Anatomy of the Covidian-Left: Response to “The Left and Covid” – Part 2 of 2
In part two Lorraine explores how a principled Left needs to relate to – and work within – the working class in a modern economy in the twenty first century.
In part two Lorraine explores how a principled Left needs to relate to – and work within – the working class in a modern economy in the twenty first century.
In the first part of this two-part article, Lorraine Pratley makes a case for the relevance of the left, in the light of what many would consider its total failure.
Chris R argues the ruling class is not what the Left thinks and is worse than it imagines. The Left’s turbo-charged version of a Davos talk makes them laugh.
At the dawn of a brutal new phase of the class war, the Left sided with the oppressor, writes Chris R in part one. Not since the vast majority of the European Left swung behind the war parties in 1914 has the movement made such a disastrous misstep.
Rusere Shoniwa on the meaning of the mainstream (non) revelations of CIA involvement in the JFK assassination and trying to skewer the thought-terminating cliche of ‘conspiracy theory’.
2022 was a challenging year, but not without its victories. We recount the good, bad and the instructive from an editorial perspective in this year in review.
“In short, by its facilitation of capitalism‘s construction of the totalitarianism of the Global Biosecurity State – woke is not liberal, and it certainly isn‘t socialist: woke is fascist”
Rusere Shoniwa explains the control grid of 21st century fascism, none other than capitalism in decay: the nexus of supranational global policy makers, the ‘free’ market and the state.
Philosopher Bert Olivier gives his thoughts on his contemporaries buying into the mainstream COVID narrative.
Amy Willows challenges the notion that a state of hypnosis is central to the explanation of mass formation. The second part of this two-part essay is a collaboration between Amy and Rusere Shoniwa.