
The most powerful tool a worker has is their voice.
Alex Riccio ๐ฉ๐ด
4K posts

@LaborwaveRadio
temporarily on hiatus, check out the pod on the nuts and bolts of organizing (very few exist!) @ChannelZeroNet @laborradionet

The most powerful tool a worker has is their voice.

I spoke with @LaulPatricia about Marxism: One is: Whatโs remarkable is that Marxism has been tried. Now, of course, defenders of Marxism say it hasnโt really been tried anywhere, but certainly the people who implemented it claimed they were implementing Marxism. And this is a massive experimentโa global experimentโwith a very clear outcome. Namely, the Soviet Union was a disaster. The imposition of communism on Eastern Europe was a disaster. The imposition of communism in Venezuela was a disaster. The imposition of communism in Maoist China was a disaster. Disaster in terms of both poverty and oppression and genocide and stupid wars. So the world has told us what happens under communism, and itโs a sign of how out of touch intellectuals can be that there are still people who defend it despite the entire world giving a very clear-cut answer. One more is: would you rather live in North Korea or South Korea? Would you rather live in the old East Germany or West Germany? We have an experimental group and a matched control group in terms of culture, language, and geography, and the answer is crystal clear. So this is a sign of, I think, the pathology of intellectual lifeโthat Marxism can persist. The other is, you did call attention to one of the appeals of Marxism, though, and more generally of heavy, strong influence of government guided by intellectuals, which is that there are certain kinds of reforms that you can state as principles. You can articulate them verbally as propositionsโlike equality, human rights, democracyโbut thereโs other kinds of progress that take place in massive distributed networks of millions of people, none of whom implements some policy. But collectively, there is an order, an organization thatโs beneficial. So that can happen organically through, for example, the development of a language. No one designed the English language. Itโs just hundreds of millions of English speakers. They coin new words. They forget old words. They try to make themselves clear. And we get the English language and the other 5,000 languages spoken on earth. Likewise, a market economy is something where knowledge is distributed. You donโt have a central planner deciding how many shoes of size 8 will be needed in a particular city, but rather information is conveyed by prices, which are adjusted according to supply and demand. And youโve got a distributed network of exchange of information that can result in an emergent benefit. Now, intellectuals tend to hate that. They like rules of languageโof correct grammar. They like top-down economic planning. They like cultural change that satisfies particular ideals described by intellectuals. And so rival sources of organization, like commerce, like cultureโtraditional cultureโtend to be downplayed by intellectuals. And this can be magnified by the fact that many dictatorships give a privileged role to intellectuals, which may be why, over the course of the 20th century, and probably continuing to the present, there has not been a dictator that has not had fans among intellectualsโincluding the mullahs and ayatollahs of Iran, but also the communist dictators: Mao and Castro, even Stalin in his day. And every other dictator has had, actually, often fawning praise from Western intellectuals.

NEW: The Minnesota Chamber of Commerce released this letter on behalf of more than 60 CEOs of Minnesota-based companies today. mnchamber.com/blog/open-lettโฆ








BREAKING: After months of stonewalling by Starbucks, unionized baristas just voted 92% to authorize a ULP strike unless $SBUX finalizes fair contracts & stops union busting. If forced, our baristas will strike in dozens of cities on Nov 13โ the company's busiest day of the year.

thereโs a pandemic of single men slowly hitting 30s and 40s and still unmarried. whatโs going on?




Hannah Einbeinder on saying โFree Palestineโ during her #Emmys acceptance speech: โIt is my obligation as a Jewish person to distinguish Jews from the state of Israel because our religion and our culture is such an important and long-standing institution that is really separate to this sort of ethnonationalist state.โ
