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సుగర్‌ బేబీలు ఎందుకు పెరుగుతున్నారు ?

23 Tuesday Feb 2016

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, Education, INTERNATIONAL NEWS, UK, USA, Women

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CAPITALISM, capitalist crisis, student debt, students, Sugar Babies, sugar mummies and daddies, UK, USA

ఎం కోటేశ్వరరావు

   సుగర్‌ డాడీ, సుగర్‌ మమ్మీ, సుగర్‌ బేబీ ఆగండాగండి. సుగర్‌ వ్యాధి కుటుంబం గురించి చెబుతున్నారని అనుకుంటున్నారా ? కానే కాదు, ఆ వ్యాధికీ వీరికీ నక్కకూ నాగలోగలోకానికి వున్నంత దూరం. పోనీ ఈ పదాల గురించి విన్నారా ? లేదా ఎక్కడైనా తారసిల్లారా ?

     సోషల్‌ మీడియాలోని ఫేస్‌బుక్‌లో ఖాతాలున్న వారికి ఎప్పుడో ఒకప్పడు వీళ్లలో ఎవరో ఒకరు ఏదో ఒక రూపంలో తగిలే వుంటారు. పబ్లిక్‌ అన్నతరువాత పది రకాల మనుషులు వుంటారు.నేను ఖాళీగా వున్నాను కావాలంటే మీరు నాతో మాట్లాడవచ్చు, నా ఫోన్‌ రీచార్జి చేయించండి నేను సెక్స్‌ ఛాట్‌ చేస్తా, నాకు చాలా డబ్బు అవసరం ప్లీజ్‌ ఎక్కడికి రమ్మంటే అక్కడికి వస్తా ఇలాంటి మెసేజ్‌లు ఫోన్‌,ఫేస్‌బుక్‌లో చాలా మందికి రావటం, కొంత మంది స్పందించటం సర్వసాధారణం. ఇంకా చాలా దారుణమైన సందేశాలు కూడా వస్తుంటాయి. సోషల్‌ మీడియాతో ప్రయోజనంతో పాటు ఇలాంటి ప్రమాదాలు కూడా వున్నాయి.

    ముందుగా సుగర్‌ డాడీ, సుగర్‌ మమ్మీల గురించి తెలుసుకుందాం. డాడీలైతే తమ కూతురి వయస్సున్న ఆడపిల్లలను, మమ్మీలైతే తమ కొడుకుల, కూతుర్ల వయస్సులో వున్న కోడెకారు కుర్ర వాళ్లను చేరదీసి తమ దేహ అవసరాలను తీర్చుకోవటంతో పాటు వారి ఆర్ధిక అవసరాలను కూడా తీర్చే వారు. భూస్వామిక వ్యవస్ధ పెత్తనం చేస్తున్న రోజులలో సుగర్‌ డాడీలు అనేక చోట్ల తమ ఖాతాలు తెరిచేవారు, ఎంత మందిని చేరదీస్తే అంత గొప్ప భూస్వామి లేదా జమిందారు కింద లెక్క. మరి ఇప్పుడు కార్పొరేట్‌ సుగర్‌ డాడీలు ఆ స్ధానాన్ని ఆక్రమిస్తున్నారు.ఈ పరంపరలోనే సుగర్‌ మమ్మీలు కూడా తయారవుతారని వేరే చెప్పనవసరం లేదు. వారికి ఎస్కార్టులనో మరో పేరుతోనే బలయ్యేవారే సుగర్‌ బేబీలు, బాబులు.

      పెట్టుబడిదారీ విధానం బాగా పెరిగే కొద్దీ ఇలాంటి వారి సంఖ్య పెరుగుతూ వుంటుంది. మన దేశం లేదా ప్రాంతం ఇంకా అలాంటి వున్నత ‘అభివృద్ధి’ దశకు చేరలేదు కనుక ఈ విషయాలు కొంచెం ఎబ్బెట్టుగానూ, మరీ చోద్యం గాకపోతే అనిపిస్తాయి. పెట్టుబడిదారీ వ్యవస్దలో ప్రతిదీ సరుకే. కార్పొరేట్స్‌ తమకు అవసరమైన దానిని కొనుక్కుంటారు. అభాగ్యులు, వేరే ప్రత్యామ్నాయం లేనివారు, పెట్టుబడిదారీ విలాసాలకు అలవాటు పడి వెనక్కు రాలేని వారు వారు తమ దగ్గర వున్నదానిని అది శ్రమ లేదా శరీరం ఏదైనా కావచ్చు విక్రయించటం,అవసరాలు తీర్చుకోవటం జరుగుతుంది.

     పశ్చిమ దేశాలలో ఇలాంటి వ్యాపారం లేదా సేవలు అందించేందుకు ప్రత్యేకంగా కొన్ని వెబ్‌సైట్లు కూడా పనిచేస్తున్నాయి. మన దగ్గర కూడా కొన్ని సైట్స్‌ వున్నాయి. బ్రిటన్‌లో ‘సీకింగ్‌ అరేంజ్‌మెంట్‌.కామ్‌ అనేది ఒక పేరుమోసిన సుగర్‌ డాడీ,మమ్మీ, బేబీల డేటింగ్‌ సైట్‌. పచ్చి తెలుగులో చెప్పుకోవాలంటే తార్పుడు కేంద్రం. పెట్టుబడిదారీ వ్యవస్ధకు పుట్టిన ఒక తీవ్ర అవలక్షణం.

     బ్రిటన్‌ ప్రభుత్వం ట్యూషన్‌ ఫీజులను మూడు రెట్లు పెంచిన తరువాత కేంబ్రిడ్జి విశ్వవిద్యాలయానికి చెందిన విద్యార్ధినులు ఈ సైట్లో తమ పేర్లు నమోదు చేసుకోవటం పెరిగినట్లు తేలింది. అంటే విశ్వవిద్యాలయ విద్యను కొనుగోలు చేయటానికి స్ధోమత లేనివారు దానికి దూరంగా వుండాలి లేదా అందుకోసం దేనికైనా సిద్ధ పడాలి. బ్రిటన్‌లో అత్యంత ప్రతిష్ట కలిగిన ఆ సంస్ధకు నిర్వహణ వ్యయం చెల్లించటాన్ని నిలిపివేస్తామని ఈనెలలో ప్రభుత్వం ప్రకటించింది కనుక వచ్చే ఏడాది మరోసారి ట్యూషన్‌ ఫీజులతో పాటు వాటిని చెల్లించేందుకు డబ్బులిచ్చే సుగర్‌ డాడీల కోసం వెతికే విద్యార్దులు కూడా పెరుగుతారని ఆ కేంద్రం అంచనా వేస్తోంది.ఎంత దైన్య స్దితి, ఎంత దుర్మార్గం ?

      వెబ్‌సైట్‌లో రకరకాల సేవల గురించి వివరాలు వుంటాయి. ఏ సేవ కావాల్సిన వారు వారిని ఎంచుకోవచ్చు. అందుకు తగ్గ ఫీజు లేదా పరిహారం, బహుమతులు వుంటాయి. పైన చెప్పిన బ్రిటన్‌ డాట్‌కామ్‌లో ఈ ఏడాది జనవరి నాటికి తమకు సదరు సేవలందించేందుకు సిద్దంగా వున్నట్లు అంగీకారం తెలిపేవారు గానీ 2.25లక్షల మంది విద్యార్ధులున్నారట. మరో అంచనా ప్రకారం ఇంకా ఎక్కువ మందే వున్నారు. ఆ డాట్‌కాం స్ధాపక సిఇవో బ్రాండన్‌ వేడ్‌ దీని గురించి చెబుతూ దేశం ఒక విధంగా అత్యవసర పరిస్ధితిలో వున్నట్లుగా వుంది.అయితే వుగ్రవాదంతో కాదు, 1.2లక్షల కోట్ల పౌండ్ల విద్యార్ధుల అప్పు పేరుకుపోయి సంక్షోభానికి దారితీసేదిగా వుంది.ఎవరూ దీని గురించి ఎవరూ పట్టించుకోవటం లేదు, మేము మిలియన్లలో గాక పోయినా లక్షల మందికి మా సైట్‌ ద్వారా విద్యకోసం చేసిన అప్పునుంచి బయట పడేట్లు తోడ్పడుతున్నాం అని కుండబద్దలు కొట్టినట్లు చెప్పాడు.

     సేవల విషయానికి వస్తే సుగర్‌ డాడీలు కొందరు వెబ్‌కామ్‌ల ముందు కూర్చొని కబుర్లు చెప్పమని అడుగుతారట. అయితే మేం బట్టలు వేసుకొనే మాట్లాడతాం అని అమ్మాయిలు షరతులు విధిస్తున్నవారు కూడా వున్నారట. ఇది అమలిన శృంగారం. కొంత మంది భౌతిక సుఖాల జోలికి పోకుండా కేవలం ఫోన్లో సంభాషిస్తూ విద్యార్దినులను ఆదుకొనే వారు కూడా వున్నారట.ఎవరైనా ఒక పరిధికి మించి డిమాండ్‌ చేస్తే దక్కిన వరకు సొమ్ము తీసుకొని గుడ్‌బై చెప్పేవారు కూడా వున్నారట.విశ్వవిద్యాలయ విద్యకోసం ఇదంతా తాము స్వచ్చందంగానే చేస్తున్నాం తప్ప ఎవరి బలవంతమూ లేదంటున్నవారు కూడా లేకపోలేదు.అయితే అవసరాల బలహీనతను సొమ్ము చేసుకోవటానికి ఏ అమ్మాయి దొరుకుతుందా అని సదరు వెబ్‌సైట్‌ వారు నిరంతరం శోధిస్తుంటారని, ఇక్కడ కూడా మహిళలు దోపిడీకి గురవుతున్నారని వేరు చెప్పనవసరం లేదు.

      పెట్టుబడిదారీ ధనిక దేశాలలో విద్యారంగం నుంచి ప్రభుత్వాలు తప్పుకోవటం, సంక్షేమ చర్యలపై కోత పెట్టటం ఎక్కువ చేయటంతో పాటు 2008లో ప్రారంభమైన ఆర్దిక సంక్షోభ సమయంలోనే బ్రిటన్‌లోనీ సీకింగ్‌ అరెంజ్‌మెంట్‌ డాట్‌ కామ్‌ 2006లో వునికిలోకి వచ్చింది. ఇప్పుడది ప్రపంచంలోనే అగ్రగామి సంస్ధ.ముందే చెప్పుకున్నట్లు విశ్వవిద్యాలయాలలో ఫీజుల రేట్లు పెరిగే కొద్దీ ఇలాంటి సైట్లలో నమోదు చేసుకొనే విద్యార్ధినుల సంఖ్య పెరుగుతోంది. అంతకు ముందు సంవత్సరంతో పోల్చితే 2015లో పెరుగుదల రేటు 40శాతం ఎక్కువ. అనధికారికంగా ఇంకా చాలా మంది వుంటారని వేరే చెప్పనవసరం లేదు. ఈ సేవలకు ముందుకు వస్తున్న వారి గురించి చేసిన విశ్లేషణలో ఇలాంటి వారు 21-27 సంవత్సరాల వయస్సులో వారు అత్యధికులు వున్నారు.ఇరవై నాలుగు శాతం మంది అల్పాదాయ, 56శాతం మధ్యతరగతి, ఎగువ మధ్యతరగతి కుటుంబాలకు చెందిన వారు. సగటున వారు రెండువేల పౌండ్ల ప్రతిఫలం పొందుతున్నారు.ఆ మొత్తంలో వారి కనీస అవసరాలైన ట్యూషన్‌ ఫీజుకు 36శాతం, అద్దెకు 23, పుస్తకాలకు 20, ట్రాన్స్‌పోర్ట్‌కు 9శాతం మొత్తాలను ఖర్చు చేస్తున్నట్లు తేలింది.

      నేటి విద్యార్ధే రేపటి పౌరుడన్న సంగతేమో గానీ రేపటి రుణగ్రస్తుడిగా మారుతున్నాడన్నది 2014 సర్వేలో తేలిన సత్యం. కాలేజీల నుంచి బయట పడిన తరువాత 50 సంవత్సరాల వయస్సు వచ్చే వరకు కొంత మంది విద్య కోసం చేసిన అప్పును తీరుస్తూనే వున్నారట.డిగ్రీతో పాటు సగటున 44వేల పౌండ్ల అప్పుతో బయటకు వస్తున్నారు. రుణం తీసుకొని చదువు కొనుక్కొనే వారు బ్రిటన్‌లో నానాటికీ పెరుగుతున్నారు . అలాంటి వారు 2013లో 60శాతం వుంటే 2015 నాటికి 74శాతానికి పెరిగారు.అంటే సంక్షోభ తీవ్రతకు ఇది దర్పణం. తమ చదువు కోసం పని చేస్తున్న వారి సంఖ్య కూడా 59 నుంచి 74శాతానికి పెరిగింది. యువకులు సగటున నెలకు 412 పౌండ్లు సంపాదిస్తుంటే, యువతులు 334 పౌండ్లు పొందుతున్నారు.ఈ పూర్వరంగంలోనే అవి చాలనపుడు 2000 పౌండ్ల ఆదాయం వచ్చే సుగర్‌ బేబీస్‌గా మారుతున్నారు.

      పోనీ పని చేసి సంపాదించినా లేదా నీతి తప్పి సంపాదించి పొందిన సర్టిఫికెట్లతో మంచి వుద్యోగాలు వస్తున్నాయా, వాటితో అప్పు తీర్చగలుగుతున్నారా అంటే అదీ లేదు. చదుకు తగిన వుద్యోగాలు లేవు, అవసరానికి తగిన వేతనాలు లేవు.ఇది ఒక్క బ్రిటన్‌ పరిస్దితే కాదు మొత్తం పెట్టుబడిదారీ ధనిక దేశాలన్నింటా వున్న దౌర్బాగ్యం. దివాళాకోరు, ఖాయిలా పడిన పెట్టుబడిదారీ విధాన ఫలితమిది.

    అమెరికాలో గత ఏడు సంవత్సరాలలో 58శాతం పెరిగింది. అప్పుతో పాటు చెల్లించలేని వారి సంఖ్య కూడా గణనీయంగా పెరుగుతోంది. విద్యార్ది రుణం 2014లో 1.2లక్షల కోట్ల డాలర్లని, చెల్లించటంలో విఫలమైన వారు 70లక్షల మంది వున్నట్లు తేలింది.ఈ కారణంగానే ఈ ఏడాది జరగనున్న ఎన్నికలలో విద్యార్ధి రుణ సమస్య కూడా ముందుకు వచ్చింది.ఈ సమస్య గత రెండు దశాబ్దాలలోనే ముందుకు వచ్చింది.కారణం అన్ని చోట్లా వుదారవాద విధానాల పేరుతో ప్రభుత్వం చేసే ఖర్చు తగ్గించటం, ప్రజలపై భారాలు మోపుతున్న పర్యవసానాల ఫలితమిది.

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FOR A NEW COMMUNIST PARTY

13 Saturday Feb 2016

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, INTERNATIONAL NEWS, Left politics, USA

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Tags

CAPITALISM, communism, Crowds and Party, Left politics, Occupy Wall Street’s, Socialism, US left politics

 So no, I don’t envision the Democratic Party as being that. That’s not at all what I have in mind. I’m thinking of a radical left party to which elections are incidental. Elections might be means for organizing, but the goal isn’t just being elected. The goal is overthrowing capitalism. The goal is being able to build a communist society as capitalism crumbles.

Transcribed from the 23 January 2016 episode of This is Hell! Radio(Chicago) 

“The goal isn’t just being elected. The goal is overthrowing capitalism. The goal is being able to build a communist society as capitalism crumbles.”

Chuck Mertz: Real change, the kind of change that Occupy Wall Street had hoped to start, can be achieved through—I know you’re going to find this hard to believe—a political party. I found it hard to believe, until I read Jodi Dean’s book Crowds and Party. Jodi is here to explain to us how a political party can bring about real change.

Welcome to This is Hell!, Jodi.

Jodi Dean: Hi! Thanks.

CM: Great to have you on the show.

Let’s start with Occupy. What, to you, explains the impact that the Tea Party had on Republicans, relative to the impact that Occupy seems to have had on the Democratic Party? All of the sudden there were “Tea Party Republicans.” There weren’t “Occupy Democrats.”

JD: That’s a good point. The Tea Party took the Republican Party as its target. They decided that their goal was going to be to influence the political system by getting people elected and basically by trying to take over part of government. That’s why they were able to have good effects. They didn’t regard the mainstream political process as something irrelevant to their concerns. They thought of it as something to seize.

The problem with many—but not all—leftists in the US is that they think the political process is so corrupted that we have to completely refuse it, and leave it altogether. The Tea Party decided to act as an organized militant force, and too much of the US left (we saw this in the wake of Occupy) has thought that to be “militant” means to refuse and disperse and become fragmented.

CM: So what explains the left turning its back on the collective action of a political party? It would seem like a political party would fit into what the left would historically want: an apparatus that can organize collective action.

JD: There are multiple things. First, the fear of success: the left has learned from the excesses of the twentieth century. Where Communist and socialist parties “succeeded,” there was violence and purges and repression. One reason the left has turned its back is because of this historical experience of state socialism. And we have taken that to mean that we should not ever have a state. I think that’s the wrong answer. That we—as the left—made a mistake with some regimes does not have to mean that we can never learn.

Another reason that the left has turned its back on the party form has been the important criticism of twentieth century parties that have been too white, too masculine, potentially homophobic; parties that have operated in intensely hierarchical fashion. Those criticisms are real. But rather than saying we can’t have a party form because that’s just what a party does, why not make a party that is not repressive and does not exclude or diminish people on the basis of sex, race, or sexuality?

So we’ve got at least two historical problems that have made people very reluctant to use the party. I also think that, whether or not you mark it as 1968 or 1989, the left’s embrace of cultural individualism and the free flow of personal experimentation has made it critical of discipline and critical of collectivity. But I think that’s just a capitalist sellout. Saying everybody should just “do their own thing” is just going in the direction of the dominant culture. That is actually not a left position at all.

CM: So does identity politics undermine collectivism? And did that end up leading to fragmentation and a weakening of the left? Because there are a lot of people we’ve had on the show—and one person in particular, Thomas Frank—who say that there is no left in the United States.

JD: First I want to say that I disagree with the claim that there is no left. In fact, I think that “the left” is that group that keeps denying its own existence. We’re always saying that we’re the ones who don’t exist. But the right thinks that we exist. That’s what is so fantastic, actually. Did you see the New York Post screaming that Bernie Sanders is really a communist? Great! They’re really still afraid of communists! And it’s people on the left who say, “Oh, no, we’re not here at all!”

The left denies its own existence and it denies its own collectivity. Now, is identity politics to blame? Maybe it’s better to say that identity politics has been a symptom of the pressure of capitalism. Capitalism has operated in the US by exacerbating racial differences. That has to be addressed on the left, and the left has been addressing that. But we haven’t been addressing it in a way that recognizes how racism operates to support capitalism. Instead, we’ve made it too much about identity rather than as an element in building collective solidarity.

I’m trying to find a way around this to express that identity politics has been important but it’s reached its limits. Identity politics can’t go any further insofar as it denies the impact of capitalism. An identity politics that just rests on itself is nothing but liberalism. Like all of the sudden everything will be better if black people and white people are equally exploited? What if black people and white people say, “No, we don’t want to live in a society based on exploitation?”

CM: You were saying that the left denies its own collectivity. Is that only in the US? Is that unique to the US culture of the left?

JD: That’s a really important question, and I’m not sure. Traveling in Europe, I see two different things. On the one hand I see a broad left discussion that is, in part, mediated through social media and is pretty generational—people in their twenties and thirties or younger—and that there’s a general feeling about the problem of collectivity, the problem of building something with cohesion, and a temptation to just emphasize multiplicity. You see this everywhere. Everybody worries about this, as far as what I’ve seen.

On the other hand, there are countries whose political culture has embraced parties much more, and fights politically through parties. Like Greece, for example—and we’ve seen the ups and downs with Syriza over the last two years. And Spain also. Because they have a parliamentary system where small parties can actually get in the mix and have a political effect—in ways that our two-party system excludes—the European context allows for more enthusiasm for the party as a form for politics.

But there’s still a lot of disagreement on the far left about whether or not the party form is useful, and shouldn’t we in fact retreat and have multiple actions and artistic events—you know, the whole alter-globalization framework. That’s still alive in a lot of places.

“I think holding on to the word ‘communism’ is useful, not only because our enemies are worried about communism, but also because it helps make socialists seem really, really mainstream. We don’t want socialism to seem like something that only happens in Sweden. We want it to seem like that’s what we should have at a bare minimum.”

CM: You mentioned the structure of the US electoral system doesn’t allow for a political party to necessarily be the solution for a group like Occupy. Is that one of the reasons that activists dismiss the party structure as something that could help move their agenda forward?

JD: We can think about the Black Panther Party as a neat example in the US context: A party which was operating not primarily to win elections but to galvanize social power. That’s an interesting way of thinking about what else parties can do in the US.

Or we can think about parties in terms of local elections. Socialist Alternative has been doing really neat work all over the country, organizing around local elections with people running as socialist candidates not within a mainstream party. I think that even as we come up against the limits of a two-party system, we can also begin to think better about local and regional elections.

The left really likes that old saw: “Think Globally, Act Locally.” And then it rejects parties—even though political parties are, historically, forms that do that, that actually scale, that operate on multiple levels as organizations.

That we have a two-party system makes sense as an excuse why people haven’t used left parties very well in the US, but that doesn’t have to be the case.

And one more thing: there is a ton of sectarianism in the far left parties that exist. Many still fight battles that go back to the twenties, thirties, forties, fifties, and haven’t let that go. That has to change. We don’t need that kind of sectarian purity right now.

CM: You ask the question, “How do we move from the inert mass to organized activists?” You mention how you were at Occupy Wall Street; you write about being there on 15 October 2011 as the massive crowd filled New York’s Times Square. And you mention this one young speaker, and he addresses the crowd; they’re deciding if they should move on to Washington Square Park or not, because they need to go somewhere where there are better facilities. You then quote the speaker saying, “We can take this park. We can take this park tonight. We can also take this park another night. Not everyone may be ready tonight. Each person has to make their own autonomous decision. No one can decide for you. You have to decide for yourself. Everyone is an autonomous individual.”

Did that kind of individualism kill Occupy Wall Street from the start?

JD: Yeah, I think so. A lot of times I blame the rhetorics of consensus and horizontalism, but both of those are rooted in an individualism that says politics must begin with each individual, their interests, their experience, their positions, and so on. As collectivity forms—which is not easy when everyone’s beginning from their individual position—what starts to happen is that people start looking for how their exact experiences and interests are not being recognized.

I think that the left has given in too much to this assumption that politics begins with an individual. That’s a liberal assumption. Leftists, historically, begin with the assumption that politics begins in groups. And for the left in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the operative group is class. Class is what determines where our political interests come from.

I try to do everything I can in the book to dismantle the assumption that politics, particularly left politics, should begin with the individual. Instead I want people thinking about how the individual is a fiction, and a really oppressive fiction at that. And one that’s actually, conveniently, falling apart.

CM: You write about Occupy Wall Street having been an opening but having had no continuing momentum. You mention that the party could add that needed momentum. That’s one of the things that parties can do. The structure of the party can continue momentum and keep the opening alive.

When you say that a party could be a solution for a movement like Occupy, you don’t mean the Democratic Party, do you?

JD: I’ve got a lot of layers on this question. My first answer is that no, I really mean the Communist Party. My friends call this “Jodi’s Fantasy Revolutionary Party” as a joke, because the kind of Communist Party I take as my model may not be real, or may have only existed for a year and a half in Brooklyn in the thirties. And I don’t mean the real-existing Communist Party in the US now, which still exists and basically endorses Democrats.

My idea is to think in terms of how we can imagine the Communist Party again as a force—what it could be like if all of our left activist groups and small sectarian parties decided to come together in a new radical left party.

So no, I don’t envision the Democratic Party as being that. That’s not at all what I have in mind. I’m thinking of a radical left party to which elections are incidental. Elections might be means for organizing, but the goal isn’t just being elected. The goal is overthrowing capitalism. The goal is being able to build a communist society as capitalism crumbles.

Second, it could be the case—as a matter of tactics on the ground in particular contexts—that working for a Democratic candidate might be useful. It could be the case that trying to take over a local Democratic committee in order to get communist/socialist/radical left candidates elected could also be useful. But I don’t see the goal as taking over the Democratic Party. That’s way too limited a goal, and it’s a goal that presupposes the continuation of the system we have, rather than its overthrow.

CM: But how difficult would it be for a Communist Party to emerge free of its past associations with the Soviet Union? Can we even use the word “communist” or is it impossibly taboo?

“It’s fantastic that Occupy Wall Street’s narrative of the 99% and the 1% asserted collectivity through division. This is class conflict. There is not a unified society. This is the collectivity of us against them. This narrative produced the proper collectivity: an antagonistic one.”

JD: We have to recognize that the right is still scared of communism. That means the term is still powerful. That means it still has the ability to instill fear in its enemies. I think that’s an argument for keeping the word “communism.”

It’s also amazing that close to half of Iowa participants in the caucuses say that they are socialist. Four or five years ago, people were saying socialism is dead in the US. No one could even say the word. So I actually think holding on to the word “communism” is useful not only because our enemies are worried about communism, but also because it helps make the socialists seem really, really mainstream, and that’s good. We don’t want socialism to seem like something that only happens in Sweden. We want it to seem like that’s what America should have at a bare minimum.

One last thing about the history of communism: every political ideology that has infused a state form has done awful things. For the most part, if people like the ideology, they either let the awful things slide, or they use the ideology to criticize the awful things that the state does. We can do the same thing with communism. It’s helpful to recognize that the countries we understand to have been ruled by Communist Parties were never really communist—they didn’t even claim to have achieved communism themselves. We can say that state socialism made these mistakes, and in so doing was betraying communist ideals.

I don’t think we need to abandon these terms or come up with new ones. I think we need to use the power that they have. And people recognize this, which is what makes it exciting.

CM: You write, “Some contemporary crowd observers claim the crowd for democracy. They see in the amassing of thousands a democratic insistence, a demand to be heard and included. In the context of communicative capitalism, however, the crowd exceeds democracy.

“In the 21st century, dominant nation-states exercise power as democracies. They bomb and invade as democracies, ‘for democracy’s sake.’ International political bodies legitimize themselves as democratic, as do the contradictory and tangled media practices of communicative capitalism. When crowds amass in opposition, they pose themselvesagainst democratic practices, systems, and bodies. To claim the crowd for democracy fails to register this change in the political setting of the crowd.”

So are crowds today, the protesters today, opposed to democracy? Or are they opposed to the current state of, let’s say, representative democracy?

JD: Let’s think about our basic environment. By “our,” now, I mean basically English-speaking people who use the internet and are listening to the radio and live in societies like the United States. In our environment, what we hear is that we live in democracy. We hear this all the time. We hear that the network media makes democratic exchange possible, that a free press is democracy, that we’ve got elections and that’s democracy.

When crowds amass in this setting, if they are just at a football game, it’s not a political statement. Even at a march (fully permitted) that’s registering opposition to the invasion of Iraq, for example, or concern about the climate—all of those things are within the general environment of “democracy,” and they don’t oppose the system. They don’t register as opposition to the system. They’re just saying that we want our view on this or that issue to count.

But the way that crowds have been amassing over the last four or five years—Occupy Wall Street is one example, but the Red Square debt movement in Canada is another; some of the more militant strikes of nurses and teachers are too—has been to say, “Look, the process that we have that’s been called democratic? It is not. We want to changethat.”

It’s not that we are anti-democratic. It’s that democracy is too limiting a term to register our opposition. We want something more. We want actual equality. Democracy is too limiting. The reason it’s too limiting is we live in a context that understands itself as “democratic.” So democracy as a political claim, in my language, can’t “register the gap that the crowd is inscribing.” It can’t register real division or opposition. Democracy is just more of what we have.

CM: We are so dependent. We use social media so much, we use Facebook so much, we use so many of these avenues of what you callcommunicative capitalism so much. How can we oppose or reject this system without hurting ourselves and our ability to communicate our message to each other? Can we just go on strike? Can we become the owners of the means of communicative production?

JD: One of the ways that Marxism historically has understood the political problems faced by workers is our total entrapment and embeddedness in the capitalist system. What makes a strike so courageous is that workers are shooting themselves in the foot. They’re not earning their wage for a time, as a way to put pressure on the capitalist owner of the workplace.

What does that mean under communicative capitalism? Does it mean that we have to shoot ourselves in the foot by completely extracting ourselves from all of the instruments of communication? Or does it mean that we change our attitude towards communication? Or does it mean that we develop our own means of communication?

There’s a whole range here. I’m not a Luddite. I don’t think the way we’re going to bring down capitalism is by quitting Facebook. I think that’s a little bit absurd. I think what makes more sense is to think of how we could use the tools we have to bring down the master’s house. We can consolidate our message together. We can get a better sense of how many we are. We can develop common modes of thinking. We can distribute organizing materials for the revolutionary party.

I don’t think that an extractive approach to our situation in communicative media is the right one. I think it’s got to be more tactical. How do we use the tools we have, and how do we find ways to seize the means of communication? This would mean the collectivization of Google, Facebook, Amazon, and using those apparatuses. But that would probably have to be day two of the revolution.

CM: Jodi, I’ve got one last question for you, and it’s the Question from Hell, the question we might hate to ask, you might hate to answer, or our audience is going to hate the response.

How much did the narrative that Occupy created, of the 99% and the 1%, undermine a of collectivity? Because it doesn’t include everyone…

JD: Division is crucial. Collectivity is never everyone. What this narrative did was produce the divided collectivity that we need. It’s great to undermine the stupid myth of American unity, “The country has to pull together” and all that crap. It’s fantastic that Occupy Wall Street asserted collectivity through division. This is class conflict. This says there is not a unified society. Collectivity is the collectivity of us against them. It produced the proper collectivity: an antagonistic one.

CM: Jodi, thanks so much for being on our show this week.

JD: Thank you! Take care.

This article first published in http://antidotezine.com/

Who is Jodi Dean ?

According to Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   Jodi Dean (born April 9, 1962) is a professor in the Political Science department at Hobart and William Smith Colleges.[1] She has also held the position of Erasmus Professor of the Humanities in the Faculty of Philosophy at Erasmus University Rotterdam.

Dean received her B.A. in History of Princeton University. She received her MA, MPhil, and PhD from Columbia University. Before joining the Department of Political Science at Hobart and William Smith Colleges, she taught at the University of Texas in San Antonio. She has held visiting research appointments at the Institute for the Human Sciences in Vienna, Austria, as well as McGill University in Montreal and Cardiff University in Wales.

Drawing from Marxism, psychoanalysis, post-structuralism, and postmodernism, she has made contributions to contemporary political theory, media theory, and feminist theory, most notably with her theory of communicative capitalism; the online merging of democracy and capitalism into a single neoliberal formation that subverts the democratic impulses of the masses by valuing emotional expression over logical discourse. She has spoken and lectured in the United States, Canada, Ecuador, Peru, England, Wales, the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Italy, Austria, Norway, Denmark, Croatia, Hungary, the Czech Republic, and Turkey. She is the co-editor of the journal Theory & Event.

Crowds and Party

by Jodi Dean
How do mass protests become an organized activist collective?
Crowds and Party channels the energies of the riotous crowds who took to the streets in the past five years into an argument for the political party. Rejecting the emphasis on individuals and multitudes, Jodi Dean argues that we need to rethink the collective subject of politics. When crowds appear in spaces unauthorized by capital and the state—such as in the Occupy movement in New York, London and across the world—they create a gap of possibility. But too many on the Left remain stuck in this beautiful moment of promise—they argue for more of the same, further fragmenting issues and identities, rehearsing the last thirty years of left-wing defeat. In Crowds and Party, Dean argues that previous discussions of the party have missed its affective dimensions, the way it operates as a knot of unconscious processes and binds people together. Dean shows how we can see the party as an organization that can reinvigorate political practice.
Hardback, 288 pages

ISBN: 9781781686942 February 2016

 

Ebook  ISBN: 9781781686720

Reviews

  • “In this enthralling and exhilarating book, Jodi Dean shows that, contrary to neo-anarchist cliche, the party form and class struggle are very far from being outmoded. The revival of the party has produced a surge of enthusiasm in contemporary left politics—an enthusiasm that Crowds and Party both explains and stokes up.”

    – Mark Fisher, author of Capitalist Realism

  • “Jodi Dean’s new book isn’t just a timely reminder that to change our thoroughly and deliberately atomized society demands collective action and militant organization; it is also a passionate analysis of the fractured passion of shared political commitment, linking the enthusiasm of group experience with the sustained and steady discipline of popular empowerment.”

    – Peter Hallward, author of Damming the Flood

 

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U.S. Futures Daily Cotton Market – 4th February, 2016

05 Friday Feb 2016

Posted by raomk in CHINA, Current Affairs, Economics, Farmers, INDIA, INTERNATIONAL NEWS, NATIONAL NEWS, Prices, USA

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

cotton, cotton farmers, cotton prices, us cotton futures, World Cotton

 

Contract Open * High Low Close * Settle Change
Mar ’16 61.89 61.89 59.99 60.28 60.23 -1.71
May ’16 62.34 62.37 60.42 60.77 60.70 -1.71
  Jul ’16 62.79 62.80 60.98 61.36 61.27 -1.50
Oct ’16 0 0 0 0 60.91 -1.41
Dec ’16 62.50 62.55 60.90 61.33 61.26 -1.36
� Open and Close prices reflect the first and last trade in the market and do not correlate to any opening or        closing period �
Cotlook ‘A’ Index 68.70 (-0.25)

 

**MARKET OUTLOOK**

India & International Market Highlights:

• Widespread whitefly damage to cotton crops in Pakistan could result in production levels falling to an 18-year low in 2015/16.

• Viscose prices have continued bottoming out in China after a small number of leading producers had previously agreed to lower their production.

North Zone:

Cotton traded steady tone across major spot markets of north India on Thursday. Prices were down Rs 05-10 per maund.  In Punjab, ready delivery cotton traded at Rs 3535-3540 a maund. In Haryana, it offered at Rs 3,510-3,520 while in Rajasthan, ready delivery new cotton quoted at Rs 3,470-3,530 a maund.

Central Zone:


Cotton spot prices steday tone across west India market on Thursday. Gujarat Sankar-6 cotton traded at  Rs 33700-34200 per candy. while B-Grade Cotton traded flat at Rs 33200-33500 per candy. V 797 cotton offered at Rs 22500-23500 a candy. While in Maharashtra, mech-1 good grade quoted at Rs 33700-34200 a candy.

South Zone:


Cotton spot price was steady tone across the major trading centers of south India.  

US Cotton Futures :

Cotton futures tumble: February 05, 2016 – Cotton futures fell on Wednesday despite a sharply weaker dollar and strength elsewhere in the commodity complex as investors hesitated to increase long positions ahead of the looming index fund roll, when large funds move positions forward from the front-month. “They don’t have a long time to build up a significant long,” said Louis Rose, independent cotton trader and consultant with Risk Analytics in Memphis, Tennessee. March cotton on ICE Futures US settled down 0.36 cent, or 0.58 percent, at 61.94 cents per lb. It traded within a range of 61.77 and 62.59 cents a lb. Total futures market volume fell by 4,576 to 43,027 lots. Data showed total open interest gained 2,126 to 197,632 contracts in the previous session. Certificated cotton stocks deliverable as of February 2 totalled 26,614 480-lb bales, down from 27,784 in the previous session. The dollar index was down 1.70 percent. The Thomson Reuters CoreCommodity CRB Index, which tracks 19 commodities, was up 2.50 percent. Copyright Reuters, 2016

Pakistan :

Cotton prices increase: February 05, 2016 — Karachi : Prices moved higher at the local cotton market on Thursday amid short supplies of high grade lint variety, brokers said.  The official spot rate held steady at Rs5,400 per maund. The Karachi Cotton Association (KCA) reported traders purchased 2,800 bales at Rs4,450 to Rs5,675 per maund as compared to Rs4,800 to Rs5,650/maund during previous trade. By and large, prices remained firm at the overnight level, but till the close of the trading session, some quality lint was quoted at higher prices.  “There is dearth of stocks lying with spinners and they see prices to remain on higher side in anticipation of shortfall in cotton production during the current season,” said a broker at Karachi Cotton Association. “The short supply prospects of cotton triggered buying at the market,” the broker said.  Many traders expect the cotton market to witness a steady trade on account of ease in demand for the cotton yarn by the spinners who are under capacity.

China :

Chinese industrial park in Ahmedabad to go functional by end of 2017: 2016-02-03 : The first Chinese general Industrial park with focus on textiles will be functional by the end of 2017 near Ahmedabad. The infrastructure for the park will be ready by 2017-end and some of the companies will begin setting up their units by the same time, said the country head of China Association of Small and Medium Enterprises (CASME) in India, Kamlesh Bhadani. An MoU for setting up this project was signed between China Development Bank and Gujarat government during the Vibrant Gujarat Summit 2015. The state government has set up a high-power committee under the chairmanship of the additional chief secretary of industries for this project. A group of senior officials of CASME and China Development Bank, including Bhadani and vice-managing director of China Development Bank Xiao Ming Zhen, had met the state chief minister last month. Zhen had said that work on the $1 billion industrial park will begin soon. The ground breaking of the project is likely to be held in the next few months. Bhadani said that they are looking at two land pockets — one in Sanand and other on Ahmedabad-Rajkot highway. It is going to be a general park and its developer will be CASME. Once the Chinese New Year celebrations are over, they will be conducting road shows and other campaigns to create awareness about this industrial park among the Chinese firms. The work on project will be expedited from March. Bhadani, speaking about the focus on textile sector in this park said that many of the Chinese textile firms will prefer to have a local partner as they will be coming from different environment. There is hardly any value addition in India to the raw material which is exported to China. The Chinese textile companies will do manufacturing here in Gujarat and export the finished product to China, as there is a huge market for this in China Some of companies interested in the project have already visited Ahmedabad and few more will be coming soon. These firms would like to do due diligence before investing here. Besides bringing in investment, this park will also provide employment on a large scale.

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Win or lose, the campaign is an opening for movements fighting inequality

05 Friday Feb 2016

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, International, INTERNATIONAL NEWS, Readers News Service, USA

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'Socialist' Bernie Sanders, 2016 US Elections, Bernie Sanders, Democratic party

THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY NOMINATION RACE

Why the Bernie Sanders insurgency matters

Michal Rozworski, Derrick O’Keefe

Bernie Sanders’ achievement in Iowa, a virtual tie with Hillary Clinton, was one of the most remarkable electoral results in recent memory. Just as noteworthy as Sanders’ rise in the polls — he closed a 50-point gap in Iowa in just over six months — is the way his campaign’s themes and issues have resonated with a mass audience.

The core messages of the Sanders campaign, once scoffed at or derided when they were expressed by Occupy Wall Street, have become common sense for millions of people.

This is especially true among young people. Sanders won a staggering 84 per cent of Democrats under 30 in Iowa.

For some time now, mainstream political commentators have been throwing everything but the kitchen sink at Sanders to dissuade primary voters from taking his campaign seriously. These pundits, presenting themselves as hard-headed realists while wagging their fingers, try to explain away Sanders’ growing public appeal. They are unwilling, and seemingly unable, to look fairly at what the campaign is proposing and how that might relate to people’s lives.

In other words, the pundits’ job is to distract from the things that really matter: the series of concrete ways that people’s lives could be be improved. Sanders’ meteoric rise, whatever else has helped bring it about, is a response to real inequality, stagnant incomes and bleak prospects for many Americans.

For an example of myopic punditry, take a look at how Canadian writer Stephen Marche described a Sanders rally in Iowa late last year:

“Sanders’s exasperation was the principal fact to be communicated, more than any political content. Trump was about winning again. Sanders was about having lost. The vagueness of American politics is what astonished the outsider. It’s all about feelings and God and bullshit. Sanders actually uttered the following sentence out loud: ‘What we’re saying is when millions of people come together to restore their government we can do extraordinary things.’ Nobody asked what he meant. Nobody asked for numbers. They applauded. Better to take it in the spirit in which it’s given, like a Catskills resort comedian.”

You have to work pretty hard to so completely miss the content of a Bernie Sanders stump speech. The same core issues are there every time. And yes, policy proposals, granted ones presented in broad brushstrokes, are clearly enumerated. Even his triumphant speech in Iowa late Monday night relentlessly went through the issues, one by one. Each of these key points highlights ways in which real inequality manifests, and points (albeit in some cases not far enough) toward reform and remedies that will benefit real people. On all these issues, Sanders is offering more than the corporate money supported Clinton.

If the pundits and ideologues weren’t sowing so much confusion, it wouldn’t even be necessary to point this out.

$15 minimum wage

While some cities in the United States have recently raised their minimum wage, with some even planning to get to $15 within a few years, the inflation-adjusted minimum wage across most of the country is lower today than it was in the 1970s. Consider that. Four decades of economic advance have left the lowest paid worse off. Minimum wage workers today may have iPhones, but too many are barely making ends meet for themselves and their families.

Of course, simply raising the minimum wage won’t be enough.

Sanders’ call for a nationwide $15 minimum wage is an integral part of his message that inequality is not natural but the result of policy choices and power. Raising the minimum wage is not only about restoring something ephemeral like dignity, but also about slowly swinging the pendulum of power back towards workers.

Of course, simply raising the minimum wage won’t be enough. Less than 10 per cent of U.S. workers are members of a union today. Reinvigorating the labour movement in a way that brings power back to the grassroots will have to happen for more substantive change. Bernie’s push for a $15 minimum wage across the United States and his focus on the need for greater participation and democracy could help push this more transformative change forward.

Universal health care

At the surface, the U.S. health care system is marked by a huge contradiction: the country manages to both spend the most on health care among developed countries and do very poorly on a raft of health measures.

Bernie Sanders’ championing of universal public health care exposes the simple cause of this disparity: the network of private health insurers, private health providers, pharmaceutical companies and army of consultants who all profit from the unequal and rationed delivery of what should be a human right.

Universal health care would immediately impact the lives of millions of people. The drama of not having coverage or having the wrong kind of coverage or not having enough to pay for a deductible or even just the small dramas of navigating the maze of forms, payments and providers — all of these would be alleviated with the social democratic cure of a universal public service.

When the media reduces Sanders’ program to economic inequality, it glosses over the many social and other inequities that are deeply intertwined with economic inequality. Poor health, for example, is a highly racialized issue. Just look at the enormous gaps in life expectancy and other measures.

Health and economics aren’t separate, and one can’t be reduced to the other, but a system where income and wealth go disproportionately to the 1 per cent while tens of millions don’t have access to health care at all and untold millions have inadequate care only reproduces and deepens deep divisions.

Free public college

Maybe it’s not such a mystery why young people overwhelmingly prefer Sanders to Hillary Clinton.

It might have something to do with his key campaign proposal of abolishing tuition fees at all four-year public universities and colleges in the United States. In fact he’s already put the idea forward, introducing legislation in the Senate for new federal spending on postsecondary education, to be supplemented by state-level funds.

When faced with accusations that free college is unrealistic, Sanders blasts back by listing all the European countries where free tuition has already been introduced. He also calls for relief of student debt, which has become a nationwide crisis. (Even 40-something Republican presidential contender Marco Rubio talks about how he only recently paid off his student loans.)

Students, and the many young workers who can’t afford to be students, would appear to be perfectly rational political actors in flocking to Sanders.

Progressive taxes

Sanders’ pledges to expand and universalize services are matched by his willingness to talk about paying for them. If inequality has grown and public services have deteriorated, it is because money has been flowing upwards and sticking rather than being redistributed.

Delivering a full range of universal services will require more people to pay more in taxes.

New income and wealth do go disproportionately to the top 1 per cent and less of the population, as Sanders doesn’t shy from repeating. Any social democratic program will need to reverse this flow. Sanders has proposed higher income taxes on the wealthy, closing loopholes for investment income and taxes on Wall Street speculation to this end.

The senator from Vermont has broken the consensus on the anti-tax, pocketbook rhetoric that has dominated politics in the United States and elsewhere — rhetoric that is the home turf of everyone from Hillary Clinton to Ted Cruz. Delivering a full range of universal services will require more people to pay more in taxes and a redirection of resources away from waste such as the military and corporate subsidies.

A truly different economy will require far more democratic participation. Talking about the wealthy paying more, saying that it is “too late for establishment economics” and inching towards greater contributions from most for social(ized) goals, Sanders has opened an important debate.

Taking climate change seriously

It’s one of the most repeated applause lines of Sanders speeches: Climate change is real, humans are causing it, and we have a moral responsibility to act to mitigate it.

Sanders has one the support of many prominent activist campaigners including 350.org’s Bill McKibben.

This statement is maddeningly obvious, but it’s a direct response to the ongoing climate denialism of the Republicans, a party that is one of the last bastions of this retrograde nonsense on the planet.

But as an early champion of climate issues, however, Sanders has one the support of many prominent activist campaigners including 350.org’s Bill McKibben. What’s more, his general rhetoric is matched by leadership in opposing specific fossil fuel megaprojects. Whereas Clinton waited years to take a position against the Keystone XL tar sands proposal, Sanders took a strong stand against it early on, helping push the Obama administration to their eventual rejection of the pipeline.

Political revolution

These measures, and other needed measures that go beyond the limits of Sanders’ campaign, require deep political transformation. Contrary to the typical rhetoric of presidential candidates, Sanders has made this reality central to his campaign.

His campaign is not a manicured, media-driven effort to sell a progressive product.

Sanders’ call for “political revolution” is the glue that holds his program together and differentiates him from other upstart Democrats of the last decades. His campaign is not a manicured, media-driven effort to sell a progressive product. He seems to genuinely understand and want to inspire grassroots political mobilization. He will not turn decades of economic degradation into engagement for a truly democratic economy over the course of a presidential campaign, but it is hard to say that his campaign cannot bear fruit for the U.S. left.

Two moments stood out from Bernie’s speech in Iowa Monday night. The first was his finger pointed at the camera early on, calling out the media for willfully misrepresenting his campaign. Then there were his closing remarks, which echoed the common theme of political revolution, imploring those interested in his campaign to join actively.

These simple messages are the stuff to build off on in his campaign: we have to take on powerful interests and we have to do it actively.

Far from being just a lament for what has been lost, Sanders’ campaign has stoked new hopes and energized new political constituencies. Millions of people can see that there is, as the campaign slogan says, “a future to believe in.” But this future won’t be delivered by one politician; this future can only be fought for and won by millions.

This article first appeared in ricochet.media

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U.S. Futures Daily Cotton Market – 2nd February, 2016

03 Wednesday Feb 2016

Posted by raomk in Economics, Farmers, INDIA, INTERNATIONAL NEWS, NATIONAL NEWS, Prices, USA

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

cotton, cotton farmers, cotton market, us cotton futures

Contract Open * High Low Close * Settle Change
Mar ’16 61.61 62.50 61.49 62.13 62.30 +0.51
May ’16 61.95 62.78 61.92 62.47 62.65 +0.45
  Jul ’16 62.17 62.95 62.14 62.75 62.88 +0.49
Oct ’16 0 0 0 0 62.34 +0.73
Dec ’16 61.61 62.45 61.61 62.34 62.41 +0.57
� Open and Close prices reflect the first and last trade in the market and do not correlate to any opening or        closing period �
Cotlook ‘A’ Index 68.45 (+0.50)

Required Carded CVC Ne 40/1 (80/20) & Ne 40/1 Cotton / Bamboo Melange (60/40) for Direct Exports

WE CAN PROVIDE COTTON LINTER FROM INDIA TO CHINA. Please Contact : rahul.mrtextiles@gmail.com

**MARKET OUTLOOK**

India & International Market Highlights:

• India`s Cotton exports are expected to rise by 21.27% to 70 lakh bales during the 2015-16 season, mostly due to rise in demand from Pakistan.

• The decline of the Chinese currency renminbi has raised import prices of yarn above domestic price levels.

North Zone:

Cotton traded steady tone across major spot markets of north India on Wednesday.  In Punjab, ready delivery cotton traded at Rs 3545-3550 a maund. In Haryana, it offered at Rs 3,530-3,540 while in Rajasthan, ready delivery new cotton quoted at Rs 3,490-3,550 a maund.

Central Zone:


Cotton spot prices steday tone across west India market on Wednesday. Gujarat Sankar-6 cotton traded at  Rs 33700-34200 per candy. while B-Grade Cotton traded flat at Rs 33200-33500 per candy. V 797 cotton offered at Rs 22500-23500 a candy. While in Maharashtra, mech-1 good grade quoted at Rs 33700-34200 a candy.

South Zone:


Cotton spot price was steady tone across the major trading centers of south India.  

US Cotton Futures :

Cotton futures post biggest gains in two weeks: February 03, 2016 – Cotton futures surged on Monday to their highest single-session gains in two weeks, lifted by a weaker dollar and end-user buying at low price levels and bucking a rout across most commodities. Still, prices remained within the same tight range they have been trading in for months. “They’re not chasing it higher,” said Chris Kramedjian, a risk management consultant with INTL FCStone in Nashville, Tennessee, noting that physical buying evaporated at the upper end of the day’s range. “We’re still in the middle of the range.” March cotton on ICE Futures US settled up 0.66 cent, or 1.1 percent, at 61.79 cents per lb. It traded within a range of 60.85 and 62.00 cents a lb. Total futures market volume rose by 1,696 to 38,571 lots. Data showed total open interest gained 2,648 to 198,357 contracts in the previous session. Certificated cotton stocks deliverable as of January 29 totalled 27,784 480-lb bales, down from 28,706 in the previous session. The dollar index was down 0.59 percent. The Thomson Reuters CoreCommodity CRB Index, which tracks 19 commodities, was down 1.96 percent. Speculators cut their net long position to 18,555 lots from 22,806 lots in the latest week. The Relative Strength Index in the most-active contract rose to 46.363. Copyright Reuters, 2016

Pakistan :

Slow off-take on cotton market: February 2nd, 2016 – KARACHI: Much of the trading activity remained around low quality cotton on Monday as the availability of quality lint is becoming difficult with each passing day. Floor brokers said that out of 1.1 million bales held by ginners, only 30 per cent of stocks are of quality lint. On an average 1.2m bales are consumed per month by the spinning industry under normal circumstances, but current depressed demand on the cotton yarn market is keeping cotton off-take slow, they added. With around seven months for the arrival of cotton next crop (2016-17) there should have been frenzied buying from spinners. The spinning industry continues to import cotton from Indian and only last week around one million bales were imported, brokers added. According to market sources, most deals finalised between spinners and ginners were in lower quality cotton priced at Rs5,550 to R5s,650 per maund. The Karachi Cotton Association (KCA) cut its spot rates by Rs50 per maund to Rs5,400. Major deals on ready counter were: 3,700 bales from Sanghar (Rs4,550 to Rs4,725 per maund), 400 bales from Shahdadpur (Rs4,750), 600 bales from Burewala (Rs4,850), 400 bales from Fort Abbas (Rs5,350), 400 bales from Multan (Rs5,400), 400 bales from Layyah (Rs5,500), 600 bales from Mianwali (Rs5,500 to Rs5,550), 600 bales from Yazman Mandi (Rs5,650), 1,000 bales from Rahimyar Khan (Rs5,650).

China :

China to lose, to Vietnam, top rank among cotton importers: 2nd Feb 2016 – China, which last season lost to India the title of the world’s top cotton producer, is to give up top rank in imports too, the International Cotton Advisory Committee said, citing the enhanced competitiveness of polyester. The committee deepened to 40%, from 34%, its forecast for the top in Chinese cotton imports in 2015-16, taking the estimate from 1.2m tonnes to 1.08m tonnes (5.0m bales). Imports at that level – besides coming in below expectations of commentators such as the US Department of Agriculture, which forecasts them at 5.5m bales — would be the lowest in 13 years. And they would, on ICAC projections, demote China to equal second, with Bangladesh, on cotton imports, behind Vietnam, which is expected to buy 1.1m tonnes this season. “Cotton imports by Vietnam in the first four months of 2015-16,” which began in August, “totalled 327,000 tonnes, while those by China totalled 247,000 tonnes,” the committee noted.
Cotton vs polyester:
The ICAC highlighted the role in Vietnam’s rise as a cotton importer, with volumes seen soaring 17% this season, its low labour costs. “Consumption in both Vietnam and Bangladesh is increasing steadily, due to lower production costs, but both produce very little cotton, and instead must rely on imports to meet demand,” the committee said. However, it also flagged the enhanced competitiveness of polyester, of which China produces 72% of global supplies, making this fibre a particularly acute rival to cotton for the country’s mills. Polyester’s discount to cotton has “continued to widen”, the ICAC said, reporting that values of the artificial fibre had averaged 48 cents a pound in the first half of 2015-16. Cotton prices, as measured by the Cotlook A index, averaged 70 cents a pound. “The ongoing drop in polyester prices cuts into cotton’s market share, particularly in China where polyester has been favoured over cotton in recent seasons,” the committee said, cutting by 200,000 tonnes to 7.1m tonnes its estimate for Chinese cotton consumption in 2015-16.
New season forecasts:
The comments came as the ICAC left little changed its forecast for world cotton inventories at the close of this season, pegging the figure at 20.5m tonnes, a drop of some 1.6m tonnes year on year. And, in its first estimates for 2016-17, it forecast a further drop in inventories, albeit at a far slower rate, of some 1m tonnes, against expectations of improved production and flat consumption. Inventories, at 19.5m tonnes, would at the close of 2016-17 fall below 20m tonnes for the first time in four years, but remain high by historical standards, equivalent to 80.7% of annual consumption. The ICAC gave no explanation for its forecasts, which saw world production improving to 23.1m tonnes, but remaining behind world consumption, at 24.1m tonnes. Courtesy – by Agrimoney.com

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Why People Around the World are Rooting for Bernie Sanders

01 Monday Feb 2016

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, INTERNATIONAL NEWS, Opinion, USA

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2016 US Elections, Berni sanders, Democratic party, Populists

BY PARMINDER JEET SINGH
The United States is as good a democracy as any other in formal terms but there has been a great amount of despair about the actual control its citizens exercise over the country’s political institutions and policies. Between them, two political parties divide up the US political spectrum, creating a narrow zone of elite consensus within which politics is allowed to play. The stranglehold of big business over election finance, aided by some significant court decisions, helps fix the boundaries of this elite consensus.But then democracy has a way of throwing up surprises. The 2016 presidential election is different from earlier contests because of the way in which this widely resented elite consensus is being challenged from left and right. In this sense, both Donald Trump, the by-now famous Republican hate-monger, and Bernie Sanders, the challenger to Hillary Clinton’s bid for the Democratic Party’s nomination, represent a similar political impulse. A huge public sentiment, in its primordial form, is trying to defy the limits that the elite consensus affords people – turning the primaries into a battle between elitism and populism.

Populists appeal directly to strongly felt hopes and fears. And it is here that the resemblance between Trump and Sanders ends abruptly. Trump is seeking to make capital of people’s deep fears and anxieties. Sanders, on the other hand, is appealing to what remains of the American people’s hopes of getting a fair and just deal in society.

Sanders presents a simple pitch based on three clear socio-economic issues, and a political one. He promises free healthcare, free higher education (primary education being already free) and a decent minimum wage, for all. He is unhesitant in saying that for achieving these he will indeed raise taxes, though the bulk of the money will come from taxing the top fraction of a percent. And he provides figures to back his proposals. The core political element of his programme is that he promises to ‘really’ clamp down on corporate influence over politics and political funding. The fact that he takes no funds from the big corporates makes his claim credible among voters.

What makes Sanders’ programme attractive to poor and middle class America is the growing inequality in the country. But the humanistic logic of his four key demands is winning him a following even among those who may not be the ‘biggest gainers’ of his proposed reforms – eg. white, college-educated, young men.

If the rest of the world is waiting eagerly for the results of the first Democratic Party primary in Iowa on Monday, it is because of this humanist and idealist content of Sanders’ campaign. The next primaries are in New Hampshire, where the polls show the ‘socialist’ Sanders leading Clinton. Although these are the only two states yet where Sanders is giving such a strong challenge to Clinton – and the latter stays comfortably ahead in country-wide  opinion polls – the results of these first two states have historically given an important boost to whoever wins them.

What Sanders means to the world

Apart from the economic and political influence that it exercises globally, the US has a strong ideological impact on the world too. American soft power has been especially devastating in terms of its export of neoliberal ideology, wherein corporates are the preferred vehicle for economic activity, even in the social sector, with the role of governments relegated to smaller and smaller niches.

If Bernie Sanders becomes the next president of the United States, free health, education, and a decent minimum wage – and a clear message to big business to rein in its economic greed and political aspirations – can be expected to become strong elements of US national policy. This will hit at the very heart of the neoliberal global establishment. It could significantly weaken this establishment’s ideological strength, which it currently packages so well that it has been able to sell it successfully to a very big part of the global population, especially the middle and aspirational classes.

Now, if a font of such an alternative discourse, as anchored by Sanders’s campaign, erupts from the very epicentre of the global neoliberal order, it could have a strong cascading effect. What Sanders demands may already be standard fare in many European countries but social services there are wilting under the pressure of austerity.  For developing countries, making free health and education and decent minimum wages for all the responsibility of the state can become the cornerstone of a new politics.

Of course, the fate of Sanders is not known and one ought not to give the possible result of the presidential election in the US any disproportionate or implausible weight in term of our political futures. Even if it comes to pass, such a favourable result will be the child of its times – with its complex social and political realities – and its possible global impact would also be tempered by that context. But we must remember that politics and history do not follow linear logics. Iowa on Monday may well open a new chapter in the global struggle for a more just and equal world.

Parminder Jeet Singh is with IT for Change, a Bengaluru based NGO

This article First Appeared in The WIRE.in

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So, what is the Zika virus?

30 Saturday Jan 2016

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, Health, INTERNATIONAL NEWS, Latin America, Readers News Service, USA, Women

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Brazil, WHO, Zika virus

 

 

By Peter Gelling

NEED TO KNOW: 

The Zika virus may be the Ebola of 2016, just a lot less deadly. The virus is spreading rapidly throughout the Americas. The World Health Organization said the virus is spreading “explosively.” Health officials are warning of a pandemic. And the news media is starting to take notice.

So, what is the Zika virus? Zika is spread through a certain kind of mosquito that thrives in warmer climates. It’s named after a forest in Uganda and is usually found in Africa and Asia. In fact, until 2015, almost no one in the Western Hemisphere had ever been infected with it.

That’s now changed in a big way. Last May, the Zika virus began showing up in patients in Brazil. And since people in the Americas have no immunity to it, the virus began to spread quickly. Millions of people may already be infected across South and Central America.

The Zika virus, however, is not like Ebola. It won’t kill you. Most people who contract Zika won’t even notice. Those who do will have a fever, joint pain, maybe red eyes. All of it is treatable and it’s unlikely a patient would even have to be admitted to the hospital.

There is one exception: pregnant women. Scientists suspect that a rise in the number of cases of pregnant women giving birth to children with abnormally small heads and brains — a condition called microcephaly — is related to the rise in Zika.

Typically Brazil sees about 150 microcephaly cases a year. It is right now investigating some 4,000 cases. The connection between Zika and microcephaly, however, is circumstantial. Scientists are still researching to see if Zika is actually the cause.

WANT TO KNOW: 

Whether the connection between Zika and microcephaly is true or not, many pregnant women in South and Central America are worried. So are their governments. Some governments are even recommending that women postpone getting pregnant for the next two years.

The growing health crisis in Brazil, where the most cases of microcephaly have been reported, has sparked a new public debate over women’s rights to abortion for troubled pregnancies.

Brazil’s 1940 penal code made abortion a crime in all but two cases: pregnancy from rape and when terminating a pregnancy is necessary to save the mother’s life, writesGlobalPost Senior Correspondent Will Carless. The only amendment to those laws came more than 70 years later, in 2012, when the Supreme Court ruled that women could also terminate a pregnancy if the fetus was diagnosed with anencephaly, a rare condition where the child is born missing pieces of the brain and skull.

The sudden reported uptick in microcephaly cases has reinvigorated a cadre of powerful women’s rights activists in Brazil, some of whom are already preparing a fresh appeal to the Supreme Court to consider granting the right to abortion in the case of microcephaly.

It won’t be easy. Abortion is a controversial subject in Brazil, and the country’s political climate is not friendly to the debate. Conservative politicians have even recently pushed for a harsh new bill that would require rape victims to undergo physical exams before being allowed an abortion because, you know, they haven’t been through enough already.

STRANGE BUT TRUE: 

And while everyone is freaking out about Zika, our old friend swine flu has come back for a sentimental and rather deadly visit. In Russia, Ukraine and Armenia, the virus has killed more than 150 people.

Swine flu had its moment in 2009, you might remember, when it grew to a global pandemic and killed tens of thousands. There is no need to panic this time, though. Since 2009, the virus has become a seasonal sickness that can be treated with vaccinations. The WHO says there is no danger of a new pandemic.

That isn’t stopping people in some parts of Russia and Ukraine from wearing surgical masks on public streets. The paranoia is real. One Russian politician even suggested the outbreak was planted by the United States.

This article appeared in globalpost.com

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విశ్వవిద్యాలయాల సిలబస్‌లో మూడో స్ధానంలో కమ్యూనిస్టు మానిఫెస్టో

29 Friday Jan 2016

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, INTERNATIONAL NEWS, Left politics, USA

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communist manifesto, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, Open Syllabus Project., US Left

ఎంకెఆర్‌

అదేమి చిత్రమో గానీ అమెరికాలో కమ్యూనిస్టు వ్యతిరేకులు ఎంత గట్టిగా కళ్లు మూసుకున్నా కారల్‌ మార్క్స్‌-ఫెడరిక్‌ ఎంగెల్స్‌లు పదేపదే దర్శనమిస్తున్నారు. వద్దనుకున్నవారు ఇలా కనపడటమేమిటని వారికి మనోవ్యాధి పట్టుకుంది. ఓపెన్‌ సిలబస్‌ ప్రాజెక్టు అనే సంస్ధ ఈ వారంలో ఒక నివేదిక విడుదల చేసింది. విశ్వవిద్యాలయాల వెబ్‌సైట్లలో ప్రచురించిన పదిలక్షలకు పైగా సిలబస్‌ పుస్తకాల జాబితాలో ఏది ఎక్కువగా వుందని విశ్లేషిస్తే కారల్‌ మార్క్స్‌-ఫెడరిక్‌ ఎంగెల్స్‌లు ప్రపంచం ముందుంచిన ‘కమ్యూనిస్టు మానిఫెస్టో’ పుస్తకం మూడవ స్ధానంలో వుందని తేలింది.’విఫలమైన సిద్ధాంతం విశ్వవిద్యాలయాల సిలబస్‌లో ఇప్పటికీ బహుళంగా వుంది’ అనే శీర్షికతో కెయిరెన్‌ అండర్‌ వుడ్‌ అనే కమ్యూనిస్టు వ్యతిరేకి కడుపు మంటతో ఒక వ్యాసం రాశాడు.

ప్లాటో రచన ‘రిపబ్లిక్‌ ‘ రెండవ స్ధానంలో ఇబి వైట్‌ మరియు విలియం స్ట్రంక్‌ జూనియర్‌ వుమ్మడి రచన ‘ఎలిమెంట్స్‌ ఆఫ్‌ స్టైల్‌ ‘ ప్రధమ స్ధానంలో వుంది. కమ్యూనిస్టు మానిఫెస్టోకు ఇంత ఆదరణ ఎందుకు వుందంటే దానిలో చరిత్ర, రాజకీయాలు, సామాజిక శాస్త్రాలతో సహా అనేక అంశాలున్నాయి గనుక విశ్వవిద్యాలయ అధ్యాపకులు దానిని తరచూ సిలబస్‌లో పెడుతున్నారు. పెట్టుబడిదారీ విధానానికి మౌలిక పాఠాలు చెప్పే ఆర్ధికాంశాలతో కూడిన ఆడమ్‌ స్మిత్‌ రచన ‘ వెల్త్‌ ఆఫ్‌ నేషన్స్‌ ‘ 37 వ స్ధానంలో వుందట. ప్రచ్చన్న యుద్ధంలో తామే విజయం సాధించామని పాతికేళ్ల క్రితం పెట్టుబడిదారులు ప్రకటించుకున్న తరువాత కూడా వారి వ్యవస్ధను కూల్చివేయాలని పిలుపు నిచ్చిన కమ్యూనిస్టు మానిఫెస్టో ప్రాధాన్యత ప్రపంచంలో తగ్గలేదన్నది సుస్పష్టం. అమెరికా రాజ్యంగానికి ఆమోద ముద్ర వేయించేందుకు ఫెడరలిస్టు అనే పత్రికలో 1787 ఆక్టోబరు 1788 ఆగస్టు మధ్య రాసిన అనేక వ్యాసాలను తరువాత ఫెడరలిస్టు పేపర్స్‌గా పిలిచారు. ఆ పుస్తకం విశ్వవిద్యాలయాల సిలబస్‌ పుస్తకాల జాబితాలో 294వ స్ధానంలో వున్నట్లు తేలింది.

తనను సోషలిస్టుగా అభివర్ణించుకొని ఈ ఏడాది జరగనున్న అధ్యక్ష ఎన్నికలలో డెమోక్రటిక్‌ పార్టీ అభ్యర్ధిగా తనను బలపరచమని కోరుతూ ప్రచారం జరుపుతున్న బెర్నీ శాండర్స్‌ తన ప్రత్యర్ధి హిల్లరీ క్లింటన్‌కు చెమటలు పట్టిస్తున్నాడు.ఆయన అసలు సోషలిస్టు కాదు, నకిలీ అని మన దేశంలో నగ్జల్స్‌ వంటి గ్రూపులు అమెరికాలో వ్యతిరేకిస్తున్నాయి. అనేక మంది వామపక్ష వాదులు ఆయనను బలపరుస్తున్నారు. శత్రువులు ఆయన కరడు గట్టిన కమ్యూనిస్టు అని ముద్రవేసి మరీ ప్రచారం చేస్తున్నారు. యువతరం ఆయనకు జేజేలు పలుకుతున్నట్లు వార్తలు వస్తున్నాయి. అసలు శాండర్స్‌ ఏమిటి అనే విషయం పక్కన పెడితే ఆయన నిజమైనా, నకిలీ అయినా సోషలిస్టు పేరుతో మద్దతు పెంచుకుంటే ఒకసారి వామపక్ష భావజాలం తలకెక్కితే యువతరంలో దిగటం అందునా సోషలిజం,కమ్యూనిజానికి మారుపేరుగా వున్న సోవియట్‌ యూనియన్‌, తూర్పుఐరోపా దేశాల సోషలిస్టు వ్యవస్ధలు కూలిపోయిన పాతిక సంవత్సరాల తరువాత , అమెరికాకు అనేక ఎదురు దెబ్బలు తగులుతున్న స్ధితిలో, అమెరికాతో సహా ధనిక దేశాలన్నీ సంక్షోభంతో కొట్టుమిట్టాడుతున్న తరుణంలో ఒకసారి సోషలిస్టు భావజాలంవైపు మొగ్గితే వెనక్కు తిరగటం కష్టం, నకిలీ అయితే ఆచరణలో అసలు వారిని ఎంచుకుంటారని కమ్యూనిస్టు వ్యతిరేకులు భయపడుతున్నారు.ఈ నేపధ్యంలోనే ‘ప్రమాదకరమైన వామపక్షం వైపునకు అమెరికా మొగ్గుకు మూలాలు’ అనే పేరుతో ఈనెల ట్రంపెట్‌ అనే పత్రికలో గెరాల్డ్‌ ప్లరీ ఒక పెద్ద చాంతాండంత వ్యాసం రాశాడు.

‘ తీవ్రవాద వామపక్షం అమెరికాను స్వాధీనం చేసుకుంటున్న తీరును అవగాహన చేసుకోవాలంటే మీరు ముందుగా దాని భావజాలాన్ని అర్ధం చేసుకోవాలి.దీని గురించి గత యాభై సంవత్సరాలుగా మేము హెచ్చరిస్తూనే వున్నాం’ అంటూ ఆ వ్యాసాన్ని ప్రారంభించాడు. ‘అమెరికా తీవ్రమైన తిరోగమనంలో వుంది. అనేక మంది అమెరికన్లు తీవ్రంగా ఆందోళన పడుతున్నారు. వామపక్ష తీవ్రవాదులు దేశంపై అదుపు సాధించారు.నేటి డెమోక్రటిక్‌ పార్టీని చూడండి. దేశాన్ని ఆర్ధికంగా, సామాజికంగా, నైతికంగా, మిలిటరీ పరంగా, భౌగోళిక రాజనీతి పరంగా బలహీన పరిచే విధానాలను ఆ పార్టీ నాయకత్వం ప్రోత్సహిస్తున్నది. వారి అదుపులోకి దేశం ఎలా వచ్చింది? దేశం ఈ స్దితికి దిగజారటానికి కారణాలేమిటి ?

ఈ దేశంలో అంతర్గతంగా ఏం జరిగిందో ఎందుకు జరిగిందో మీరు అర్ధం చేసుకోవాల్సి వుంది.ప్రచ్చన్న యుద్ధ సమయంలో అమెరికాలో అంతర్గతంగా కమ్యూనిజం వ్యాప్తి గురించి ఎంతో భయం వుండేది. ఈ రోజు దానితో ముప్పుందని ఏమాత్రం భయపడనవసరం లేదని ఎక్కువ మంది అమెరికన్లు భావిస్తున్నారు. కానీ ఇది తీవ్ర ఆందోళనకరమైనది. కొద్ది మంది దీన్ని గుర్తించారు. కానీ తిరిగి వెనక్కు చూసుకుంటే అమెరికాలోని ప్రధాన స్రవంతి రాజకీయ అభిప్రాయాలలో అనేక మంది వెనక్కు తిరిగి నేరుగా కమ్యూనిజంపై విశ్వాసం, భావజాలంతో వున్నట్లు కనిపిస్తోంది.

అందరికీ బాగా తెలిసిన ఒక అభ్యర్ధి సోషలిస్టుగా చెప్పుకొని డెమోక్రటిక్‌ పార్టీ అధ్యక్ష పదవి అభ్యర్ధిత్వం కోరుతున్నాడు. అనేక మంది కమ్యూనిస్టులు తాము సోషలిస్టులమని చెప్పుకుంటారు.ఆయన ఎంతో మద్దతు పొందటాన్ని బట్టి అమెరికా జనం ఎంతటి ప్రమాదకర అమాయక స్ధితిలో వున్నారో తెలుస్తోంది.మీకు కమ్యూనిజం గురించి ఏమి తెలుసు? ఆరోగ్య సంరక్షణ,జాతీయ ఆర్ధిక వ్యవస్థలోని ఇతర ప్రధాన విభాగాలను ప్రభుత్వం తీసుకోవాలనే మద్ధతుదారుల సంఖ్య పెరుగుతోంది. దానితో పాటు కమ్యూనిస్టు వ్యవస్ధ వస్తుందనే ప్రమాదాన్ని అర్ధం చేసుకోవటంలో వారు విఫలమయ్యారు.’ ఇలా సాగి కమ్యూనిజాన్ని వ్యతిరేకించాల్సిన అవసరాన్ని పాఠకుల ముందుంచారు. చివరకు మతాన్ని జోడించి వర్తమాన అమెరికా సమస్యలన్నింటికీ అమెరికా చేసిన పాపాల ప్రత్యక్ష ఫలితం. ఏ రాజకీయ అభ్యర్ధి మరోసారి అమెరికాను గొప్పగా రూపొందించబోవటం లేదు.దేవుడే మరోసారి అమెరికాను గొప్పదానిగా చేస్తాడు.మనం ఎంత తిరుగుబాటు చేసినా ఆయనే మన సమస్యలను పరిష్కరించబోతున్నాడు అని ముగించారు.

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Extra Leave for Late Marriage to End Across China

29 Friday Jan 2016

Posted by raomk in CHINA, Current Affairs, INTERNATIONAL NEWS, Readers News Service, Women

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China, Marriage Leave

Extra Leave for Late Marriage to End Across China
Most of China’s provinces and municipalities are planning to officially abolish late marriage leave, the rule that allowed some newlyweds to take extended holidays after their big day. [chinanews.com]

Most of China’s provinces and municipalities are planning to officially abolish late marriage leave, the rule that allowed some newlyweds to take extended holidays. The latest move based on the newly-passed amendment to the Population and Family Planning Law has sparked much debate among experts and citizens including many young net users.

According to the new amendment to the Law which has been approved by the standing committee of the National People’s Congress, China’s top legislative body last December, citizens who marry and bear children at a later age can only get three days of marriage leave, instead of the previous 10 days or more, bringing the regulations into line with the rest of the population.

Quick Response from Local Officials

For now, Guangdong and Hubei provinces are among the quick responders to apply the new policy change. They have officially released the regulations on scrapping extra marriage leave, only giving three days off for newlyweds.

Beijing and Shandong Province issued the draft of the new family planning measures to solicit public opinions in early January, in which the extended leave for late marriage had been deleted.

Officials from the Shanghai Health and Family Planning Commission also confirmed it would also be removing such a clause in the new local regulations.

The legal age for marriage in China is 22 for men and 20 for women. Now, all couples get three days’ leave after tying the knot, whereas before, those who were 25 or 23 were eligible for extra time off. The additional leave was aimed at encouraging people to marry and raise children later in life according to previous family planning policy.

However, as China adopts fundamental changes to the policy and is nowadays encouraging couples to have two children, the State no longer wants to discourage people from marrying earlier.

Therefore, in the next step towards full adoption, China’s provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities have begun to amend and publish their own local population and family planning regulations based on the new Law.

For now, though, if the new regional regulations have not yet been released officially, couples who marry at an older age can still enjoy a holiday ranging from 10-23 days. For instance, those marrying at a later age in northwest China’s Gansu Province can even still get 30 days off and those in north China’s Shanxi Province have a similarly extended arrangement.

To catch the “last train” of late marriage leave, therefore, many young couples in China swarmed into registration offices to apply for their marriage certificates before the New Year.

Change Sparks Argument

The move of abolishing the extra leave has sparked argument among some netizens from various regions.

A commenter nicknamed Doudou complained, “As a woman born in the 80s, I encountered the one-child policy, college entrance exam reforms, overall two-child policy, abolishment of late marriage leave, postponed retirement, and what’s worse, as a college graduate majoring in medicine, I also encountered the medical treatment reforms. In the future, I have to support two children and four seniors.”

One netizen said that as the late marriage leave has been abolished, if there is no local amendment to the policy, the three-day holiday is only enough to hold a wedding ceremony, and thus they have to prepare in their spare time or ask their parents, relatives or friends for help, not to mention making time for the honeymoon.

On the other hand, some netizens and experts explained their agreement about the new policy, saying that it caters for the developmental direction of the country and is also beneficial for keeping China’s population stable and relieving the trend for an ageing demographic.

Experts said as the amendment to the family planning regulations in other provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities are still in process, the changes for late marriage leave can only be clear after the local standing committee review meetings. But based on the new regulations released in regions like Guangdong and Hubei provinces, abolishing the extra holiday has gone mainstream across the country.

Experts have suggested that it could be better to adopt a gradual way to abolish the extra leave, so that the public can have a period of time to get used to the changes.

(Source: ce.cn/Translated and edited by Women of China)

 

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Rekindling Hope: SYRIZA’s Challenges and Prospects

28 Thursday Jan 2016

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, Greek, INTERNATIONAL NEWS

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Greece Left, Greek, Syriza

Michalis Spourdalakis

Before turning to the main theme of this article it would be very useful to come to terms with at least the following preliminary observations:

Greek farmers protesting against planned pension system reforms.

Greek farmers protesting against planned pension system reforms.

The left in government and especially the radical left in government has never been the subject of easy discussion among leftists. As the project of social transformation was never a peaceful stroll in the park, the debates on the question of in and/or out of government, let alone those about political power, have been very heated. In fact, it is hardly an exaggeration to say that these debates are as old as the left itself. Before, during, and after coming into office, leftist theorists and practitioners have been involved in fierce discussions and heated arguments, often leading to organizational splits and fragmentation. The intense polemical nature of these debates has very rarely led to useful, positive, and practical conclusions for the left.

In addition, these debates, which characterize not only the ʻold leftʼ, often tend to be ahistorical in the sense that they engage in, or are even based on, comparisons with situations whose objective and subjective conditions were or are quite different. It is thus not surprising that there are a number of attempts to compareSYRIZA‘s socio-political experiment with that of the Workersʼ Party (PT) in Brazil or of Hugo Chávez in Venezuela. Even if one is obliged to do so, one has to bear in mind that we are then comparing political experiences arising in quite different social formations, different continents, and of course with different geopolitical and institutional constraints. At the same time, one should realise that we are talking about different parties with different social bases, histories, and socio-political traditions within which they operate. Therefore if these comparisons are to help provide a framework for more effective socialist strategy, their relevance should be understood with the appropriate degree of abstraction without viewing them as providing concrete recipes to be applied directly.

Finally, before we look at the Greek case, we need, given the developments of the last few months, to come to terms with the notion of ʻdefeatʼ. Since the left is committed to the subaltern social strata, to the under-class, and to all oppressed people, and is guided by a vision of human emancipation, defeats are perforce a recurrent experience. In fact, historically, at least since 1848, it seems that retreats and defeats can be seen as one of the constituent components of the left’s identity. Therefore a defeat, such as that experienced by the SYRIZA government last summer should not lead to defeatism, to individual retreat and withdrawal, or even worse to panic. On the contrary, we should confront the left’s defeats as useful developments and as prime opportunities to identify and understand mistakes and shortcomings. In this sense, there are no absolute defeats or absolute victories. After a major political development for the left such as a defeat and, even more, a victory, the left’s strategy should not lead to calm reassurance. In the last analysis, as the left’s history is one of a long series of defeats and victories, we must realise that no attempt at radically transforming society has ever been anything but a painful marathon with numerous retreats, defeats, diversions, and short-term disappointments.

SYRIZA’s Defeat?

When Alexis Tsipras conceded to the blackmail of the so-called ʻinstitutionsʼ on 12 July 2015, he did what any sensible and committed trade unionist, negotiating on the basis of an overwhelming (61 per cent) strike vote and confronted with the vindictive response of a management threatening to close down the business, would have done. Logic prevailed and the SYRIZA government retreated. Under the circumstances, retreat is a key word; it was the only way to avoid the disastrous social, economic and political consequences.

No one in his or her right mind could claim that this setback, or more accurately defeat, was the result of treason and/or subversion from within. This dramatic retreat, especially after the impressive result of the referendum, should be taken as the basis for creatively rethinking how to continue to serve what SYRIZA has long committed itself to – the ʻstrategic goal of social transformationʼ. This strategic goal, despite superficial analyses, remains the main goal of SYRIZA, as Tsipras stated clearly in his address to the last session of the party’s Central Committee (30 July 2015).

In this respect, there are some very important questions that need to be addressed. What led the promising radicalism of the SYRIZA government to such a dead end? Why did it not have a realistic and effective government plan in the event the negotiations failed? Why did it not recognize the uncompromising stubbornness and even vindictiveness of the country’s lenders? Without answers to these questions it will be impossible to draw up a solid new strategy, given the new conditions and constraints that the new agreement imposes on the country.

To address these questions one has to go back to the 2012 election when what has been called the ʻmiraculous rise of SYRIZAʼ became more than a realistic prospect. More concretely, following the election that brought it into prominence, it seems that the party gradually drifted away from the strategy that had made it into a key player at the centre of the country’s political scene. This development had given hope not only to those Greeks suffering from the effects of the memoranda but also to the concerned, democratic, and progressive citizens who had doubts about the social, political, cultural, and even ecological future of societies under the aggressive hegemony of neoliberal austerity in Europe and elsewhere.

SYRIZA’s (forgotten?) Strategy

The success of SYRIZA – to which of course specific political and social conjunctural conditions contributed – was the outcome of its unique political strategy in the Greek political arena. Its strategy had five principal elements. The first and basic element was its involvement in the social sphere, embedded as its activists were in the multifaceted social movements without engaging in the vanguardist practices that usually prevail in the Leninist tradition and in fact in the post-Junta practices of the political system. The second element was its commitment to participating in the institutions of political and social representation in a way that prevented it from being subsumed by the bureaucratic constraints of those institutions. The third was the establishment of a programme based on this experience in the social field as well as in these institutions. The fourth was its call for the unity of the entire left tradition. Indeed, SYRIZA managed to become the common organization of all the traditions of the left: from the historic left (from the old social democratic tradition to all versions of communism, such as Maoism, Trotskyism, etc.) to all the specific concerns of the radical social movements. However, it was the fifth and final element of SYRIZA’s strategy that proved most significant in distinguishing it from other left organizations, and which proved most decisive in its success. This was its explicit intention to come to power.

These distinct elements of the party’s strategy, in a dialectical relationship with one another, proved very functional and effective. This was the case both at the social level by representing the social alliance of social strata that the austerity policies had created (between the working-class, precarious, unemployed, and the old and new middle class), as well as at the political level as an answer to the statism of the cartel-like party system. At least in retrospect, one needs to realise that this strategy, which started to emerge as early as 2004-2005 and became much clearer during the 2008 youth uprising, was not only the result of political planning but also evolved out of the contradictory pressures of limited electoral tactics. However, it must be stressed that it was underpinned by a federated pluralist organizational structure and a party culture that imitated the model of the mass party of the Leninist tradition although certainly not in substance.

So successful was SYRIZA’s strategy that in the 2012 elections it became the leading opposition party. The handwriting was on the wall. No particularly astute political analysis was needed to recognize that this was no flash in the pan, and that SYRIZA would soon enter government.

Negligence

The quick and unexpected emergence of this success in 2012 was probably what led much of the party’s leadership to believe that effective politics would from then on be an easy affair, not requiring much further party development. They did not bother with consolidating or even fine-tuning the strategy that had brought about this success, in such a way as to facilitate the dissemination and deepening of this strategy among broader layers of society as well as among the party rank and file. Instead, the leadership adopted more conventional tactics, which in practice meant a rush to move toward power by all means available. Thus, gradually SYRIZA became not just parliamentarist but also governmentalist even before it came into office.

This was partly justified by its commitment to prevent the social calamity created by the aggressive austerity policies imposed by previous governments. However, now joined or at least supported by political figures with roots in a wide range of old and new political parties ranging from right-wing to centre-left modernizers, the leadership became alienated from SYRIZA’s radical physiognomy as a party. This drifting away from what had previously characterized SYRIZA revealed the existence of a number of tacit perceptions and analyses that were to become real problems after its much-celebrated electoral victory in January 2015. The rush to power not only bypassed a number of democratic procedures that were needed for the building of its party organization, especially after the fourfold increase in membership, but also resulted in a number of politically naïve mistakes, which would come all too quickly to the fore.

Without going into great detail, in addition to the unquestionably very hostile environment inside the country organized by the media, the opposition parties, and the oligarchs, these naïve ideas are in my opinion to blame for the dead end in which the SYRIZA government found itself when it was forced into last summer’s dramatic retreat, which led to the adoption of the new Memorandum.

These naïve ideas, perceptions, and practices can be seen both on the internal front and in the international sphere. Although all of these had already been part of the party’s baggage, there is no doubt that they became dysfunctional after the party leadership moved into office and adopted at the same time a very instrumentalist conception of power. On the one hand, its rhetoric to the contrary, the SYRIZA leadership now seemed to limit its conception of political change to governmental change (for example, no immediate plan for transforming the media, at best a formalization of its support for the social movements, a kind of polite, neutral, and slowly emerging response to the bureaucracy’s undermining of government policies). On the other hand, key figures in the government felt it was necessary to appease the old establishment and the bourgeoisie. To this end, the so-called technocrats or experts who clearly have close relations with the old corrupt personnel and networks were recruited by the SYRIZA government into the state.

But behind this naïve and instrumentalist orientation to taking state power, one can detect similar problems in SYRIZA’s party programme. Although the detailed programme was the product of enormous political and even scientific energy, it was never concretized to become a real operational plan. This was in some sense the side effect of the expectation that the change of government would be smooth and that the administration of the state by the radical left would not require any particular caution, let alone preparation.

Even on the internal party front, this naïve neglect has proven very damaging. The limited educational and informational work done within the party led to further problems. The membership was left uninformed and unsupported and thus frequently fell into in the hands of propagandists both within and outside the party. One of the notions created was that all those who proposed a vague plan B (mainly the Left Platform) were identical with the radical wing of Syriza. Arguments around the party’s strategy were often reduced to the simplistic euro vs. drachma dilemma.

Another naïve assumption motivated the tactic of most radical cadres (whose grouping came later to be known as the Group of 53), who more than anyone else were the key to the development of SYRIZA, to negotiate a modus vivendi with the part of the leadership that was in a rush to enter the government. It was an arrangement that, in addition to consuming the capacities of these cadres, did not even result in establishing certain rules for party building. In fact, the party organization fell increasingly into the hands of self-appointed leaders of small or larger networks and sub-groups within the party.

Such problems also characterized all wings of the party in terms of the international context and environment. It was assumed that what were called ʻtough and honest negotiationsʼ would be sufficient to convince the ʻinstitutionsʼ, as if the outcome of these exchanges were a matter of rational, well documented, and well researched scientific arguments and not of naked power interests. In addition, the idea that one radical government alone, even if the prospect of others like it were emerging on Europe’s periphery, could change the EU or ignore the structural reproductive commitment of the most aggressive capitalist interests, proved to be another naïveté.

“

The road map for drafting a new strategy under the new conditions created by the government’s retreat needs one clear sign post:to become SYRIZA again.”

Given all this, the classic question of ʻwhat is to be doneʼ, or better ʻwhat can be doneʼ, becomes more urgent than ever. The point of departure for answering it, given the features of SYRIZA’s victory (lack of enthusiasm and shrunken turnout) and the tight constraints of the ʻAgreementʼ, which make ʻpolitical time extremely compressedʼ, should be a deep understanding of the party’s strategy, especially during the five-year period that preceded the 2012 election. The road map for drafting a new strategy under the new conditions created by the government’s retreat needs one clear sign post: to become SYRIZA again. This means nothing other than continuing to govern without being eroded by governmentalism and continuing to solidify the party’s relation to its social base without being paralysed by parliamentarism.

Prospects

In the new post-Referendum, post-Memorandum and post-September 2015 victory conjuncture, given the economic and institutional constraints, SYRIZA should craft or even better re-draft its strategy based on its successful march toward government. Some key presuppositions of these prospects should be:

1. SYRIZA should stay in government. The administration of state resources is key not only for managing the ʻAgreementʼ with the country’s debtors in the most democratic and humane fashion possible, but also as a vehicle to organize political and social initiatives that can work under the radar of the Memorandum’s constraints – as a ʻparallel programmeʼ – as well as a framework conducive to the long overdue task of party building.

2. SYRIZA should minimise the consequences of the rupture. After the creation of Popular Unity by the Left Platform and in response to the simplistic and emotional polemics coming from the ʻother leftʼ (Antarsia and the Communist Party of Greece) and the anarchists, SYRIZA is in danger of falling into the trap of unhelpful exchanges. This could prove counterproductive in any effort to plan and implement a ʻparallelʼ and class-based programme that will transcend the social and political cleavages that developed around the Memorandum, turning them into creative pressures on the government along anti-austerity, anti-neoliberal, and eventually anti-capitalist lines.

3. SYRIZA should completely change its method of recruitment into the state. So far, and as a result of the government’s instrumentalist understanding of state power, people from the old political, technocratic, and academic scene have quite often been recruited to the cabinet and more broadly to positions that depend on political appointments. Since part of SYRIZA’s support came from the huge anti-establishment, anti-corruption popular sentiment, the presence or the re-emergence of such people in key positions strains the people’s trust in the government as representing a political and ethical countercurrent. This does not mean that all new recruits should be in full agreement with the government; rather, the rising opportunism should be counteracted by the SYRIZA government’s generosity toward party cadres who have expressed their scepticism of the party’s strategy after last summer’s retreat.

4. In addition to the creative social and political organizing that must be based on the party’s experience in the social arena, a new strategic orientation should be formulated: Given SYRIZA’s failed strategy vis-à-vis the ʻinstitutionsʼ, it needs to reconsider its commitment to the Eurozone, even though under the current economic, political, and cultural circumstances, both the party and society are far from prepared to realistically assume a rejectionist position toward the latter, especially given the balance of power in Europe.

5. All the previous points are essentially proposals to deal with the defeat and to correct the mistakes and omissions that many radicals in and around SYRIZA have identified. However, the morale of the social base can be raised and consolidated only when a new goal is put forward and directly related to social developments. In this context, SYRIZA will have to have a clear and systematic commitment to actively return to the social field. This will be the key to rekindling hope. This hope naturally has to do with the reconnection and the mobilization of the party’s social base and thus the reclaiming of its radical left identity. Without the effective creation of a new vision around which to mobilize, such as the improvement of social conditions through debt reduction, it will be very difficult to consolidate the social alliance of the working-class, the unemployed, pensioners, and the dramatically squeezed lower middle class who have supported SYRIZA massively.

These ideas, and probably many others, will need to be put forward in a very concrete fashion. They must all aim at dealing with the disappointment from the defeat and at recovering the morale and the trust of the social base, which invested its hopes in SYRIZA. These are not at all novel as they come straight from the very strategy that made the party of Greek radical leftists an inspiration not only to the country’s citizens but to radical and democratic citizens worldwide. In the last analysis, one can see them as interpreting what Tsipras not long ago made ingeniously clear at a meeting of the party’s Political Secretariat: “It is not a revolutionary act to escape from reality or to construct a fictional one. What is revolutionary is to find ways even when they do not exist.”

In response to those who think it unlikely that anything like this can now be initiated because the party is far from being in a condition to sustain it, one can argue that political parties are voluntarist institutions par excellence. This is particularly true of left parties, especially young ones like SYRIZA with weak internal bureaucracies. To put it differently, the necessity for renewed party building and organizational development is a prerequisite to reconnecting with the strategy that propelled SYRIZA into the government and to regaining the ground lost since the defeat. Without this, the precious political capital created by the Greek people’s democratic and anti-austerity struggles will be squandered. •

Michalis Spourdalakis, a founding member of Syriza, is one of Greece’s foremost political scientists and currently Dean of the Faculty of Economics and Politics, University of Athens.

This was first published intransform! 2016: The Enigma of Europe
(ISBN 978 0 85036 721 8). Published by www.transform-network.netin association with www.merlinpress.co.uk.

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