The longest chapter in Capital is the fifteenth, on “Machinery and Large-Scale Industry.” At almost 150-pages, it’s really a book in itself, a staggeringly dense and expansive discussion that could easily standalone—not only as a brilliant exegesis of capitalist machinery, but also as a sweeping social history of technology. At its broadest reach, the chapter is a vivid demonstration of historical materialism in action, of Marx’s method put through its dialectical paces. As ever with Marx, his footnotes aren’t to be passed over glibly: they’re worth studying, pondering over for the nuggets of insight they contain.
Marx on technology
Tag: Trade Unions
Pity the Nation: Honduras Is Being Eaten from within and without
Biden’s new dawn: Illusion and reality
Biden’s new dawn: Illusion and reality
Biden is attempting to create a political framework within the US to wage war abroad. This is the essential significance of his administration’s aggressive promotion of the official trade unions, which are to be incorporated into a “national labor front” based on economic nationalism and militarism.
What Does Decolonization Look Like? Ask Bolivia.
What Does Decolonization Look Like? Ask Bolivia.
More posts from Marxist, Erich Arbor.
Drones With Facial Recognition Are Set to Fly + More
Protests mount against Socialist Party-Podemos persecution of Spanish rapper Pablo Hasél
Facebook’s news censorship in Australia: A battle between monopolies
Facebook’s news censorship in Australia: A battle between monopolies
However, socialists and progressives in the country are wary of taking any sides in what they see as a battle between monopolies. Media outlets owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp hold a monopoly of over 70% of the national print readership. Murdoch is also one of the biggest advocates of the bargaining code, which has also inspired other media corporations around the world.
“Hitler was elected” – Myth or Fact
Stalin and the Proletariat’s Battle for Democracy
We Are Grass. We Grow on Everything: The Forty-Ninth Newsletter (2020)
Farmers and agricultural workers from northern India marched along various national highways toward India’s capital of New Delhi as part of the general strike on 26 November. They carried placards with slogans against the anti-farmer, pro-corporate laws that were passed by India’s Lok Sabha (lower house of parliament) in September, and then pushed through the Rajya Sabha (upper house) with only a voice vote. The striking agricultural workers and farmers carried flags that indicated their affiliation with a range of organisations, from the communist movement to a broad front of farmers’ organisations. They marched against the privatisation of agriculture, which they argue undermines India’s food sovereignty and erodes their ability to remain agriculturalists.
We Are Grass. We Grow on Everything: The Forty-Ninth Newsletter (2020)