Month: June 2020

Moratorium

Download (PDF, 2.19MB)Santa Cruz in COVID time June 1, 2020 J. Clifford A historical materialist cannot do without the notion of a present which is not a transition, but in which time stands still and has come to a stop. –Walter Benjamin, “On the Concept of History” XVI. (1940) Moratorium Download (PDF, 2.19MB)torium Things fall apart; the center cannot hold: Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world… W.B. Yeats, from “The Second Coming” (1920) … Still, the profound change has come upon them: rooted, they grip down and begin to awaken William Carlos Williams from “By the Road to the Contagious Hospital”...

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Social Democracy in One Country? Spain’s Struggle

  In a recent article in the Washington Post, Robert Samuelson contemplates the looming possibility of a new sovereign debt crisis in Europe. The Great Recession of 2008, he recalls, brought the weaker European economies, including Spain’s, to the brink of default, and the countries themselves to the brink of expulsion from the EU and economic devastation. The COVID-produced economic crisis, Samuelson contends, is having the same effect. Once again the deeply indebted countries of southern Europe will not be able to save themselves either through frugality or through spending: they will have to be “rescued” by the EU...

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Is Becomes Ought: The Mere Necessity of Socialism

We’re now caught between despair and hope, resignation and purpose, facts and values, between the worst and the best of times, between our historical circumstance–what simply is–and our ethical principles–what ought to be.  But what if these are also times when the either/or choice between “is” and “ought” stops making sense?  When doing the right thing by our fellow citizens is also the necessary thing, what we must do if we’re to dig ourselves out of the hole we’re in? It doesn’t happen very often, which is why we call the consequence a revolutionary crisis or situation.  We’re in one right now because just about everybody knows that capitalism has failed, and that socialism is a utopian (or dystopian) alternative–an “ideal society” that has never stood the practical test of real time. But what if socialism is, practically speaking, the only way to salvage civilization from the ruins of capitalism?  What then?  At that moment, we can see how the ethical principle of socialism resides in and flows from the historical circumstance we now experience as the eclipse of capitalism–that is, how the slogan “From each according to her abilities, to each according to his need,” now makes perfect sense in social, economic, intellectual, moral, and, yes, political-programmatic terms. We can’t address the C-19 pandemic unless we deliver proper health care to everyone who needs it regardless of their...

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The Talking Dead: Jia Tolentino and the Tradition of Women’s Talent

Arielle Isack The first time I ever heard of Jia Tolentino was when an editor at our college newspaper branded me the Jia Tolentino of my class of columnists. I didn’t know who she was at the time, and I also didn’t know who I was at the time, so I googled her, assuming our similarity lay in a willingness to divulge extremely personal details to the internet. Instead, I found a writer whose content was remarkably outward facing; it appeared Tolentino was tasked with glossing extremely topical cultural phenomena and breaking them down to an audience that had...

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Before and After the Fall

50 years ago today, I fell 24 feet to my death.  On that June 1st, I died to my old self, a lazy, drunken lout, an ex-jock frat boy who had recently been expelled from Carthage College in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on the grounds that I never attended class, was instead always drinking or sleeping or starting fights in bars–and was, therefore, “just not cut out for higher education,” as the Dean of Students put it during my exit interview. He solemnly echoed my high school counselor, who had explained to me in my senior year that I wasn’t “college material,” and had accordingly urged me to get with the building trades. They were both right, and I say this as a tenured Professor of History who has spent the last 40 years teaching at public universities as well as small colleges and prisons, in four different states.  I’m near retirement at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, having published six books–two more are in progress–written dozens of articles, lectured to thousands of undergraduates, attended many meetings, and, not least, started this little online magazine, POLITICS/LETTERS. Still, the dean and the counselor were right, I wasn’t cut out for higher education.  So how did I get there, and last this long? Let’s start over, on June 1, 1970, on the fifth floor, the top floor, of an office building under...

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