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Volume warning

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This is pretty slow, especially the first 15ish, but he eventually gets into what was actually helping his patients (vegan diet, exercise, community support) instead of surgery, how this began to make it feel wrong to do the surgeries he had been doing, and why that made him quit.

Spoiler: he found the need to make money for the hospital system to be conflicting with what was best for his patients.

None of this was really new to me and probably won't be too you either, but it was nice to hear a neurosurgeon talking about how fucked the medical system is, even if it's in relatively bland language.

I realize it's not really a podcast, but there's not enough visual component to really count for another community, so I'm posting it here. Please lmk if it should be somewhere else.

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Fascinating interview, nice summation of stuff

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cross-posted from: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/5080808

I would suggest watching some of the previous episodes.

My favorite episode is this.

(Yes, George Lucas is definitely Autistic.)

The hosts are kinda liberal, vaguely DemSoc, but I love 'em all the same.

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it-is-knownstalin-gun-1citations-needed

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cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/2918161

Will, Hesse and Chris interview Alex Cox, director of Repo Man (1984), Sid and Nancy (1986), Straight To Hell (1987), and Walker (1987).

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One of my favorite podcasters rants about everything that's wrong with the world and inches closer to a materialist understanding of why that is. Hoping that someday Gabrus will be a Hexbear.

His guest is fun up until the very very end, when he talks up some Sandler movie he watched recently that sounds zionist and awful, but Gabrus immediately pulls the ripcord on the interview when that comes up, so it's literally the very tiny end of an otherwise entertaining episode ranting about the evils of capitalism.

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econonystalin-gun-1citations-needed

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I have been listening to People's History of Ideas, which is a podcast on the Chinese Revolution. In ep 28 he covers a moment that in the 60s/70s was framed in a way that was probably correct politically, but was a bit of a lie. And how that correct decision for the moment, bolstering the cult of personality, unfortunately in the long term was part of what helped the capitalist roadsters discredit Mao.

The problem here is that there is no evidence for this account, and plenty against it. Simply put, Mao was not at that Congress. And by Mao’s own account, he did not get involved with peasant organizing in Hunan until the May 30th Movement broke out. Now, Han Suyin may not have been consciously lying. She did not have access to all the materials that have made modern scholarship on China possible, and she relied heavily on interviews with people in China. So it is quite possible that she was told this by a party historian or leading party cadre who wanted to paint the history of the Chinese Revolution in this light.

This is an example, one of many, I’m afraid, where the political imperatives of the moment, as understandable as they may be, even in retrospect, have left the history of communism as written by those sympathetic to socialism as sort of cartoonish (in the portrayal of revolutionary leaders as infallible heroes) and, in some essential points, basically false or untrue. I personally think the world would be a better place today had capitalism not been restored in China, and I do think that whoever at the leading levels of the Maoist wing of the Chinese Communist Party in the 1960s decided that it would not be possible to quickly educate tens of millions of people about the economics of socialist construction and their relationship to a larger project of human emancipation, that person was basically correct. However, their answer to that problem, the amplification of Mao’s cult of personality, has in itself been a factor which has been used to discredit the project of socialism globally.

So, an unintended consequence of the imperatives of the moment, in this case during the Cultural Revolution in China, but there are other examples which can be cited as well in the history of communism as written by those sympathetic to socialist aims, an unintended consequence is that much of the history written with momentary imperatives in mind contain easily demonstrable falsehoods and unrealistic pictures of leaders and the revolutionary process in general. In the longer term, this has made it much easier for the opponents of equality and freedom to discredit the work of supporters of socialism. After all, when one can point to one demonstrably false claim in a book, it serves to undermine the credibility of everything else that person has written. And we can see that in the long run, that lack of credibility has made it more difficult for humanity to get back on track with finding a path for ending capitalism.

Just a fascinatingly nuanced perspective and one we should all keep in mind. I've been thinking about this a lot recently, how the idea of unforced errors supposes that some errors are forced. That we have to make errors at times that are genuinely correct in the moment and needed to happen, but have bad outcomes down the line. The point is to adapt

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We've picked some of the finest automotive news stories for you, and isn't it funny that they all prove the ruthlessness, short-sightedness, and unsustainability of capitalism?

Also: each of us are selling a car. Email [email protected] if you want to buy a Camaro, a Saabaru, a Blazer, or a Ranger.

(INB4: "And yet you participate in capitalism. Curious! I am very intelligent.")

Main topic at 49:29

Email us with tips, stories, and unhinged rants: [email protected] //

Our social media links etc: www.linktr.ee/CarsAndComrades //

Music by King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard: www.kinggizzardandthelizardwizard.com/polygondwanaland //

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