What I want to do today, briefly, is shine a light on the group in the war that is often pushed to the margins. You see, on the Republican side of the war were not simply Spaniards fighting the Fascist takeover of their homeland, but the International Battalions. People from all over the world who poured into Spain to try to stem the tide of Fascist takeover. Many people who know about the International Battalions know about the Abraham Lincoln Battalion – the American contingent, which was largely made up of Jewish men from New York and surrounding environs – and their history is fascinating and important. There was also a German contingent on the Republican side, and they’ve been an object of fascination for me recently. They were called the Thälmann Battalion.
Read MoreMy worry is that, as alienating and bad as things are now, that the cessation of modernity might be followed by merely swapping one savagery for another. We like to believe that the world is growing less brutal and less violent, but the moral arc of the universe doesn’t bend towards justice: there is no arc. There is no absolute, inevitable progress. Everything that we get, we need to push for, fight for, argue for. It’s possible that the world might be a better and more just place if the modern era had never happened, but it has happened. If it is undone, it will most likely be undone through a great deal of suffering.
Read MoreIn my thinking, this hinges upon the “black pill”, which I’m explaining as a coincidence of despair and conspiratorial thinking (there may be other aspects, but I think this is the formation.) The mutant epistemology of conspiratorial thinking provides an explanation for the despair and a supposed pathway out of it, but this is a snare. It only leads deeper into the mire.
Read MoreThere’s the brain bug that says that we can ignore the things we know will be happening in the future, because we don’t want to deal with it, and moreover says that planning for the desired outcome alone is fine. We habitually silo off our plans for the future. We could easily say that this means that there is no coherent future – or no future at all.
Read MoreOne thing I noticed during the course of this conversation is a confusion of terms, though. We didn’t agree on what capitalism actually is. I’ve been turning this idea over and over in my head and that’s what I’m going to do today: provide a working definition of the problem.
Read More