It has all been downhill for the western world when it embraced secularism and Jewish Hollywood and financialization.uziq wrote:
i think we can do better in 2020 than to look to a bunch of frock-wearing pederasts for a solution.

It has all been downhill for the western world when it embraced secularism and Jewish Hollywood and financialization.uziq wrote:
i think we can do better in 2020 than to look to a bunch of frock-wearing pederasts for a solution.
Last edited by Larssen (2020-05-12 09:15:53)
Last edited by uziq (2020-05-12 09:27:31)
Last edited by uziq (2020-05-12 10:37:20)
Larssen, I think your failure here is your very short-sighted view of the world, and a very myopic view of the goal of international relations in particular. There have been multinational agreements, leagues, NGOs, across the span of history. Regional societies and governments have always sought to form alliances that in theory mutually benefit all parties. The Roman Empire, the Hanseatic League, the League Of Nations, the USSR, the OAS, the United Nations, etc etc. This is not an inevitability borne out of modern politics or the globally connected world - these are agreements between those entities to embark in mutually beneficial activities or as a way to exert singular control of a central power. Obviously, most of those examples cease to exist in modernity. Why? Because those mutually beneficial arrangements only last as long as those charters act in the benefit of the whole only. We could look at any example and suss out specific reasons for their demise, but the commonality is that those multi-party entities failed to follow their charter - either because they were not empowered enough to do so, or because they started acting for the benefit of a few instead of the syndicate, or because a stronger entity dissolved them.Larssen wrote:
In the age of increased globalisation it is only to be expected that both on the left and right movements would emerge that resist this trend and argue for more localised or national politics. The fact that these movements exist doesn't make them logical. Let me give you some IR 101, or at least one of the myriad of angles through which you can look at this problem:
The power of centralised government is increasing because of a very simple concept, that sovereignty means not only the ability to determine one's own policies, but the ability to act on those policies as well. The legitimacy of a government hinges in no small part on its policy effectiveness. It is a fact that smaller nations especially have seen their individual sovereignty erode over time - in matters of national economics, in trade, in security, in social policy etc. Hence their often reluctant appeal to international organisations such as the EU. This is no longer the age of colonialism and governments need one another to enact policy, especially the smaller ones. Jay, the fact that most nations don't contribute as much to the NATO budget as you would like them to is unquestionably proof of these notions. For various reasons (depending on national context) they are unable. Even if they were willing and redirected vast sums to the military budget, the means their money could buy would not be able to satisfy their strategic goals without the larger NATO alliance's involvement. There's also the argument that dumping more money in the military won't do anything to further secure the north atlantic area, but I digress.
The EU has indeed careened from crisis to crisis, it's a core aspect of the EU's evolution. National governments want to safeguard their ability to decide their own policies rather than outsource decision making capacity to the EU. Yet time and again they're faced with challenges beyond their national control and find themselves unable to solve the international crises with which they are faced. Sovereignty of decisionmaking but no policy effectiveness - remember? And so the member states are resigned to seek out one another and fill emergent cracks once more, giving rise to new international constructs under the EU umbrella. In most respects crisis is the necessary vehicle for EU integration. Even if national governments were to decide to destroy that institution, they would only be forced to rebuild it once a new transnational challenge emerges.
I don't care to respond to the points of the soviet union and china because there's incredibly obvious differences between them and an institution like the EU. The EU does not mean the destruction of local and national culture or the removal of the voice of the people and all layers of government between Brussels and, say, Helsinki. It's a necessary top layer on modern life that will only continue to absorb responsibilities and authorities normally associated with nations. The problem is these responsibilities and authorities seem associated with our national identities as well. If we can't move beyond that into an organisation where we can acknowledge common purpose regardless of our national affiliations, Europe and its inhabitants are done. Not tomorrow, a slow decline, but decline nonetheless.
So what's the point of that centralised government? Well not to pave the road between Thessalonica and some unremarkable adjacent village. But there's a certain streamlining that is absolutely necessary to ensure smooth trade, economic growth, security, to counter tax evasion, but also rule of law - and from these core aspects other functions emerge as well. Foreign affairs, development aid, agricultural reform, educational standards, innovation investment etc. Here everyone has their own opinion on what the EU should or shouldn't do and I imagine many feel similar frustrations with state rights vs federal rights, but at the end of the day the complexity of the interlinked landscape we deal with today is much greater than most people assume on a surface level and the only logical way forward is to seek out other communities and compromise.
I can't help it that there's a resurgent far right and nationalist tendencies across the board. I see it as a symptom of the fact that our way of life is evolving faster than many individual's ability to cope. I sympathise, but refuse to appease that short-sighted, emotional reactionism.
And here's why 'the left' is too vague a term if you only conceive of it as something more closely rooted in marxism. Deconstruction traces its roots back to the same logic of freeing the oppressed from their oppressors and many of its pioneers were communists in their youth... your wholesale rejection of it tells me only that it's not part of 'your left'. Was it socialist and marxist economics in the EU you were referencing more? Well I'd like to refer you to yanis varoufakis' stint as finance minister of greece for a case study.uziq wrote:
identitarianism is liberal ideology. the left has been critiquing it for years. it's right there in fundamental marxian analysis (the basis of all class difference is economic), and it's there in bang-up-to-date zizek polemics. the left has never been the political wing 'dividing society into a million different identity groups'; its buzzword is 'solidarity'. jordan peterson and zizek had a hugely publicised 'debate' a year or so ago in which they got together to shit on identity politics, ffs.
it was called the comintern for a reason.
Last edited by Larssen (2020-05-12 12:18:28)
Last edited by uziq (2020-05-12 12:44:29)
I'll respond to this seperately because I don't agree at all. If you accuse me of being myopic I can't hope to imagine what you make of your own writing here. If 'the goal' has always been the same you might as well ask yourself why we ever left the age of colonialism and empire to begin with. We've been in the process of rectifying this issue since the justification of colonial possession became untenable. A process over the course of decades and centuries, mind you, not years.KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
This may not be the age of colonialism as we know it, but there are activities taken by the global north that still seek to exert control over weaker areas - except the new currency of warfare is money, not bombs. The end goal is the same - to extract wealth and resources, to open up new markets, to ensure consumption. Whether it's old-fashioned imperialism, colonialism, or modern neoliberal policy, the goal is the same.
I'll leave the precise designations to you but yes these were essentially my points. There's a lot of movement within social liberalism and I've noticed those who fuss about identity the most are also almost unanimously more associated with 'traditional left' thinking, green movements etc. The dividing lines are a little blurry at this point.uziq wrote:
i was thinking of yanks varoufakis in my first post. that went well, didn't it?
'the left' is commonly accepted to be communism-socialism, if you want to talk about identity politics then talk about the liberal politicians and ideologues who have pursued such politics in the west. if you think any sort of social democrat or liberal is 'left' then, yeah, sure. but 'The Left' as a political-philosophical system? as an organised movement? not really. i realise it probably sounds like a ridiculous splitting of hairs but i cannot see how anyone can conceive of liberal centrists fussing over identity as 'leftist' politics.
i'm not sure why you reference deconstruction, as if derrida dovetails into identity politics. yes it was closely associated with post-marxism; but identity politics? i guess again here you're going to lump all sorts of subaltern studies, feminism, post-colonialism, etc. as 'identity politics'. otherwise what you're saying makes little sense to me.
what you're reaching at is intersectionality, another topic again.
Last edited by Larssen (2020-05-12 12:45:34)
Last edited by uziq (2020-05-12 12:58:35)
Last edited by uziq (2020-05-13 13:14:29)
https://www.cnn.com/2020/05/12/us/coron … index.htmlTwo men who allegedly refused to wear masks inside a Target store in California are facing felony battery charges after a fight that left an employee security guard with a broken arm, according to the Los Angeles Police Department.
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The suspects were not wearing face coverings when they entered the store's Van Nuys location on May 1, and were confronted by store employees, police said in a statement released on Monday. They were being escorted out of the store when the fight broke out, police said in a statement released on Monday.
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The two suspects, identified by police as 31-year-old Phillip Hamilton and 29-year-old Paul Hamilton, were arrested later that day. CNN has not been able to determine whether the men have attorneys.
Last edited by uziq (2020-05-13 14:17:01)
Last edited by uziq (2020-05-13 14:35:54)
The formation of the EU was largely an institutionalist approach. I understand you want to add in that you can still apply constructivist ideology to any current relations, but let's stop pretending that this particular application of international relations theory followed anything that could be construed as as constructivist ideology. It's accelerated realism where practical goals are championed over any ideological goals - and that is my biggest issue with IR theory in general.Larssen wrote:
My post was not meant to sound the end-all verdict on why states do what they do in the 21st century. There's layers to this and I did write that it's 'one of myriad of angles' to analyse what's happening. Nor is my goal to posit that we're all moving towards a 'one world government', I don't see that as possible at all - a multipolar world, yes, but not beyond that. What I do explain is what motivates cooperation within the EU first and foremost, to which you can still add ideological underpinnings, constructivist or institutionalist perspectives - one could even posit the notion of shared historical experience and cultural roots. Ultimately a narrative only speaking in terms of rational states is bound to fall short in explaining the how, what and why of the existence of an entity like the EU. But I'm also alluding to what makes it different from other organisations, as its foundation is much more expansive than a simple agreement based on mutual need, or only to counteract anarchy or safeguard new moral principles.
Historical comparisons are very hard to apply here. Other reasons apart from the above being the fact that we've now established a state system fundamentally resting on the treaty of westphalia instead of vague hierarchical divisions within societies and that the norms and rules of the international order have completely changed as well - look only to the changing morality on conquest and empire which were perfectly valid reasons in times past to construct centralised government. The closest you may get is to draw some parallels with the holy roman empire, though its dynamics and context were still wildly different. I've made the argument elsewhere that another possibility for the EU's future is to fare much like the HRE did, with the different national centres tugging at and slowly weakening centralised government for the next X hundreds of years. But I'm sure you can predict what my personal stance is on that matter as to the continued prosperity & safety of the people who live here (very much undesirable). Nonetheless, the supremacy of the 28 members being entrenched everywhere in the EU's "constitutional documents", the treaty on the functioning of the EU, the treaty on the EU, the treaty of lisbon, this is more than a guess - it's possible and likely.
As a sidenote I hope the above explains that the EU as it was formed was as much a product of internal EU politics as it was influenced by the existence of the soviet union on its borders and the united states across the atlantic. China did not factor in the equation. Only in the late cold war and again in the late 90s, after a massive effort to involve eastern Europe in the union and rebuild it did the member states really look beyond and see a greater international role for the organisation.
I also do think the changing technology landscape should be mentioned here, as it's been a gamechanger beyond any other development. The fact that you can get in an airplane and literally be at the other end of the world within 24 hours, that you can speak to anyone on the globe instantly, that information flows freely and also currency and business - the interconnection of our world is a direct assault on our traditional westphalian state system. The international arena needs to change to accomodate this. The other end of the spectrum are those who do still see the world in terms of little turfs and who want to deploy technology to entrench these imaginary divisions and make them lived reality, i.e. through the super-surveillance state and the elimination of privacy. Ironically, that too requires the construction of a superstate.