Young Master Smeet

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  • in reply to: SWP Pre-conference Bulletins 2012 #91225

    You have to laugh through your tears at the evil genius:http://www.cpgb.org.uk/home/weekly-worker/943/swp-expelled-before-conference-begins

    Quote:
    The four expelled members are Paris Thompson (Leeds), Tim Nelson (Bristol), Charlotte Bence (London) and Adam Marks (London) – the first two had contributions published in the Internal Bulletins, as the documents are known. Ironically, temporary factions are permitted during the three-month pre-conference period and we are in such a period right now (the 2013 SWP conference will be held in London over the weekend of January 4-6). But the SWP constitution stipulates that the central committee must be notified of their formation in a document signed by “at least 30 members of the party”.

    The 30 members for a faction is hilarious: how do you know you have thirty memebrs before you start asking, and if you ask, your factionalising without permission, so you can't get to 30 members.Also, that Paris and Tim have been effectively expelled for contributing to the Internal Bulletin, the lesson goes out that if you challenge the Centre's line, you're out.  Also, you have to think that the Centre must have begun invesitigating those memebrs as soon as they chose to cotnribute, evidence will always be found if you really want to expel someone and have no checks and balances on the process.

    in reply to: SWP Pre-conference Bulletins 2012 #91223

    Just another small point: note the way the SWP avoids votes.  The CC slate is circulated, and ambitious members who come forward will just be added, there are no votes at conference just summaries of debate.  There is no way to quantify dissent (an important tool for anyone seeking to build a new majority).Of course, SWPers condemn nose counting, asking why the vote of one person should determine the outcome; and I've seen in practice a reluctance to just settle arguments with a vote, with the 'leading' member able to drag out debate in order to try and get their way.This could be sold, I suppose, as an attempt to build consensus (indeed, wasn't that how occupy worked as well), but we soon see that without the right to be outvoted, a determined minority can come to dominate discussion.

    in reply to: Robots in demand in China as labour costs climb. #90845

    http://britishlibrary.typepad.co.uk/patentsblog/2012/12/automated-storage-and-retrieval-of-retail-stock-inventions.html

    Quote:
    The systems are expensive, but they do mean that the right items can be correctly and quickly identified and retrieved. Storing them in an optimal way so that the most highly requested items are quicker to retrieve is often part of the system as well. Using staff would take much longer and would occasionally involve errors. It is easy to take all this for granted.

    Check out the patent for the stock storage system he links to: regulated stock control anyone?Also, note, how the so-called internet revolution is simultaneously a revolution in warehouse management, a material change in the real economy.

    in reply to: SWP Pre-conference Bulletins 2012 #91221

    At the risk of slightly de-railing:http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1847/communist-league/rules_draft.htmThose are the rules of the Communist League (of which Marx & Engels were members).  I may have posted them somewhere before.  They make for an interesting comparison, since they are dealing with a secret society.  Interestingly, they had a membership exam:

    Quote:
    These five questions are:a. Are you convinced of the truth of the principles of the community of property? b. Do you think a strong League is necessary for the realisation of these principles as soon as possible, and do you wish to join such a League? c. Do you promise always to work by word and deed for spreading and the practical realisation of the principles of the community of property? d. Do you promise to observe secrecy about the existence and all affairs of the League? e. Do you promise to comply with the decisions of the League?Then give us on this your word of honour as guarantee!

    Apart from (d) they could suffice for our membership.What's notable, is that even for a secret society, this is a much more democratic organisation than the SWP's (the 'official' Leninist footnote observes:

    Quote:
    It shows the reorganisation work done by the League of the Just leaders as agreed with Marx and Engels, who consented early in 1847 to join the League on the condition that it would he reorganised on a democratic basis and all elements of conspiracy and sectarianism in its structure and activity would be eliminated. Engels, who was present at the Congress, took a direct part in drawing up the Rules. The draft recorded the change in the League’s name, and it is referred to here as the Communist League for the first time. The new motto, “Working Men of All Countries, Unite!” was also used for the first time. The former leading body, the narrow People’s Chamber (Halle), was replaced by the supreme body — the Congress, composed of delegates from local circles; the executive organ was to be the Central Authority. The relations between all the League organisations were based on principles of democratism and centralism. At the same time a number of points in the draft showed that the reorganisation was not yet complete and that former traditions were still alive, namely: Art. 1 formulating the aims of the League; one of the points in Art. 3, making the sectarian stipulation that members were not to belong to any other political organisation; Art. 21, limiting the powers of the Congress by the right of the communities to accept or reject its decisions, etc.

    http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1847/communist-league/rules.htmSlightly more centralised version of the rules.  Still more democratic than the SWP.

    in reply to: SWP Pre-conference Bulletins 2012 #91219

    Wow, the first bulletin contains the mythic SWP constitution.  Some snippets:http://www.cpgb.org.uk/assets/files/swpinternalbulletins/PreConf_Bulletin_i_Oct_2012.pdf(Page 25)

    Quote:
    Branches and/or districts elect delegates to Conference on a basis proportional to their membership, as determined by the Central Committee.[…](5) Central Committee The CC consists of members elected by the Conference according to the following procedure: The outgoing Central Committee selects and circulates a provisional slatefor the new CC at the beginning of the period for pre-Conference discussion. This is then discussed at the district aggregates where comrades can propose alternative slates.At the Conference the outgoing CC proposes a final slate (which may have changed as a result of the pre-Conference discussion). This slate, along with any other that is supported by a minimum offive delegates, is discussed and voted on by Conference.Between Conferences the CC is entrusted with the political leadership of the organisation and is responsible for the national direction of all political and organisational work, subject to thedecision- making powers of Conference.

    Note: there is no specification of the size of the CC, so they can always co-opt oppositionists to the official slate.  Also note the CC controls the size of conference, which can make it more manageable.Let's see how they justify this:

    Quote:
    The necessity of a revolutionary party flows from the fact that although the working class must collectively emancipate itself, the ideological domination of the ruling class means there is considerable uneveness within the working class in terms of its confidence, organisation and ideas. The role of a revolutionary party is to draw together the militant minority who understand the need for revolution, not to substitute for the class, but to constantly seek ways to act to increase workers’ combativity and confidence and in the process win wider layers of workers to socialist ideas.[…]And the existence of a leadership is a necessity. Uneveness in terms of experience, confidence and clarity of ideas exists not just inside the working class as a whole, but also within the revolutionary party. The more roots the party has inside the working class, the more it is able to intervene in the class struggle, the greater this uneveness will be.

    (CC statement in the third bulletin).  Note, it assumes that the leadership is the pinacle of this uneven consciousness, and instead of seeking to challenge the "unevenness" seeks to work within it, and in effect justifies a technocratic/theocratic elite dictating to the ignorant, rather than a two way dialogue between revolutionaries and workers.  After all, for all we (naturally) assume that we are right, we enter into debate, and have to withstand the possibility that we may be proved wrong.

    in reply to: Robots in demand in China as labour costs climb. #90844

    I'll also add:http://www.capitalbay.com/latest-news/281072-read-all-about-it-first-glimpse-inside-british-library-s-new-home-for-its-uk-national-newspaper-collection.html

    Quote:
    The state-of-the-art facility will be controlled by some 160km of robotic shelf space, with newspapers kept in low oxygen to prevent risk of fire.
    in reply to: Robots in demand in China as labour costs climb. #90843

    http://ftalphaville.ft.com/2012/12/10/1303512/the-robot-economy-and-the-new-rentier-class/

    Quote:
    So, robot and technology power is reducing the natural employment rate. But rather than our subsidising those who have lost jobs to technology, so as to spread that manna wealth that’s literally dropped onto the surface of the earth at no-one’s physical disadvantage, companies are using monopoly power to extort rents on the capital that is creating all that free wealth.

    Maybe this analysis is starting to go mainstream, and it should have significant effects.  What striver can outstrive a machine?

    in reply to: Rubbish bin #91210

    Cheers for looking.  Thought it might be worth a look at (in light of Socialist Punk's question yesterday).

    in reply to: Updating stats… #91204

    Some fascinating stats from the 2011 census:http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-20677321

    Quote:
    The second-most common category was "No religion", comprising more than a quarter of the population (25.1%; 14.1 million), up from 7.7 million (14.8%) in 2001.

    (Note, The Christian 33.2 million is split between several denominations, so it'c clear that no-religion is the biggest "religious" group outright).http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-20677515

    Quote:
    The census also shows that, while fewer people own their own home, more people own it outright. Just under 15 million households owned their own home in 2011, either with a mortgage or loan, or outright – a decrease of four percentage points since 2001…However, those who owned their home outright increased two percentage points from 29% (6.4 million) to 31% (7.2 million)…The group that rented from a private landlord or letting agency increased by six percentage points from 9% (1.9 million) in 2001 to 15% (3.6 million) in 2011.
    in reply to: Free and open discussion on Sticky: Forum Rules #91013

    I don't follow you.  I'm not a moderator.  How does your comment relate to my quoted text?

    in reply to: Free and open discussion on Sticky: Forum Rules #91011

    I am on topic, the topic is the forum rules, and it is on topic to say a thread has been talked out. 

    in reply to: Free and open discussion on Sticky: Forum Rules #91009

    I wasn't being sarcastic at all.What you wrote was:

    OGW wrote:
    I was refering to the period BEFORE I was warned.And yes it IS time we moved on.

    I can't see any other way of reading that than as a call to move on and let it lie, which i agree with.

    in reply to: Free and open discussion on Sticky: Forum Rules #91007
    TheOldGreyWhistle wrote:
    And yes it IS time we moved on.

    Hear, hear.  I think we should all follow OGW's advice and let it go, and get on with discussing socialism.

    in reply to: Updating stats… #91203

    On Homelessness in the UKhttps://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/16512/Statutory_Homelessness_3rd_Quarter__July_-_Sep__2012_England.pdf

    Quote:
    52,960 households were in temporary accommodation on 30 September 2012, 8 per cent higher than at the same date in 2011.
    in reply to: Labour Theory of Value – Marginal Utility #91111
    DJP wrote:
    In mainstream economics 'Marginal Utility' refers to an increase or decrease in utility following the consumption of an additional unit of a good. I fail to see what that article has to do with it?

    Well, I suppose the utter uselessness of Californium, and several other of the items on that list illustrates the Diamonds half of the Paradox of Value (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paradox_of_value) note, the apparent solution of the problem, by Marginalism, is, to my mind, unutterable bunkum.  Diamonds are precious because they are rare, but they are only rare because they are desired.  Since they have no otehr use, it is their value that makes them desirable.

Viewing 15 posts - 2,971 through 2,985 (of 3,078 total)