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Volume 54, Number 5 | October 2002 |
» Newsletter » A Note from the Associate
Editor » About MONTHLY REVIEWS September
2002 July-August 2002 June 2002 May 2002 April 2002 March 2002 February
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2001 Index to Back Issues
AN
INTERVIEW WITH: |
c o n t e n t s In late August and early September a
number of MR and Socialist Register authors (including Patrick
Bond, John Bellamy Foster, Gerard Greenfield, Naomi Klein, and John Saul)
participated in forums in Johannesburg related to the World Summit on
Sustainable Development. On August 24, they joined in a march led by
antiprivatization activists from the black townships (in particular by Trevor
Ngwane and Virginia Setshedi-whose role in the struggle in South Africa is
discussed in Ashwin Desai's new MR Press book, We Are the Poors). The march was organized
to protest the arrest and jailing of political activists. The marchers lit
candles and proceeded peacefully but were met within minutes by the South
African police who exploded percussion grenades, injuring three of the
protestors. The harsh and unprovoked actions of the police on this occasion
pointed to the increasingly antipopular character of the South African state,
which is imposing neoliberal economic policy on the society. It also
underscored the repressive measures now commonly utilized at world summits in
general. We will address the Johannesburg summit and the economic and
environmental problems of southern Africa in an upcoming issue of MR. REVIEW
OF THE MONTH In early July 2002, I asked Harry Magdoff if he would be interviewed for the Statesman, a Kolkata, India newspaper for which I write political commentary. Our first interview was so satisfying that we continued for several sessions. What follows is a discussion of something Harry has considered, what we can learn from the experience of the Soviet Union. It is, characteristically, concerned with learning from history. Harry is methodologically committed to the actual world from which all theory springs, to which it must speak, and to meet whose specific particularities it must continually be reshaped. Punishment by
Detail Aside from the obvious physical discomforts, being ill for a long period of time fills the spirit with a terrible feeling of helplessness, but also with periods of analytic lucidity, which, of course, must be treasured. For the past three months, now I have been in and out of the hospital, with days marked by lengthy and painful treatments, blood transfusions, endless tests, hours and hours of unproductive time spent staring at the ceiling, draining fatigue and infection, inability to do normal work, and thinking, thinking, thinking. But there are also the intermittent passages of lucidity and reflection that sometimes give the mind a perspective on daily life that allows it to see things (without being able to do much about them) from a different perspective. Reading the news from Palestine and seeing the frightful images of death and destruction on television, it has been my experience to be utterly amazed and aghast at what I have deduced from those details about Israeli government policy, more particularly about what has been going on in the mind of Ariel Sharon. And when, after the recent Gaza bombing by one of his F-16s in which nine children were massacred, he was quoted as congratulating the pilot and boasting of a great Israeli success, I was able to form a much clearer idea than before of what a pathologically deranged mind is capable of, not only in terms of what it plans and orders but, worse, how it manages to persuade other minds to think in the same delusional and criminal way. Getting inside the official Israeli mind is a worthwhile, if lurid, experience. Class, Economy,
and the Second Intifada The current Palestinian Intifada and Israel's brutal response has been the subject of countless articles over the last two years. There is however a disappointing vacuum within left analysis, with much of this writing attempting to explain the character of Israeli policy through the right-wing views of Ariel Sharon. Within this framework, Israeli strategy is presented as a racist extension of colonialist designs on the Occupied Territories sometimes including the expulsion of Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza Strip (hereafter referred to as WB/GS). Its Not a
Postcapitalist World, Nor is it a Post-Marxist OneAn Interview with John
Bellamy Foster Evrensel Kultur: Postmodernism's advice to us was to have doubts towards all kinds of information acquired. The "security syndrome" following September 11 has spread these doubts to daily life. In other words, the twenty-first century has begun as an age of doubts/suspicions. How does the suspiciousness of the new century differ from that of past centuries? If we take "suspicion" as a metaphor, what kind of real relations/connections can be described or hidden with this metaphor? Stop Abusing Cuban ChildrenAnd Their
Doctors The voices of the victims of U.S. misadventures overseas are too often drowned out and their stories forgotten. Let us not forget the plight of the children of Cuba, which is the result of the U.S. embargo on trade with their country. From a medical point of view my response is one of outrage, and to communicate the full measure of my horror, I have to recount some personal experiences of Cuban physicians, and some of my own. For more than three decades, visitors to Monthly Review's Manhattan offices would be greeted with the slightly raspy, always cheerful "Hi ya" that Beadie Magdoff offered to cabinet ministers, students, revolutionaries, workers, political exiles, and internationally renowned scholars. They came to work with the editors, to join the lunchtime discussions, and, of course, to leave with the latest Monthly Review Press books that Beadie made sure they bought. Beadie was an instrumental part of the daily life of MR, indefatigable not only in the small tasks she took on, but in her insistence on an unyielding passion for social justice as well as a clear focus on the case for socialism. BOOK
REVIEW A review of Slave Patrols: Law and Violence in Virginia and the Carolinas by Sally E. Hadden. |
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