Outside Agitator: Naomi Klein and the New New Left
The marquee outside the Bloor Cinema, in Toronto, advertised "The Last Mistress" at four, "Naomi Klein-the Shock Doctrine" at seven, and "Little Shop of Horrors" at nine-thirty. It was a warmish night. The falafel shop next door was doing a brisk business. A line of people holding tickets to the Naomi Klein event stretched to the end of the block and around the corner. Outside the entrance to the cinema, a middle-aged man and an elderly woman paced up and down selling copies of Socialist Action for a dollar. (The September issue included articles about capitalism's contradictions, class war in Bolivia, and a commentary by Mumia Abu-Jamal-a regular feature.)
"We
apologize for starting late, but it's typical activist time, so I'm
sure you're used to it," a young woman organizer said from the stage.
The young woman wore a black necklace, black jeans, and black hoop
earrings. She urged the audience to fight racism and poverty, and to
work for education, international solidarity, justice for immigrants
and refugees, and solidarity with Palestine and with the Mohawk of
Tyendinaga and the Algonquin of Barriere Lake, on whose behalf the
fund-raiser that night was being held. She squinted into the lights.
"I'm glad you can't see the audience from here," she said, "because I
don't think I've ever spoken in front of eight hundred and fifty people
except at a protest, and then you can always dissolve into a chant."
She consulted her notes. "To a different audience-to those that hold
capital and power in this society-Naomi Klein's words and her ideas are
seen as a serious threat," she said. "Her words are a source of
inspiration . . . for those of us who were and are being radicalized by
the anti-globalization, anti-colonial, and anti-poverty movements and
the demands to change the system totally and completely."
Klein ascended the stage. "It's been an eventful few hours," she said, smiling. The first bailout package announced by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson had been voted down that afternoon by the House. "The President went on television and informed us that there would be Armageddon, essentially, if they didn't get this deal . . . but it didn't work!" she went on, over rowdy clapping. She was wearing dark jeans tucked into tall brown boots, a crisp white shirt, and a long black blazer. She was dressed for a fox hunt. She looked terrific.
She had spent the day curled up on the blue sofa in her living room, watching CNN while she waited restlessly to hear what would happen in Washington. She fortified herself with cups of coffee and a smoothie. She checked her iPhone for messages from an economist friend who was keeping her posted on what was going on behind the scenes. She followed the Dow as it pitched downward, thinking how ridiculous it was for Paulson to believe that he could control it. "This is politicians acting like traders," she said, staring at the television. "A government shouldn't play the market-it should govern."
The past couple of weeks had been a giddy time. Since her book "The Shock Doctrine" was published last year, Klein, now thirty-eight, has become the most visible and influential figure on the American left-what Howard Zinn and Noam Chomsky were thirty years ago. She speaks every few days, all over the world, and hundreds of people turn up to hear her. They visit her Web site and subscribe to her newsletter and send her passionate fan mail. She has become an icon's icon: Radiohead and Laurie Anderson promote her books to their fans; John Cusack's comedy "War, Inc." was inspired by her reporting from Baghdad. The Mexican film director Alfonso Cuarón felt so strongly about "The Shock Doctrine" that he made a short promotional film about it for free. Now, suddenly, she was in demand everywhere. The economic crisis had looked at first like a textbook enactment of her "shock doctrine" theory, and everyone wanted her to go on TV and explain it.
The central thesis of the book is that capitalism and democracy, free markets and free people, do not, as we've been told, go hand in hand. On the contrary, capitalism-at least fundamentalist capitalism, of the type promoted by the late economist Milton Friedman and his "Chicago School" acolytes-is so unpopular, and so obviously harmful to everyone except the richest of the rich, that its establishment requires, at best, trickery and, at worst, terror and torture. Friedman believed that markets perform best when freed from government interference, so he advocated getting rid of tariffs, subsidies, minimum-wage laws, public housing, Social Security, financial regulation, and licensing requirements, including those for doctors-indeed, virtually every measure devised to protect people from the market's harsh logic. Klein argues that the only circumstance in which a population would accept Friedman-style reforms is when it is in a state of shock, following a crisis of some sort-a natural disaster, a terrorist attack, a war. A person in shock regresses to a childlike state in which he longs for a parental figure to take control; similarly, a population in a state of shock will hand exceptional powers to its leaders, permitting them to destroy the regulatory functions of government.
Friedman once observed that much of the time societies are too paralyzed by the "tyranny of the status quo" to accept real reform, and that only a crisis can convince people that the way things are done needs to change. This idea is not particularly controversial. But from Friedman's words Klein concludes that the Chicago School is "a movement that prays for crisis the way drought-struck farmers pray for rain." Worse, Friedmanites are impatient-sometimes too impatient to sit around praying for acts of God. Natural disasters are tricky to engineer, but coups and terror are always possible. "Some of the most infamous human rights violations of this era," she writes, "which have tended to be viewed as sadistic acts carried out by antidemocratic regimes"-Pinochet's in Chile, for instance, or the Argentinean junta-"were in fact either committed with the deliberate intent of terrorizing the public or actively harnessed to prepare the ground for the introduction of radical free-market ‘reforms.' "
Klein first formulated her thesis in 2004, when she was reporting in Baghdad and noticed that Paul Bremer's goal seemed to be to establish a perfect capitalist state in Iraq while its population was still reeling from the "shock and awe" bombing. Then she noticed that soon after the tsunami in Sri Lanka the coastline that had been inhabited by fishermen was being sold off to hotels. Then she noticed that Friedman had suggested taking advantage of Hurricane Katrina to replace New Orleans's disastrous public schools with charter schools. The pattern was striking. But now that a shock had shaken Washington itself, something slightly different seemed to be going on. On the one hand, the initial reaction to the economic crisis followed her theory-the shock (the bank failures and the market's nosedive) had inspired the government to attempt to seize unprecedented power (seven hundred billion dollars with no strings attached), claiming that in such a crisis everyone should simply trust it to do the right thing, even though the actions it wanted to take would seem to enrich the wealthiest at the expense of everybody else. That was the textbook part. But the plan wasn't working. Constituents wrote thousands of outraged letters, and bloggers wrote about how this felt familiar, like the aftermath of September 11th, and how the bailout was the economic equivalent of the Patriot Act. It was just as she had written at the end of the book: memory was shock's antidote. (Another difference, of course, was that the government wanted to enact not Friedman-style reforms but the opposite: enormous interference in the market. Still, since the point of this interference was to bail out banks, this difference did not strike Klein as of much importance.)
"Americans remembered that they thought Rudy Giuliani was their daddy after September 11th, which was why they're a little less inclined to say that Paulson and Goldman Sachs were going to take care of them this time," Klein told the audience at the Bloor Cinema. "I think actually their biggest mistake with the bailout was how short it was. It's just two pages and three paragraphs, and so the weirdest thing happened: people read it." Everyone laughed. "It sounded like a coup."
She went on, "It's worth thinking about what the right has been doing for the past thirty-five years as a counter-revolution that has been waged against our victories." The New Deal is usually told as a history of F.D.R., she said, but we don't talk enough about the pressure from below. Neighborhoods organized, and when their evicted neighbors' furniture was put on the streets they moved it back into their homes. It was that kind of direct action that won victories like rent control, public housing, and the creation of Fannie Mae. The other thing that's important to remember, she said, is that the organizers were a threat-of socialist revolution-and it was that which allowed F.D.R. to say to Wall Street, "We have to compromise, or else we've got a revolution on our hands." Now, these market shocks are opportunities for the same reason that the crash was in the thirties, because we are seeing the failures of laissez-faire before our eyes. "It's time to say, ‘Your model failed,' " she said. "This is a progressive moment: it's ours to lose."
Klein was born in 1970, but the political stories in which she places herself all begin in the thirties. The thirties and forties were the last time in America, she feels, that social movements were strong enough to force radical economic change in a progressive direction. They were also the last time that a certain kind of grand, bold political hope existed in her family-the last time before events combined to extinguish all thoughts, among Kleins, of utopia.
Her paternal grandparents, Anne and Philip, met at the Jack London Club-a leftist artists' club-in Newark, New Jersey, sometime in the thirties. (Philip's older brother, Sol, was more committed-he moved to the Soviet Union after the revolution and never came back.) Philip wanted to be a painter, and in 1936 he got a job as an animator for Disney. He worked on "Fantasia" and "Snow White" and "Pinocchio." Disney animators had been trying to organize themselves in secret since the early thirties, but they didn't pull it off until after the bonuses they were promised for "Snow White" failed to materialize. In the late spring of 1941, they went on strike. Philip and Anne, ardent believers in the union, lived in a tent across the street from the studio, cooking over open fires and manning the picket line. Their first son, Michael, Naomi's father, was then three, and lived with them in the tent part of the time. The strike was settled in September, but a few months after that Philip was fired for being an agitator. In 1942, he and Anne moved back to New Jersey, and he went to work in a shipyard.
At the time they were ruining their lives for politics, Anne and Philip were experiencing the beginnings of a crisis of faith. Stalin had signed the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact: that was the first betrayal. Then came news of gulags in the Soviet Union. By the time of Khrushchev's "secret speech" of 1956, in which he denounced the cult of Stalin and its consequences, Philip and Anne, along with many others, had bitterly abandoned Communism. They held on to their core beliefs in social justice and racial equality, and taught their sons to believe in those things, but apart from brief forays-Anne took ten-year-old Michael canvassing for the Progressive Party in 1948, and marched on Washington in support of the Rosenbergs-they withdrew from politics. They began to spend time at Nature Friends (later Camp Midvale)-a retreat near Paterson, founded in the twenties as a place where workers of all races could congregate and enjoy nature. Nature Friends became their life. Philip built a house nearby, and Anne grew her own vegetables. They went to see leftist singers like Pete Seeger and Paul Robeson and Woody Guthrie. Philip sought to revive his early ambition of becoming a painter, but all his figures looked like Disney cartoons. He tried sculpting in metal, and after a while this brought him a measure of satisfaction.
In high school, Michael Klein was in the band and the student council and was the captain of the swim team, but he led a double life. He'd been sent to Socialist summer camp, and his real friends were other red-diaper babies who lived in New York, with whom he could discuss his home life without fear of exposure. It was difficult and frightening to be the child of Communists. One of his most vivid childhood memories was seeing buses arrive at Camp Midvale in the early fall of 1949 and disgorge dozens of bloodied people who had gone to a Paul Robeson concert and had been attacked with rocks and bats by a local mob. The electrocution of the Rosenbergs, in 1953, which left their two boys orphaned at the ages of six and ten, terrified Michael, who was not much older.
Michael Klein never deviated from the beliefs of his parents, but, like them, he stayed away from political parties. In medical school, he protested against the Vietnam War and joined Physicians for Social Responsibility. When he was drafted, he didn't sign the statement about not belonging to organizations with Communist ties, so the Army held a hearing to decide whether he was loyal enough to serve. Meanwhile, he had met a young activist filmmaker from Philadelphia named Bonnie Sherr, and got her pregnant. In the middle of his draft negotiations, she saw a documentary about American soldiers dropping napalm on civilian populations, commissioned by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. She said, "If a Canadian government agency can produce a film like this, we should get married and run away to Canada." So they did.
They ended up in Montreal. Michael worked as a pediatrician in a public hospital. Bonnie had studied film in California-the first film she shot was of César Chávez's first march in Sacramento. In Canada, she made a film in which welfare recipients interviewed one another about health care; she made a series of films about the community organizer Saul Alinsky; later, she made a film about women peace activists, at Greenham Common and in the Soviet Union. ("I had pretty simplistic political ideas about dialogue," she says now. "You know, an enemy is somebody whose stories you haven't heard.") In 1980, she set out to make a feminist film about sex, to be titled "Celebration," but instead made "Not a Love Story," about pornography. She was involved in a feminist film group at the National Film Board called Studio D. Her friends at Studio D were into solstices and female spirituality, and at one point she confided to her daughter that she wanted to be a witch. "My mother was always saying things like that," Klein recalled later in her mother's memoir. "She always wanted to be more of a hippie earth mother than she actually was. . . . The Joan Baez fantasy ran deep. It would resurface every few years, and she would learn to play ‘Greensleeves' again."
Her parents' careers, so very Canadian, give Klein's commitment to public institutions an emotional force, beyond her sense that profit distorts certain functions, such as health care. "Both of my parents lived through a honeymoon period in the public sector," she says. "My mother and Studio D were always furious because they weren't getting the resources they thought they deserved, but from the outside perspective it was, like, Oh, my God. You were allowed to have a women's studio making films about social change within a huge public institution! And my father was able to do something similar within the health-care system, starting the birthing room at the hospital"-he admitted midwives and alternative medicine, and waged a campaign against unnecessary surgical interventions in childbirth. "It's easy to deride the idea of government in America, where people's association with the public sphere is the post office."
Naomi and her older brother, Seth, were brought up to be proud of the history of their family and of the left. "I can't tell you a time," Seth Klein says, "when I didn't simultaneously know that I really liked Disney movies and that Walt Disney was a bastard." When they drove to their cabin in Vermont on weekends, Bonnie and Michael would play tapes of a Pacifica Radio show that related American history through folk music-the story of McCarthyism through the Weavers, the civil-rights movement through the Freedom Singers. When Seth was little, he worried that all the good fights had already been fought, but Bonnie told him that she was sure he would find something that needed attending to, and from an early age he was on the lookout for what that thing might be-what fight would turn out to be his identity and his legacy. When he was in the sixth grade, his father took him to hear Helen Caldicott speak against nuclear weapons, and he decided that that was it. He started an anti-nuclear group, and after graduating he took a year off to travel around the country with the group, speaking to students.
While Seth was the good activist child, Naomi always resented being dragged to demonstrations. She found her mother's feminism repellent. "She really didn't like the way I dressed," Bonnie says. "My crowd at Studio D wore long skirts, schlumpy clothes." Naomi recalled that when she was eight or nine she spent "an entire journey through the Rockies conducting covert makeovers on everyone in the car. My father would lose the sandals and get a sharp, dignified suit, my mother a helmet hairdo and a wardrobe of smart pastel blazers, skirts and matching pumps." She fought with her parents all the time. "Since I was an impeccable liar and rarely got caught," Naomi recalled, "our fights were less about actual transgressions than about my silence, my sullenness and, as my dad was always fond of putting it, my ‘refusal to be part of this family.' "
Naomi spent her adolescence in her room writing poetry or experimenting in the bathroom with makeup. Bonnie was appalled. She worried that Naomi was turning into a brat, thinking about clothes, spending time in front of the mirror. "I think we were overly concerned about the kind of typical teen-age stuff she was into," Bonnie says. "She read Judy Blume! I was beside myself. I was a feminist-I wanted my daughter to be good at math." "They had imagined themselves to be breeding a new kind of post-revolutionary child," Naomi wrote in her twenties. "Hadn't they diligently mushed their own baby food? Read Parent Effectiveness Training? Banned war toys and other ‘gendered' play?" Bonnie says now, "I think she thought, ‘What's wrong with having a good time?' And there was something in us-although I don't like to admit it-something of the overearnest, you know? We were always fighting something. There were always people who were the bad guy." In fact, it was worse than that. Naomi suffered from a kind of spiritual claustrophobia: she had glumly concluded that any path she chose in life-conformist or rebellious, lawyer or itinerant poet-would be equally hackneyed and ridiculous. And so even her parents' idea of a good time, which usually involved getting out into nature and attending to one's bodily needs under artificially primitive conditions ("another ponchoed picnic"), was to her just more proof of their irredeemable cheesiness and the vast gulf between them and herself. "All my parents wanted was the open road and a VW camper," she wrote. "That was enough escape for them. The ocean, the night sky, some acoustic guitar. . . . "
Soon after she graduated from high school, two catastrophic events erased her animus toward her parents and their politics. First, her mother had a severe stroke that initially left her quadriplegic. Naomi quit her job and spent most of the six months that Bonnie was in the hospital at her side. Then, during her first semester at the University of Toronto, a gunman killed fourteen women at the École Polytechnique in Montreal, declaring, "I hate feminists." She decided to call herself a feminist from then on.
Klein sat on a table, inside the MTV studios, in Manhattan. She swung her legs back and forth. She was wearing a long necklace and black high-heeled mini-boots. She may have made up with her parents, but in matters of style she stands firm against activism of the old school. She wears jeans, but she is groomed as flawlessly as an anchorwoman. She giggles, she makes jokes. She smiles a lot, especially onstage, though it is never clear whether she is smiling in amusement, politeness, irritation, or for some other reason. Her demeanor is friendly but guarded.
While they were waiting for the interview to start, the interviewer, a young man in a black T-shirt, asked her what she'd been doing lately. She told him that she'd been working on the movie version of "The Shock Doctrine," which was being made by the director of "Road to Guantánamo."
"Did you see ‘Road to Guantánamo'?" she asked.
"No. I heard about it, though."
"It's excellent-it's intercut between interviews with the Tipton Three"-three young British men who were held in Guantánamo for two years-"and they're just, like, blokes, you know? The best moment in the film was when one of them suggests going to Afghanistan because they've got massive naans there. That was the reason."
The producer, a young man in jeans and an acid-lime polo shirt, appeared.
"We'll be talking about China and the Olympics, about Darfur and intervention," the interviewer said. "But also about you personally-how you became who you are-because it's a young audience that looks up to each and every person on the program. The goal is to have them want to be like that person."
"Are you going to ask me my favorite band?" she asked.
"We will, yes, I'm afraid."
"I'm going to say M.I.A., just so you know."
"That will definitely ingratiate you with the demographic," the producer said.
"I'm sucking up, that's why I'm here. D'you think I could get some tea?"
Klein has been a person whom young people look up to since she found herself in charge of emotional teach-ins right after the Montreal massacre. She spent most of her time in college on politics and journalism; she was the editor-in-chief of the university paper, the Varsity. Then, after her third year, the Globe and Mail offered her a job, and she dropped out of school to take it. At the age of twenty-three, she took over as the editor of This Magazine, the Canadian equivalent of The Nation. But after a little more than a year she started to get discouraged about the state of the left-she felt that it had run out of things to say, apart from being outraged by people it disagreed with-and she decided to go back to school.
When she arrived back at university in 1996, she discovered that everything had changed. During her previous stint as an undergraduate, she had spent all her time protesting the underrepresentation of women and minorities in the curriculum and the media; campus politics in 1989 had mostly meant identity politics. But students in 1996 weren't interested in identity; what they talked about was economics. At the time, corporations were starting to make inroads into schools: soft-drink companies were negotiating exclusive deals; advertisements were appearing in bathrooms. There was a feeling in the air that corporations were getting too powerful-more powerful than governments, but not accountable to anyone except their shareholders. And, at the same time that big corporations were withdrawing physically from the United States and opening factories overseas, visually, even spiritually, they were everywhere, insinuating their logos into what had once been public space. Young activists found this especially objectionable, perhaps because one of the places into which corporations insinuated themselves most effectively was youth and activism, folding mutiny into advertising so deftly that resistance seemed futile.
Klein dropped out of college again and started writing a book about the insidious new branding culture. She thought about how much she had loved shiny, plastic brand-name stuff when she was a kid-everyone had-and she concluded that a movement was doomed to hippies-only irrelevance if it condemned the longing and the pleasure that brands could create. "Soft drink and computer brands play the roles of deities in our culture," she wrote later. "They are creating our most powerful iconography, they are the ones building our most utopian monuments." She discovered that an anti-corporatist movement was brewing all over the world, in response to sweatshops abroad and brand encroachment at home. By 1999, she had finished "No Logo," a book about brands and the new movement they had inspired. Then, in an extraordinary stroke of publishing luck, while "No Logo" was at the printer's, enormous crowds of protesters suddenly materialized outside a meeting of the World Trade Organization in Seattle. The protest seemed to come out of nowhere-or, at least, that was how it appeared to the bewildered old left-and there was "No Logo" and Klein herself to explain it.
Klein lives with her husband, Avi Lewis, in a small house in Toronto, on a quiet street. Lewis is a host of political talk shows and a maker of documentaries; this year he is covering the U.S. elections for Al Jazeera English. Their house is very tidy, free of any sort of clutter. It is furnished simply, as though on one quick trip to Crate & Barrel. It does not look lived in, and, indeed, most of the time it is not: both Lewis and Klein are on the road so much that they estimate they have spent no more than two months in Toronto since they moved in, a year ago. Nonetheless, the house is important to her. "I come from such a line of wanderers that I wanted to stop wandering," Klein says. "In Montreal, the city I grew up in, there's no trace of us." (Klein's parents moved to British Columbia after Bonnie's stroke, because the weather made it easier to get around in a wheelchair; Bonnie has become a disability-rights activist. Seth also lives in British Columbia, working on poverty issues for a think tank.) "I don't like to go to the city I grew up in and feel like a stranger," Klein says. "This is Avi's city, he goes back generations here, and that's as close to roots as I'm going to get."
Although Klein and Lewis spend a lot of time apart, they make a point of preserving their dependence upon each other. Avi tries not to work when Naomi needs him. "He feeds her and takes care of her while she's writing," Bonnie says. "He edits things first." He accompanies her on her book tours whenever he can. In 2002, Klein and Lewis concluded that their only hope of spending a long stretch together was to do a joint project, and they decided to make a film. They were tired of being against things all the time, and they were always being asked what they would suggest as an alternative, so they started travelling, looking for something that they could feel good about. They settled on Argentina, and ended up making "The Take," a moving documentary about a group of laid-off workers who broke into their shuttered factory and started it up again as a collective. At the time, Buenos Aires was in turmoil, and every now and again a protest they were documenting would turn violent and the police would start shooting, and there was an ongoing discussion about what to do. Lewis wanted to run; Klein wanted to stay. "I was trying to dissuade the cowboys in our crew from putting themselves in danger," Lewis says. "I was, like, ‘Just be safe, guys, it's not our country, we're here at best in a capacity of solidarity, it's not the time to die.' But Naomi said, ‘Here's the principle: if something is happening and we're the only ones witnessing it, we have a responsibility to posterity.' "
Klein and Lewis agree on most political issues, but Klein seems more ready to break things; more cynical; angrier. "I think Avi is too quick to reject revolutionary movements," she says. "I think that incremental change makes sense in the Canadian context, but it doesn't necessarily make sense in the mountains of Chiapas. I don't fetishize guerrilla violence, but I think there are situations where people are justified in taking up arms. We've had fights about that." Unlike Klein, the descendant of embittered ex-Communists, Lewis comes from a distinguished political family that has always been Socialist rather than Communist, and so has kept its political faith. "My earliest memories are of conventions and election nights, seeing grownups crying or celebrating," Lewis says. "We understood in my family that we were part of a cause, a movement, and the Party, capitalized, was a big part of that."
The politics of the Lewis family have changed very little in the past hundred years. Avi Lewis's great-grandfather Maishe Losz was the leader of the Jewish Labor Bund, a secular Socialist party, in his small town just east of Bialystok. The Bund was anti-Bolshevik; it believed that revolution should be achieved through democratic processes, even if that meant compromise. Thus, the Bundist maxim: "It is better to go along with the masses in a not totally correct direction than to separate oneself from them and remain a purist." In 1921, fearing that he would be killed by the Red Army, Losz fled to Canada. Losz's son David Lewis became the national leader of the Canadian democratic socialist party, the New Democratic Party. The N.D.P. never formed a national government, but it came to power in the provinces: in Canada, socialism was mainstream. David Lewis persuaded the Party to delete the eradication of capitalism from its manifesto, and he crushed movement dogmatism and indiscipline. ("When in heaven's name are we going to learn that working-class politics and the struggle for power are not a Sunday-school class?" he asked.) David's son Stephen, Avi's father, also followed in the family tradition, and was elected the leader of the N.D.P. in Ontario at the age of thirty-two. (Avi's mother, Michele Landsberg, is a journalist, who is well known in Canada for her feminism and her pugnacious left-wing politics-in her columns, conservatives are always "jack-booted" or "henchmen.") When, in the late sixties, a faction called "the Waffle" threatened to splinter the Party, Stephen Lewis crushed it, just as his father had crushed factions before. For Stephen and for David, loyalty to the Party was paramount. They would not permit the left to destroy itself.
Stephen Lewis left office thirty years ago, and David Lewis died in 1981, but the Lewises are still well known and beloved in Canada. "I live in that fantasy world in which you should say what you believe in and shouldn't retreat because the electorate may not be receptive," Stephen Lewis says. "That may explain why my own leadership was one of remarkable futility, almost legendary futility." Recently, Lewis spent five years as the United Nations special envoy for H.I.V. /AIDS in Africa, but his respite from campaigning has not made him quieter. "I'm more fundamentalist now," he says. "I have no patience for capitalism at all. I see now that there is almost nothing that is positive in this ugly international system, and that's why I embrace Naomi's view of the way the world works. I'm actually tired of my rhetorical outbursts-I'd like to engage in physical aggression."
"I think there is, for my parents' generation, a sense of defeat," Avi Lewis says. "They grew up in a postwar period when it seemed like the world was changeable-a welfare state had been built and had to be protected and extended. But their adult lives have encompassed a long deterioration of the standard of living for the majority of people on this continent, and as they've seen the gains of the sixties and seventies largely erased, they've started to feel more and more hopeless. Whereas Naomi and I grew up in a time when the backlash was already well under way, so we may be just as pessimistic, but we don't feel defeated, because we never had the luxury of hope."
These days, Avi Lewis looks very much like the product of his family, but this was not always so. "I rebelled furiously, but without rebelling in the most hurtful way, which would have been to rebel politically," he says. "I was a host on MuchMusic, which is our MTV. I knew that I wasn't doing politics the way I was brought up to, and I was conflicted about that. My parents would ask me, ‘Are you sure you know what you're doing? I know you love music, and it's cool for you to hang out with Bowie, and you sometimes get to do a one-hour special on music and politics in South Africa, which is sort of political, but are you sure you're doing the most you can?' I was alienated from my own political inheritance. I had a tradition to fit into. I had a platform from the time I was four or five years old." It was at this point that Lewis met Klein. They were both covering the Canadian elections in 1993-he for MuchMusic, she for CBC. When Lewis met Klein, he felt that she was freer of her family than he was of his, and this somehow relieved him of the urge to run away. "I always got the feeling that Naomi was the author of her own politics," Lewis says. "And when I got close to her I started seizing the reins of my own political development."
To Klein's and Lewis's parents, it seems that the only difference between their children and their families is style. "I remember Stephen's father debating William F. Buckley when I was an undergraduate," Michele Landsberg says. "The place was packed to the rafters, and we went mad with joy when David trounced that snakelike William Buckley. Remembering David's rhetoric, a lot of it was sentimental and heartfelt old Socialist lingo, talking about the poor working man in his tattered raincoat. Naomi would use more irony, because we've gotten past our romanticism about how we change the world." But their parents never doubted what ought to be done to make the world better; Lewis and Klein are not so sure. "Naomi takes the responsibility of young people listening to her and looking up to her really, really seriously," Lewis says. "Which is precisely why she refuses to say, ‘Here's the alternative, here's what we all have to line up and fight for.' Suspicion of people who know what the answer is-that's very characteristic of our generation, and that's one of the reasons I've never gone into politics. It's very difficult for both of us when people look to us for the kind of certainty that earlier generations had." One of the few political leaders whom Klein really likes is Subcommandant Marcos, the head of the Zapatistas, in Mexico, who makes a fetish of his elusiveness and doubt.
In "No Logo," Klein celebrated the anarchic formlessness of the anti-corporate protests-what she wryly termed "laissez-faire organizing." Her generation of activists was "challenging systems of centralized power on principle, as critical of left-wing, one-size-fits-all state solutions as of right-wing market ones," she wrote. "It is often said disparagingly that this movement lacks ideology, an overarching message, a master plan. This is absolutely true, and we should be extraordinarily thankful." These days, the movement long gone, she is not so sanguine about it. "What I was responding to at the time was people on the left who I thought were opportunistically trying to impose their solutions," she says. "I was hoping that more of an articulation would emerge in a grass-roots way, but it's not happening-I think because the entire discussion was severed on September 11th. The mainstream N.G.O.s became frightened of being associated with people who seemed quasi-terrorist, and then we started talking about war." Lewis has never been as enamored as Klein of the movement's lack of discipline, and she admits now that he may have been right. "Seeing how easy it was for everything to evaporate, without institutions taking that energy and nailing it down-we were too ephemeral," she says. "It was that experience that made me feel like we need to be more tangible, whether it's political parties or putting it in writing."
In the end, despite all his suspicion of leaders and certainty, Lewis loves and honors his family tradition. The N.D.P. regularly approaches him about running for office (as it does Klein), and he thinks seriously about doing so (she does not). During the recent election campaign in Canada, Klein advocated strategic voting-voting for either the Liberals or the N.D.P., depending on which had a better chance of winning in a particular district, to promote the greater goal of unseating the Tories. "I don't believe enough in the N.D.P. to really care," she says. Avi tried to talk her out of it, while her father-in-law was appalled. "I don't have one minute's use for strategic voting," Stephen Lewis says. "I just believe in the most intransigent of ways that you vote for your convictions." But Klein doesn't have much use for political parties. When she is asked about this, she explains that she has seen liberation movements betrayed by the politicians they fought to get elected, but her impatience appears to be rooted in something more than that: she seems to dislike parties and, indeed, governments, in a visceral way, almost the way that Milton Friedman does. In principle, she is a Keynesian, but she distrusts centralization, institutions, platforms, theories-anything except extremely small, local, ad-hoc, spontaneous initiatives. Basically, she really, really doesn't like being told what to do.
It is clear, in "The Shock Doctrine," just how deeply she disdains the political. She tends to conflate very different right-wing groups-neoconservatives, crony capitalists, libertarians. (In the end, "The Shock Doctrine" is not so much anti-Friedman as anti-corporate.) And in hunting down instances in which ideology has been used as a cover for enriching cronies and corporations, she slides into the position that politics is always and everywhere about enrichment. Her great strength-following the money; never taking ideology at face value but always questioning who benefits from it; helping to pull the left back to the economic analysis that it forgot during the era of "the personal is political"-is also a weakness. Her materialism is such that she sometimes seems scarcely to believe that politics exists at all. At one point, for instance, she argues that the Israeli élite lost interest in peace in large part because Israeli companies were doing a booming business in security technology, which benefits from war. She argues that the Chinese Communist Party cracked down on protesters in Tiananmen Square not in order to protect its power but in order to protect Deng Xiaoping's economic-liberalization program (of which breach of orthodoxy, in fact, many in the Party were quite suspicious-a suspicion only reinforced by the pro-Western protests).
"I'm not a utopian thinker," Klein says. "I don't imagine my ideal society. I don't really like to read those books, either. I'm just much more comfortable talking about things that are." The only time she has ever felt a whiff of utopia was in Buenos Aires, in 2002, when the political system had virtually disintegrated-during the time that she and Lewis were filming "The Take." "That moment in Argentina was an incredible time because a vacuum opened up," she says. "They had thrown out four Presidents in two weeks, and they had no idea what to do. Every institution was in crisis. The politicians were hiding in their homes. When they came out, housewives attacked them with brooms. And, walking around Buenos Aires at night, there were meetings on every other street corner. Every plaza where there was a streetlight, people were meeting under it and talking about what to do about the external debt, I swear to God. Groups of one hundred or five hundred people. And organizing buying groceries together because they could get cheaper prices, setting up barters because the currency was worthless. It was the most inspiring thing I've ever seen."
Klein believes that change comes about only when social movements become so large and disruptive that politicians can no longer ignore them. This is another of her ongoing arguments with her in-laws: whether social movements can really change things. Stephen Lewis is as susceptible to their allure as the next new leftist-he drove down to Little Rock in 1957, when Orval Faubus called out the militia, to witness the civil-rights movement firsthand-but in the end he remains a politician. "Naomi's and Avi's profound skepticism is not a skepticism I share, even though they have far more evidence than I do," he says. "There was a period when people like Avi and Naomi actually thought that the social movements could sort of take over. But you may have a green movement which has influence on carbon tax, you may have a campaign for nuclear disarmament which lowers the temperature over the arms race, but you never have an over-all gestalt which can do everything from day care to foreign aid and see it as part of an over-all pattern to change the world. That has to come through politics."
Both Klein and Lewis are skeptical about Barack Obama. "I've been at rallies and seen him speak, and I feel that feeling that one feels," Lewis says. "It is thrilling. And it's churlish not to allow yourself to be thrilled. We crave inspiration, and it's a bleak life to always be dissecting things. But the main feeling that Obama creates in me is fear, because I see people fooling themselves. If you actually look at his policies, what they reflect is the triumph of the right-wing political paradigm since Reagan, and I think he could set things back dramatically, because for young people who are getting engaged in politics for the first time, for them to be disillusioned is very, very damaging." Because Klein doesn't expect much from any politician, she doesn't spend time wishing Obama were more progressive. "I don't want to appear too cynical, but when I first saw the ‘Yes We Can' rock video that Will.I.Am made, my first response was ‘Wow, finally a politician is making ads that are as good as Nike's,' " she says. "The ‘Yes We Can' slogan means whatever you want it to mean. It's very ‘Just Do It.' When you hear it, you catch yourself thinking, Yeah! We're gonna end torture and shut down Guantánamo and get out of Iraq! And then you think, Wait a minute, is he really saying that? He's not really saying that, is he? He's saying we're going to send more troops to Afghanistan. He's telling regular people what they want to hear, and then in the back rooms he's making deals and signing on to the status quo. But if people don't like where Obama is they should move the center." To this end, Klein has been taking every opportunity to call for the nationalization of the oil companies. "It's the job of the left to move the center," she says. "Get out there and say some crazy stuff! And then, suddenly, it'll seem more reasonable for politicians to take riskier positions."
For someone who places so much weight on social movements, though, Klein can get dyspeptic when she finds herself in the middle of one. Activists are so earnest, so dedicated, so-like her parents. "Marches depress me," she says. "Going for a walk and chanting-I get nothing out of it." When she began participating in the anti-globalization movement, she understood that protests outside trade summits were the main way that the movement was making itself heard, but they still seemed a little comical to her. "Is this really what we want?" she wrote in a column in the summer of 2000. "A movement of meeting stalkers, following the trade bureaucrats as if they were the Grateful Dead?" The World Social Forum in Brazil ought to have been a place where she felt at home, but there was too much chanting, and José Bové went around with bodyguards to protect him from the paparazzi, and the activists kept accusing one another of racism and classism, and the cultural interludes were hard to take. "A line of dancers appeared on stage, heads bowed in shame, feet shuffling," she wrote, describing one. "[Then] the people on stage began to run, brandishing the tools of their empowerment: hammers, saws, bricks, axes, books, pens, computer keyboards, raised fists. In the final scene, a pregnant woman planted seeds-seeds, we were told, of another world."
The only kind of protest she likes is the Yippie kind, theatrical enough to be entertaining and self-mocking enough to dilute the earnestness to a level that she can tolerate. At the protests in Quebec City during the Summit of the Americas in 2001, for example-when the officials surrounded themselves with a tall protective fence, a group of activists built a medieval-style wood catapult and lobbed Teddy bears over the top. "Quebec City was just madness," she says. "It was one of those times when nobody knows what's going to happen, and there are these breakthrough moments, these liberated moments, these moments of euphoria. It was mostly young people, and they were getting gassed, but they were still enjoying themselves tremendously, playing cat and mouse with the police. What I loved about it was that the whole city joined in-people working in cafés on the main streets, and neighbors got buckets of water to wash out people's eyes. It was like an alternative reality."
After the death of Milton Friedman, in 2006, the University of Chicago decided to set up an institute in his honor. The institute was opposed by many professors, who formed a group to protest it. Klein offered to debate someone from the institute's board, but nobody would do it, so she agreed to go to Chicago and talk about her own objections to the project.
The evening was sponsored in part by the Platypus Affiliated Society-a student-teacher reading group that focusses on the Frankfurt School and the Second International period of Marxism-and a few of Platypus's members, tall, thin, pale young men, had set up a table out front. Platypus was founded on the idea that the left didn't have a proper sense of its own history, especially the bad bits, and that a study of that history would help it emerge from the troubled state in which it found itself. ("Protest has devolved into an insular subculture of self-hatred, frustration, and anxiety derived from a pathological attitude towards social integration," a typically morose editorial in the Platypus Review declares.) Given its emphasis on self-criticism, Platypus was not a natural constituency for Klein's work, but because she was coming to the campus the group read "The Shock Doctrine," and also Hayek and Friedman. "The conservatives engage the questions of freedom and utopia directly," Ian Morrison, the editor of Platypus's newsletter, said. "We were very struck that Klein seemed to back away from utopianism, because we feel that the left has liquidated itself in part because it's conceded talk about freedom to someone like Bush." Platypus's interrogation of the past has led it in a variety of directions. Several of its members also belonged to the new Students for a Democratic Society, a revival of the new-left group from the sixties. In August, Platypus participated in a historical reënactment, in Grant Park, of the 1968 Democratic Convention, minus the police. "As a group of young, largely inexperienced activists it was the only organizing framework we could find which emphasized active participation," read a writeup of the event in the Platypus Review. "Other forms seemed linguistically and ideologically flaccid. . . . We didn't want to view our history-our radical history-as if from a riverbank, we wanted to jump in and splash around in it. . . . We debated, for instance, the ethics of nominating a live pig for the presidency: what should we feed it, and where would it stay?"
The Platypus men filed into the front row of Assembly Hall, and Klein stood at the lectern. There was a good crowd, not just people from the campus. Three anarchists had driven up from St. Louis specially to see her. "What we have been living since Reagan is a policy of liberating the forces of greed," she declared. "I don't think the project has actually been the development of the world and the elimination of poverty. I think this has been a class war waged by the rich against the poor, I think that they won, and I think the poor are fighting back."
Klein never tempers her arguments in search of converts from the center; she rallies her base. She's not interested in making the left part of the mainstream; she wants to convince the left that it doesn't need the mainstream. "Part of what makes us less strong than we should be," she says, "those of us who don't believe that profit should govern every aspect of our lives, is that part of us accepts the narrative that neoliberal ideas have triumphed around the world because they were popular and our ideas failed." For this reason, it is important to her, in "The Shock Doctrine," that there be virtually no exceptions-that is, instances where radical market reforms are enacted with the consent of a people. (In passing, she concedes Reagan and Sarkozy.) But some of her examples are less plausible than others. She argues that the Falklands War-a ten-week venture whose main impact on Britain was an outpouring of jingoistic glee-was "a large enough political crisis," creating sufficient "disorder" to enable Margaret Thatcher to "impose" her economic agenda. (It is true that, without the glee, Thatcher might not have won the next election, but ill-gotten popularity and traumatized regression are not the same thing.) Klein dismisses as a "propaganda exercise" a referendum held by Boris Yeltsin in which a majority of voters supported his reforms, on the odd ground that it was nonbinding. She maintains that the war in Chechnya was waged not in order to crush secessionism but in order to protect Yeltsin's economic policy. Thus, she concludes, it "contributed significantly to the Chicago School crusade death toll." "Naomi is a pattern recognizer," Lewis says. "Some people feel that she's bent examples to fit the thesis. But her great strength is helping people recognize patterns in the world, because that's the fundamental first step toward changing things."
Throughout "The Shock Doctrine," Klein is at pains to portray Friedman as a quasi-Satanic figure. The first chapter of the book describes the horrifying psychiatric experiments performed in the nineteen-fifties by one Donald Ewen Cameron, in which subjects were tortured by electroshock. She characterizes this work as a metaphor for the economic shocks performed in Friedman's name; the next chapter, about Friedman, is titled "The Other Doctor Shock." The promotional film that Klein made with Alfonso Cuarón is even cruder-a pastiche of disturbing footage of patients receiving electroshock treatment, images of prisoners being tortured, and the sound of a child wailing in an echoey room. "Unable to advance their agenda democratically, Friedman and his disciples were drawn to the power of shock," Klein says in the voice-over, in the calmly terrorizing tone of a campaign attack ad. "Friedman understood that, just as prisoners are softened up for interrogation by the shock of their capture, massive disasters could serve to soften us up for his radical free-market crusade."
Why does Klein place such emphasis on Friedman? Perhaps because she wants to draw a parallel between capitalism and Communism, to make their two histories look as similar as possible, and for that she needs not the messy, pragmatic, ad-hoc capitalism of corporations but the purist, utopian capitalism of the Chicago School. Violent autocrats of the free-market persuasion, though there have been many, have not soiled Friedman's name in the way that Stalin soiled Marx; somehow, the misdeeds of a Pinochet or a Suharto or a Yeltsin are attributed to these men as individuals-to their lust for power, their greed, their drinking. But Klein holds capitalism guilty of all their sins. Friedman's followers must no longer get away with shaking their heads when their advisees start killing people, she believes. They should feel themselves dupes, fellow-travellers, accessories: they should acknowledge their willed ignorance and complicity, as her grandparents and the Communists of their generation were forced to do.
"My grandparents were pretty hard-core Marxists, and in the thirties and forties they believed fervently in the dream of egalitarianism that the Soviet Union represented," Klein told the audience in Chicago. "They had their illusions shattered by the reality of gulags, of extreme repression, hypocrisy, Stalin's pact with Hitler. . . . The left has been held accountable for the crimes committed in the name of its extreme ideologies, and I believe that's been a very healthy process. . . . When you start issuing policy prescriptions, when you start advising heads of state, you no longer have the luxury of only being judged on how you think your ideas will affect the world. You begin having to contend with how they actually affect the world, even when that reality contradicts all of your utopian theories."
The day after the Chicago event, Klein taped an appearance on "The Colbert Report," then went directly to the airport for a flight to France. She came back and went on a speaking tour to Texas, Colorado, California, and Wisconsin, did two panels in New York, and then later flew to Chicago for its humanities festival and to Miami for the book fair. She spent a week in Poland. Everywhere she went, she stuck to her theme. "The crash on Wall Street should be for Friedmanism what the fall of the Berlin Wall was for authoritarian Communism, an indictment of an ideology," she says. It was clear to her that the past month had proved what she'd been saying for years. Now, if she could only speak often enough, to enough people, and explain things persuasively enough, maybe the left would stop wringing its hands and the right would start apologizing. It seemed unlikely, but she would try all the same.
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67 Comments so far
Show AllI agree with Klein that free market utopia is just as illusory as socialist utopia. But perhaps not for the same reasons.
In my opinion Klein does not do enough justice to two elements:
1) If most individuals are basically corrupt there will be little economic justice no matter how you structure it.
2) The rapid emergence of artificial intelligence, nanotechnology, robotics and genetic engineering will soon make us all obsolete no matter what kind of economic system we choose to implement. In the end Her Highness Technology will rule over all. Check out www.sillyConValley.net for more on that one.
Transcript of new Naomi Klein interview:
Naomi Klein: "What I think we are seeing is a clear example of the shock doctrine in the way the Harper government has used the economic crisis to push through a much more radical agenda than they won a mandate to do. At the same time we are seeing an example of what I call in the book a "shock resistance," where this tactic has been so overused around the world and also in Canada that we are becoming more resistant to the tactic - we are on to them - and Harper is not getting away with it."
http://rabble.ca/news/naomi-klein-%E2%80%98we-cant-lose-moment
I'm not going to fawn over her because of her looks like some. Intellectually Naomi is more appealing than most women in my area but she still leaves something to be desired. I find her presence commercial.
The more I learn about Naomi Klein the less impressed I become. What I've read of her book teaches me little and provides no real insight. Almost everything she writes or says I had thought about twenty years ago or more. Her disaster capitalism is nothing more than fascism or cruel tyranny. It's nothing new. The modern parasites that promote the word capitalism have been around for time immemorial. She could make comparisons between the modern parasites and the roman empire. What was it 1400+ years later that Adam Smith was born? Has she even read Wealth of Nations? I've tried. It is dry and boring but I will get it done eventually.
I am almost the same age as Naomi and grew up in a middle class family in the south. My parents voted for Nixon and were afraid of Kennedy. I didn't grow up in an atmosphere that was critical of "capitalism" or as learned of other forms of economics such as hers. Even as a teenager I knew what this country called capitalism was fascism or oligarchy. What took Naomi so long to realize the rot of it all? I'm disappointed in her tardiness.
It looks like all she wants and has ever wanted is to rebel against something. Anything. So now she rebels against corporations yet profits from it while most other "heretics" suffer for it. I was like that as a teenager but I never rebelled against the Bill of Rights or the idea of promoting the general welfare through good governance. I'm starting to think she has something in common with Palin. Obtaining large numbers of people's attention is too important to her.
Is Naomi a disaster capitalist? She's capitalizing on the misery of the masses by selling us retreads of muckraking that's been around for years. Capitalist pig! I find nothing special about any of it.
I am glad she doesn't suck up to right wing propaganda but she comes off to me as mainly an opportunist.
This is the WORST article I have ever read in CD! I could care less about her family and where she came from. What I would have liked to read is more about her theory and about how true it is when compared to what has happened in the world since the 70's. Her theory is totally believable and is the most important thing about her. I have been a peace and justice activist since the 60's and when I read her book I felt like I had finally found someone who believed the same way about the world. I don't think it is any surprise to women that a feminist figured this out. We women have known in our hearts for many decades what was going on with the elite running the world! The down-trodden know these truths in their daily lives...but it took a woman writer to express it! Naomi Klein finally put it into words for us. Most men will never understand...as evidenced by this posting!
God Bless Maggie Thatcher and Condaleeza Rice, proof positive that women in power will overturn oppression. Yeah right. And it is Klein's LACK of theory that stands out most. I almost tossed my cookies when she came out on the Colbert Report in defense of capitalism, the good capitalism, not corporate capitalism. Her inane leftism represents a huge step backward for working class struggle.
Precisely!
Be pro active, you who are "tired of being against things all the time." Again, It's ours to lose. So I support those against negativism. But I understand, if you lose all the time for decades, you get negative.
Peace activists here (Iowa) were challenged in 2003 to state what they would propose on foreign policy against dictators and terrorists, and many confessed they didn't know. Likewise, people always ask Chomsky what to do as activists. They don't know.
Then again many groups don't offer much on how to win against entrenched power. They just want to "demonstrate," and don't seem to win. I put the links in the comment below by iowablackbird in that category.
It's time to admit mistakes and, what's the word? "Change!"
So, on the postive, pro-active side: What would peace do? My short answer in 2003 was to follow the MAP diagram on page 48 of Roger Fisher's book, International Conflict for Beginners. The chapter with the MAP can be found as pdf here: http://www dot pon dot harvard dot edu/hnp/writing/books/international3 dot pdf. There are more eye helpers at http://www dot pon dot harvard dot edu/hnp/theory/tools/tools dot shtml. The MAP is also how to move way beyond "demonstrating" to winning. (In 2003 I wasn't aware of Fisher's (et al) new books on these matters, Beyond Machiavelli and Coping with International Conflict.)
We can do this. There's an African American coming to the White House. Anything is possible. (Though his votes have been no different than others) change is in the air. Come on folks. Do your homework. Build the skills. Read Shel Trapp's online booklets (organizing, it's a group thing). It's not that hard.
In the end, winning itself is what builds momentum and the end to negativism, fatalism, and chasing windmills. (Organize!)
Brad Wilson:could you make it easier on us new-to-tech older folks with a url for hte Shel Trapp's online booklets? Otherwise, I'll just google the name.
A little psy-ops here
I think if my buddy Phil Ochs and our band of Yippie friends were still alive I could convince them that to throw off the chains of identity politics, the most radical fun loving among us should start a movement calling ourselves the "the Right" we are the "New Right!"
Why, because words not only matter, words and labels (identity politics) control the media and our own opinions, fears, needs and hopes.
The majority 90 percent of the world are right handed and the demonizing of the needs of the Masses to brand us as "left" which is defined in the dictionary as "Evil and weak" is... well, stupid and self defeating if we don't confront that once and for all.
Think about it ...because, I am right! are you? or are you a slave to failed identity politics.
PS. Just to show how we are controlled by labels, my spell checker here does not recognize the word "Yippie".
I am rightly pissed....are you?
Jim Glover:I'm a little older than the Yippees. I like a mix of humor, street theater and some of the good old fashioned organizing techniques and art as a tool.
I don't see "identity politics" as it was defined and "blamed" for all kinds of things. I view it as someone who participated in the self-help movement, women artists (still largely excluded), disabled and an activist for disability rights, which I discover via this article, with Naomi Klein's mother;different disabling illness(since I became disabled by disabling illness) and also watched some good old-fashioned organizing in the 1960s.
I like identifying myself by various overlapping groups that I am in (including having started left handed, but switched to right hand as a baby by parental force to make my life "easier"=ambidextrous, except for writing) because it makes comments clearer when one says in appropriate circumstances where one "is coming from", such as you did in your comment. I don't feel "controlled" by labels.
What do you think? Give examples.
I also see identity as a basis for some organizing: such as ADAPT www.adapt.org a national group of activists who are disabled and very activist: got arrested in DC for sitting in Sept.2008 and asking McCain's office staff, the question: will McCain support medicaid funding be used for disabled housing (since many are in nursing homes due to lack of wheelchair accessible housing, in addition to the other reasons).
"She was dressed for a fox hunt."
Hmmmm, now that doesn't sound very progressive does it?
This was the best Common Dreams could do to bring us current news
of Naomi Klein --??????????????
Larissa's piece is questionable and really doesn't show us the
everyday, everywhere umderstanding growning of capitalism's fascist
aims over our government --
Yes -- NATIONALIZE our nation's oil resouces -- and start building
ELECTRIC CARS. What's so radical about that--???
California had thousands of beautiful, high performing cars on their
roads on the late 19990's/2000 until they were crushed by GM --
every last one of them--!!!
See: "Who Killed The Electric Car" movie probably at your library
Move the center --!!
"According to all myth, the female - not the male -- gives life"
I was listening to NPR the other day and they were talking about the evolution to electric cars, and I was getting so frustrated and fed up that they completely ignored the fact that electric cars had already been in use until the suspicious recall/destruction. Tom Hanks had one of those electric cars, and he could not understand why in god's name he was forced to give it back. Imagine the innovation that could have been accomplished by now if the technology hadn't been delayed (for profitable purposes no doubt). I puked in my mouth when I found out GM now wants a bailout. They would have revolutionized cars back then, but they stalled it, and now they want a bailout. Unbelievable.
If you haven't seen "Who Killed the Electric Car" you really should.
Thanks for this, but oh ah shucks, is it lightweight! What is happening to the New Yorker! I hope she(ms. Klein) will introduce her fans to Herbert Marcuse. But then a "Pop" journalist might have to become reflective, analytical and too difficult for english speakers to read. I am afraid the New Yorker , (under Conde'nast ownership) will do a Time Magazine, morph into its' offspring People Magazine. The New Yorker is more and more a Vanity fair, or Vogue..
grateful to the new yorker and common dreams for providing a biographical sketch of an intriguing intellectual who has espoused a reasonable critique, crisis provides opportunities for elites to capitalize on the suffering and fear of the masses.
however, the tendency to 'hero worship' is as prevalent on the left as it is on the right. systemic change in this world will transpire when the unnamed masses of this world understand the core ideas behind marxist/anarchist thought. it's important to foster the conversation (as klein, zinn, chomsky and many of the writers who contribute to CD do daily) but fostering the conversation is like blowing on a spark hoping the tinder catches fire, praying a stronger wind doesn't blow away all of your efforts as you huddle over the fire pit. ideas in and of themselves are not change.
change occurs when real 'outside agitators' connect w/ the masses (the 9.5 out of 10 people who don't proscribe to revolutionary thoughts) , converting esoteric (by traditional standards) ideas into reality, praxis - direct action. not exclusively writing/scribbling about how the demonstrations emerge from the conditions - rather finding the masses and convincing them to act.
the real outside agitators are the organizers like the participants of recreate 68, the rnc welcoming committee, the direct action network, and the organizers that Larissa MacFarquhar describes throughout her expose of ms klein. what a fascinating person.
organizers that create the awareness by generating mass participation (not necessarily dinner after a night at the theater in london or on holiday in argentina to document the tragedy). i appreciate naomi klien's efforts, insight (books-book tour) and i agree w/ her critique/commentary; but, it's the masses in this country that need to be activated daily, the ideas are tools (not necessarily the authors or their publishers).
how will this transformation happen? through the cult of personality?....
"They visit her Web site and subscribe to her newsletter and send her passionate fan mail. She has become an icon's icon: Radiohead and Laurie Anderson promote her books to their fans; John Cusack's comedy "War, Inc." was inspired by her reporting from Baghdad. The Mexican film director Alfonso Cuarón felt so strongly about "The Shock Doctrine" that he made a short promotional film about it for free"
i appreciate the fact voices on the left can idolize (klien) and publish (sy hersch) in the new yorker.the conceptual ideas of the left/academia are accepted amongst the educated bourgeois,they understand the ideas, like a spectator watching a tennis match understands the rules. the magical moments occur when the rules are broken (for example, the russian peoples response to a dysfunstional state in 1991).
there were a few quotes that bugged me...
"Then, in an extraordinary stroke of publishing luck, while "No Logo" was at the printer's, enormous crowds of protesters suddenly materialized outside a meeting of the World Trade Organization in Seattle. The protest seemed to come out of nowhere-or, at least, that was how it appeared to the bewildered old left-and there was "No Logo" and Klein herself to explain it."
"I'm not a utopian thinker," Klein says. "I don't imagine my ideal society. I don't really like to read those books, either. I'm just much more comfortable talking about things that are."
i wish the new yorker would have published an 'objective' 7 page expose/bios on the organizers of the rnc welcoming committee or any other collective that is organizing mass resistance - today. their tactics/approaches are 'ideas' we can ponder and use, how do we respond? what jolt throws the economic elite out of the equation?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_Action_Network
http://www.recreate68.com/media_communique_2.pdf
http://www.nornc.org/
http://www.myspace.com/rnc2008welcomingcommittee
...peace...
Outside agitators bringing consciousness to the masses doesn't sound like Marx or anarchism to me. It sounds like old fashioned vanguardism.
From
http://libcom.org/library/renegade-kautsky-disciple-lenin-dauve
However Leninism continues to haunt the minds of many revolutionaries of more or less good will who are searching for a recipe capable of success. Persuaded that they are "of the vanguard" because they possess "consciousness", whereas they only possess a false theory, they struggle militantly for a union of those two metaphysical monstrosities, "a spontaneous working class movement, bereft of any theory" and a disembodied "socialist consciousness."
Naomi worries the Utopian dreams died in the 30s of the last century - long past time we found them again - on Green Island
William Kristrol's father Irving Kristol is a distance relative of Larissa’ mother. Perhaps this is the reason that her facts are gathered and presented to us without insight or understanding of Friedman’s master cock-up.
Smug neo-con?
WARNING: does not contain any discussion of religion or atheism.
Why is CD publishing the New Yorker writer Larissa MacFarquhar???
She has published a smear piece on Chomsky("The Devils Accountant"). For this reason alone she should not be on this website. Check out the summary and read the whole thing if you want:
http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-22879334_ITM
Shame on Common Dreams.
"For this reason alone she should not be on this website. "?
Announcing someone's background is useful information. I truly appreciated the lowdown and link.But I don't need you or anyone else telling an information provider who or what not to tell me in the future.
Remember, '1984' and it's appendix was about British Socialism. And now, just to spite you, I'm going to program Pandora to play a ABBA set while I peruse CD in peace.
Just read the Chomsky piece.
RE: "Chomsky said. "Another one they loved was General Suharto. His record easily compares with Saddam Hussein's. ..."
When Suharto was in BC for the APEC summit in 1997, he asked if his guards could shoot protestors. Presumably one of the reason for the crackdown on protesters which resulted in huge rights violations was a fear that if they (Canada) did not control its citizens, Suharto's men might.
RE: "Chomsky always refuses to talk about motives in politics." / "Chomsky's refusal to consider motives in politics ..."
I think that Mark Emery would like some of what Larissa MacFarquhar was smoking when she wrote that! What she calls "motives", I would call "rationalizations" or "excuses" - I think that there was a saying that Chomsky and others adhere to about starting off with the ends justifying the means and then the presumed ends disappearing altogether - that one can always find a "reason" to commit an atrocity. You do see Chomsky's thinking there, though have to ignore MacFarquhar's misinterpretation of it.
Naom Chomsky on The Hour
http://www.cbc.ca/thehour/videos.html?id=722864181
Naomi Klein on The Hour
http://www.cbc.ca/thehour/videos.html?id=739017527
Note that George Stroumboulopoulos used to work with Avi Lewis and was the reason that Tommy Douglas was declared "The Greatest Canadian."
Because, no one beat Larissa MacFarquhar to the punch and there is an interest to know more about Naomi Klein. I would have preferred someone else with a better understanding of the Canadian situation for the Lewis portion of the article. MacFarquhar may have a better understand of the situation in the US that Klein's parents grew up in and left than what would have been given by a Canadian writing this article, I don't know.
Will read the Chomsky piece.
Naomi Klein is for reforming capitalism. Need I say more? She sees the state capitalism of the so called communist countries as "state communism." It seems that a single pass at Capital might clear up some of her weird ideas. Might she find time between her speaking tours and her CNN and smoothie binges to hunker down with some literature that elaborates a critique of capitalism? In the meantime she excells as a leftist celebrity.
For revolution and a classless society,
Elegant Frilly Powder Blue Panties (not my real name)
Are you a Senator from a state in the SW? (Lynn Samuels, talk show radio, in the last decade, joked that a certain Senator looked like he wore women's undies beneath his clothes. It's a comment that sticks in memory.)
RE: "Avi tried to talk her out of it, while her father-in-law was appalled."
That is an understatement! Holding the balance of power or being part of a coalition, the Lewis family would not even blink at, but the phrase "strategic voting" would be worse that the worse swear and the word "traitor" would not a be strong enough term to describe the person who uttered it. I would not have liked to be Avi caught in the middle like that. I can understand Naomi Klein's hatred of Harper and trying to get him out at all cost but she just spoke what would be in the Lewis family unspeakable!
I have to disagree with Larissa MacFarquhar on her assessment of Shock Doctrine, though, in that the views expressed are very consistent with NDP doctrine - especially in its focus on human rights.
Stephen Lewis (the father-in-law) is a little bit shell shocked due to the time he has spent in Africa - so it is not just disillusionment with the loss of gains. On The Hour, SL sited one instance where those who voted for the loser in a recent election went out and raped women who voted for the winner as punishment:
http://www.cbc.ca/thehour/videos.html?id=941229931
Contrary to what MacFarquhar wrote, Stephen Lewis entered politics before his father David did - even though David was always politically active. That Naomi Klein and her future mother-in-law wrote for the Globe and Mail at the same time and that Michele Landsburg was covering Stephen Lewis for her paper when the scope she had to phone into the paper was that Lewis had proposed to her. That when Avi was on Much Music, he covered politics for them. Oh, and the Avi Lewis show, which MacFarquhar fails to mention is "Inside USA" - and all the episodes are on You Tube - where Avi seems to be able to find people stating various aspects of the shock doctrine.
RE: "... and I think he could set things back dramatically, because for young people who are getting engaged in politics for the first time, for them to be disillusioned is very, very damaging."
That is a very real worry about raising expectations too high and seeing them dashed (or not met completely enough). I think that Naomi Klein is right in her previous articles that there are all sorts of people trying to influence Obama and that he has been fairly noncomital about things. That said, Obama was still a better choice. I think Avi may be indicating that he sees Naomi as having been damaged in that way.
Wow, New Yorker, this profile is Vanity Fair-worthy! Naomi Klein, despite being young enough to be my daughter, has long been one of my heroines, and precisely for her "recognizing patterns" capability (and good looks).
USAN probably didn't mean anything negative about Naomi Klein, but he would have done a bit better not to make any reference to Barbara Streisand or "red diaper baby" anything. The reference to her looking good is something that others have mentioned and surely meant nothing negative about it. Since when can't Jewish women be good looking and bright?
Add to that he probably was using hyperbole on the reference to "red diaper baby," but it is in the Jewish tradition to be sensitive to those less fortunate, and that is what classic anything is all about. USAN didn't say this woman is stereotypical.
AD
"But if people don't like where Obama is they should move the center." To this end, Klein has been taking every opportunity to call for the nationalization of the oil companies. "It's the job of the left to move the center," she says. "Get out there and say some crazy stuff! And then, suddenly, it'll seem more reasonable for politicians to take riskier positions."
Yes! What I have been saying for a while. Don't look to the pols to move anything, it is clearly up to US to move them in the direction we want to go. Is that not democracy?
What the hell are we waiting for?! We must let go of our paralyzing cynicism long enough to DO SOMETHING! Whether you believe you can or you can't, you will be right - so, you may as well believe that you can. The little things matter, folks. They really do.
"All Nature's difference keeps all Nature's peace." Alexander Pope
If this woman is an outside agitator, we need more.
AD
Just want to say I really enjoyed the long involved background stuff, and all the context.
. . . market's harsh logic . . .
Markets have no logic of any kind. Markets are the product of something older than prostitution or dirt: greed. Markets are about primitive acquisitiveness, about grabbing as much for yourself as you can. Screw everybody; let 'em all die; who gives a shit? I want it! I want it! I want it! Milton Friedman was a hyena, a buzzard, a vampire, a driver ant but he was no economist. Kill them, eat them, digest them, take a satisfying dump and do it all again tomorrow. That's "the market".
"They were tired of being against things all the time..."
God, how I can so relate. Many of the "progressives" in my neck of the woods are addicted to being against this or that or everything, but never seem to present a cogent view of what they are for. I think this is true for many progressives, and until they/we start walking their/our talk, they/we will always be fringe players. Sad, because most of the progressives I know are really smart. Just imagine what we can do if we start being instead of merely doing.
Not everything is bad, fellow progressives, and life, even now, can be good. Let go of the "anti" long enough to work on the "for." Our children are looking to us for guidance.
"All Nature's difference keeps all Nature's peace." Alexander Pope
Ted Markow: I left you a message below. In reply to yours here, we're looking to ourselves and each other for guidance. I just skip the folks who are all negative.
Agreed, NYCardist. I am working on being the change I want to see, and am also working on ignoring the nattering negativity. Though, sometimes the negativity is reality. The hard part is recognizing which is which while dancing.
BTW, you left me a message below? Below what? I've looked under some rocks but all I've found are a few cold worms. (yes, I'm being a wisenheimer)
"All Nature's difference keeps all Nature's peace." Alexander Pope
Ted:comment on not to poke at pigs who make hostile comments about Jewish women. I am amused that some newer comment was defending the Jewhater, not having familiarity with his previous "work". I ignore.
The article contains lots of interesting background & biographical information about Naomi. Good reading; could have been better without the snippets of snark & spite.
Bubbasouth: I was looking for a word, but I wouldn't say snippets of spite, but maybe trying to look vaguely critical and coming off a bit patronizing while working at sounding grownup and not too praising the person she's profiling. I think the author did a great job on integrating family history into the article. But, like you, I caught the occasional undertone.
Too bad most Americans wouldn't recognize her name let alone her ideology.
Keep this in mind 46% voted for McSame. Even after all the crap that has happened. 46%! They stood in the streets of Berlin in 1945 and cried when they heard Hitler was dead. This the kind of mentality we're dealing with.
" ... It’s ours to lose." That's the catch. We may be smarter than the status quo and the neocons and neocon-centrists (main Democrats), and better on a long list of virtues, but we have to win politically to make it count. That's what people always ask Chomsky. Just what do we do.
We need to effectively organize (as groups) against actual decision makers, about actual decisions, on going. Congress is key.
I recommend Roger Fisher, starting with Beyond Machiavelli, but as a group effort (ie. with Shel Trapp's Dynamics of Organizing and Basics of Organizing).
I'm glad that Naomi understands capitalism. Boiled down to its basics it's a simple system that allows the mega-rich to exploit the middle and lower classes in every country in the world bigtime!
All it requires is an education system that reduces everyone to the level of sheeple, you know, non-questioning, non-thinking sheeple. Then you need a slick group of marketing and advertising gurus to convince the sheeple that greed is good and that if you can't afford consumer items, get credit.
Then you need banking institutions to loan the gullible sheeple money, money that they can't afford to pay back. To finish it off you need a share market, one where the rich have inside knowledge of potential movements plus a Government that's in bed with the capitalists and will bail them out should things get messy.
There, in simple terms that's capitalism. Is it any wonder it's so popular with the mega-rich?
Shame it's destroying our world. Shame it reduces many humans to the level of insatiable pigs while a majority starve!
www.dangerouscreation.com
"She looked terrific".
She is terrific.
Direct online democracy NOW!
ezeflyer:I can't resist: www.democracynow.org
So will popular success and adulaton spoil Naomi Klein? I don't think so because first and foremost she is a very smart and perceptive person who has the great advantage of having been right in her metaphoric masterpieces "No Logo" and "Shock Doctrine".
So now popular media would like to change the subject. Isn't she just lovely to look at? My, my, what a Commie Red Pinko pedigree! Toronto, Chicago, New York, Miami, California, Wisconsin, Colorado, France, Poland, why she is everywhere and so "on message"!
Oh and by the way Larissa MacFarquhar, you papparazzi pile of excrement, did you even mention that she and her analysis just happens to have been correct and that's why crowds are lining up to hear what she has to say?
Or haven't your noticed how decrepit New Orleans and all of Iraq and Afghanistan still are? Or how many bankers and corporate heads are unashamedly lining up to fill their pockets with as much money from the public treasury as possible (of course with no accountabiity on their part for how they spend it)?
Or how corporate "private contractors" (unaccountable to anyone or anything except their own bottom line profits) are taking over what used to be government employee functions? No, I didn't think so, you are too busy noticing what everybody wore and how they looked to bother with such trivia. How could a magaziine that publishes Sy Hersch print such twaddle and nonsense?
Poet
Poet:oh Poet. You were doing so great without the personal attack of word re author. I noticed that the author was putting in stuff about how Naomi Klein looks and pondered it a bit. But it's still a basically good article. I am a teeny bit older than Naomi Klein's mother. I am Jewish. Working class. I loved the history of her family and how it was integrated into the article. It was helpful in understanding the article under headlines about the new government in Canada and the political party that Avi Lewis, Naomi's spouse, is grandson of one of the founders, and his dad was active in that political party,too. It's the style of New Yorker profiles to do it kind of "personalized", but it's ok. Nothing is perfect. Skip the silly stuff and reread or skim it again. (If I may suggest.) I only make this comment because I know from your other comments that you are open. And I respect your criticisms.
Are you referring to the new government of six weeks ago or the new government likely in a week or so? Layton warned Harper that something like this would happen before the Throne speech - and, instead, Harper's strategy was to take away the right to strike (among other things). Layton's warning:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CRiNuEftfws
The NDP (formerly the CCF) sees itself as "left-of-centre" rather than "leftist" - and has a history of being on the side of human rights. David Lewis co-wrote "Make This Your Canada" - which talked of such things as indoor plumbing and electricity on farms (things that were pipe dreams at the time) - and was credited with inventing the phrase "corporate welfare bums". On page 31 of The Shock Doctrine, Klein briefly mentioned that 9 former patients of Cameron's sued the CIA - one should note that the first of the 9 was Val Orlikow, wife of NDP MP David Orlikow who came from the same Jewish Bund tradition as the Lewises. Scroll down to "Orlikow" to find out more about another great NDP hero:
http://www.gov.mb.ca/legislature/hansard/4th-36th/vol_071b/h071b_9.html
The Regina Manifesto (which proposed, as party doctrine, 'equal treatment before the law of all residents of Canada irrespective of race, nationality or religious or
political belief')predated the United Nation's Universal Declaration of Human Rights. There is a belief that the latter was based largely on the former.
I personally think that "red-diaper baby" was not so much about fashion but a term to describe a form of upbringing - that Klein's parents still believed in the promise of Communism but figured that what Stalin did was a corruption of Communism rather than a manifestation of it's flaws. Thus, the Lewis family was never as "leftist" as the Kleins. Another Canadian writer similar to Klein, Linda McQuaig, also tends to write from the anti-communist left-of-centre.
Naomi Klein admits to having been a mall rat uninterested in world affairs before the Montreal Massacre where Marc Lepine shot 14 female engineer students to death - just because his own application to the school was rejected. To change from someone obsessed with logos to the author or "No-Logo" was an important part of her development.
Okay, I accept your criticisms, but still disagree somewhat. Generally the most important material in an article is up at the top with more trivial stuff further on down. I am astounded by the complete lack of any mention of how correct her hypothesis has proven and held up over two past years (the paperback edition came out last year, the hard cover edition came out in 2006--I know it because I preordered it because I had seen Naomi on Democracy Now and was excited about its release).
I am an absolute fan of Naomi. My devotion has nothing to do with her good looks since I am old enough to be her father and reading such fan-mag style pap is a bit like someone doing an article on Albert Einstein and babbling on about his wierd hair, rumpled clothing and how unconventional his background was--all true, but so what? He only turned out to be the greatest mathematician since Newton. Naomi is not and may never be as iconic a figure as Einstein, but she is so much more than another babe who fills out a pair of jeans nice.
Poet
Poet: hello. Criticism is OK. I just hate reading personal attacks in good criticism (and scatalogical references are a "go to next" usually,) but since it was you, I kept reading. On Einstein: I have familiarity with those rumpled clothing and "big" hair photos, which I like. Einstein was notoriously absentminded. Since I am close to an absentminded professor, scientist, the stories always amused me. According to a NYTimes article about Einstein, he once called his wife, on the way to a meeting, and asked, "Where am I going?". The same article talked about how bad a husband he'd been to his first wife.
I have been known to call someone whose name is not Albert, "Albert". I do agree with many of your criticisms of the article. I,too like Naomi Klein's work very much (mostly via DemocracyNow)and like some of the mother's work. I am a disability rights activist since disabling illness (not same disability/illness as Naomi Klein's mother).
I must admit, as an artist, I am interested in clothing, but the author was fitting a kind of format. I've covered it in another comment, so won't bore you with repeat. I like the family history, as I said, being nearly as old as her mother. I am now wondering if all backgrounds are not "unconventional" since most people don't fit the movie image family background (old movies, that is). I didn't get the impression that the author was speaking about how Klein fills out jeans, so much as contrasting her clothes with her mother's look from the mother's "time". I wore jeans in those years, but always with an eye to looking good. Then I mixed jeans and designer clothing, finally adding thrift shop clothing. (I'd grown up poor and find N. Klein's family "exotic" in re class. As a Jew, I found their history very interesting over the generations. Few Jews can go back more than two generations in family history.)
One is FALSE...The Flag On the LEFT...
Posted on Google campus Mountain View CA:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/snej/2835537396/in/pool-828437@N25
The key to her importance in the world is in the phrase: "Naomi is a pattern recognizer," Lewis says. "Some people feel that she's bent examples to fit the thesis. But her great strength is helping people recognize patterns in the world, because that's the fundamental first step toward changing things."
Naomi then can best be understood as a natural scientist of capitalism. Science is basically the recognition and description of the common patterns of behaviour that occur in very distinct contexts. She shows how the neoliberal social darwinists justify profits from every imaginable form of disaster. Also she has the ability, not to common amongst scientists, to get ordinary people to recognise those patterns.
snydly "Get out there and say some crazy stuff":
Friends......The global Elite already have this well in hand. The financial "meltdown" is aptly named. It and the "bailout" for capital stakeholders is, in my warped opinion, their response to climate change (which is upon us). Unfortunately, they see humanity's best chances for survival as a small group with all the marbles, rather than as 6 billion healthy, informed and enabled team members. Well, you say, that's a very radical statement, how do you come to that conclusion?
Al Gore/IPCC let the cat out of the bag in "An Inconv Truth" by showing the world the IPCC ice core data chart spread across a studio wall screen, and in his book, on a fold-out page that can be studied. It shows (but he didn't say)that we are now at the tipping point of a NATURAL cycle that has occurred neatly three times before like a heart beat of Gaia, but, now, (he does say) humanity has driven several parameters far out of historical norms. Therein lies the cause for concern. Some "forcings" associated with the natural cycle have become evident. If we don't find the will to bring our GHGs, etc, back within norms, and soon, we risk a "forcing of the forcings" which would invite phenomenae that would pretty much wrap it up.
Humans have survived all the previous cycles, albeit with cataclysmic alterations in the status quo...is anyone aware of traces of any type of civilization co-incident with the previous cycles? The most recent traces we have on this side of the last one are 35,000 year old stone knife blades in Australia.
This time, we have satellites to see the weather coming, and lots of technology.
We also have lots of skeptics. But even for "believers" it is hard for the true extent of this to sink in. Even Al stops at describing the likely scenario, and just drops his gaze and shakes his head, mumbling something like, "We don't want to let this get out of hand." on the Oprah Show.
And you thought the Bushies could scare the ever-loving crap outta everybody!
I see no sign that the drastic action necessary will be taken.
I don't even see people hanging their clothes out to dry on a line, or car-pooling.
Maybe we'll get a wakeup call, maybe not.
Check it out for yourself. Read the chart, notice the spikes. Tell us what you see.
What Would Noah Do?
snydly "Get out there and say some crazy stuff":
Friends......The global Elite already have this well in hand. The financial "meltdown" is aptly named. It and the "bailout" for capital stakeholders is, in my warped opinion, their response to climate change (which is upon us). Unfortunately, they see humanity's best chances for survival as a small group with all the marbles, rather than as 6 billion healthy, informed and enabled team members. Well, you say, that's a very radical statement, how do you come to that conclusion?
Al Gore/IPCC let the cat out of the bag in "An Inconv Truth" by showing the world the IPCC ice core data chart spread across a studio wall screen, and in his book, on a fold-out page that can be studied. It shows (but he didn't say)that we are now at the tipping point of a NATURAL cycle that has occurred neatly three times before like a heart beat of Gaia, but, now, (he does say) humanity has driven several parameters far out of historical norms. Therein lies the cause for concern. Some "forcings" associated with the natural cycle have become evident. If we don't find the will to bring our GHGs, etc, back within norms, and soon, we risk a "forcing of the forcings" which would invite phenomenae that would pretty much wrap it up.
Humans have survived all the previous cycles, albeit with cataclysmic alterations in the status quo...is anyone aware of traces of any type of civilization co-incident with the previous cycles? The most recent traces we have on this side of the last one are 35,000 year old stone knife blades in Australia.
This time, we have satellites to see the weather coming, and lots of technology.
We also have lots of skeptics. But even for "believers" it is hard for the true extent of this to sink in. Even Al stops at describing the likely scenario, and just drops his gaze and shakes his head, mumbling something like, "We don't want to let this get out of hand." on the Oprah Show.
And you thought the Bushies could scare the ever-loving crap outta everybody!
I see no sign that the drastic action necessary will be taken.
I don't even see people hanging their clothes out to dry on a line, or car-pooling.
Maybe we'll get a wakeup call, maybe not.
Check it out for yourself. Read the chart, notice the spikes. Tell us what you see.
What Would Noah Do?
John E.:I don't think Naomi Klein ever used the words or concept "social darwinism" in any form. It's not science. Otherwise, I like your comment
NYCartist: You are totally right and I was unclear. Social darwinism is a psuedo-science distortion of evolutionary theory that has long been seized on as a justification for capitalism. I thought I remembered that she had written that the Friedman gang had used it in their ravings.
John E.:I salute any man who is so comfortable saying he was wrong. If you haven't run for local office, do so. And if you are in a relationship, the other person will affirm that I said you are great for doing the "I was wrong;I was unclear". Did you ever read Deborah Tannen's "You Just Don't Understand?". Fun book, although Tannen is a serious PhD in sociology. On the other hand, if you said you're a woman, I'd not be surprised.
Figures that her roots werent long in Canada.
Best we can do is Pierre Burton.
Ok and Farley Mowatt.
He's pretty good.
And Paul Watson.
He's very good too.
And William Shatner.
Naomi Klein rocks and has a lot of what most progressives lack, an understanding of capitalism. Plus she looks beautiful. :)
After reading her books, I have the utmost respect for this woman.
And yes, she is VERY beautiful!
Yeah,
She's a classic Jewish, Barbara Streisandesque, red-diaper baby, looker...
---USAn---
"She's a classic Jewish..."
Classic Jewish? Care to elaborate?
"All Nature's difference keeps all Nature's peace." Alexander Pope
Ted Markow: don't poke at a pig. (No insult to the animal which is quite inteligent.)
I very much liked reading this article. Thanks for providing it here. Having read No Logo and The Shock Doctrine I have come away with great respect for Naomi Klein. She is an important voice worth listening to.
http://tbelfield.wordpress.com
What is admirable about Naomi Klein is that unlike some of the elders mentioned in the piece (Noam Chomsky and Howard Zinn), she is quite media savvy and the camera likes her. Factor in a reporter's ability to think on her feet and come up with catchy phrases to make a formidable figure. A word of caution though: progressives should work to emulate her, not rely.
www.wunderman-comics.com
Well put, the left in the long will either learn to work new media like the internet and thrive or fail at this task and whiter up and become increasingly insular and bitter. The economic crash is our opening and I for one hope we succeed. I also think Naomi Klein's combination of MTV media savvy and hard core economic analysis is a good one to emulate. Hint identity politics is dead in a world where are facing major systemic issues like economic and ecological breakdown. United we stand divided as just isolated identity groups we fall.
I would write that the younger portion of the left is generally quite media literate. I echo your call for the avoidance of identity politics and striving for larger more general goals. We do not need a repeat of the shearing off the women's movement over porn as what occurred in the early 80's: the lesson there was only the right triumphed in that one.
www.wunderman-comics.com
NateW:news flash: women/feminists can juggle several issues at once.
Economic justice for ALL or none IMO, hint the elevation of Hillary Clinton as secretary of State of the empire is not a victory. Identity politics allows for easy co-optation of isolated groups. I bought the identity group rhetoric when I was in college in the 80s, not anymore when Clarence Thomas is trumpeted as a victory for African Americans, Janet Reno and Madeline Albright for women, and Alberto Gonzales for Latinos I woke up and saw identity politics is a non starter and easily divided and conquered. Screw that completely! Un p.c.? You bet! IMO we are going to have to be focused intensely like a laser on systems issues like ecology, the environment, and poverty survival issues and avoid p.c. pitfalls if we are going to win.
While we sit around and whine about "empowerment" and "alternative histories" the globalist militarists corporate heads are planning their next war, their next investment in a sweatshop, their next assault on environmental regulations that assure ALL of our survival. We have to deal with these more important issues FIRST or risk being eternally distracted, and sidelined pouring energy into irrelevant trivialities. Yes some things are more important than others and ought to be dealt with first to rationally allocate our limited energy, deal.