
Capitalism Hits the Fan: A Marxian View
1 year ago
Lecture by Professor Rick Wolff, Department of Economics at the University of Massachusetts - Amherst on October 7, 2008.
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Here is the truth. Greedy corporations have monopolized and cheated you out of every cent they can in a capitalistic approach because you let them. They have noticed a trend of you not doing that anymore so they invented a new game. The game Remove Risk.
While I did see a dramatic change start in about the mid 70's, I do not limit the change to the US. It seems like capitalist have one mindset. If there is a bailout here..there are bailouts all over the world. If we have cutback in social services, they attempt cutbacks in Europe. Margaret Thatcher, Ronald Reagans counterpart in the UK, iniitated very similar attacks on the working class as Reagan. Since then, it seems the attacks on the working class have increased. It seems both parties in the US have shifted to right. Yesterdays republican party is todays democratic party. If the attacks on the US are harsher, its most likely because unions in the US are weaker. That has more to do with the decline in the standard of living than anything else. We need to win back all the rights Unions have lost since the late 1800's. I have seen strike after strike since the 78 coal miners strike go down in defeat. The fact Reagan was able to fire the controllers without a follow up strike to force the govt to rehire all the controllers and also to win the concessions they were fighting for, shows much we need to rebuild our unions.
Since most Europeans enjoy better health care, and some a shorter work week., I think American workers are getting the shorter end of the stick.
I like the scholar here, who actually studied Marx: "m m" since it appears this brain actually thought through the "rhetoric" and could read the writing that was intended for ALL COMMONERS.
How to put the predatory capitalists into checkmate.
Cannibalization is true, "The game REMOVE RISK" is on and the goal for only 500,000 to inhabit planet earth is very real.
For whom doth this IDEA/AGENDA intend?
Study the Protcols of Zion, and then read Marx again.
HENRY MAKOW, PhD., is a scholar of this historical reality: Capitalism is THE TOOL, to bring the planet earth and all its' natural resources (human Goy are simply "cattle," btw), into a full spectrum dominance by the Israeli Zionists and their minions.
Notice Wolff dates his work to bring attention to this, as, 1948. Hmmmm, this is when the STATE of ISRAEL was also allowed to be, to make certain all the Jews and non-Jews of the "Holocaust" (forensic investigation of this as well as 9/11 MUST FINALLY BE DONE for pity's sake!), could live together on the earth as a beacon of hope to all, a light of democracy in the Middle East .... it goes on and on when predatory capitalists make up their "minds" (oxymoron) to rape, pillage and plunder the earth and all its' wealth.
Time for a new idea. Study the PROTOCOLS OF ZION, so we can rewrite history into a sane future.
This is what I have read, by Professor to put my comment at this site: Capitalism in Crisis: Actually, "It's the System, Stupid" ~by Prof. Rick Wolff
globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=11577
Point in case, in my opinion: The State of Israel was set-up by predatory capitalists as a ruse to take over the whole planet. How convenient to set-up the ADL, in the US, and take away basically all freedom of speech. The PLAN has been very well implemented and the end game goal, in THEIR OPINIONS, is already ONE HALF THERE.
Too bad the internet was not around in 1948, then we would not be in this critical mass insanity of Zionist rule to "govern as GOD/s of earth."
Another WOLF with only 1 F, but this is worth the read, too.
globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=11580
Marxist analysis? I don't think so.
No mention of the falling rate of profit/ composition of capital. His explanation of the slowdown in the 1970s is based on underconsumption and demographic changes.
As for the solution: popular post-fordism ain't socialism. The idea of workers establishing petty commodity producing firms is a utopian fallacy that Marx explicitly argued against. What happens when those engineers are forced by competition to start employing wage labour? They go from cooperative to capitalist firm. The relationship between exploitation and labour goes beyond the firm to the state, the operation of market and the law of value. Ending these requires more than some yuppie fantasy of setting up a firm in someone's garage.
Marx's "right of inequality", outlined in the same document, also establishes the "right of equal measure" where value is measured not by currency but by the direct labour value of the products. The notion that "engineers are forced by competition to start employing wage labour" is meaningless in Marx's system because wage labour and surplus value are impossible. Goods are being exchanged against labour certificates, which are worth nothing more and nothing less than the labour they represent. To hire a wage worker for an hour, you would have to work for an hour (given equal intensity of labour). All labour of the same intensity is equally valuable - whether brain surgeon or janitor - 1 hour at average intensity being worth products equal to 1 hour of labour production at average intensity. Surplus value is impossible because there is no means to expropriate it.
Ever try to read any of his work? I say "try" because you'll realize within 2 minutes that he has absolutely nothing intelligible to say. It is all vague and cyclical gobbledygook -- like staring into a black hole and wondering why you can't focus on anything.
And one after another the proletarian pettifoggers post their neo-marxist hooey in the comment thread, each earnestly trying to outdo the other in their sharp little critiques of the phony professor.
This gentlemen certainly earns the BIG BUCKS by creating myth, distraction, and distortions in collusion with mainstream media. Add Moyers, Black, Celente and more to this list.
Myth of American Invincibility Omnipotent Wall Street
newsblaze.com/story/20090418172350zzzz.nb/topstory.html
I found an interesting graph from the OECD, that right-wing hate group (sarcasm), that tells a different story.
1.bp.blogspot.com/_CQyU4ayBifw/SSmiDLHdghI/AAAAAAAAB6M/vVUYLrvMwhk/s1600-h/hour+per+year.jpg
His blackboard graph confirms recurrent reports that real wages in the US have stagnated for decades. A Google search with “low wages in America” found “Over the last 20 years the real wages of blue-collar workers in the US have risen only 1.1%, although total compensation was up 10% thanks to the rise in benefit costs. Service workers did a little better in wages, with a 1.4% increase, but over all had only a 9.1% increase in compensation over the two decades.” More at nytimes.com/2006/02/04/business/04charts.html?_r=1&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss&pagewanted=print
Wolff rightly notes how competition between employers for profits causes them to reduce wages then to complain demand is too low, from 18:42 mins. But this endemic problem requires a systemic solution not escape into irony! Responsible employers have paid good wages and militant trades unions have obtained a proper share of output. Now free trade with nations where low productivity requires very low wages compounds the problem especially when exchange rates are set by free capital. And when more is saved than can be profitably invested, borrowing by governments and peoples can maintain demand but is unsustainable!
I have graphs of average earnings divided by output and retail prices for the UK since 1970. Until 1992 this varied within a 10% band depending on whether government was more worried by inflation or unemployment. But in 1993 it started to fall and by 08Q2 was 24% below the average in 92; a central value since 79. Then the index rose, as output and retail prices fell and earnings did not, to 16% down in 09Q2. It’s an ill wind that blows no good! Surely real wages have been too low for over a decade? Yet British politicians reject the moral prices and incomes policy that worked well in the 1950s and 60s.
In Reform the International Monetary System, governor of The People’s Bank of China, Zhou Xiaochuan, values the global currency and Clearing Union Keynes first proposed in 1941 to avoid the build up of debts and protectionism that had led to war; in English at pbc.gov.cn/english/detail.asp?col=6500&ID=178.
And UNCTAD’s Trade and Development Report, 2009 proposes reforms to the international system and warns of wage deflation. See the Overview on Downloads at unctad.org/Templates/Webflyer.asp?intItemID=1397&docID=11867.