uetricht has said that he hadn't considered that the broadcast of that 1:1 tweet could result in an uptick of threats to K, and that had he considered it, he wouldn't have run it. i think he's right in that regard, and i think that decision, had it been made--to make an editorial choice based on putting the control of the narrative in a survivor's hands--is one that would have been driven by anti-sexist values.
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Thursday, 12 June 2014 18:17 (ten years ago) link
writer unfollowed me bcz i made fun of her review in a tweet
:(
#classwar
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, 29 July 2014 14:19 (ten years ago) link
nobody said there wouldn't be vanity in our revolution
― j., Tuesday, 29 July 2014 15:12 (ten years ago) link
I read this earlier and shared it without even realizing it'd been written by a guy whose show I produce.
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2014/08/in-defense-of-the-ferguson-riots/
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Thursday, 14 August 2014 20:22 (ten years ago) link
idk if we have a better generic thread for me to post this to? http://www.rhizzone.net/article/2012/09/29/fuck-new-inquiry-and-other-tales/
― celfie tucker 48 (s.clover), Sunday, 28 December 2014 05:53 (nine years ago) link
So far, so banal - this seems to be nothing more than a luminary of the left’s old guard hurling vile attacks at one of its young bloods. But what if this is a symptom of something bigger and more problematic, both at the journal Harris and Rosenfelt run, and within the left itself?
First though, let us examine what happened in more detail.
rolling let's not thread?
― languagelessness (mattresslessness), Sunday, 28 December 2014 06:00 (nine years ago) link
Just as the rapacity of global capitalism has created a surplus population of eastern India’s Adivasis, driving them into the arms of the Maoist Naxalite rebellion, so too did it create a surplus population of New York’s upper-middle and upper class humanities graduates. No longer able to slide into the usual pathways of academia, publishing, or academic publishing, the very real prospect of proletarianisation (or at least having to get a job that paid an hourly wage) left Rosenfelt and many others with the terrifying future of never having opportunities beyond dinner parties and similar to demonstrate that they had, in fact, read The Waste Land at university. Even more terrifying, the possibility that the public intellectual might die out entirely was growing increasingly concrete.
so too
― j., Sunday, 28 December 2014 06:05 (nine years ago) link
haha yes that's a heckova "so too"
― celfie tucker 48 (s.clover), Sunday, 28 December 2014 07:50 (nine years ago) link
i cant figure out if its just that the left attracts damaged people, or that the internet attracts damaged people, or that the combination of the left and the internet makes regular people damaged
― max, Sunday, 28 December 2014 15:32 (nine years ago) link
i think that "so too" is snarking tho?
― Mordy, Sunday, 28 December 2014 18:22 (nine years ago) link
HOOS did you ever meet MH? he was like self-appointed king of UMD activism
― linda cardellini (zachlyon), Sunday, 28 December 2014 20:24 (nine years ago) link
i met him once briefly at a thing, then i took twitter shots at him for a TNI piece about teacher's unions, so he blocked & unfriended me. lol.
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Monday, 29 December 2014 06:46 (nine years ago) link
lol
i had a couple conversations, we ran in similar circles but i never really wanted to be around him. forced himself to the front of literally every activist and/or anarchist thing on campus like it was his destiny. everything. apparently i mentioned him already itt as having an editorial in the paper every day. read creepy sex poetry at the weekly open mic.
― linda cardellini (zachlyon), Monday, 29 December 2014 08:55 (nine years ago) link
also creeped on a friend in a really weird way that sort of paints him in a way in my head
forced himself to the front of literally every activist and/or anarchist thing on campus like it was his destiny
every campus has one or two of these dudes. ugh.
― I dunno. (amateurist), Monday, 29 December 2014 22:23 (nine years ago) link
ok lol http://www.cafe.com/why-public-schools-are-the-real-prisons-by-cafes-new-millennial-columnist/
― big WHOIS aka the nameserver (s.clover), Sunday, 15 November 2015 06:31 (eight years ago) link
cafe.com is the best site there is
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Sunday, 15 November 2015 23:51 (eight years ago) link
marshall harford iii otm tbh
― Merdeyeux, Monday, 16 November 2015 00:06 (eight years ago) link
haven't read the magazine but jacobin headlines have been making me roll my godamn eyes lately :-(
this was a masterpiece though, probably the only piketty criticism from the left written by someone who didn't stop paying attention to economics at cambridge capital controversies. they should suresh a weekly column a la krugman https://www.jacobinmag.com/2014/05/capital-eats-the-world/
― flopson, Monday, 16 November 2015 00:10 (eight years ago) link
https://twitter.com/SaulWilliams/status/694998961623535616
this article is bad imo
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Friday, 5 February 2016 14:39 (eight years ago) link
also really long
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Friday, 5 February 2016 14:52 (eight years ago) link
For an open letter from Jacobin to Coates, I thought it was pretty innocous. This part though:
Throughout his writings, Coates rightly rejects the argument that deep inequality is due to the cultural pathology of the black poor. But he embraces another aspect of Cold War liberalism: the focus on institutional racism — a concept that roots racial inequality primarily in covert, systematized practices like redlining in the mortgage industry, property-tax funding structures for public education, the siting of undesirable or toxic land uses adjacent to black communities, and so on, rather than overt forms of anti-black violence and discrimination.
I don't think anyone who has read Between the World and Me could write that, and I'm not sure what to do with an open letter to Coates from someone who hasn't read that.
― Frederik B, Friday, 5 February 2016 15:32 (eight years ago) link
well, innocuous maybe but it's a whole broadside against his concerns w/ bernie sanders' refusal to take reparations seriously as a political concern
there's also this whole section which amounts to, "because black people also plundered black people, coates is wrong"
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Friday, 5 February 2016 16:08 (eight years ago) link
Yeah, it's just, I have such low expectations of the Jacobin I guess...
― Frederik B, Friday, 5 February 2016 16:13 (eight years ago) link
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2015/07/bosnian-war-nato-bombing-dayton-accords/
This from last summer is probably the nadir of this bullshit website
― Cornelius Pardew (jim in glasgow), Friday, 5 February 2016 16:17 (eight years ago) link
Coates' response to Johnson is pretty good: http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/02/why-we-write/459909/
― Frederik B, Monday, 8 February 2016 13:08 (eight years ago) link
This is pathetic. The magazine publishes a report on the changing class base of the Democratic party, kinda interesting, pretty obvious, a change taking place all over the world. Then it gets to 2016, and this happens:
This attitude has contributed to the success of Bernie Sanders’s bid. Sanders has placed the issue of wealth inequality at the center of the Democratic Party’s agenda for the first time in generations. Still, while Sanders’s populist platform and stump speeches express support for organized labor, it is educated professionals (or aspiring professionals) — not blue- and pink-collar workers — who have mostly turned out at his rallies and donated to his campaign. [Editor’s note: Recent evidence suggests Sanders is attracting low-income voters in greater numbers.]
If you can't let your writers write measured criticism of a candidate, without editorial popping in with comments to the contrary, give it up.
― Frederik B, Monday, 8 February 2016 16:33 (eight years ago) link
jim, what don't you like about the bosnian war article? (not challenging you; just read it and legitimately curious about yr critique)
― Mordy, Monday, 8 February 2016 16:45 (eight years ago) link
jacobin sez: meryl streep's speech "worst thing to happen since trump's election"
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2017/01/meryl-streep-speech-trump-golden-globes/
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Tuesday, 10 January 2017 04:59 (seven years ago) link
The tilt of her jaw, the lift of her nose like something out of an old portrait representing aristocratic Anglo-German inbreeding, the toss of that shiny blonde mane
mmmmmmmm
― ogmor, Tuesday, 10 January 2017 12:30 (seven years ago) link
can't figure out what i like less about this magazine's name - that they named themselves after the architects of the Reign of Terror, or that in contrast to their revolutionary forbearers they're pretty staid
― Mordy, Wednesday, 18 January 2017 17:07 (seven years ago) link
― Mordy, Monday, February 8, 2016 8:45 AM (eleven months ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
ah, almost a year later i answer this question. classic leftist anti-nato whataboutery and muddying of the waters in the article that kind of boil my blood:
"While Serb soldiers are most to blame for the massacre, the Bosnian government also contributed to the tragedy. According to Swedish diplomat Carl Bildt, who served as the European Union mediator during the Bosnian War, Bosnian officials deliberately allowed Srebrenica to fall to the Serb military. In his memoirs, Bildt notes that Bosnian government forces assigned to protect Srebrenica were “not putting up any resistance. Later it was revealed that they had been ordered by the Sarajevo commanders not to defend Srebrenica.”
Bildt’s account is supported by military correspondent Tim Ripley, who provides copious evidence that the Bosnian government ceded the town to Serb forces, possibly as part of the Izetbegović government’s broader strategy to expose civilians to Serb attacks and garner sympathetic intervention.
Retrospective efforts to whitewash the actions of the Bosnian government, and Izetbegović in particular, have played an important role in establishing the Srebrenica massacre as a morally simple affair, with villains and heroes, thus retroactively justifying US military involvement in Bosnia. Equally important, widespread mischaracterizations of the massacre have served to portray interventions in Bosnia and elsewhere as acts of benevolence."
First off I would suggest that it's somewhat controversial of a take to say that the Bosnian government let Srebrenica fall because they wanted their people to be massacred for propaganda purposes. The mainstream narrative usually has it that the Bosnians were on the back foot in the war and retreated to avoid further military losses and to consolidate the territory they had under firm control rather than protect enclaves. e.g. this from the NYT obit of Izetbegovic:
"Determined to cut losses and establish contiguous territory in a war that was now going against them, Gen. Ratko Mladic's Bosnian Serb forces overran the eastern Muslim enclaves of Srebrenica and Zepa in the summer of 1995."
Now even if we accept that Izetbegovic was playing 12 dimensional chess and allowing the Bosnian populace to be terrorized and abused by the Bosnian Serb forces it does not necessarily follow that he could have predicted that the worst massacre in Europe since the Second World War was going to happen. Neither is allowing something to happen as bad as carrying out the bad thing (imo). I'm generally sympathetic to looking at the Yugoslav wars through a non-binary prism - shit was definitely murky. But imo to try and cast Srebrenica as a "both sides are as bad as each other" sort of thing is obtuse and/or disingenuous.
― Islamic State of Mind (jim in vancouver), Wednesday, 18 January 2017 17:44 (seven years ago) link
Subbed 2 Catalyst, their new journal thing.
― the ghost of markers, Friday, 26 May 2017 16:54 (seven years ago) link
is it supposed to be more academic stuff?
― flopson, Friday, 26 May 2017 17:22 (seven years ago) link
recent piece i enjoyed:
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2017/05/after-piketty-capital-twenty-first-century-naidu
― flopson, Friday, 26 May 2017 17:39 (seven years ago) link
got catalyst no 1. the first two articles (lead editorial and the sociology one) are dire and full of jargon to the point of near unreadability, and also not particularly new or interesting in any sense if yr familiar with the sort of traditions they come out of. there are some decent pieces in the rest of it, at least in the sense they're readable. not really sure what exact territory its trying to stake out when monthly review, new left review, etc. are still kicking around, except maybe they think that more people will read those sorts of articles if they're yoked to the jacobin brand
― breaking kayfefe (s.clover), Sunday, 4 June 2017 18:18 (seven years ago) link
but not if they're written like those first two articles, nobody will
(also the capsule summaries in front of each article are some condescending cliffs notes nonsense that remind me of the "teachers guides" for reading comprehension exercises in sixth grade)
― breaking kayfefe (s.clover), Sunday, 4 June 2017 18:19 (seven years ago) link
jacobin writer: the fact that elizabeth warren has such awesome and detailed policies is actually evidence of her weakness as a candidate, and here's why
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2019/04/elizabeth-warren-policy-bernie-sanders-presidential-primary
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Tuesday, 30 April 2019 19:04 (five years ago) link
I don't disagree with part of the central thesis, that Warren lacks Sanders' mass appeal and is trying on a different strategy, but the notion that it's a desperate attempt to mask a lack of support or w/ever is needlessly mean (and unfounded)
― Simon H., Tuesday, 30 April 2019 19:15 (five years ago) link
trying on taking
well, Sanders' mass appeal depends on his 2016 run. I've seen her work a room and a crowd as adeptly as he. After all, it's only April 2019.
― recriminations from the nitpicking woke (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 30 April 2019 19:17 (five years ago) link
Here's an article calling Sanders vs Warren another version of....Debs vs Brandeis.
― recriminations from the nitpicking woke (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 30 April 2019 19:20 (five years ago) link
warren is promoting a positive vision sanders is promoting a reactionary one that's why the radicals prefer him - negation will always sound more dramatic and exciting than reform.
― Mordy, Tuesday, 30 April 2019 19:25 (five years ago) link
It’s almost as if they complete each other and would be terrific running mates.
― Van Horn Street, Tuesday, 30 April 2019 19:26 (five years ago) link
to sander's credit (and what is oft pointed out) his rhetoric sounds more revolutionary than it is and it's certainly possible to marry pragmatic structural revamps w/ the glossy veneer of "revolution" but it is funny that jacobin types seem to want to play this dichotomy on both sides - when convenient bernie is offering the more "radical" approach and when he's critiqued for being too radical he's merely a european style social democrat. to me the lacuna between the two positions is cause for concern whereas warren is presenting (politically) a coherent package.
― Mordy, Tuesday, 30 April 2019 19:29 (five years ago) link
Put bluntly, Warren is turning her campaign into a policy factory because she’s had trouble inspiring people with a broad-strokes political vision the way her closest ideological competitor, Bernie Sanders, has.
iow, she hasn't generated enough popular enthusiasm to rise in the polls, yet. you can figure that part out by looking at the polls.
But we shouldn’t see her policy blitz purely as a sign of strength. It may actually be an SOS message, a panicked response to her campaign’s shortcomings in the field of mass politics.
(my bolding)
To say that these policies are being delineated because she thinks this will help her generate more enthusiasm is just the author drawing that rather simplified conclusion and asserting it as true. Presidential campaigns are complex and multiform and notoriously difficult to win. This article is the usual weak-assed punditry as most campaign reporting. Where it is right, it is stating the obvious. Where it is adventurous, it is empty speculation. Call back in a year.
― A is for (Aimless), Tuesday, 30 April 2019 19:32 (five years ago) link