[-] [email protected] 2 points 22 minutes ago

This is what libs are warning us about when they talk about so-called Chinese imperialism. 🤡

[-] [email protected] 1 points 44 minutes ago* (last edited 43 minutes ago)

Killing a non combatant for no reason even if the commander in chief gives the order might be a bit of a problem under the ucmj.

Kill them too. 🤷‍♀️

Also I think a drone strike would be more effective. Biden knows where they live, after all.

[-] [email protected] 1 points 45 minutes ago

Inflation is mostly due to higher wages, and savings. Savings are reinvested by banks and turned into new constant and variable capital (hiring more workers). It can be turned into new consumption (like video games, social media, more advertising). It can be turned into student loans, and mortgages (if there is a surplus of money-capital all of these things will get more expensive relative the the unit of money), and “gentrification” re-developments or new suburban developments. Your savings become a smaller share of the MOP because they got invested elsewhere and more things were made or labor paid because of it!

"Savings savings savings" you say, and yet the rate of savings has been declining since the 60s and right now is on par with the period just before the 2008 financial crash. Savings are not an explanation for the inflation we are seeing and this is another contradiction to your claims: if savings are a source of inflation, and savings are down, where is the inflation coming from? Is it only coming from wage increases like is being claimed by bourgeois economists? I'm skeptical, and so I'm hypothesizing that the inflation is geopolitical.

You’re right that if not enough surplus-capital finds a home, that the value of dollars goes down, this is effected by dollar demand but also capital exports can take the form of bombs, ultimately the destruction of capital, which allows for demand to be re-established. New sources of consumption counter-balance inflation, essentially, which is why the US is the least susceptible state to inflation.

And yet, the state is grappling with inflation despite being the least susceptible state to inflation. Does this not indicate a change?

Do you think the bourgeois want a high interest rate environment? Do you think they want the global South to turn to other countries for loans?

In an Imperial economy where wages are already built from stolen labor of the global proletariat, cutting hours in Imperialist states comes at the expense of the global proletariat, it’s ultimately reactionary organizing unless it doubles with demands of a shorter working day globally for all workers, i.e. proletarian internationalism.

One thing that stood out to me was the demands for an end to understaffing, which necessarily means hiring more people. It's not quite internationalism, no, but it does benefit the internally colonized people who could gain employment instead of being forced to fill the ranks of the gig economy and reserve army of unemployed workers.

I will acknowledge the labor upsurge lacks enough international character. I'll be watching for who starts to organize migrant temp workers first.

Where? Outside of the walk-outs of academics who some happened to be in the UAW, there hasn’t been any anti-Imperialist actions by US unions.

UAW International is calling for a ceasefire, a full list of unions who have signed on can be found here. I'm not overly impressed by their calls, they only call for Israelis to be released when they should be calling for a hostage exchange and acknowledge that the Zionists have been taking Palestinians hostage by the thousands into detention centers, but they aren't just silently supporting Israel either.

The International Longshore and Warehouse Union recently shut down the Port of Oakland to prevent ships carrying weapons bound for Israel from leaving the docks. In fact, the ILWU has a long history of being interested in and supportive of Palestinian liberation going back decades because of their internationalist character that was cultivated during the anti-apartheid struggle against South Africa.

It's not just academics. The labor upsurge is gaining a political character. Something is happening.

When union workers start destroying weapons manufacturing equipment I’ll have to change my mind, but that seems to be far from where we are, and the “toughest actions” have been climbing (office, not factory) buildings and tagging them with paint.

I'll cheer when that happens, and you're right to point out the lacking radicalism in US unions. Yet, you're underestimating the importance of public demonstration and should recognize that even non-destructive acts still act as propaganda for further radical action. Tagging a building with paint can be a precursor to tagging it with... something else.

I don't share your pessimism for the white US working class. I think we're on the brink of a change and these are all signs.

We'll see.

[-] [email protected] 30 points 3 hours ago

Prediction: Starmer takes a stronger stance in support of Israel in order to shore up votes for becoming Prime Minster. 😞

[-] [email protected] 1 points 3 hours ago

Nothing has fundamentally changed from the 60s

Bold statement!

You seem to think inflation is anything other than more wages than can be spent or reinvested (if in savings banks and credit unions).

Yes? Inflation, as experienced by the worker, is the cost of goods and services and housing rising faster than wages. Which is happening. Inflation does not automatically equal higher wages. Inflation, again as experienced by the worker, means higher prices. If that comes with higher wages then the worker can keep up with inflation and no one notices much other than the fact that their savings literally lose value over time, but debourgeoisification has disrupted this process. We are now seeing inflation actually outpace workers, they are not just making more to pay their higher bills and it's lead to the recent labor upsurge.

This is not universal, obviously. The wages of managers, cops, so-called skilled laborers, bureaucrats, etc have risen in pace with inflation. We have seen some workers keep up and other workers fall behind, splitting off those workers and debourgeoisifying them as they fail to save and fail to attain property and fail to get "ahead." I'm not sure why you're insisting this isn't happening.

Do you think there isn't a labor upsurge and that class consciousness isn't rising?

An exploited Proletariat literally cannot save money, and globally luxury spending does not mean they are exploited!

You're right! And would you look at that, the savings rate in the US has been declining since the 60s, supposedly the period when things stopped changing. The savings rate briefly went up after the financial crash and bucked the trend of decline (i.e. when capital destruction created new avenues for investment) and obviously spiked during the period when people cared about COVID, but on the whole there has been a steady decline that coincides with the way real wages have stagnated.

Inflation is not in "luxury spending" it's in fucking groceries and rent and housing.

The US is a more advanced British Empire + French Empire in one. It’s not a surprise since the US inherited every Imperial relationship the former great powers had!

Okay, so you are speaking literally of currency being exported. But you're contradicting yourself and I'm confused.

You say "capital exports bring down the prices of goods" yet we are also talking about conditions of strong inflation. Is this not a contradiction? Does this not indicate that capital exports are falling, and that demand for USD is falling? You say nothing has changed, but despite the harshest sanctions regime in history we have seen Russia's economy continue to grow! We are seeing nations make deals with each other in national currencies, totally bypassing USD. We are seeing alternatives to the World Bank and IMF, which offer loans in currencies other than USD.

The world is changing, and the conditions for white workers will change with it. Maybe it's too early to say

Cops are petty booj, more cops means more petty booj.

What productive assets do they own? I think they're a special protected class created by the State, and while their class interests align with business owners and independent farmers they are still distinct and it's worth recognizing it.

This is copium and you’re universalizing your position within the Settler economy.

Maybe. Some of the trends I'm noticing have only been around for a few years, it could just be a blip and the white working class will go back to feasting on the superprofits of the global South soon enough. But-

Outside of Economistic practices focusing on wages and prices, the great thing this new wave has brought through the pandemic is organizing around workers’ health and wellness, as well as property abuses such as AI likenesses for performers. These are still material problems and the pandemic exposed them, but still this unions are hitting Economistic dead ends in organizing energy.

We've also seen the contract fights have not focused on wages. While the companies have been throwing record wages at workers the contracts still get rejected because what they actually want is time away from work and time where they can't be scheduled and an end to understaffing, or like you say, workers' health and wellness.

But we are also seeing union locals organizing against the Zionist genocide. That's huge! The labor upsurge might be gaining a political character and you seem to be ignoring it in favor of pessimism. The union leadership is still in lockstep with the Democrats, and as long as that is the case they will hit those dead ends, but if I'm right and the rank-and-file are being debourgeoisified then we are going to either see the leadership change or we'll see the NLRB declared unconstitutional and unions will have to go back to illegal strikes.

[-] [email protected] 25 points 4 hours ago

Hatred is a powerful emotion and Dems don't want to unleash it, because the people we hate are the friends they go to brunch with.

Leftists have no excuse. Is your hate pure?

[-] [email protected] 22 points 4 hours ago

This is proof Trump has lost a step in his old age.

If this were 2016 he would have riffed on this at his events and really gotten the crowd busting up.

Now he's just going through the motions smh

[-] [email protected] 1 points 4 hours ago* (last edited 4 hours ago)

Surplus capital is not a “libertarian thing”, it’s a Lenin thing, it’s the reason why capital is exported.

Sorry, we're miscommunicating I think. Are you conflating "dollars" with "capital" here?

My reading tells me the export of surplus capital refers to the export of productive machines, not the literal national currency. But I am, in fact, talking about the demand for the literal national currency i.e. not surplus capital specifically. Yes, US productive capacity is still high and there's still a lot of unequal exchange happening between the US and its imperialized holdings as it forces them to use its machines and proprietary software etc etc, but notably interest rates have needed to remain high (so no more historically low interest rates) and this has put incredible downward pressure on the value of loans in USD.

At the same time, the sanctions regime has bifurcated the global economy. There's now a parallel economy that exists outside of USD and this is adding additional downward pressure. Nations can now get loans from elsewhere (notably China), trade with national currencies for commodities and even resources like oil, and avoid unequal exchange with the declining hegemon because of the large and growing non-USD economy. The value of US dollar and demand for dollars can still decline despite US exports.

So, between nations not wanting loans from the US and being able to trade without USD, literal demand for dollars has fallen. This is, in part, where the inflation is coming from.

Where is the money going? Police, judicial, and carceral costs are increasing year over year. [...] Did I mention that over half of the money spent on incarceration and policing (reaching a quarter trillion dollars every year, chart ends in 04, $261B spent in 2018) is wages for cops, guards, and judicial staff?

Is this not a sign of the debourgeoisification of the rest of the working class? The empire needs to spend more and more on policing and incarceration of exploited and superexploited workers at home, to the point that those high costs of control are now eating into quality of life of the rest of the working class due to inflation. At the same time it needs to keep elevating the lifestyles of pigs higher and higher to keep them showing up to work, as the act of policing itself becomes more reviled and more mentally taxing (I'm reminded of Fanon talking about how colonialism dehumanizes the colonizer). This is the other side of where the inflation is coming from.

As the cops, guards, judicial staff, and all the other carceral employees demand more wages they're acquiring investments and housing and special legally protected status. They're being further bourgeoisified, developing into their own special class and totally separate from the rest of workers who are beginning to be debourgeoisified (they can't acquire housing, they can't build savings, they don't have investments, they certainly can't seclude and segregate themselves away from the rest of the working class into white enclaves).

This special class of carceral workers is being elevated at their expense. They're being turned from national police to colonial police, many white workers are being turned from settlers into... not natives, but something adjacent?

These aren’t conditions to wait around for! Don’t wait for shit to get worse! There is revolutionary potential now! You have hundreds of national liberation struggles and 100 million oppressed nationals across Black/Indigenous people and Chicanos/Latinos. These struggles could have been turned into revolution in the 60s but revisionist Communists at that time said “wait we need white workers!”.

When did I give this impression? I merely contend that shit is getting worse, not that we need to wait for anything!

Yes, the internally colonized people of the US are the most revolutionary force within it. I work in a factory and I can see how all the positions of management are only given to white English speakers, while the production floor is dominated by nonwhite people whose first languages are French, Arabic, or Spanish. I can see what you're talking about every day.

I guess I'm just optimistic that the white working class has finally entered its own decline, but as you say, the embodied and generational wealth that they've accumulated will take quite some time to disappear. This is not a call to wait around, merely an observation that the time those misguided white communists were waiting for might be happening.

All of this is to say that the recent labor upsurge and rise in class consciousness has a material basis and isn't just a fad.

Am I to understand that your point is nothing has fundamentally changed?

[-] [email protected] 5 points 11 hours ago* (last edited 11 hours ago)

Okay, so I should clarify what I'm hypothesizing.

I'm not saying that bourgeoisification has already been eliminated or that we have reached the end of superprofits and their redistribution to the US working class, I merely contend that it's begun its decline and is stratifying into even smaller and smaller subsections of the white working class. It would also be some time before we see the effects on things like air conditioning because of the inertia from previous development. The already installed air conditioners don't just go away - people just stop running them.

US inflation used to be something that could be exported onto the rest of the world, but now the chickens are coming home to roost. The surplus of dollars is a poor explanation (kind of libertarian tbh), it only explains half the problem. The other side of the surplus comes from declining demand for dollars. The US sanctions regime has overreached on Russia and is now bifurcating the global economy into "countries that can trade with the US" and "everyone else" which created a boom in non-dollar trade. The high interest rate environment, too, is hurting demand for loans in US dollars as countries look for other sources of capital and deleverage themselves from US loans and debts.

The US is still superexploiting those workers in Brazil and Mexico; US workers are not going to be living like them in the near future! Yet as worker's struggle in Latin America brings a new pink tide we are going to see more trade in national currency, more internal development, more investment from outside the US, and ultimately less superexploitation.

This is a trend, that's all I'm saying.

[-] [email protected] 15 points 11 hours ago

Every day of inaction after the Court basically gave him unlimited authority is proof Biden doesn't actually see these people as a threat.

[-] [email protected] 35 points 19 hours ago

"Some of you may die, but that's a sacrifice I'm willing to make Jack!"

4
submitted 1 month ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Carmelized onions and garlic, cubed potatoes, bell peppers, and egg substitute; topped with hot-sauce, with a cup of white chai on the side.

1
submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Just a simple chili made with four tomatoes, one onion, half a bell pepper, a three chipotles in abado sauce, a clove of garlic, a couple tbsp of chili powder, a tbsp of oil, and then topped with nooch and air fried kidney beans.

I think I'll spring for mango or pineapple next time.

116
submitted 2 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

And here they are ready for action

32
submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Okay so I knew we had a holiday on Easter weekend at my job and I assumed we'd have Good Friday off, since that's what literally every other job I've had has done and since it's a semi-holiday.

Nope, we got Monday off. April fools! 😂

So now I just burned two attendance points because I was a no-call-no-show and lost out on holiday pay.

Death to America.

64
submitted 3 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Did you know soy sauce Top Ramen is vegan? Maruchan isn't so don't get em confused!

The greens are raw sweet peas and green onion.

43
submitted 3 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

SUSAN ABULHAWA: I want to say that the reality on the ground is infinitely worse than the worst videos and photos that we’re seeing in the West. There is a — you know, beyond people being buried alive en masse in their homes, their bodies being shredded to pieces, these kinds of videos and images that people are seeing — beyond that, there is this daily massive degradation of life. It is a total denigration of a whole society, that was once high-functioning and proud and has basically been reduced to the most primal of ambitions, you know, being able to get enough water for the day or flour to bake bread. And this is even in Rafah.

And the people in Rafah will tell you that they feel privileged because they’re not starving to death, while their families in the north, the ones that they can reach, because Israel has basically cut off 99% of communication — what remains are basically communications by people who have, you know, set up some ingenious ways to keep internet in the north. But most people in the north have no idea what’s happening. As a matter of fact, at one point — I’m sure you all know Bisan Owda, who is on Facebook. She explained to me she often goes up to the border between Khan Younis and the middle area in the north where you can’t go beyond, and she explained to me that an aid truck, that sort of pushed its way through but was eventually fired on, had — people came up and ran up, thinking that the war was over and people were returning to the north. So, most people in the north are in total darkness and hunger and really have no way of communicating, no way of figuring out where to get food.

And, you know, what we’re hearing on the ground is surreal. It’s dystopic. What I witnessed personally in Rafah and in some of the middle areas is incomprehensible. And I will call it a holocaust — and I don’t use that word lightly. But it is absolutely that.

I recommend listening to the whole thing, but this is the most harrowing part for me. The death toll is likely a massive undercount and, if the Zionists have their way, we will never be allowed to know the truth.

42
Veggie BLTs (lemmy.ml)
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I've been slowly adding more and more veggies through experimentation, but now I'm at the point where I either need to use bigger tortillas or just be more picky about which veggies I want 😅 this is the configuration I'm using right now, though in the summer I like to use avacado instead of sauce.

I heat the tortillas in a pan with a light coat of walnut oil and black pepper and assemble my fixins in the pan itself.

Sauce is also homemade! I save all the vinegar from pickled jalapenos and then mix that with equal parts coconut oil in a heated pan, then combine it with whatever seasoning I'm feeling like during that batch (rn I'm using nooche, though sometimes I go for an onion sauce or mustard). It's not super precise so there's no recipe, I've just got a feel from experimentation.

Also the fake-on bits are actually a cheap local veriety I've found. Basically just smoke and salt flavored crunchy soy chips.

Once I'm done, I pack up my chopped veggies to do this again in a couple days. I usually make four at a time every two days, and these are my pre-shift and mid-shift work meals. Served with a thicc pea protein chocolate drink.

156
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

And you all told me the blue maga border bill that Republicans rejected was 4d chess.

65
submitted 4 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Kidney beans and rice with taco seasoning, caramelized onion and garlic, and I found out I can get dried habaneros near me! Definitely growing those this year, I forgot how good they are (haven't had any since before the pandemic 🥲 )

Also that Perrona sauce is... okay. It's really sweat, throws off everything. Also not nearly as spicy as I was hoping! It's a cool color, you can't really tell but it's actually green, but it just didn't hurt me the way I like 😌

67
submitted 5 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Pintos and white rice seasoned with cumin, cayenne, garlic, nooch, salt, msg, walnut oil, and then served with taco fixins on hard shells 💪

45
submitted 5 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

🥵

25
submitted 6 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I used to think I didn't really like beans, but when I got an airfryer I decided to see what they'd be like if I cooked them differently. Amazing~✨

Smaller beans become a delicious crunchy topping or filling, highly recommended, but what's really interesting is those huge butter beans. They're disturbingly similar to chicken breast when cooked this way, so I cooked up some white rice, cut up some ice cold broccoli, and fried up some butter beans 8 minutes with walnut oil at 400^o^ F

And that's it! Super simple but so so sooo good.

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queermunist

joined 1 year ago