LibsEatPoop

joined 5 years ago
[–] LibsEatPoop@hexbear.net 13 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Here's The Intercept article

Who wrote the memo? What’s their name?

The memo — written by Times standards editor Susan Wessling, international editor Philip Pan, and their deputies. First distributed to Times journalists in November, the guidance — which collected and expanded on past style directives about the Israeli–Palestinian conflict — has been regularly updated over the ensuing months.

Will they be fired?

Funny you ask. Months earlier, The Intercept exposed NYT's extremely flawed reporting in their Screams Without Words piece which was...really bad.

CW: Sexual Assault and Rape Mention

NYT accused Hamas of systematically raping Israeli teenagers and adults. Systematically being the operative word - no one disputes that rape/sexual assault took place. But there is no proof that Hamas, as an organization, has any prior history of such tactics or in this case, instructed its members to do so. But that's what NYT said happened. In addition, it manufactured instances of rape that didn't even happen and could not be verified by even other people at NYT and used the name of a Pulitzer prize winning journalist to get the article recognition when the actual "reporting" was done by a food blogger.

So, The Intercept received leaks from people within NYT who were clearly disgruntled/dissatisfied/disagreed with what was going on and published it and, in response, NYT launched an investigation into who leaked it! Rather than investigating how such a bad piece was published, they investigated how it got exposed instead - and the probe was done in an extremely racist way with people who were Muslim or from MENA targeted almost exclusively.

[–] LibsEatPoop@hexbear.net 15 points 1 year ago (1 children)

So I went down a small rabbit hole to figure out wtf happened and the gist I've got is they are what are called "pacers" i.e. people you, the actual competitive racer, pay to run alongside you so you get motivation to keep running in these long distance runs. Like, one article mentioned the main guy running 42 km while pacers running like 10 km. It helps give you a good pace, rhythm, provide a wind break or something etc. Other articles mentioned the pacers ran the whole race alongside the guy at the same pace instead, so maybe the 42 km - 10 km thing was from a different race or only for a specific pacer or something. Typically, the pacers will have a thing on their jersey saying they are "pacers" which didn't happen here, but I've also read that pacers can also get awarded medals, which did happen here, so that isn't unusual, even if the public doesn't doesn't know about it usually.

The main racer in this instance is a 25 y.o. who is insanely talented - he is the winner of the Asian gold, and is practising for the Olympics later on. This can be seen in the fact that this race has over 2k people and there is literally no one else in the entire footage because this dude and his group of pacers are that far ahead of everyone else. For this race, his goal was to beat the Chinese record - that's the time the pacers where there to help him beat. Unfortunately, he wasn't able to do so. One of the pacers went on record saying he was not in this race to compete but only there as a friend to help the main guy beat the goal.

Of course Western news sources went Cold War manufacturing consent with it and accused China of paying the African racers to lose to the Chinese guy, adding in other instances of corruption (proven and unproven, even ones where people were punished were used as a way of somehow saying China bad) and Reddit of course went full racist CCP Bad Winnie the Poo North Korea etc etc you know the drill (even worse stuff about Asian and African stereotypes I'm not going to repeat).

Anyways, everything I've just said is what I managed to gather in the past 15 mins or so. If someone knows anything more, feel free to add or correct me.

[–] LibsEatPoop@hexbear.net 12 points 1 year ago (7 children)

Yeah, since making the post, I was shown of a good summary of the entire saga by fellow Hexbearite(?) (we need a better name istg).

[–] LibsEatPoop@hexbear.net 11 points 1 year ago

Ah, I'll check it out! Don't let anyone know, but

spoilerI never check the mega

[–] LibsEatPoop@hexbear.net 10 points 1 year ago

Some highlights:

The fight of the oppressed or even the elimination of oppression of Palestinians, Blacks or women – if this would ever be possible under capitalism - does not abolish this very system. On the contrary, as is the case with the Palestinians, we can even expect that their “liberation” from the oppressing Israeli regime, if it ever succeeded at all, would most certainly lead to an oppressive regime like the other Islamic states in the region and thus not to the undermining of capitalism – not to mention its abolition.

the regime in Gaza has also several functions of a bourgeois state: it collects taxes and has an army, a juridical apparatus, detention facilities, intelligence and police personal, etc. It is the Hamas de-facto administration which exercises these state functions and has, since 2005, under the direction of a highly centralised command centre, been able to fire thousands rockets into Israeli territory. There is only one conclusion possible: the war in Gaza is a war between two imperialist states.

But the article is right when it says that the slogan “Palestine will be free, from the river to the sea” can only signify the ethnic cleansing of the Jewish population in the region between the Jordan and the Mediterranean Sea, “a Nakba in reverse”.

In this sense there is indeed no difference between the nationalism of Israel and the nationalism of Palestine: both ideologies are a cover for the drive to war and for the repression of the working class by the bourgeois state.

[–] LibsEatPoop@hexbear.net 58 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You will be shocked, as I was, when you realize the comrade from Germany is the one defending Palestine.

[–] LibsEatPoop@hexbear.net 14 points 1 year ago

The only good IDF?

[–] LibsEatPoop@hexbear.net 24 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Here's a video by Thought Slime that sorta covered Yud and his beliefs of AI from a couple years ago. It's hilarious.

[–] LibsEatPoop@hexbear.net 32 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

CW - SA: He also wrote a short story where people in the future/aliens are appalled that we (i.e. present-day humans) considered r*pe to be a bad thing. You did not read that wrong.

[–] LibsEatPoop@hexbear.net 18 points 1 year ago

Yeah, on a technical level, the film was absolutely brilliant. Probably one of the best I've ever seen. But the actual story was so weak, which, given the actual subject matter it covers, is super disappointing. I knew going in it wasn't going to be any good so I went with zero expectations on that front - I'd seen the trailers, the interview with the director, and seen some reviews already.

But if I'd actually gone in expecting an actual message or, you know, substance beyond style, I'd have been super pissed. In the end, I could just enjoy the film and the characters and have a good time. Still, I didn't pay full price and I'd tell others the same - go see it if you want to see great sound design and amazing cinematography, along with some genuinely thrilling scenes. But try and get some discounts - half-price, matinee pricing etc.

[–] LibsEatPoop@hexbear.net 23 points 1 year ago (1 children)

There are some reports right now they are claiming to reply with "an unprecedented response." I don't know if that's just one perspective among many, the prevailing narrative for domestic audience, or actual military statement. I hope it's not the latter.

 

Twitter randomly served me this tweet. I'm not following the person, and neither is anyone I'm following. Nor did the tweet blow up. So I don't know why.

The author of the tweet is John Kennedy, a history PhD, who is "working on the transfer of auto-industrial technology from FR and ITA to the USSR from the 60s onwards." The author they're quoting is just called Filtzer.

In the comments, there is just one other person with whom they have a small interaction where there is some more information.

Alexandra Oberländer: I'd say: Good ol' days! (She's a researcher at the Center for the History of Emotions, and an associate editor of Kritika Journal - A Quarterly academic journal about the history of Russia and the former Soviet states. She also lists History of Sexual Violence and the Cultural History of Work as her areas of knowledge/expertise.)

John Kennedy: I'm afraid my original political formation as a Trot prevents me from agreeing with you! I was just reading your article Cushy Work, Backbreaking Leisure the other day. Very nice corrective to the idea that the issue was (an intrinsic) laziness

Alexandra Oberländer: Well, as "Trot" you'd be better off with Filtzer then :) (No disrespect meant, of course!)

John Kennedy: Haha none taken :) I won't tie myself to the mast just yet!


I don't know what my point was exactly by posting this here. I just wanted to share this people, I guess. It's fascinating.

 

I’m not kidding. This will make Gen-Zers vote for Trump. All he has to say is he’ll reverse the ban. He’s already announced that he opposes this bill and that this only supports Facebook.

Biden and the Democrats are so fucking insane. I do not understand it. They want to lose all support with every fucking base they have.

I’ll never stop being on TikTok.

 

First, a practical explanation of what happened after the sanctions were imposed:

Best quote of his explanation: "This is a situation in which the sanctions were imposed by one important sector of the world economy which then cut itself off from resources that it needs - and that's particularly true of Western Europe - in return for cutting Russia off from various things that Russia doesn't really need."

Second best quote: "If you go back to the period before the introduction of the sanctions [...] the Russian economy was very heavily colonized by Western firms. That was true in automobiles, it was true in aircrafts, it was true in everything from fast food restaurants to big box stores. Western firms were present all throughout the Russian economy. A great many of them [...] either chose to exit Russia or were pressured to exit Russia after early 2022. So on what terms did they leave? Well, they were required, if they were leaving permanently, to sell their capital equipment, their factories and so forth, to let's say a Russian business which would get a loan from Russian banks or maybe have other sources of financing, at a very favorable price for the Russians. So effectively a lot of capital wealth, which was partly owned by the West, has been transferred to Russian ownership. And you now have an economy which is moving forward and has the advantage compared to Europe of relatively low resource costs because Russia is a great producer of resources, oil and gas and fertilizer and food stuff and so forth. And so while the Europeans are paying maybe twice in Germany what they were paying for energy, the Russians are not, they're paying perhaps less than they were paying before the war. So again I characterize the effect of the sanctions, in fact as being in certain respects a gift to the Russian economy. And this is, I think, quite different from what the authors of the sanctions expected. [...] And the essence of the situation is this would not have happened without the sanctions. You could have had the war, and it would have gone pretty much as it has gone. But the Russian government in 2022 was in no position to force the exit of Western firms. It didn't want to, wouldn't have done that. It was in no position to force its oligarchs to choose between Russia and the West. It didn't wish to do that. These choices were imposed by the West, and the results were actually, in many respects, favorable to the long-term independent development of the Russian Federation's economy."

Here’s the link to the tweet with the quotes. It has a 12 min video interview with the economist in question too, but you might want to watch that in YouTube instead.

A good potential secondary objective of the sanctions: making Europe dependent on the US:

But what if the purpose of the sanctions was actually not to damage the Russian economy but to damage the European economy, to remove the latter as an economic competitor for the United States and to make it dependent on US energy?

Link to the OG tweet that asked the question.

Second, a theoretical explanation of the modern Russian state by Samir Amin.

In one of his last books, Russia and the Long Transition from Capitalism to Socialism, the great Marxist thinker Samir Amin posed a prescient question.

He saw that the Putin-era Russian state balanced two contradictory economic tendencies. On one hand, it introduced vicious neoliberal reforms, which served exclusively the powerful Western-oriented comprador elites. On the other, it vigorously sought to bolster the country's economic sovereignty. Which tendency would prevail?

"[I]f the comprador fraction of the Russian ruling classes... ends up gaining the upper hand," Amin wrote, "then the 'sanctions' with which Europe is intimidating Russia could bear fruit. The comprador segments are still disposed to capitulate to preserve their portion of the spoils from the pillaging of their country.” (This, by the way, was the strategy of figures like Alexey Navalny, who hoped against hope that he could effect regime change by striking a bargain with Russia's pro-Western elites.)

Amin did not live to see the sanctions package introduced against Russia. But I suspect that his insights would have echoed Galbraith's. By effectively dismantling the Russian comprador class, the sanctions have resolved a central contradiction within the post-Soviet Russian state — in favor of the imperative of sovereign development.

This is precisely the opposite of the intended effect and is deeply revealing of the hubris and analytical poverty of Western imperial policy.

Link to the first Samir Amin explanation and the LibGen link to the book.

Someone, in response, talks of Russian oligarchs and Amin engaging in wishful thinking. A response that goes further into Amin’s theory:

If we take seriously Amin's notion of a world dominated by the collective imperialism of the Triad — a central thesis of his political thought — and the idea that the present moment is characterized by a new wave of "emergence" from the domination of these centers, then I struggle see any wishful thinking here.

We have a state which, as Galbraith says, has been "heavily colonized by Western firms". Now, by force of historical necessity, it is advancing across technological, food, medical, informational, and financial sovereignty — Amin's very definition of an "emergent" state. This is not a qualitative judgment. It is a quantitative observation about the degree of a state's economic separation from the imperialist centers.

A lot hinges on the analysis of the material basis of the national bourgeoisie versus the comprador bourgeoisie, a distinction that Amin and others have made very clearly. Much of the last great wave of "emergence" (e.g., the Bandung era) was also led by national bourgeois projects. In the long run, neoliberal policies open the state to foreign capital penetration in ways that subordinate it to the domination of the main capitalist centers and undermine the national bourgeoisie, foreclosing pathways to "emergence".

Whether we see the sanctions as punishment for war or punishment for disobedience with the diktats of empire, they had the opposite of their intended effect — and Amin, like Galbraith, give us a framework that helps explain why. There is a lot more to say — indeed, books have been dedicated to these questions! — but I don't think it serves us well to dismiss these analytical currents.

The final response

 
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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by LibsEatPoop@hexbear.net to c/movies@hexbear.net
 

Seriously tho, couldn’t stop comparing the situation to Palestine during the first half of the movie. An invading army with super-advanced tech in a desert environment vs a bunch of brave fighters fighting with knives and stuff. It was cool. And sad.

I liked the movie, btw. Would recommend. Now I’m gonna read the book.

Edit - It’s also a good criticism of the white savior trope but that goes into spoilers territory.

 

I have photos of the backs of men where Israeli men carved pictures, smiley faces, Stars of David, etc. in their skin. Women narrated stories to me of Israeli soldiers laying them, laying hundreds of women, on the ground and then taking their guns with laser and laughing, and wherever the laser landed, they shoot.

I spoke with a woman whose three year old daughter had both of her legs shattered…she was intentionally shot by a soldier…after they’d killed her son, shot him through the head, in what she described as tank fire, toying with them, for about 30 minutes, before they finally delivered the final blow.

People who’re fleeing their homes to get to the south having to walk with their hands up with their IDs and if anybody dares to look down or pick anything up, they’re picked off, they’re literally shot by snipers.

I spoke with a little girl, about eight years old, whose face was badly burned, but her injuries were the least in the whole families, the entire family had third degree burns all over their bodies.

People are being discharged from hospitals with wounds and going into tents where they don’t have running water and proper hygiene and getting horrible infections and dying from sepsis.

The food that does come in to Rafah is primarily canned food and most of it…and I’ve seen it and tasted it myself, it is stuff that has clearly been sitting on shelves for decades. All you can taste, really, is the rancidity, and metallic taste of the can.

People schedule their days around trying to get to a single, shared bathroom, that’s shared by hundreds of other families. They try to do their best with hygiene but it’s impossible.

People don’t have medicines. People are dying from lack of insulin, which, by the way, Israel has banned from coming into Gaza. They dying from diarrhoea because they’re drinking polluted water and Israel has also banned water filtration systems, even handheld ones, simple, personal, water filtration systems that Americans use when they go camping.

And, on top of that, they are bombed day in and out. Even in Rafah. When I was there, there was not a single night, that we didn’t hear bombs. And at least once, was close enough, that the building I was in shook and we thought that our building had actually been hit…And there was another moment too when a tent by a hospital where we had just been was bombed, they bombed a tent.

 

Leftist Infighting Go Brrr....

 

I haven't read Saito's books, or looked too deeply into degrowth as a movement. I just read this article and thought it made some good arguments against what it claims are Saito's understandings of Marx. I'm not sure I agree with everything, but I thought it was interesting enough to share.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by LibsEatPoop@hexbear.net to c/news@hexbear.net
 

Billionaire Socialist azan coming to the defence of gamers.

“All I can think of is the awful track record of the FBI when it comes to identifying extremism,” Hasan Piker, a popular Twitch streamer who often streams while playing video games under the handle HasanAbi, says of the mechanisms. “They’re much better at finding vulnerable teenagers with mental disabilities to take advantage of.”

 
 

Wu Xia, a working poet, left her hometown at 14 to work on an assembly line in the southern tech hub of Shenzhen. As documented in the award-winning film “The Verse of Us” (2014), she transformed her feelings during those times into poetic expressions. However, her post-documentary life hasn’t unfolded quite the way she had hoped. Leaving the factory, she encountered persistent setbacks in finding writing-related jobs. Determined to stay in Shenzhen, Wu Xia and her parents now rent a house in a nearby workers’ community, trying their best to navigate the escalating costs of city living so as to make ends meet.

This summary doesn't quite do justice to her story cri. The video (just ten mins) made me tear up. She's a really good writer - her brilliance shines through, man. I wish she could be free to write. Seeing the poverty she has to live in is really depressing.

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