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(Post)pandemic struggles in social reproduction: COVID-19 and housing justice in Serbia | Lefteast

Louis Proyect
 


How American religious conservatives fought LGBT rights in Ukraine - bellingcat

Louis Proyect
 


Re: Question: Has the Spartacist League Folded?

Louis Proyect
 

On 10/16/20 7:55 AM, Jerry Monaco wrote:
I remember an article on the Meiji Restoration as a “bourgeois” revolution. It was a “very good” bad argument that illustrated the problem that capitalist development does not run a straight course. A bourgeois revolution is made above the heads of a small bourgeoisie and this illustrates Trotsky’s theory etc, etc... In other words they were very good at representing important historical problems with one track Marxism while claiming to solve those problems. 

But sometimes they did good historical work on the history of the communist movement and the USSR as well. 

MEIJI RESTORATION

Turning to Japan, the question of whether capitalist agriculture is a requirement for the advent of capitalism in general becomes even more problematic. Japanese Marxist scholarship has been the site of intense debates inspired by the Sweezy-Dobbs exchange. The Meiji restoration of the late 19th century is widely seen as the advent of the contemporary economic system, but there is scant evidence of bourgeois transformation of agriculture.

In "The Meiji Landlord: Good or Bad" (Journal of Asian Studies, May '59), R.P. Dore dates the controversy as arising in the 1930s, long before Dobbs, Sweezy and Brenner stepped into the ring. The Iwanami Symposium on the

Development of Japanese Capitalism, held in 1932, marks the starting point of a sustained effort to date the transformation of Japan from a feudal to a capitalist society. Especially problematic was the role of class relations in the countryside, which never went through the radical restructuring of Brenner's 16th century England.

Referring to Hirano Yoshitarö's "The Structure of Japanese Capitalism" Dore writes:

"Hirano's work contains a good deal of original research concerning the economic facts of the agrarian structure of the early Meiji, and the creation of a highly dependent class of tenant farmers. The landlords of Hirano, for example, preserved the semi-feudal social relations of the countryside which provided the necessary groundbase for the peculiarly distorted form of capitalism which developed in Japan. The high rents, maintained by semi-feudal extra-economic pressures, not only helped to preserve this semi-feudal base intact (by making capitalist agriculture unprofitable) they also contributed to the rapid process of primitive capital accumulation which accounted for the speed of industrial development. Thus the landlords were to blame for the two major special characteristics of Japanese capitalist development--its rapidity and its distorted nature."

Gosh, this is enough to make your head spin. Here we have a situation in which, according to one of the deans of Japanese Marxist scholarship, semi-feudal relations in the countryside served to accelerate Japanese capitalist development. Just the opposite of what Brenner alleges to be the secret of English hyper-capitalist success. Something doesn't add up here, does it?

http://www.columbia.edu/~lnp3/mydocs/origins/brenner_thesis.htm

On their historical work, they were deep into James P. Cannon, and published material on him and other Trotskyists they considered revolutionary at https://www.icl-fi.org/prl/index.html. From what I can gather, Bryan Palmer was a fellow traveler.



Question: Has the Spartacist League Folded?

Jerry Monaco
 


No jokes comrades and friends. They haven’t brought out a newspaper in six months. The last post on their meager website was in August where they told the world proletariat that “Workers Vanguard” would be on “an irregular schedule until further notice.” 

In a Chris Marker movie I once heard the joke, “One Trotskyist a tendency; two Trotskyists a party; three Trotskyists a split.” Did the SL dwindle down to three comrades and then disappear? Are they hiding in apartments or caves to preserve their aging cadre from COVID 19? It is very unBolshevik of them not to make a statement. 

I know many will say of the SL “good riddance.” And perhaps they were the bad disrupters of the ultra-radical left. But a long time ago they had a very amusing and sometimes interesting paper. When I was in college in Chicago I remember the headline “Hubert Humphrey Dead at Last.” That is when I first subscribed to WV. I’ve subscribed off and on when I have had a settled address in the United States. So when I moved to New York I remember the headline when Alex Cockburn (I miss him so) was fired from the Village Voice, “Defend the Scoundrel.”  

They did do some good historical work. Even in this century. 

I remember an article on the Meiji Restoration as a “bourgeois” revolution. It was a “very good” bad argument that illustrated the problem that capitalist development does not run a straight course. A bourgeois revolution is made above the heads of a small bourgeoisie and this illustrates Trotsky’s theory etc, etc... In other words they were very good at representing important historical problems with one track Marxism while claiming to solve those problems. 

But sometimes they did good historical work on the history of the communist movement and the USSR as well. 

Back in college I did learn one concept that has stayed with me from a pamphlet on Black Liberation. They defined the position of Blacks in the United States as a “color-caste disproportionately consigned to working class jobs.” They trice hard to integrated this concept of a color-caste into a class analysis. I think this is a useful framework. It is better than Wilkerson’s conceptualization of how caste fits into a system of classes. Wilkerson seems to think “class” in the United States is ephemeral to our system. She has said that class is “like the clothes you wear; it is not hard to change your clothes.” (I am quoting from an interview.) I agree with her and the Sparts that there are aspects of a caste system based on the color-line in the U.S. But how that is integrated into a system dominated by the U.S. ruling class, nobody has yet worked out. The middle class intelligentsia would prefer to ignore it.

So my question again:

Are the last true Trotskyists gone? Spartacist League RIP?

Jerry


Re: GOP’s Sen. Sasse says Trump mistreats women, flirts with white supremacy and secretly mocks evangelicals

Dennis Brasky
 

Rats jumping off a sinking ship. Where were his criticisms for the past four years???


On Thu, Oct 15, 2020 at 5:43 PM Louis Proyect <lnp3@...> wrote:

GOP’s Sen. Sasse says Trump mistreats women, flirts with white supremacy and secretly mocks evangelicals


Re: Fox News Owner Rupert Murdoch Predicts a Landslide Win for Biden

Chris Slee
 

Murdoch is obviously part of the ruling class.  But the ruling class is not united.  A few days ago there was a post showing, from memory, that about 40 percent of billionaires were backing Trump and 60 percent backing Biden.  It seems that Murdoch may be shifting from the Trump to the Biden camp.

Chris Slee



From: marxmail@groups.io <marxmail@groups.io> on behalf of Michael Meeropol <mameerop@...>
Sent: Friday, 16 October 2020 2:18 PM
To: marxmail@groups.io <marxmail@groups.io>
Subject: Re: [marxmail] Fox News Owner Rupert Murdoch Predicts a Landslide Win for Biden
 
referencing our ongoing discussion of what the AMerican ruling class "wants" ---- do we think that Murdoch is a member of the ruling class or just an opportunistic hired gun??


Re: Fascism, Trumpism, and the left | Louis Proyect: The Unrepentant Marxist

Dayne Goodwin
 

On Thu, Oct 15, 2020 at 6:12 AM Andrew Stewart <hasc.warrior.stew@...> wrote:
> I am not going to play this childish game with you. You know exactly what the point is that I am making and you want to play what amounts to an inbred power game.

No need to play games, Andrew.  You could just admit that you have no evidence for your assertions.

I was surprised that you would 'make a point' that amounts to common U.S. high school history level misrepresentations of Lenin and the Bolshevik revolution.


On Thu, Oct 15, 2020 at 1:01 AM Dayne Goodwin via groups.io <daynegoodwin=gmail.com@groups.io> wrote:
> On Mon, Oct 12, 2020 at 10:33 AM Andrew Stewart <hasc.warrior.stew@...> wrote:
>> ...Remember, (despite what Lars Lih claims) Lenin's key to success was outright rejection and repudiation of the received wisdom from the prior 50 years of Marxist theory combined with a novel restatement of principles.

Andrew, you did not provide one quote from Lenin, one reference to anything from Lenin's writings or speeches, where Lenin outright "rejected and repudiated" any major point of Marxist wisdom.  Where can i find Lenin's "novel restatement of principles"? 


On Wed, Oct 14, 2020 at 10:12 AM Andrew Stewart <hasc.warrior.stew@...> wrote:
Andrew, would you please list some of these major points of Marxist wisdom which Lenin 'outright rejected and repudiated'?
The received Marxist wisdom in 1917 at the time of the Russian revolution that Lenin acted contrary to:
1-Socialist revolution could not take place anywhere besides an advanced capitalist country such as Germany
2-Socialist revolution could only take place following a bourgeois democratic revolution
3-From an interview with Lukacs: It was Lenin who, for the first time since Marx, seriously raised the significance of the subjective factors in revolution. His definition of a revolutionary situation, when the ruling classes are no longer able to govern in the old sense, and the oppressed classes are no longer willing to live in the old way, is generally known. When his followers adopted this concept, some made a ‘slight’ difference in interpretation, saying that ‘not to want to live in the old way’ meant for them that economic development is automatically turning people into revolutionaries. Lenin knew that the problem of ‘not wanting to live in the old way’ has strong dialectical implications and is a manifold tendency of society.
4-Also consider the numerous criticisms that Kautsky raised (ones I do not agree with but that is besides the point). The whole Menshevik/West European Social Democratic indictment of the Bolshevik revolution, made manifest in the USA by the Socialist Party of America and later Michael Harrington, claimed a fundamental break with Marx's theory had occurred when the Bolsheviks took power.


On Tue, Oct 13, 2020 at 9:43 PM Dayne Goodwin via groups.io <daynegoodwin=gmail.com@groups.io> wrote:
>
> On Mon, Oct 12, 2020 at 10:33 AM Andrew Stewart <hasc.warrior.stew@...> wrote:
>>
>> ...Remember, (despite what Lars Lih claims) Lenin's key to success was outright rejection and repudiation of the received wisdom from the prior 50 years of Marxist theory combined with a novel restatement of principles. You need to make a similar jump into the void in order to understand the current situation.
>
> Andrew, would you please list some of these major points of Marxist wisdom which Lenin 'outright rejected and repudiated'?
>
>
> On Mon, Oct 12, 2020 at 10:33 AM Andrew Stewart <hasc.warrior.stew@...> wrote:
>>
>> Your analysis is to pull out something about Germany from 85+ years ago as if that can be mechanically imposed upon the 21st century? Also, Germany was not a settler-colonial society and Weimar was a parliamentary system as opposed to a Federalist system. C'mon Louis, de omnibus dubitandum. Ford's class analysis is there, it is Marxist, and you just don't want to see it. Remember, (despite what Lars Lih claims) Lenin's key to success was outright rejection and repudiation of the received wisdom from the prior 50 years of Marxist theory combined with a novel restatement of principles. You need to make a similar jump into the void in order to understand the current situation.


On Thu, Oct 15, 2020 at 6:12 AM Andrew Stewart <hasc.warrior.stew@...> wrote:
Andrew, you did not provide one quote from Lenin, one reference to anything from Lenin's writings or speeches, where Lenin outright "rejected and repudiated" any major point of Marxist wisdom.  Where can i find Lenin's "novel restatement of principles"? 
I am not going to play this childish game with you. You know exactly what the point is that I am making and you want to play what amounts to an inbred power game.
 


Re: Fascism, Trumpism, and the left | Louis Proyect: The Unrepentant tMarxist

fkalosar101@...
 

Comrade Lause--delighted to see you being your inimitably grouchy and overbearing self.  Wouldn't have it any other way.

Stewart has a lot to say and says much of it very badly or without any real coherence at all.  When legitimately challenged or innocently questioned he resorts to personal abuse--"childish, inbred" etc. A little of that goes a long way.  Non est qualis erat, I suppose. 

His weird reply to my reference to New Labor suggests dementia. I've said everything to him that I consider worth saying. Poor man. There we all go sooner or later I suppose.  

However, to the extent that Stewart makes sense on this particular point, he is one of the "nobodies" who seem to regard foundation documents as inherently determining.  Not sure what is going on there, so won't belabor the point.  (Walt Whitman said we should "stand up for the stupid and crazy.")

Let me try to clarify my points for you and then try to indicate the relevance to the topic of this thread

1) My point re foundational documents, particularly constitutions, is that the rule frameworks they established do not determine the qualitative nature of the political arrangements that can happen under their alleged sway.  As rules  bodies, they are lifeless in themselves.  The "programs" they contain, so to speak, can be hacked to justify any result desired by--oh let's put on our kneebritches and talk 18th Century--"interested parties."  

2) The point about New Labor is that for all practical purposes the neoliberal political result under the so-called British constitution is the same as in the United States.  Formal rules, the British Constitution, immemorial tradition, and all the rest of it are irrelevant. This is quite obvious. I would like to say that I am surprised that some do not seem to "get' this very elementary fact, but alas that is not in the least surprising. 

To the extent that Andrew Stewart's argument on this point is coherent at all--which for the most part I do not think it is, though I am sure there must be matters on which he makes sense or used to make sense--the point seems to be that "parliamentary coalitions" caused fascism, which cannot happen in the United States because Federalist Papers 10.  Sorry, buddy--but that's what it boils down to.  

I've demonstrated that the first part of the proposition is historically false. As to the second part, the operation of the American ideology is not determined from time immemorial by the gefluegelte worte of the Floundering Bothers or anyone else.  The reproduction and adaptation of ideologies in history is a psychological and semantic, rather than a purely intellectual, process to which even the history of ideas and geistesgeschichte as such are not directly relevant. 

The documents are merely convenient bits and pieces available for the ready-made assembly process of ideological construction.  Ideology is continually renewed and reproduced, and its operations and effects are in many ways unconscious, even when it is itself remanufactured into "official" documents that form the "intellectual" justification for policies and party lines.

Tradition and national character do not in themselves exist--they are functions of social forces and exist in a semantic web, the functioning of which is largely unconscious.  If you are looking for the American Character as a really existing intentional object, so to speak, you are on a snipe hunt.  You might as well resort to some Tainian pseudo-scientific mumbojumbo about race, milieu, and moment.

It is helpful in dealing with these very basic matters to have some training in and understanding of criticism and the interpretation of texts.  Historians always seem to dismiss this as a load of unmanly affectation, which it isn't--although the insane pretentions of "deconstruction" etc. have gone far to discredit what is nonetheless a fundamental intellectual discipline, especially when allied with the study of literary history and, indeed, of history in general.  We ignore the semiotic at our peril, as infuriating as the currents of intellectual reaction surrounding Derrda etc. have been. 



Re: Fascism, Trumpism, and the left | Louis Proyect: The Unrepentant Marxist

fkalosar101@...
 

On Thu, Oct 15, 2020 at 08:12 AM, Andrew Stewart wrote:
Andrew, you did not provide one quote from Lenin, one reference to anything from Lenin's writings or speeches, where Lenin outright "rejected and repudiated" any major point of Marxist wisdom.  Where can i find Lenin's "novel restatement of principles"? 
I am not going to play this childish game with you. You know exactly what the point is that I am making and you want to play what amounts to an inbred power game.
In a high-minded civil debate, one is supposed to actually make one's points--if more or less pointedly, and maybe harshly at times-rather than claim that they are self-evident and require no defense. 

Somewhere in this thread there is a reasonably good list of the points you were making.   Why not direct Comrade Kulp's attention to that? The question sounded perfectly sincere to me.

"Childish?" "Inbred?"   


Re: Fox News Owner Rupert Murdoch Predicts a Landslide Win for Biden

Michael Meeropol
 

referencing our ongoing discussion of what the AMerican ruling class "wants" ---- do we think that Murdoch is a member of the ruling class or just an opportunistic hired gun??


Re: The Right’s War on Universities | by Ruth Ben-Ghiat | NYR Daily | The New York Review of Books

Roger Kulp
 

I think the historians they have interviewed raise some compelling arguments about the project,especially its omissions.But aside from that,I know a couple of socialist university professors,and I have had some enlightening conversations about the radical shift to the right on college campuses.What if,anything,do you think we can do  to stop this dangerous trend?I don't believe we can stop this simply by voting.The right have had a "long march"  of their own,through academia in the last forty odd years.You can criticize me for this,but I do think some fault can be placed at the feet of the collective left,for not making academic freedom an important enough issue,and we are seeing the results of this.


Let Them Eat Brunch: Why Leftists Should Celebrate the End of the #Resistance Era #resistance

Roger Kulp
 

There was indeed an organized backlash to Donald Trump’s victory, but that took the form of the “#resistance,” which is hardly a Leftist movement. In fact, I would argue that this liberal “awakening” which occurred after Trump took office was controlled opposition that did far more harm than good to the progressive cause. Besides spreading the new McCarthyism of Russiagate, cheering on an utterly pointless impeachment proceeding, electing a bunch of ex-CIA officers to Congress, and catapulting a failed mayor of South Bend, Indiana to national stardom, what has this #resistance movement accomplished? The most significant thing to come out of it was the inaugural Women’s March in 2017, when the now famous photo was taken of a protester holding a sign that read “If Hillary was President We’d Be at Brunch.”


https://duedissidence.com/2020/10/15/let-them-eat-brunch-why-leftists-should-celebrate-the-end-of-the-resistance-era/?fbclid=IwAR3zXwLSzEKCWiONjJHCGRq44niFFka1jbvsGm99Wh_JMkrTXfVdHjdvwOg


Re: The Right’s War on Universities | by Ruth Ben-Ghiat | NYR Daily | The New York Review of Books

Louis Proyect
 

On 10/15/20 9:57 PM, Roger Kulp wrote:
Have you read the articles about the 1619 Project at WSWS?

I have. They are garbage.


Re: The Right’s War on Universities | by Ruth Ben-Ghiat | NYR Daily | The New York Review of Books

Roger Kulp
 

Have you read the articles about the 1619 Project at WSWS?


Inside the Fall of the CDC — ProPublica

Louis Proyect
 

How the world’s greatest public health organization was brought to its knees by a virus, the president and the capitulation of its own leaders, causing damage that could last much longer than the coronavirus.

https://www.propublica.org/article/inside-the-fall-of-the-cdc?fbclid=IwAR09aulTa5DBIb6jwmT6eXZxHitxK2m9JtcnI2avuRnAOUJdhYVWSEWcgCM


Fordism

jenorem
 

Forging Global Fordism: Nazi Germany, Soviet Russia, and the Contest over the Industrial Order
Stefan J. Link

The utopian ideal of globalization has imploded over the past decade. Rising demand in Western countries for greater state control over the economy reflects a range of grievances, from a chronic shortage of well-compensated work to a sense of national decline. In the United States, the dearth of domestic supply chains exposed by the COVID-19 pandemic has only heightened alarm over the acute infrastructural weaknesses decades of outsourced production have created. Post-industrial society, rather than an advanced stage of shared affluence, is not only more unequal but fundamentally insecure. Rich but increasingly oligarchic countries are experiencing what we might call, following scholars of democratization, a dramatic “de-consolidation” of development.



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GOP’s Sen. Sasse says Trump mistreats women, flirts with white supremacy and secretly mocks evangelicals

Louis Proyect
 

GOP’s Sen. Sasse says Trump mistreats women, flirts with white supremacy and secretly mocks evangelicals
By Colby Itkowitz
Washington Post, Oct. 15, 2020 at 4:45 p.m. EDT

Sen. Ben Sasse eviscerated President Trump during a phone call with constituents in which the Nebraska Republican accused the president of cozying up to dictators, mistreating women, flirting with white supremacists and irresponsibly handling the coronavirus pandemic.

Sasse’s comments were disclosed by the Washington Examiner, which obtained an audio recording of the call, a campaign telephone townhall with Nebraska voters. Sasse’s spokesman verified that the reporting was accurate, but declined to answer more specific questions such as when the call happened.

During the call, a woman asked Sasse why he’s so hard on the president. The senator has been among the Republican lawmakers willing to criticize the president from time to time, but has mostly supported him and his policies.

But in the call, Sasse unleashed a torrent of criticisms at Trump.

“The way he kisses dictators’ butts. I mean, the way he ignores the Uighurs, our literal concentration camps in Xinjiang. Right now, he hasn’t lifted a finger on behalf of the Hong-Kongers,” Sasse said.

“The United States now regularly sells out our allies under his leadership, the way he treats women, spends like a drunken sailor,” Sasse continued. “The ways I criticize President Obama for that kind of spending; I’ve criticized President Trump for as well. He mocks evangelicals behind closed doors. His family has treated the presidency like a business opportunity. He’s flirted with white supremacists.”

Trump refused to condemn white supremacists and militia members in presidential debate marked by disputes over race

This appears to be the most brutal assessment of the president from a sitting GOP lawmaker, echoing many of the charges against Trump from the left. While some Republicans who have left Congress and now speak out against Trump claim many of their ex-colleagues privately feel the same, no one has gone this far in denouncing the president.

A Trump campaign spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Sasse’s spokesman, James Wegmann, in confirming the authenticity of the call, defended his boss as being focused solely on the Senate races to ensure Republicans maintain the majority.

“I don’t know how many more times we can shout this: Even though the Beltway is obsessing exclusively about the presidential race, control of the Senate is ten times more important,” Wegmann said. “The fragile Senate seats that will determine whether Democrats nuke the Senate are the races Ben cares about, the races he’s working on, and the only races he’s talking about.”

Sasse said on the call that he fears Trump’s “stupid political obsessions” and “rage tweeting” will drive voters away.

Wegmann did not respond when asked if Sasse intends to vote for Trump next month.

Sasse is up for reelection this year, and is expected to easily win in his GOP-leaning state. The greater concern for Sasse was a serious primary challenge from the right in the spring. His opponent focused on Sasse’s previous critiques of Trump, which Sasse toned down as a result. Trump endorsed Sasse in September 2019.

The senator had admonished Trump early in 2016 when he was seeking the GOP nomination, saying he would vote for a third-party candidate. Earlier this year, however, Sasse voted to acquit Trump on two impeachment charges.

But relations between them have frayed lately. Sasse began criticizing the president again after handily winning his GOP primary. In August, Trump reacted strongly to Sasse’s objection to the president approving coronavirus relief aid by executive order.

“RINO Ben Sasse, who needed my support and endorsement in order to get the Republican nomination for Senate from the GREAT State of Nebraska, has, now that he’s got it (Thank you President T), gone rogue, again. This foolishness plays right into the hands of the Radical Left Dems!” Trump tweeted.

The senator also criticized the president’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic on the call. While he came to Trump’s “partial defense,” by accusing the news media of wanting to use the public health crisis against the president, he said Trump has mishandled it from the beginning.

“But the reality is that he careened from curb to curb. First, he ignored covid. And then he went into full economic shutdown mode,” Sasse said. “He was the one who said 10 to 14 days of shutdown would fix this. And that was always wrong. I mean, and so I don’t think the way he’s led through covid has been reasonable or responsible, or right.”


Inspired by Trump, Hasidic Backlash Grows Over Virus Rules

Louis Proyect
 

Inspired by Trump, Hasidic Backlash Grows Over Virus Rules

Orthodox Jewish leaders have seen a growing, raucous faction of young men in the community, tired of pandemic guidelines and resentful of the secular authorities.

Heshy Tischler, center, a supporter of President
                  Trump, has emerged as a leader for a conservative
                  movement that has started in the ultra-Orthodox Jewish
                  community.
Heshy Tischler, center, a supporter of President Trump, has emerged as a leader for a conservative movement that has started in the ultra-Orthodox Jewish community.Credit...Stephen Lovekin/Shutterstock

A group of mostly young men began descending on the Brooklyn home of a Hasidic journalist just before midnight on Sunday.

The men, who were fellow ultra-Orthodox Jews, were shouting that the journalist, Jacob Kornbluh, was a snitch, an informer who had betrayed his own by publishing reports on how devoutly religious Jews in the city had been ignoring coronavirus guidelines.

The group got all the way to Mr. Kornbluh’s doorstep, where a line of police officers kept them at bay.

The tense scene spoke to what many Orthodox leaders said they had been seeing for weeks: a growing, raucous faction of young men in the community, tired of pandemic guidelines and resentful of the secular authorities, who are taking their cues from the broader right-wing movement in society, including from President Trump.

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For months, misinformation and rumors about the virus, some inspired by Mr. Trump, have spread widely in forums like WhatsApp that are popular with ultra-Orthodox New Yorkers, according to numerous interviews with Hasidic leaders and community members.

ImageResidents protested
                new coronavirus restrictions in the Borough Park
                neighborhood of Brooklyn on Oct. 7.
Residents protested new coronavirus restrictions in the Borough Park neighborhood of Brooklyn on Oct. 7.Credit...Yuki Iwamura/Reuters

Now, a new shutdown in Orthodox neighborhoods in Brooklyn and Queens, ordered last week by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, appears to have inflamed sentiments further. Mr. Cuomo closed nonessential business and schools, and limited attendance to 10 people at a time in houses of worship in the hardest hit areas, including synagogues.

Mr. Cuomo was spurred by spiking caseloads in the Orthodox community and concerns that health rules were not being followed. But some Orthodox voices have responded by arguing that their community’s religious life was being targeted by the government.

The Orthodox Jewish community in the New York region includes Hasidic and other ultra-Orthodox groups. There are as many as 500,000 ultra-Orthodox Jews in the New York region, and they have long tended toward conservative politics. In 2016, Hasidic neighborhoods in Brooklyn voted overwhelmingly for Mr. Trump.

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But the pandemic may have also emboldened more extreme elements, complicating efforts to curb the virus and frightening normally outspoken Hasidic activists and writers.

“There is a mistrust in media, a mistrust in government, and people don’t check the facts,” Mr. Kornbluh said in an interview. “In the years since Trump came onto the scene, people are more engaged in politics, and follow Trump and his conspiracy theories.”

Image
Jacob
                    Kornbluh has reported on how devoutly religious Jews
                    in the city had been ignoring coronavirus
                    guidelines.
Jacob Kornbluh has reported on how devoutly religious Jews in the city had been ignoring coronavirus guidelines.Credit...Amr Alfiky/The New York Times

After the virus devastated Hasidic neighborhoods in the early days of the pandemic, many residents began to believe that safety precautions were unnecessary because they had developed herd immunity, according to community leaders.

That attitude, which health officials say has no basis in fact, has been a primary reason for a recent surge of cases in Brooklyn and Queens that has raised the citywide positivity rate to levels not seen in months.

On the first night after the governor announced the restrictions, a group of mostly young men in the predominantly Orthodox neighborhood of Borough Park took to the streets in protest.

They were led by a local radio host and viral video personality, Heshy Tischler, a Trump follower and a candidate for City Council who was once convicted of conspiracy to commit immigration fraud and sentenced to a year and a day in federal prison.

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Mr. Tischler identifies as Orthodox, but is not part of a Hasidic sect. Still, he has gained popularity during the pandemic, in part because he has gone after critics of the Hasidic community.

The ultra-Orthodox communities in New York are an insular world that distrusts outsiders and disdains members who speak up in public about sensitive issues, like education or public health.

Since March, Mr. Kornbluh, a reporter for Jewish Insider who has lived in Borough Park for 18 years, has been posting on Twitter about the disregard for coronavirus safety measures in these communities.

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On the second night of protests — where some waved pro-Trump banners — the crowd spotted Mr. Kornbluh, who was covering the events, and pointed him out to Mr. Tischler.

Mr. Tischler, unmasked, approached Mr. Kornbluh, and began calling him a traitor. Soon Mr. Kornbluh was surrounded by men and teenagers who shoved him against a wall, punched, kicked and struck him with objects, and then chased him for two blocks. Videos of the attack quickly appeared on social media.

Mr. Kornbluh said many in the group told him that he deserved to die and called him “Nazi” and “Hitler.”

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“They were saying I am not part of this community and I should leave,” Mr. Kornbluh said.

Mr. Tischler was arrested on Sunday in connection with the attack. After he was taken into custody, a group of men showed up at Mr. Kornbluh’s home.

Image
A new set of coronavirus restrictions in areas where the positivity rate had increased led to protests last week in Borough Park. Credit...Mark Abramson for The New York Times

Mr. Tischler was arraigned on Monday on charges including inciting a riot and was released without bail. He returned home, where a boisterous crowd of young Hasidic supporters awaited him.

Standing on his porch, he plugged his candidacy for City Council and declared that he did not condone violence.

“We’re going to continue our fight,” he said. “We’re going to beat that Mayor de Blasio, we’re going to knock Cuomo out!”

The turmoil is also revealing a fault line through ultra-Orthodox New York over the question of how much the government — and the pandemic — should be allowed to intrude on religious life. In March and April, rabbis vigorously debated about whether synagogues should close in compliance with Covid-era restrictions or whether communal prayer must continue, according to Yochonon Donn, a Hasidic journalist.

But in recent months, as the pandemic has ground on and a new outbreak has brought renewed restrictions, the question of how to respond is playing out in the street and online, forums where the influence of rabbis is limited but where Mr. Tischler’s theatrical videos have been shared widely.

While local leaders and elected officials have denounced the violence at last week’s protests, relatively few have condemned Mr. Tischler.

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Rabbi Chaim Dovid Zwiebel, executive vice president of Agudath Israel of America, an Orthodox umbrella group, said Mr. Tischler was a fringe figure who had “made an idiot of himself.”

“I don’t think anybody really knew him or had heard of him until he decided to turn himself into the wonderful spokesman he thinks he is,” Rabbi Zwiebel said. “This guy is supposed to be a community leader? Please. It is an embarrassment.”

Mr. Tischler first gained popularity in June when he used bolt cutters to unlock city playgrounds — at least 14 in his telling — that had been closed by the authorities as part of Covid-19 restrictions. The move was celebrated by Orthodox parents, many of whom had been crowded in small apartments with many children.

In an interview in Crown Heights last week, Mr. Tischler said he believed the newly imposed restrictions were singling out Orthodox Jews because “the Jews don’t fight back, the Jews take things lying down.”

“We will not be sheep anymore,” he said.

He called Mr. Trump one of the “greatest presidents we’ve ever had” and said he thought Mr. Cuomo was exaggerating the threat of the coronavirus because the governor planned “to create martial law.”

As he spoke, a small circle of young men gathered on the sidewalk to listen. One of them, Mendy Freidman, 23, shrugged when asked if he supported Mr. Tischler but said that he understood his appeal.

“Nobody else is willing to do what he does,” he said. “Nobody else is willing to go to jail.”

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Mr. Tischler was arrested on Sunday after officials accused him of inciting fervor that led to an attack on a journalist during last week’s protests. Credit...Yuki Iwamura/Associated Press

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But Mr. Tischler’s public stunts often contain a hint of menace. Last month, when city health officials held a news conference in Brooklyn to discuss the virus uptick, he disrupted the event while not wearing a mask, shouting at top health officials that the virus uptick was fake, and called them “Jew haters” and “garbage.”

And his messages have carried racist undertones. Some of the city health workers sent to conduct outreach in Orthodox neighborhoods have been people of color. In one video, Mr. Tischler shows himself calling them outsiders who are “ready to come after us.”

“I’m sure most of them are from just the projects, picked off the street with not even proper training,” he said.

The criminal charges against him stem from his actions during the protests, which lasted for two nights last week and resulted in attacks on at least three men. Two of them, a photographer and a Hasidic man accused of disloyalty to the community, were attacked on Tuesday.

After those episodes, Mr. Kornbluh sent Mr. Tischler a late-night WhatsApp message, which was shared with The New York Times, calling the violence Mr. Tischler was stoking a “chillul Hashem” — a desecration of God’s name.

The next morning, Mr. Tischler filmed a video of himself in a graveyard threatening Mr. Kornbluh, which soon spread in popular Hasidic WhatsApp groups.

That night he confronted Mr. Kornbluh at the protest, setting off the mob attack that resulted in Mr. Tischler’s arrest on Sunday, prosecutors say.


Re: Inside the Republican Plot for Permanent Minority Rule | The New Republic

fkalosar101@...
 

On Thu, Oct 15, 2020 at 08:06 AM, Louis Proyect wrote:
No need for a coup when you can retain power "legally".
The thing "we" (whoever that may be) have to fear from a Trump seizure of power isn't a powerful dictatorship  but an anarchy.  I'm thinking of what English historians called "the Anarchy of Stephen" or simply "the Anarchy"--the reign of King Stephen in England from 1135 to 1153, where the King (and his queen) had sufficient forces based on the castle system of the time to maintain the throne, but not enough power or legitimacy to carry out the functions of governance, which were in any case apparently in flux at the time.  The result was an inconclusive civil war that resulted in a compromise whereby Henry II succeeded Stephen on the throne of England, thus founding the Plantagenet dynasty that eventually resulted in England's formation as a national state and colonial power.  

This isn't an anarchy in the sense of anarchism, but (at least in our time) rather rule by someone, like Trump who actively dismantles the institutions of governance while using both force, subterfuge, and illusion to expand and promote his own interests and those of a powerful clique.  

The analogy with Stephen is weak and of admittedly limited application, but the point about controlled chaos is not.  We are IMO barking up the wrong tree if we expect Trump to rule like Salazar, maintaining uncontested political and social control for a lifetime. This is also unlikely to happen.

The so-called Anarchy was a civil war that was eventually resolved  by a leap forward toward a more modern conception of the nation state.  The Anarchy of Donald, if it happens, will be a step toward the decadence and collapse of the USA without any succeeding more advanced form of civilization.  Perhaps the rich will retreat to their own mega-ranches and rule the rest of us like feudal barons from their castles.


Re: Leading Members of the DSA Want You to Get Out the Vote for Biden | Left Voice

workerpoet
 

Read it again. My point about left unity was about the Socialist Party joining with the Greens to support Hawkins. I have vote Green before and have supported other candidates and am likely to do so again but, as a realist dependent on Social Security who understands that we will not vote in socialism this year and who also understands the daily damage Trump is wreaking on the biosphere as well as the reality of unleashed violence, I am voting to vote against him in the only way that matters. I have no illusions about Biden and the Dims either.