved the way for bigger fees for banks. “Inflating historical cash flows creates a misperception of lower current and historical cash flow volatility, enables higher underwritten [net operating income/net cash flow], and higher collateral values,” the complaint states, “and thereby enables higher debt.”

    Flynn eventually found a lawyer and, in February 2019, he filed the whistleblower complaint. The complaint accuses 14 major lenders — including three of the country’s biggest CMBS issuers, Deutsche Bank, Wells Fargo and Ladder Capital — and seven servicers of inflating historical cash flows, failing to report misrepresentations, changing names and addresses of properties and “deceptively and inaccurately” describing mortgage-loan representations. It doesn’t identify which companies allegedly manipulated each specific number. (Spokespeople for Deutsche Bank and Wells Fargo declined to comment on the record. The complaint does not mention Barrack or his company. )

    The SEC has the power to fine companies and their executives if fraud is established. If the SEC recovers more than $1 million based on Flynn’s claim, he could be entitled to a portion of it.

    When Flynn filed the complaint, the skies looked clear for the commercial mortgage market. Indeed, last year was a boom year for CMBS, with private lenders in the U.S. issuing roughly $96.7 billion in commercial mortgage-backed securities — a 27% increase over 2018, which made it the most successful year since the last financial crisis, according to Trepp. Overall, investors hold CMBS worth $592 billion.

    Flynn’s assertions raise questions about the efficacy of post-crisis reforms that Congress and the SEC instituted that sought to place new restrictions on banks and other lenders, increase transparency and protect consumers and investors. The regulations that were retooled included the one that governs CMBS, known as Regulation AB. The goal was to make disclosures clearer and more complete for investors, so they would be less reliant on ratings agencies, which were widely criticized during the financial crisis for lax practices.

    Still, the opinion of the credit-ratings agencies remains crucial today, a point reinforced by the Fed’s decision to hinge its bailout decisions on those ratings. That’s a problem, in the view of Neil Barofsky, who served as the U.S. Treasury’s inspector general for the Troubled Assets Relief Program from 2008 to 2011. “Practically nothing” was done to reform the ratings agencies, Barofsky said, which could lead to the sorts of problems that emerged in the bailout a decade ago. If things truly turn bad for the commercial real estate industry or if fraud is discovered, he added, the Fed could end up taking possession of properties that default.

    CMBS can be something of a last resort for borrowers whose projects are unlikely to qualify for a loan with a desirable interest rate from a bank or other lender (because they are too big, too risky or some other reason), according to experts. Underwriting practices — the due diligence lenders do before extending a loan — for CMBS have gained a reputation for being less strict than for loans that banks keep on their balance sheets. Government watchdogs found serious deficiencies in the underwriting for securitized commercial mortgages during the financial crisis, just as they did in the subprime residential market.

    The due diligence process broke down, Flynn maintains, in precisely the mortgages he was worried about: the 10-year loans obtained before the financial crisis. What Flynn discovered, he said, was that rather than lowering the values for properties that had taken on bigger loans than they could pay off, their owners instead obtained new loans. “Someone should have taken the losses,” he said. “Instead, they papered over it, inflated the cash flow and sold it on.”

    For commercial borrowers, small bumps in a property’s profits can qualify the borrower for millions more in loans. Shaving expenses by about a third to boost profit, for instance, can sometimes allow a borrower to increase a loan’s size by a third as well — even if the expenses run only in the thousands, and the loan runs in the millions.

    Some executives for lenders acknowledged to ProPublica that they made changes to borrowers’ past financials — scrubbing expenses from prior years they deemed irrelevant for the new loan — but maintained that it is appropriate to do so. Accounting firms review financial data before the loans are assembled into CMBS, they added.

    The financial data that ProPublica examined — a sample of six loans among the thousands Flynn identified as having inflated net operating income — revealed potential weaknesses not readily apparent to the average investor. For those six loans, the profits for a given year were listed as 9% to 30% higher in new securities than in the old. After they were issued, half of those loans ended up on watch lists for problem debt, meaning the properties were considered at heightened risk for default.

    In each of the six loans, the profit inflation seemed to be explained by decreases in the costs reported. Expenses reported for a particular year in one CMBS simply vanished in disclosures for the same year in a new CMBS.

    Such a pattern appeared in a $36.7 million loan by Ladder Capital in 2015 to a team that purchased the Doubletree San Diego, a half-century-old hotel that struggled for years to bring in enough income to satisfy loan servicers, even under a previous, smaller loan.

    The hotel’s new loan saddled it with far greater debt, increasing its main loan by 60% — even though the property had landed on a watchlist in 2010 because of declining revenue. Analysts at Moody’s pegged the hotel’s new loan as exceeding the value of the property by 40.5% (meaning a loan-to-value ratio of 140.5%).

    Filings for the new loan claimed much higher profits than what the old loan had cited for the same years: The hotel’s net operating income for two years magically jumped from what had previously been reported: 21% and 16% larger for 2013 and 2014, respectively.

    Such figures are supposed to be pulled from a property’s “most recent operating statement,” according to the regulation governing CMBS disclosures.

    But, in response to questions from ProPublica, lender Ladder Capital said it altered the expense numbers it provided in the Doubletree’s historical financials. Ladder said it wiped lease payments —$700,608 and $592,823 in those two years — from the historical financials, because the new owner would not make lease payments in the future. (The previous owner had leased the building from an affiliated company.)

    Ladder, a publicly traded commercial real estate investment trust that reports more than $6 billion in assets, said in a statement, “These differences are due to items that were considered by Ladder Capital during the due diligence process and reported appropriately in all relevant disclosures.”

    Yet when ProPublica asked Ladder to share its disclosures about the changes, the firm pointed to a section of the pool’s prospectus that didn’t mention lease payments, or explain or acknowledge the change in income.

    The Doubletree did not fare well under its new debt package. Revenues and occupancy declined after 2015 and by 2017, the hotel’s loan was back on the watch list. The hotel missed franchise fee payments. Ladder foreclosed in December 2019, after problems with an additional $5.8 million loan the lender had extended the property.

    The Doubletree loan was not the only loan in its CMBS pool, issued by Deutsche Bank in 2015, with apparently inflated profits. Flynn said he was able to track down previous loan information for loans representing nearly 40% of the pool, and all had inflated income figures at some point in their historical financial data.

    There was also a noticeable profit increase in two loans Ladder issued for a strip mall in suburban Pennsylvania. The mall’s past results improved when they appeared in a new CMBS. Its 2016 net operating income, previously listed as $1,101,207 in one CMBS, now appeared as $1,352,353 in another, data from Trepp shows — an increase of 23%. The prospectus for the latter does not explain or acknowledge the change in income. The mall owner received a $14 million loan.

    Less than a year after it was placed into a CMBS, the loan ran into trouble. It landed on a watchlist after one of its major tenants, a department store, declared bankruptcy.

    Ladder said it excluded $203,787 in expenses from the new loan because they stemmed from one-time costs for environmental remediation of pollution by a dry cleaner and a roof repair. Ladder did not explain why the previous lender did not exclude the expense also.

    The pattern can be seen in loans made by other lenders, too. In a CMBS issued by Wells Fargo, a 1950s-era trailer park at the base of a steep bluff along the coast in Los Angeles reported sharply higher profits — for the same years — than it previously had.

    The Pacific Palisades Bowl Park received a $12.9 million loan from the bank in 2016. The park reported expenses that were about a third lower in its new loan disclosures when compared with earlier ones. As a result, the $1.2 million in net operating income for 2014 rose 28% above what had been reported for the same year under the old loan. A similar jump occurred in 2013. (Edward Biggs, the owner of the park, said he gave Wells Fargo the park’s financials when refinancing its loan and wasn’t aware of discrepancies in what was reported to investors. “I don’t know anything about that,” he said.)

    Flynn said he found that for the $575 million Wells Fargo CMBS that contained the Palisades debt, about half of the loan pool appeared to have reported inflated profits at some point, when comparing the same years in different securities.

    Another of the loans ProPublica examined with apparently inflated profits was for a building in downtown Philadelphia. When the owner refinanced through Wells Fargo, the property’s 2015 profit appeared 23% higher than it had in reports under the old loan. Wells bundled the debt into a mortgage-backed security in 2016.

    The building, One Penn Center, is a historic Art Deco office high-rise with ornate black marble and gold-plated fixtures, and a transit station underneath. One of the primary tenants, leasing 45,000 square feet for one of its regional headquarters, happens to be the SEC. The agency declined to comment.

    Filed under:

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • Laken Brooks, University of Florida

    “How does that make you feel?”

    In the isolation of the COVID-19 pandemic, many people are missing a sympathetic ear. Would a response like that make you feel heard, less alone, even if it were a machine writing back to you?

    The pandemic has contributed to chronic loneliness. Digital tools like video chat and social media help connect people who live or quarantine far apart. But when those friends or family members are not readily available, artificial intelligence can step in.

    Millions of isolated people have found comfort by chatting with an AI bot. Therapeutic bots have improved users’ mental health for decades. Now, psychiatrists are studying how these AI companions can improve mental wellness during the pandemic and beyond.

    How AI became a therapy tool

    Artificial intelligence systems are computer programs that can perform tasks that people would normally do, like translating languages or recognizing objects in images. AI chatbots are programs that simulate human conversation. They have become common in customer service because they can provide quick answers to basic questions.

    The first chatbot was modeled on mental health practitioners. In 1966, computer scientist Joseph Weizenbaum created ELIZA, which he programmed to sound like a Rogerian psychotherapist. Rogerian approaches encouraged psychotherapists to ask open-ended questions, often mirroring patients’ phrases back to them to encourage the patients to elaborate. Weizenbaum did not expect that his psychotherapist-like AI could have any therapeutic benefit for users. Training ELIZA to translate users’ comments into questions was merely a practical, if not ironic, model for the AI’s dialogue.

    Weizenbaum was amazed when his test subjects actually confided in ELIZA as they would a flesh-and-blood psychotherapist. Many study participants believed that they were sharing vulnerable thoughts with a live person. Some of these participants refused to believe that the seemingly attentive ELIZA, who asked so many questions during each conversation, was actually a computer.

    However, ELIZA did not need to trick users to help them. Even Weizenbaum’s secretary, who knew that ELIZA was a computer program, asked for privacy so she could have her own personal conversations with the chatbot.

    In the decades since ELIZA stunned its inventor, computer scientists have worked with medical professionals to explore how AI can support mental health. Some of the biggest therapy bots in the business have astounding reach, especially during times of sociopolitical uncertainty, when people tend to report higher levels of isolation and fatigue.

    Since the COVID-19 pandemic struck, the demand for telehealth options, including AI chatbots, has skyrocketed. Replika is an app famous for its lifelike, customizable avatars, and it has reported a 35% increase in traffic. With mental health facilities overwhelmed with weekslong waitlists, millions of people are supplementing their mental health routines with therapy chatbots.

    As mental wellness needs have changed over time, coders and therapists collaborate to build new AIs that can meet these new challenges.

    A woman texts on her phone.
    Millions of people have downloaded AI therapy apps during the COVID-19 pandemic. Jhaymesisviphotography/flickr

    The digital doctor is in

    How can a chatbot seem so human? If you were to dissect an AI, you would find algorithms and scripts: rules, essentially, that humans use to direct the AI’s behavior. With chatbots, coders train the AI to automatically produce certain phrases in response to a user’s message. Coders then work with writers to determine what kind of punctuation, emojis and other stylistic elements the bot will use.

    These scripts ultimately provide a sense of the bot’s “attitude.” For example, a coder can train an AI to recognize the word “depressed” so that, whenever a user types a phrase like “I am feeling tired and depressed today,” the chatbot may respond with “I hear that you are feeling depressed. Can you explain why?” Or a writer may code the bot to produce a more colloquial tone: “Wow, I’m sorry you’re feeling this way. Why do you think you might be feeling depressed?”

    These scripts replicate a common tactic in cognitive behavioral therapy: asking questions. AI therapy bots encourage people to vent frustrations and then ask them to more closely reflect on those experiences or emotions. Even when an AI’s responses are broad or unspecific, a patient may find the process of typing out their thoughts to someone – even an artificial “someone” – cathartic.

    Who benefits and how

    Do chatbots actually work to relieve loneliness or anxiety? More research is needed, but it seems so. Several studies provide promising results. For example, young adults who regularly messaged a therapy chatbot reported less loneliness and anxiety than did their peers who did not use the AI. Elderly users may also benefit from communicating with chatbots, especially if those elders live alone or do not have regular contact with loved ones.

    A chatbot’s therapeutic power – and its Achilles’ heel – is its script. The dialogue is predetermined, the same lines delivered to multiple users. These scripted responses allow a chatbot to communicate with numerous users simultaneously. Chatbots are especially helpful for people who want to express themselves quickly and anonymously, without judgment. Users can immediately pull up a chatbot to offload stress from their day when they may not want or be able to share such thoughts with family or friends.

    However, these same scripts prevent AI from being a serious replacement for human therapists. AI bots respond to certain keywords, so they sometimes misunderstand users. When Vice tested the popular therapy app Woebot, the app produced a cringeworthy response.

    User: “I’m super anxious and can barely sleep.”

    Woebot: “Ah, I can’t wait to hop into my jammies later” followed by a series of sleepy “z” emojis

    Would a user in the throes of a panic attack find this scripted comment helpful or comforting? Not likely. But unlike human therapists, AI bots are not good at interpreting social context or intervening in a crisis. While an AI may seem lifelike, it isn’t always an appropriate tool to use when someone’s life is on the line. Unlike trained crisis counselors, chatbots cannot recommend specific safety plans or connect users with health resources and support in their community.

    Despite these real limitations, AI chatbots provide a much-needed platform for open communication and self-expression. With therapy apps like Replika, Tess and Woebot raking in millions in funding and user downloads, people have more options than ever if they want to try chatting with a bot to process their emotions between therapy appointments or to make a digital friend during a pandemic.

    Laken Brooks, Doctoral Student of English, University of Florida

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • Latrice Davis, a nurse at Roseland Community Hospital in Chicago, receives the COVID-19 vaccine on Dec. 18, 2020. Scott Olson via Getty Images

    Debra Furr-Holden, Michigan State University

    Dr. Anthony Fauci and other national health leaders have said that African Americans need to take the COVID-19 vaccine to protect their health. What Fauci and others have not stated is that if African Americans don’t take the vaccine, the nation as whole will never get to herd immunity.

    The concept of herd immunity, also referred to as community immunity, is fairly simple. When a significant proportion of the population, or the herd, becomes immune from the virus, the entire population will have some acceptable degree of protection. Immunity can occur through natural immunity from personal infection and recovery, or through vaccination. Once a population reaches herd immunity, the likelihood of person-to-person spread becomes very low.

    The big lie is one of omission. Yes, it is true that African Americans will benefit from the COVID vaccine, but the full truth is that the country needs African Americans and other population subgroups with lower reported COVID-19 vaccine acceptability rates to take the vaccine. Without increased vaccine acceptability, we stand little to no chance of communitywide protection.

    I am an epidemiologist and health equity scholar who has been conducting research in the African American community for 20 years. Much of my work focuses on strategies to increase community engagement in research. I see a significant opportunity to improve COVID vaccine acceptance in the African American community.

    A crowd in New York City.
    If up to 60% of African Americans don’t take the vaccine, reaching herd immunity will be difficult. Noam Galai via Getty Images

    Doing the coronavirus math

    About 70% of people in the U.S. need to take the vaccine for the population to reach herd immunity. Whites make up about 60% of the U.S. population. So, if every white person got the vaccine, the U.S. would still fall short of herd immunity. A recent study suggested that 68% of white people would be willing to get the COVID-19 vaccine. If these estimates hold up, that would get us to 42%.

    African Americans make up more than 13% of the American population. But if up to 60% of African Americans refuse to take the vaccine, as a recent study suggests, it will be difficult to reach that 70% threshold likely needed to reach herd immunity.

    Latinos make up just over 18% percent of the population. A study suggests that 32% percent of Latinos could reject a COVID vaccine. Add the 40% to 50% rejection rates among other population subgroups and herd immunity becomes mathematically impossible.

    Further exacerbating the problem is that mass vaccination alone won’t achieve herd immunity, as the effect of COVID vaccines on preventing virus transmission remains unclear. Ongoing preventive measures will likely still be needed to stop community spread. As the resistance to facts and science continues to grow, the need for credible information dissemination and trust-building related to vaccines becomes more important.

    My research offers some possible explanations for lower vaccination rates among Blacks. Historical wrongs, like the Tuskegee Syphilis Experiments, which ended in 1972, have played a major role in contributing to Black mistrust of the health care system. In another case, the “immortal” cells of Henrietta Lacks were shared without her consent and have been used in medical research for more than 70 years. The most recent application includes COVID vaccine research, yet her family has received no financial benefit.

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    A study led by Dr. Giselle Corbie-Smith at the University of North Carolina identified distrust of the medical community as a prominent barrier to African American participation in clinical research. Another of Corbie-Smith’s peer-reviewed studies found that distrust in medical research is significantly higher among African Americans than whites.

    African Americans also disproportionately experience unequal treatment in the modern-day health care system. These experiences of bias and discrimination fuel the problem of vaccine hesitancy and mistrust. Lower prioritization for hospital admissions and lifesaving care for COVID-19-related illness among African Americans was reported in Massachusetts in April 2020. Massachusetts subsequently changed its guidelines, yet across the U.S. there is a lack of data and transparent reporting on this phenomenon.

    The current messaging of vaccine importance may seem tone-deaf to those in a community who wonder why their health is so important now, at the vaccine stage. Black health didn’t appear to be a priority during the pandemic’s first wave, when race disparities in COVID emerged.

    Questioning the scientific process

    Perhaps even Operation Warp Speed has had the unintended consequence of decreasing vaccine acceptance in the African American community. Some ask why wasn’t such speed applied to vaccine development for HIV, which still has no FDA-approved vaccine? As of 2018, AIDS-related illness has killed an estimated 35 million people globally. It continues to disproportionately affect people of color and other socially vulnerable populations.

    If African Americans were honored and acknowledged in these COVID vaccine conversations and told “we need you” instead of “you need us,” perhaps more Blacks would trust the vaccine. I encourage our nation’s leaders to consider a radical shift in their approach. They must do more than pointing to the few Black scientists involved in COVID vaccine development, or making a spectacle of prominent African Americans receiving the vaccine.

    These acts alone will likely be insufficient to garner the trust needed to increase vaccine acceptance. Instead, I believe our leaders should adopt the core values of equity and reconciliation. I’d argue that truth-telling will need to be at the forefront of this new narrative.

    There are also multiple leverage points along the supply and distribution chains, as well as in vaccine administration, that could increase diversity, equity and inclusion. I’d recommend giving minority- and women-owned businesses fair, mandated access to contracts to get the vaccine to communities. This includes procurement and purchasing contracts for freezers needed to store the vaccine.

    Minority health care workers should be equitably called back to work to support vaccine administration. These issues, not publicly discussed, could be transformative for building trust and increasing vaccine acceptance.

    Without a radical shift in the conversation of true COVID equity, African Americans and many others who could benefit from the vaccine will instead get sick. Some will die. The rest will remain marginalized by a system and a society that hasn’t equally valued, protected, or prioritized their lives. I believe it’s time to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.

    Debra Furr-Holden, Associate Dean for Public Health Integration, Michigan State University

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • Libertarianism is the championing of liberty. We can’t have liberty with economic and political organization where the majority of the wealth generated  is extracted by uninvolved, unproductive rich people who are powerful just because they exist. There’s no freedom if people have zero say in the decisions which will affect their entire livelihood. That goes for all government.  Today, nobody bats an eye when we have appointed politicians with no consent from the public, without even mandatory public referendum. Unless the economy is designed so all those involved have an equal say to the same degree they are affected, it can’t possibly be a free society. That’s  a dictatorship. We’ve become so desensitized to this dictatorship it becomes easy to take  lightly. This state of affairs isn’t even 500 years old, and there have been modern societies in just the past 100 years with grassroots democracy progressing ahead of the traditional idea of government intertwined with the economy.

    For examples of libertarian socialist societies, see: Makhnovia, Catalonia and Aragon, the democratic collectivism and confederalism of the Kurds; the countless examples of effective municipality as seen on small scales like the Paris Commune, and larger scales the egalitarian Highland Madagascar communities, the autonomous period in Guangzhou and the Mondragon cooperative federation; the countless examples of successful experimentation with communal property and participatory, direct, and semi-direct democracy; the thousands of years of tribal communism, advanced confederacy and trade, and highly democratic nature of a whole galaxy of relatively modern North American tribes: the Ema, the Algonquin, the Iroquois Confederation . . . 

    . . . the Iroquois Confederation is a famous case. Known as the longest recorded participatory democracy, Cadwallader Colden said in 1749 they held “such absolute notions of liberty that they allow of no kind of superiority of one over another, and banish all servitude from their territories”—they were one of the most advanced and humanistic political networks on the planet before colonialism and the genocide of Manifest Destiny destroyed them and their couple hundred year runs, much longer under different names and affiliations.

    You can keep going, across the ages, under different identities, with different technology and consciousness of their political standing. And every single time it appears, there is minimal social conflict compared to what we have now, with collections of people—despite the opposition—still working to provide the greatest good for the greatest number under democratic principles. This isn’t even considering the parasitic nature of capitalism and most aspects of the federal government, which is built on top of everyday acts of communism found in even the most basic social engagements.

    Neolibertarians are already at the point where they recognize the danger in having imposed authority, especially over productive affairs. This is the main reason why they are opposed to socialism, being under the misconception that socialism is always statist and hierarchical in nature, that it means bureaucratic ownership and requires people to submit to a certain system. This assertion overlooks three crucial things: (1) that capitalism isn’t equally imposed on a default level; (2) that capitalism is inherently hierarchical and contradicting in nature, and therefore incompatible with democracy; and (3) that socialism is democratic by most definitions. Most tendencies within libertarian socialism are basically synonymous with democratic socialism (not social democracy, and the difference is monumental). However, they put extra attention on direct action, grassroots democracy, municipalism, restorative justice, and strong regional government. The core principle in libertarian Socialism was best described by Rudolf Rocker at the opening of his book on anarcho-syndicalism:

    “it is a indefinite intellectual current in the life of our time, whose adherents advocate the abolition of economic monopolies and of all the political and social coercive institutions within society.”

    Classical libertarianism, or anarchism—whose currents range from mutualism to Luxembergism to many other varieties of democratic socialism—is lesser known to have evolved out of the Enlightenment, with early socialist thinkers such as utopianist Charles Fourier all the way to mutualist politician Pierre-Joseph Proudhon and then anarcho-collectivist Mikhail Bakunin, and even more recently with self-described libertarian socialists like Noam Chomsky, receiving large influence from figures like Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Thomas Paine, and even Adam Smith. What was borrowed was the idea that institutions preventing  us from the joys found in individual and social life is the biggest threat to our happiness and survival, and their ideas surrounding the challenging of authority, the the legitimacy of government were taken in and thoroughly built upon not long before the Age of Revolution came to an end, too late to stop the aristocracy from beating back all continued revisions attempted against the feudalistic principles the new governments were founded on. These governments—especially in the United States—then went on to eradicate the enlightened values of the native population in the name of power, a crime seen as unforgivable by true libertarians who understand the State gave the natives no gift but slavery and the torture of watching their terriotries occupied by the false notions of ownership and hierarchical government. If we’re asking the difference between classical libertarianism and the capitalist libertarianism commonly accepted as the definition in many places, then we should look no further than the highly complex, notably egalitarian Indigenous councils (which any historian would agree was more politically and ethically advanced than any developed nation of the time and arguably today) and the money-grubbing, anti-democratic colonials who murdered them.

    But of course even the most oppressive and exploitative acts can be seen as natural or constructive  on neolibertarian grounds. One of the ideologies espoused by laissez-faire capitalists is the idea of social Darwinism, a theory developed by Herbert Spencer in his book Origins of Biology which basically takes a dangerously misunderstood interpretation of Darwin’s natural selection and the idea of “survival of the fittest” and tries to apply it to society and ethics. This has been the core philosophy behind fascism and other capitalist-oriented systems. It is a device  popularized by oligarchs, pretending humanity somehow benefits from cutthroat competition and belligerent hierarchy, where people somehow get ahead by leaving each other behind, and the haves are more deserving than the have-nots. This is easily identifiable in the “Jeff Bezos just works 130 billion times harder than you” kind of mentality, as well as the disdain higher classes have for the same demographics generating their wealth. Since Spencer, this theory has dominated our social political and social backdrop, and remains today in varying extremes. Applied to politics and economics, it is the fuel for every modern dictatorship; it is the Original Sin of our time, and just as sectarian and stifling to our progress as the more spiritual version of the idea during the reign of the Catholic Church. 

    If we aren’t mutually supporting each other, which only artificial scarcity and manipulation can prevent us from doing, then we are creating a materially divided, miserable environment where even if the nation is rich, the people are poor. The only ones who have the right to happiness, security, and confidence are those with the least amount of wisdom, character, empathy and work ethic. Shareholders stack billions on top of billions overnight, sweated off the labor of people living paycheck to paycheck.  This reminds me of the quote by John Stuart Mill: “Landlords grow rich in their sleep without working, risking or economising.” Such a society will lead to even more social erosion, pain, and, especially when you consider the existential threat of climate change, the literal extinction of our species. 

    “Survival of the fittest.” The most fit aren’t the people who destroy their own supply and reject collaboration; the fit are the collective, and the individual can find joy and security merely in the act of embracing empathy and social life, and working to create a more fulfilling environment for themselves and their community.

    Exactly 40 years after Origins of Biology was published, a lesser-known counter to Spencer’s theory was made by Petr Kropotkin, a biologist, anthropologist, revolutionary libertarian, and the father of modern Anarcho-Communism. What he proposed was the theory that mutual aid was an evolutionary instinct found in all social animals, including humans, and it is the root of all higher emotion and social behavior. It attempts to point out that it makes much more sense for humans to have evolved the innate need to cooperate rather than struggle amongst ourselves, that such behavior can be consistently seen all around us despite the unnatural social division rooted in private monopoly, as opposed to a democratic monopoly, and it is only when we remove ourselves from these contradicting devices can we achieve our full potential. 

    In his book Mutual Aid: A Factor in Evolution, he writes:

    “It is not love to my neighbor—whom I often do not know at all—which induces me to seize a pail of water and rush towards his house when I see it on fire; it is a far wider, even though more vague feeling or instinct of human solidarity and sociability which moves me. So it is also with animals. It is not love, and not even sympathy (understood in its proper sense) which induces a herd of ruminants or of horses to form a ring in order to resist an attack of wolves; not love which induces wolves to form a pack for hunting; not love which induces kittens or lambs to play, or a dozen of species of young birds to spend their days together in the autumn; and it is neither love nor personal sympathy which induces many thousand fallow-deer scattered over a territory as large as France to form into a score of separate herds, all marching towards a given spot, in order to cross there a river. It is a feeling infinitely wider than love or personal sympathy—an instinct that has been slowly developed among animals and men in the course of an extremely long evolution, and which has taught animals and men alike the force they can borrow from the practice of mutual aid and support, and the joys they can find in social life.”

    Petr Kropotkin

    We’ve seen the direct result of capitalism and selfish individualism—the core of what neolibertarianism seems to stand for. With inspiration from the writing and advisory from neolibertarian Milton Friedman, neolibertarianism helped set the trend for corporatization and cartel politics which has allowed corporate power to indirectly rule through imperialist puppets in every branch of government—the world’s biggest liars, murderers, and thieves. They are arguably worse than even the Nazis, not only because they’re subsidizing the genocidal State of Israel, not only because of the unprecedented mass surveillance and forced hysterectomies at the border which appears to continuing under Biden in the same facilities he helped build, not only because they’ve killed millions of civilians in ongoing imperialist wars in the past few decades, and not only because they utilize media to keep everyone afraid and distracted oftentimes over gross lies. It’s because even the Nazis weren’t working to destroy the planet and ecosystem, which is so far killing roughly half a million every year, and therefore all possibility for a secure and happy future. Our extinction needs to be treated as the inevitable result of capitalism. Allowing corporate criminals to dictate an entire nation is the exact opposite of liberty, and is only accepted in the U.S. because we are a criminal State not a democracy. 

    It wasn’t neolibertarianism alone which has influenced the current climate in U.S. politics, but it has directly revitalized and reinforced many values meant to conflate human freedom with the illusory idea of “moral capitalism.” The most notable figure in this regard is laissez-faire capitalist Milton Friedman’s and his Chicago School droogs in the economic department where he taught, which has overtly influenced almost every presidential administration since Nixon, appearing in both the DNC and GOP. It was his work and advisory—as the economic adviser to multiple administrations since the 1940s, including Ronald Reagan and the U.K.’s Margaret Thatcher—which is responsible for decades of growing wealth inequality, multiple international coups resulting in despotism, the crisis of fake news, and more than several ongoing hegemonic imperialist wars. Most of these you will find both right and left libertarians criticizing sharply. Undeniably, it is his same philosophy which has the parasitical exploitation which now has around 80 percent of the country given the choice between rent and food, and two-thirds of the natural world having been destroyed in the past 50 years in the pursuit of private interest. 

    Milton Friedman ideas dominated right-libertarian currents; there are lessons to be learned by his politics and the result of its implementation. On September 11th, 1973, a coup was executed in Chile to remove the elected democratic Socialist president Allende and put in his place the laissez-faire capitalist dictator Pinochet. The coup was funded by U.S. corporations and the CIA, and had an economic model outlined by followers of libertarian hero Friedman, loosely overseen by Friedman himself. It began with the sabotages against the Chilean economy beginning decades earlier, and the failed attempt to introduce laissez-faire capitalist ideas into Chilean universities. The intervention climaxed with the purging of thousands of union leaders and known leftists in the countryside, and thousands more within a period of days inside urban stadiums converted into torture and execution camps. Industries which were previously owned by the public and workers were auctioned off to oligarchs as part of a campaign of privatization and deregulation. Within four months this caused inflation to rise by 375%—one of the biggest economic crises of the twentieth century which, of course, is rarely talked about in U.S. history books and schools. Revolts were inevitable. To combat this, the dictatorship became even more repressive and began a nationalistic propaganda campaign to gather more support from the more reactionary demographics. Following Pinochet’s reign, riots involving police, populists, and the supporters of Pinochet’s politics continued, and although Chile is now more progressive than under Friedman’s regime, many of the democratic politics have never returned, and multinational corporations still maintain a tight presence. Even with the bodies of documentation surrounding this grisly incident, your average neolibertarian will still treat Pinochet and the economic model associated with him as something virtuous. 

    However, despite all my criticism of them—and most of the left’s criticism with them—we have to recognize where and when neolibertarians can be allies. We should not treat neolibertarians as the enemy so long as they’re not actively and militantly threatening us or advocating harm to others. Many are enemies of the status quo, even if there are significant flaws in their politics. We should remember  a few of the orchestrators behind the Reddit hedge fund sabotage identified as right-libertarians—even though in the long run I’d say fighting capitalism using capitalism is a bad strategy, it demonstrated that some are capable of being immediate comrades. Community organizing and direct actions is a good next step. This also reminds me of the Yellow Vest Movement in Europe and occasionally North America. That is a great example—even if a rare example—of unity between left and right libertarian against oligarchical institutions. In France, both tendencies are largely present, and they still managed to work out a written agenda of shared demands including instituting a People’s Referendum and taking measures to end austerity. 

    In 2020, Spike Cohen, the vice-presidential nominee for candidate Jo Jorgensen, tweeted something which most people these days regardless of orientation can unanimously agreed on: “We’re divided for a very simple reason: The more power over our lives is centralized in the hands of the few, the more we will fight each other over who those small few are. The solution is very simple: Take the damn power back.” Despite all my criticism for his economic positions, I still find myself inspired by these words; it almost makes him a hero in my eyes even though I would never have voted for Jorgensen, simply because they both ignore the same monopoly and power in production, and I find it hard to believe in the executive power altogether. Regardless, the fact that this same notion appeals to so many on either spectrum shows that the People—not the ones who intimidate us into handing over our authority—can be united. Not in the corporatist partisan sense spewed by the Biden administration as an excuse for helping oligarchs, but actual unity over commonly held interests, directly from the bottom and asserted through a series of direct actions meant to pressure the State and build solidarity. It will never be easy, and the threat of free democratic government has historically sounded the alarm for every hierarchical government in the vicinity to snuff it out as soon as possible. 

    Still, there is strength in our role and numbers. Every attempt to organize, mobilize, educate, communicate, and defend our communities is an act of long overdue revolution. Even if our attempts at capturing the ideal fail, pushing for it will pressure the existing forces and in turn empower us, even if just a little. From there we continue forward. True, reform only means  the ruling classes are trying to sustain their position with bribery, and we can’t remove a system which sustains itself with violence without expecting a violent reaction, but the power of the collective can’t be underestimated. Against these odds, staying consistent and continuing to organize and agitate is the only way to move forward, and in every case we can’t be afraid to challenge our oppressors at any means necessary. The tactic of mass demonstrations and provocative direct action has shown potential—the removal of Nicolae Ceaușescu, the general strikes leading up to the Spanish Civil War, for instance. The power of our rulers is derived entirely from us. When we realize this, we can overturn the system overnight and reshape the world in whatever image we please, organizing on principles of mutual aid, solidarity, and bottom-up, horizontal democracy. 

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.