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Turkey
12 September 2010 - 30th anniversary of the military coup

09/09/2010: For the Turkish and Kurdish working class and the left, September 12 is above all a day of remembrance of one of the heaviest blows against the workers in recent history.

  History, Turkey

Kazakhstan
Police prevent human rights defender meeting Joe Higgins, MEP

08/09/2010: Police hold human rights defender, Vadim Kuramshin, for 10 days to prevent him meeting Joe Higgins MEP

  Kazakhstan

Ireland
Brian Cowen fifth best global leader! You must be joking

08/09/2010: Despite being the most unpopular Taoiseach in the history of the state, at the head of the most unpopular government in the history of the state, Brian Cowen has been ranked as the fifth best global leader of the year by the American Newsweek magazine.

  Ireland Republic

Kazakhstan
Visiting socialist MEP meets workers in struggle & opposition activists

08/09/2010: Brutal Nazerbayev regime presides over ticking social time-bomb

  Kazakhstan

Kazakhstan
Vadim Kuramshin freed from prison

07/09/2010: Arrest of human rights lawyer and campaigner backfires on authorities

  Kazakhstan

Germany
Mass-Movement against Stuttgart 21 continues

07/09/2010: “Democracy is sometimes a little bit difficult“, said the mayor of Stuttgart, facing a mass movement against the railway project, ‘Stuttgart21’.

  Germany

Britain
Battles ahead on London Underground

06/09/2010: Strike will start today

  Britain

Britain
Fight-back!

03/09/2010: The only antidote to painful public-sector cuts

  Britain

Venezuela
Activists, including CWI members, arrested and detained by state forces

03/09/2010: Repression and criminalisation of struggle is not socialism!

  Venezuela

Brazil
Support the Plinio de Arruda Sampaio campaign!

02/09/2010: A socialist candidate for the Brazilian presidential elections

  Brazil

Nigeria
Goodluck Jonathan Presidency

02/09/2010: Can Nigeria experience positive development and improved living conditions?

  Nigeria

South Africa
Public sector struggle continues

01/09/2010: Say no to job cuts and poverty wages!

  South Africa

Britain
ConDem government plans to slash council services

01/09/2010: Do local councillors have ‘no choice’? – Lessons from 1980s Liverpool Council struggle

  Britain

Poland
30th anniversary of Solidarnosc

31/08/2010: The celebrations of the 30th anniversary of Solidarity take place against the background of attacks and an unprecedented media campaign against today’s trade unions and workers.

  Poland

Russia
President Medvedev suspends Khimkinskii motorway construction

31/08/2010: Struggle must continue to save environment and to win democratic rights!

  Russia

Scotland
SNP relegate independence in wake of economic crisis

31/08/2010: SNP are putting independence on the backburner

  Scotland

Theory
Is “human nature” a barrier to socialism?

30/08/2010: Aren’t people motivated by money? Wouldn’t socialism stifle hard work and innovation?

  Theory

 Kazakhstan
Urgent protests needed

29/08/2010: Lawyer attacked and arrested in run-up to Euro MP’s visit

  Kazakhstan, Solidarity

"Charity"
Let them eat cake, not the crumbs off the table ...

29/08/2010: Business and media circles are agog at “the most significant development in philanthropy” for many decades.

  World Economy

US
Stolen Legacy - The Tea Party’s March on Washington

28/08/2010: On August 28, the right-wing populist Tea Party Movement, an assortment of conservative organizations, and Fox News commentator Glenn Beck will descend on Washington, D.C. for the so-called “Restoring the Honor” rally.

  US

Australia
Neither big business party given mandate to govern

28/08/2010: The Australian Federal election held on August 21 delivered a hung parliament – the first in 70 years. Neither the Labor Party led by Julia Gillard nor the Coalition led by Tony Abbott won the 76 seats required to form a government. The result is both a reflection of the lack of enthusiasm people have towards the two major parties and a reflection of the uncertain future that faces Australian capitalism.

  Australia

Bangladesh
fighting poverty pay

27/08/2010: Strike and protest action in around 4,000 factories

  Bangladesh

Pakistan emergency
Women and children most at risk in flood-hit areas

27/08/2010: “Criminal negligence” of government and the super-rich

  Pakistan

Northern Ireland
Dissident republicanism Nothing to offer but a return to sectarian killings

27/08/2010: Accordging to the Police Federation of Northern Ireland, dissident republican groups have been responsible for carrying out an average of two attacks a day since the beginning of the year.

  Ireland North

Britain
London firefighters balloting for action

27/08/2010: Up to 1,000 firefighters poured into the conference room of TUC headquarters for a mass meeting of the London Fire Brigades Union (FBU) on Tuesday night (24 August).

  Britain

Hungary
Saying ‘NO’ to the IMF?

26/08/2010: The Hungarian parliamentary elections in April 2010 secured a landslide victory for the conservative FIDESZ party, with their leader Victor Orbán retaking the Prime Ministerial position that he had held from 1998 to 2002.

  Hungary

Chile
Miners found alive!

25/08/2010: The government hid information to the families for hours

  Chile

 Britain
Protest against brutal attack on Russian activists continue

25/08/2010: London Socialist Party members travelled to Watford (North of London) to deliver a protest letter to the Vinci regional office.

  Britain, Solidarity

 Russia
“We will not relent in our struggle”!

25/08/2010: Solidarity message from socialist brutally assaulted by thugs

  Russia, Solidarity

South Africa
Government threatens right to strike...

24/08/2010: DSM demands: General Strike to support public sector workers

  South Africa


Review

How Mumbo-Jumbo Conquered the World by Francis Wheen

www.socialistworld.net, 07/05/2004
website of the committee for a workers' international, CWI

Among members of the Socialist Party, Francis Wheen is certainly most widely known as the author of an excellent biography of Karl Marx. Equally worth reading is his latest work, How Mumbo-Jumbo Conquered the World.

Julian Wilson, Socialist Party, England and Wales

The thesis for this is simple: the 1979 revolution in Iran which instigated a theocracy in that country and the simultaneous victory of Thatcher in the British General Election were two events that signalled a break from Enlightenment values, in which debate focussed on an attempt to discover scientific and rational reasons behind all phenomena (in the natural sciences, human behaviour, economics etc.), and a turn towards an alternative, and opposing, worldview based on dogma, faith, tradition and emotion.

Appropriately enough, the first chapter deals with ‘Reaganomics’, the ideological gloss given to economic practice of Reagan, Thatcher and their followers. This, strengthened by the fall of the USSR in 1991, incorporated beliefs that there is no alternative system to the market for the distribution of wealth in societies, that flexible labour markets and low wages are positive and ‘in the national interest’ and that low taxes on the rich leads to benefits for society as a whole.

Constructions by right-wing economists, such as the ‘Laffer Curve’ (a restatement of the ‘trickle down theory’) were intended to provide a pseudo-scientific basis for such policies. That this theory is nonsense goes without saying: Paul Krugman, a leading liberal pro-capitalist economist, has (elsewhere) accurately described advocates of such theories as ‘cranks’. Laffer, Von Hayek, Milton Freedman and other precursors and supporters of Reaganomics, all of whom opposed any attempt to limit the level of exploitation as ‘destructive of the whole economy’ or even as inevitably leading to totalitarianism have a familiar ring to them.

Marxists can read the first volume of Capital to discover similar characters in the mid nineteenth century (such as Nassau Senior, J.B. Say, and A. Ure), and should then compare the flimsy basis on which they built their theories (all of which were designed to benefit the ruling class and excuse their exploitation of the working class) to Marx’s persuasive and enlightening analysis of wages and surplus value (i.e. profit, rent and interest).

But, with the new counter-enlightenment, such nonsense theories proved popular. A belief in self-enrichment and a flurry of self-improvement books promising great wealth ranging from the banal to the weird, and suggesting that anyone could make money, dominated the 1980s. Wheen celebrates the correction to this delusion; 19 October 1987, when internationally stock markets collapsed. He relates how many businessmen heroes of that decade became merely notorious fraudsters a few years later. However, Wheen notes that such delusions still have power, charting Enron’s rise through dishonest accounting and its subsequent collapse. It goes without saying that most world leaders, for example Tony Blair, still believe in Reaganomics.

Wheen then generalises these lessons in other chapters. A new ‘relativism’ becomes pervasive since the early 1980s; Tony Blair and Al Gore are able to defend the teaching of Creationism in biology lessons on the basis that such rubbish is good for ‘diversity’ in the school system. Despite the rise of the Christian right (much of which fused spirituality with getting rich), there is a simultaneous rise of simpler superstition around astrology and Feng Shui and other similar beliefs.

Ronald Reagan and Tony and Cherie Blair manage to combine an ostentatious Christianity with such nonsense as healing crystals and star gazing. The Bible itself is seen to contain many and varied codes. Worldwide, people study Nostradamus’ so-called prophecies and become involved in strange offshoots of religions such as Aum Shinrikyo. These all tend to look towards an impending apocalypse (the latter try to hasten it through the use of chemical weapons on the Tokyo underground). All of this has no basis in reality; for some this is the attraction.

Other aspects of the present counter-enlightenment are shown to be even more dangerous. Samuel Huntington’s thesis, that history will be dominated by ‘a clash of civilisations’ is excellently dissected by Wheen, and its obvious shortcomings shown up. Huntington’s principle divisions are seen as arbitrary and probably meaningless. All other divisions; class, gender, language, internal divisions within religions (Sunni-Shia or Catholic-Protestant) and the vast cultural gap between Western Europe and the USA (both part of ‘the West’) are ignored. However, his theory is becoming a self-fulfilling prophesy which echoes the vision of Bush and Bin Ladin. This pseudo-scientific doctrine provides excellent cover for both Al-Queda operations and Bush’s imperialist actions in the Islamic world.

But the Left has no reason to be smug. Those calling themselves progressive have often rejected scientific analysis (and Marxism’s strength is its nature as scientific socialism) for a relativism equally as pernicious as that of those on the right (including the self-proclaimed ‘apolitical’). Theories such as structuralism and deconstructionism (though in themselves not without validity) have led to a suggestion that there are no verifiable facts, merely alternative viewpoints. Anyone disagreeing is labelled sexist, racist, imperialist or ignorant.

Wheen notes that this is not only rubbish (if you kick a stone, your foot hurts) but comes close to supporting the agenda of holocaust deniers such as David Irving (if there is no ‘fact’ then how can such denial be ‘wrong’) and those who wish to see theocratic states established (it is seen as Western chauvinism to claim that Muslims do not want to be stoned or have limbs amputated). The Socialist Party is certainly correct in emphasising, as an internationalist organisation that those in non-Western countries should not suffer from oppression based on traditions or the reading of religious texts. This cannot be said about certain other ‘left’ groups.

Wheen further criticises much structuralist and deconstructionist writing as being absolutely incomprehensible, at least to those outsiders. Marx’s famous statement that it is the job of the philosopher to interpret the world, the point is to change it, seems apt in relation to this. He contrasts this with genuine socialists such as Alan Sokal and Terry Eagleton, who are shown in a far more favourable light as those who have contributed to human knowledge and understanding.

Although Wheen does not conclude in this way, good historical parallels can be found to assist in the explanation as to how mumbo-jumbo conquered the world, and what the results will be. Following the French revolution and the subsequent wars, the restoration of the Bourbon dynasty in France in 1815 saw an attempt to undo the changes that the revolution had achieved. Catholicism was entrenched again into the governance of the state, and the state introduced draconian blasphemy laws. Jesuit priests gained political influence. The restored monarchy regained much of the power it had, competing with only a weak parliament elected by a tiny section of the population. The press was shackled. Compensation for seized estates was secured. The ruling class thus attempted to turn its back on the very enlightenment doctrines that are rejected again today. And in 1830, political revolution overthrew this reaction.

Wheen’s book is essential reading for all Marxists. It shows the shallowness and class basis of many features of the current counter-enlightenment. It shows that it is not arrogant to fight for truth and rationality against absolute nonsense. What it does not show specifically is a path away from this reaction. By inference, however, the political theories of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels must be this path.

How Mumbo-Jumbo Conquered the World by Francis Wheen. London, Fourth Estate, £16.99





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