From Crisis To Resistance

The Article: Crisis To Resistance In Greece in SocialistWorker.

The Text: Greece has a new government led by the conservative New Democracy party, in coalition with the center-left social democrats of PASOK, among others. The country’s new leaders claim they will demand a better deal, but Greece under this regime will remain subject to the Memorandums–documents signed by the government which agree to drastic austerity measures in return for a bailout of the country’s financial system.

The two parties of Greece’s political establishment were nearly beaten by the Coalition of the Radical Left, or SYRIZA. In elections on May 6–and then again on June 17, when the first vote failed to produce a governing majority–SYRIZA finished second overall, and dominated the turnout among workers, the unemployed and the poor, and in Greece’s major cities.

SYRIZA represents the continuation of a resistance movement that produced 17 general strikes in Greece; a nationwide movement to occupy the country’s public squares, including Syntagma Square in front of the parliament in Athens; and many other struggles.

Continue Reading

Email

The Weekly Wrap-Up

Boy, we sure did learn a lot this week, didn’t we? We found out that…uh…oh! And we figured out…um. Nevermind. Ask us on Monday. For now, here’s a Friday kick-back.

5. Dumb Facebook Post

dumb-facebook-post

 

There is nothing more soul-crushing than encountering a facebook dummy whilst scrolling your News Feed. But if we can laugh at them, maybe it’s not so bad.

4. Troll High-Fiving People at Leaning Tower of Pisa

high-fiving-at-pisa

The best part about this video is not this ingenious troll prank (though it is quite good), but the smiles and goodhearted attitudes of the folks he’s trolling.

3. Making History Technicolor  

anne-frank-recolored

These images captured our hearts when they were in black and white, so it’s no surprise that color has added a whole new level of appreciation to them.

2. The Best of the Scumbag Brain Meme

scumbag-brain

Will we ever have full mastery over our thoughts and actions? Not if this douche can help it.

1. The Farce of American Pride

george-carlin-ethnic-pride

George Carlin still manages to ruffle people’s feathers, and we like that.

 

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 
Be sure to check out all the PBH Network has to offer: ProseBeforeHosRunt Of The WebAlligator Sunglasses,PBH2, and All That Is Interesting. Thanks again to all of our fans and supporters!

Email

Drudge Won’t Report This

‘The money is in Washington.’ This is why Romney wants to go to the White House. Don’t let anyone say otherwise.

Email

It Takes Two To Reform

american-health-reform-comic

We saw how well Bloomberg’s ban on large soft drinks went…let’s see how health care reform fares.

Email

The Politics Of Getting A Life

The Article: The Politics Of Getting A Life by Peter Frase in Jacobin.

The Text: ork in a capitalist society is a conflicted and contradictory phenomenon, never more so than in hard times. We simultaneously work not enough and too much; a labor famine for some means feast for others. The United States has allegedly been in economic “recovery” for over two years, and yet 15 million people cannot find work, or cannot find as much work as they say they would like. At the same time, up to two thirds of workers report in surveys that they would like to work fewer hours than they do now, even if doing so would require a loss of income. The pain of unemployment is well-documented, but the pain of the employed only occasionally sees the light, whether it’s Amazon warehouse employees working at a breakneck pace in sweltering heat, or Foxconn workers risking injury and death to build hip electronics for Apple.

When work is scarce, political horizons tend to narrow, as critiques of the quality of work give way to the desperate search for work of any kind. And work, of any kind, seems to be all that politicians can offer; right and left differ only on who is to blame for the scarcity of it. Go to the web site of the Barack Obama campaign, and you will be told at the top of the “Issues” page that “The President is taking aggressive steps to put Americans back to work and create an economy where hard work pays and responsibility is rewarded.” Likewise the site of the AFL-CIO labor federation, where a man in overalls grins behind the words “work connects us all”. This is how the virtuous working class appears in the liberal imagination: hard-working, responsible, defined, and redeemed by work, but failed by an economy that cannot create the necessary wage labor into which this responsibility can be invested.

When the Right rejects this romanticism of workers as ascetic toilers, it is only to better shift the blame for a weak economy from capital to labor. University of Chicago economist and sometime New York Times contributor Casey Mulligan tried to define the recession out of existence by insisting that collapsing employment reflected only a diminished desire to work, rather than a shortfall in demand. Meanwhile, the more culturally-minded reactionaries fret about the waning of the work ethic as a herald of civilizational decline. Charles Murray, who made his name promoting pseudoscientific accounts of the shiftlessness and mental inferiority of African-Americans, has recently returned with dire warnings about the decay of the white working class. White men, he says, have lost their “industriousness,” as demonstrated by declining labor force participation rates and shorter average work weeks among the employed.

Continue Reading

Email

Hot On The Web