Avatar

The Cultured Marxist

@theculturedmarxist / theculturedmarxist.tumblr.com

Internet Royalty

Now that the Global West seems finally to understand that the war in Ukraine is going terminally badly for Kiev, its opinion-formers are comforting themselves with the thought that this is only Round One, and that there are still five or even ten years of juicy opportunities to bring down the Russian Bear by all sorts of devious means, and to finally plant the NATO flag on the roof of the Kremlin. They are deluded, of course, but it’s useful to take a step back and consider just how deluded they are, and why that is.

I’m not going to say much about the current Ukrainian “offensive,” because I’m not a military specialist, and anyway it may already be mostly over by the time you read this. It seems as though the predictions of a bloody shambles made by experts in advance of the operation are probably coming true, and that, in days or at most weeks, depending on how hard the Ukrainians try to push, their military capability will be largely destroyed. Not many western pundits seem to have thought through the consequences of that, so we’ll do it for them. But in the meantime the punditocracy is entertaining and occupying itself with new scenarios which it believes it can force on the Russians, either in return for “concessions”that NATO might make, or because … well, that’s an interesting question: they are deluded, after all

So let’s look at this issue in two parts: first, what is likely to happen at the strategic level over the rest of this year, and second, whether there is anything, no matter how limited, that NATO can do to change the likely longer-term outcome. If you’ve read some of my earlier writings on the subject, you may feel there is degree of repetition here, but, to be honest, since neither what I’ve written, nor what much more distinguished people with much larger audiences have written, seems to have penetrated the thick skulls of the punditocracy, we’d better have another go.

At the end of April, two French neo-Nazis – Alan Vineron and Guillaume Andreoni – who had joined the Armed Forces of Ukraine as mercenaries, were arrested and convicted in their home country. Two months earlier, one of them had posted photos of three executed Russian prisoners on social media.

However, Vineron and Andreoni were detained not because of any war crimes, but for attempting to smuggle weapons and munitions back home, including rifle scopes and magazines for machine guns. After a brief trial, they were sentenced to 15 months in prison each, nine of them to be served conditionally. 

This incident is only the first sign of things to come. According to French media, about 400 French citizens are taking part in the armed conflict in Ukraine. Of these, about 100 are directly involved in the fighting, and about 30 are well-known far-right extremists. 

It’s not just Paris that will soon face the prospect of militant neo-Nazis returning home. Observers note that the number of volunteer foreign fighters in Ukraine has reached thousands. 

In August, 2019, the New York Times launched its “1619 Project,” marking the 400th anniversary of the initial arrival of 20 African slaves at Point Comfort in Virginia, a British colony in North America.

The Times wrote that its project intended to “reframe the country’s history, understanding 1619 as our true founding, and placing the consequences of slavery and the contributions of black Americans at the very center of the story we tell ourselves about who we are.” It included not only a special magazine edition that was freely distributed in hundreds of thousands of copies to schools and museums nationally, but a proposed teaching curriculum for teachers to use in their classrooms.

Despite the pretense of establishing the United States’ “true” foundation, the 1619 Project is a politically motivated falsification of history. It presents and interprets American history entirely through the prism of race and racial conflict.

The World Socialist Web Site published detailed refutations of the numerous falsifications contained in the Times project, and interviewed leading historians of the United States.

Source: wsws.org

I wonder if these brain surgeons all going to the mat now for Ukraine have considered what's going to happen to all the left over neo-Nazis and unaccounted-for weapons after this war is over.

It's just especially frustrating that these brain dead morons think that there are only two options: hating Russia and loving Russia. If you don't hate Russia, you must love Russia. Anything that reflects positively on Russia or that doesn't preface itself by saying Russia is the evil empire is pro-Russian propaganda and if you aren't virulently anti-Russian then you support their war of genocide against all the free peoples of Middle Earth.

Plus you're stupid for not believing that Russia is evil. It's so obvious if only you've been listening to the country that has been trying to destroy Russia for a hundred years and has spent the last 30 of them going on a world tour obliterating every country they didn't like. Russia is bad because they oppress and bomb people and harbor fascists and Nazis, which is something that Ukraine and its very good friend and supporter and chooser of its government the United States government simply don't do. You just have to listen to Ukrainians, like all the ones that fled to the United States and Canada a hundred years ago and have hated Russia ever since for the crime of not letting them commit wanton genocide against all non-ethnic Ukrainians that were also living in the Ukraine at the time.

It's all so plainly a black and white issue where one side is good and the other is bad, and that side is Russia.

And what we should all be worried about I think is how easily long-standing, reputable, fact-based Leftist sources are dismissed out of hand as "Russian propaganda" by the simple fact that they don't follow whatever the current fucking line is from Western propaganda.

I want Ukraine to be given massive quantities of long-range anti-surface precision-guided munitions, drones, and whatever else they ask for because they have been invaded and are trying to defend themselves from an aggressor.

In a war, you have to pick a side. The truth is not nearly as important as the effect of a message. That's the entire basis of propaganda. If people hating Russia gets more weapons sent to drive out Russian forces from Ukraine, I'm all for it.

The most effective way to decrease the quantity of Nazis in Ukraine is to kill every single Wagner Group mercenary.

Do tell what your alternative is. Ask the Russians to leave nicely?

You've chosen to side with a government that is not only a neo-Nazi controlled state but is acting as a catspaw for the United States. You're mistaken about which side is the aggressor here. You're not championing the virtuous underdog here. You're just justifying the most recent entry in a long, bloody list of US imperialist adventures using radical far right extremists to attack its enemies.

The "alternative" was preventing this entire war before it began. NATO spent decades expanding towards Russia in spite of its promises not to. After the US overthrew Ukraine's government in 2014, Russia negotiated the Minsk I&II treaties which it turns out Ukraine and its backers never intended to actually follow. Ukraine then spent 8 years sending neo-Nazis to wage war against people that didn't want to be ruled by Nazis. Even in the immediate leadup to the war the United States insisted on ignoring Russia's security concerns because acquiescing to them would have meant removing their puppet regime which was put into place with the explicit understanding that they would be used to wage war against Russia on NATO's behalf. Back towards when this whole mess started, Russia and Ukraine were even in the process of negotiating peace, which NATO put a stop to.

So thanks to all of that, the fact is that the Russians aren't going to leave unless they're made to leave, and nothing short of a nuclear exchange is going to make that happen. So maybe think twice about advocating for NATO-backed Neo-Nazis in a war that they made and are intentionally choosing to perpetuate.

Trickle Down Economics has failed Americans

Fucking all of liberal economic theory--the idea that capitalism can be used for good if you just find some way to protect society from its more harmful aspects--has “failed” us. It’s time for a communist revolution.

You have to kind of abandon any hope for capitalism when Keynesianism actually said "so capitalism has to be managed so that it doesn't destroy itself and lead to revolution," but because that leads to slightly less profits the capitalists just said "oh no we won't be doing that 😌"

George Orwell wrote in 1984 that "Who controls the past controls the future: who controls the present controls the past." Governments work relentlessly to distort public perceptions of the past. Regarding the Ukraine War, the Biden administration has repeatedly and falsely claimed that the Ukraine War started with an unprovoked attack by Russia on Ukraine on February 24, 2022. In fact, the war was provoked by the U.S. in ways that leading U.S. diplomats anticipated for decades in the lead-up to the war, meaning that the war could have been avoided and should now be stopped through negotiations.

Recognizing that the war was provoked helps us to understand how to stop it. It doesn’t justify Russia’s invasion. A far better approach for Russia might have been to step up diplomacy with Europe and with the non-Western world to explain and oppose U.S. militarism and unilateralism. In fact, the relentless U.S. push to expand NATO is widely opposed throughout the world, so Russian diplomacy rather than war would likely have been effective.

The Biden team uses the word “unprovoked” incessantly, most recently in Biden’s major speech on the first-year anniversary of the war, in a recent NATO statement, and in the most recent G7 statement. Mainstream media friendly to Biden simply parrot the White House. The New York Times is the lead culprit, describing the invasion as “unprovoked” no fewer than 26 times, in five editorials, 14 opinion columns by NYT writers, and seven guest op-eds!

There were in fact two main U.S. provocations. The first was the U.S. intention to expand NATO to Ukraine and Georgia in order to surround Russia in the Black Sea region by NATO countries (Ukraine, Romania, Bulgaria, Turkey, and Georgia, in counterclockwise order). The second was the U.S. role in installing a Russophobic regime in Ukraine by the violent overthrow of Ukraine’s pro-Russian President, Viktor Yanukovych, in February 2014. The shooting war in Ukraine began with Yanukovych’s overthrow nine years ago, not in February 2022 as the U.S. government, NATO, and the G7 leaders would have us believe.

Biden and his foreign policy team refuse to discuss these roots of the war. To recognize them would undermine the administration in three ways. First, it would expose the fact that the war could have been avoided, or stopped early, sparing Ukraine its current devastation and the U.S. more than $100 billion in outlays to date. Second, it would expose President Biden’s personal role in the war as a participant in the overthrow of Yanukovych, and before that as a staunch backer of the military-industrial complex and very early advocate of NATO enlargement. Third, it would push Biden to the negotiating table, undermining the administration’s continued push for NATO expansion.

The archives show irrefutably that the U.S. and German governments repeatedly promised to Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev that NATO would not move “one inch eastward” when the Soviet Union disbanded the Warsaw Pact military alliance. Nonetheless, U.S. planning for NATO expansion began early in the 1990s, well before Vladimir Putin was Russia’s president. In 1997, national security expert Zbigniew Brzezinski spelled out the NATO expansion timeline with remarkable precision.

U.S. diplomats and Ukraine’s own leaders knew well that NATO enlargement could lead to war. The great US scholar-statesman George Kennan called NATO enlargement a “fateful error,” writing in the New York Times that, “Such a decision may be expected to inflame the nationalistic, anti-Western and militaristic tendencies in Russian opinion; to have an adverse effect on the development of Russian democracy; to restore the atmosphere of the cold war to East-West relations, and to impel Russian foreign policy in directions decidedly not to our liking.”

President Bill Clinton’s Secretary of Defense William Perry considered resigning in protest against NATO enlargement. In reminiscing about this crucial moment in the mid-1990s, Perry said the following in 2016: “Our first action that really set us off in a bad direction was when NATO started to expand, bringing in eastern European nations, some of them bordering Russia. At that time, we were working closely with Russia and they were beginning to get used to the idea that NATO could be a friend rather than an enemy ... but they were very uncomfortable about having NATO right up on their border and they made a strong appeal for us not to go ahead with that.”

In 2008, then U.S. Ambassador to Russia, and now CIA Director, William Burns, sent a cable to Washington warning at length of grave risks of NATO enlargement: “Ukraine and Georgia's NATO aspirations not only touch a raw nerve in Russia, they engender serious concerns about the consequences for stability in the region. Not only does Russia perceive encirclement, and efforts to undermine Russia's influence in the region, but it also fears unpredictable and uncontrolled consequences which would seriously affect Russian security interests. Experts tell us that Russia is particularly worried that the strong divisions in Ukraine over NATO membership, with much of the ethnic-Russian community against membership, could lead to a major split, involving violence or at worst, civil war. In that eventuality, Russia would have to decide whether to intervene; a decision Russia does not want to have to face.”

Ukraine’s leaders knew clearly that pressing for NATO enlargement to Ukraine would mean war. Former Zelensky advisor Oleksiy Arestovych declared in a 2019 interview “that our price for joining NATO is a big war with Russia.”

During 2010-2013, Yanukovych pushed neutrality, in line with Ukrainian public opinion. The U.S. worked covertly to overthrow Yanukovych, as captured vividly in the tape of then U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland and U.S. Ambassador Geoffrey Pyatt planning the post-Yanukovych government weeks before the violent overthrow of Yanukovych. Nuland makes clear on the call that she was coordinating closely with then Vice President Biden and his national security advisor Jake Sullivan, the same Biden-Nuland-Sullivan team now at the center of U.S. policy vis-à-vis Ukraine.

After Yanukovych’s overthrow, the war broke out in the Donbas, while Russia claimed Crimea. The new Ukrainian government appealed for NATO membership, and the U.S. armed and helped restructure the Ukrainian army to make it interoperable with NATO. In 2021, NATO and the Biden Administration strongly recommitted to Ukraine’s future in NATO.

In the immediate lead-up to Russia’s invasion, NATO enlargement was center stage. Putin’s draft US-Russia Treaty (December 17, 2021) called for a halt to NATO enlargement. Russia’s leaders put NATO enlargement as the cause of war in Russia’s National Security Council meeting on February 21, 2022. In his address to the nation that day, Putin declared NATO enlargement to be a central reason for the invasion.

Historian Geoffrey Roberts recently wrote: “Could war have been prevented by a Russian-Western deal that halted NATO expansion and neutralised Ukraine in return for solid guarantees of Ukrainian independence and sovereignty? Quite possibly.” In March 2022, Russia and Ukraine reported progress towards a quick negotiated end to the war based on Ukraine’s neutrality. According to Naftali Bennett, former Prime Minister of Israel, who was a mediator, an agreement was close to being reached before the U.S., U.K., and France blocked it.

While the Biden administration declares Russia’s invasion to be unprovoked, Russia pursued diplomatic options in 2021 to avoid war, while Biden rejected diplomacy, insisting that Russia had no say whatsoever on the question of NATO enlargement. And Russia pushed diplomacy in March 2022, while the Biden team again blocked a diplomatic end to the war.

By recognizing that the question of NATO enlargement is at the center of this war, we understand why U.S. weaponry will not end this war. Russia will escalate as necessary to prevent NATO enlargement to Ukraine. The key to peace in Ukraine is through negotiations based on Ukraine’s neutrality and NATO non-enlargement. The Biden administration’s insistence on NATO enlargement to Ukraine has made Ukraine a victim of misconceived and unachievable U.S. military aspirations. It’s time for the provocations to stop, and for negotiations to restore peace to Ukraine.

Correction: An earlier version of this article misstated the date of William Burns' 2008 cable warning about NATO enlargment. That error has been fixed.

The reason why social media has gotten so much worse recently (reddits recent fuck-up, everything on Twitter since Musk, FB being FB, Tumblrs various attempts at expanding profitability recently) is because it is no longer possible to exist as a company by fencing in large parts of our social life and having investment money pump in on the basis of expected future value of that amount of information when it suddenly costs money to loan money due to suddenly high interest rates after the inflationary crisis of the last year, which has made the current model of the Internet that has existed for the last about 10 years completely unsustainable. All of them need to become profitable or die, and they are learning very quickly that that just isn't possible no matter how much of the life and information of the users one steals. We are witnessing the death-throes of Web2.0, and what comes after is as yet unclear.

"The internet’s best resources are almost universally volunteer run and donation based, like Wikipedia and The Internet Archive. Every time a great resource is accidentally created by a for-profit company, it is eventually destroyed, like Flickr and Google Reader. Reddit could be what Usenet was supposed to be, a hub of internet-wide discussion on every topic imaginable, if it wasn’t also a private company forced to come up with a credible plan to make hosting discussions sound in any way like a profitable venture.

We are living through the end of the useful internet. The future is informed discussion behind locked doors, in Discords and private fora, with the public-facing web increasingly filled with detritus generated by LLMs, bearing only a stylistic resemblance to useful information. Finding unbiased and independent product reviews, expert tech support, and all manner of helpful advice will now resemble the process by which one now searches for illegal sports streams or pirated journal articles. The decades of real human conversation hosted at places like Reddit will prove useful training material for the mindless bots and deceptive marketers that replace it."

thanks capitalism

I wonder if these brain surgeons all going to the mat now for Ukraine have considered what's going to happen to all the left over neo-Nazis and unaccounted-for weapons after this war is over.

It's just especially frustrating that these brain dead morons think that there are only two options: hating Russia and loving Russia. If you don't hate Russia, you must love Russia. Anything that reflects positively on Russia or that doesn't preface itself by saying Russia is the evil empire is pro-Russian propaganda and if you aren't virulently anti-Russian then you support their war of genocide against all the free peoples of Middle Earth.

Plus you're stupid for not believing that Russia is evil. It's so obvious if only you've been listening to the country that has been trying to destroy Russia for a hundred years and has spent the last 30 of them going on a world tour obliterating every country they didn't like. Russia is bad because they oppress and bomb people and harbor fascists and Nazis, which is something that Ukraine and its very good friend and supporter and chooser of its government the United States government simply don't do. You just have to listen to Ukrainians, like all the ones that fled to the United States and Canada a hundred years ago and have hated Russia ever since for the crime of not letting them commit wanton genocide against all non-ethnic Ukrainians that were also living in the Ukraine at the time.

It's all so plainly a black and white issue where one side is good and the other is bad, and that side is Russia.

And what we should all be worried about I think is how easily long-standing, reputable, fact-based Leftist sources are dismissed out of hand as "Russian propaganda" by the simple fact that they don't follow whatever the current fucking line is from Western propaganda.

I wonder if these brain surgeons all going to the mat now for Ukraine have considered what's going to happen to all the left over neo-Nazis and unaccounted-for weapons after this war is over.

It's just especially frustrating that these brain dead morons think that there are only two options: hating Russia and loving Russia. If you don't hate Russia, you must love Russia. Anything that reflects positively on Russia or that doesn't preface itself by saying Russia is the evil empire is pro-Russian propaganda and if you aren't virulently anti-Russian then you support their war of genocide against all the free peoples of Middle Earth.

Plus you're stupid for not believing that Russia is evil. It's so obvious if only you've been listening to the country that has been trying to destroy Russia for a hundred years and has spent the last 30 of them going on a world tour obliterating every country they didn't like. Russia is bad because they oppress and bomb people and harbor fascists and Nazis, which is something that Ukraine and its very good friend and supporter and chooser of its government the United States government simply don't do. You just have to listen to Ukrainians, like all the ones that fled to the United States and Canada a hundred years ago and have hated Russia ever since for the crime of not letting them commit wanton genocide against all non-ethnic Ukrainians that were also living in the Ukraine at the time.

It's all so plainly a black and white issue where one side is good and the other is bad, and that side is Russia.

I wonder if these brain surgeons all going to the mat now for Ukraine have considered what's going to happen to all the left over neo-Nazis and unaccounted-for weapons after this war is over.

Assortment of etchings from Otto Dix’s The War.

Dix’s War prints were published in 1924, the tenth anniversary of the outbreak of the First World War, as an antidote to the heroic interpretation of the war.
In the series, Dix depicts scenes of executions and famine, with trenches and corpses amid the desolate landscapes in Flanders and the Somme.  He shows images of emaciated and decaying corpses, grimacing skeletons, bodies crucified or impaled on barbed wire, the wounded with bulging eyes and open flesh, in a hallucinatory dance macabre. The prints are based on wartime photographs, hundreds of sketches that Dix made during the war, and his own memories.