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Shantastic Marie

A Movement Without Demands? | Possible Futures - 0 views

  • Commentators and protesters alike thus give the impression that the movement’s inability to agree upon demands and a shared political line is a conscious choice
  • absence of demands as a benefit, a strength
  • having done the impossible in creating a new political force
  • ...86 more annotations...
  • Even if some occupations have released lists of demands, the entire question is bitterly contested in New York
  • lack of demands reflects the weak ideological core of the movement
  • should be grounded in a long-term view of the political goals of the movement, a view that is currently lacking
  • First, demands are said to be potentially divisive as they may alienate those who disagree with them and discourage newcomers from a variety of backgrounds from joining it
  • insofar as Occupy aspires to be a movement that expresses the views and interests of the vast majority of the social body, every attempt to define it through a politics of demands entails a reduction of this potentiality
  • anti-representational objection
  • movement should focus on “autonomous solutions” rather than demands
  • autonomist objection
  • second
  • third
  • cooptation objection
  • Some counteract this third objection with the idea of releasing “impossible demands,” i.e. demands that cannot be met without igniting a radical transformation of the system
  • rebuffed
  • anti-representational objection
  • assumption
  • designation of an existing sociopolitical entity that would define itself in opposition to the 1 percent
  • never the right time for demands. Demands always and necessarily activate a state apparatus apart from and over and against society
  • anarchists and libertarians in the movement have repeatedly blocked proposals for introducing taxes on financial transactions and stronger oversight of the banking sector on the grounds that such proposals would expand the size of the government and the scope of its intervention
  • refusal or inability to make an honest assessment of the social composition of the movement
  • emphasis on consensus, the refusal of demands, and the refusal of representation may well have served the purpose of inciting political desire and expanding the social base of the movement in its first phase
  • demands are divisive
  • be the change they want to see in the world
  • The autonomist approach, then, emphasizes the creation of autonomous structures and new political organizations and practices
  • demands
  • autonomist objection overlooks economic ones
  • anti-representational objection ignores political differences
  • full-time
  • activities of logistical support
  • require interaction with dominant arrangements of power
  • economic position doesn’t give them the time that the practice of permanent occupation demands
  • process through which a common will is produced out of previously divergent positions
  • truth of the co-optation objection is its recognition of antagonism and division
  • fear of co-optation posits that the strength of the movement comes from a kind of unity of anger and dissatisfaction that will dissipate in the face of any particular success
  • co-optation objection obscures actual and potential connections among different proposals
  • For autonomists (and anarchists), the practice of occupation and the very mode of existence of the movement are themselves prefigurative of a new, more democratic and more egalitarian world
  • It thus reinforces, in the attempt of preventing it, the very fragmentation that has long plagued the contemporary Left
  • Commentators have been nearly hysterical in their demand for demands: somebody has got to say what Occupy Wall Street wants!
  • demands
  • strategically
  • politics of the commons
  • three common objections
  • demands reduce the autonomy of the movement insofar as they endow an external agent—notably, the government or some other authority—with the task of solving problems the movement cannot solve for itself
  • by meeting some demands the government would be able to divide and integrate (parts of) the movement into the existing political landscape, thus undermining the movement’s very reason for being
  • pragmatists who argue that if demands are to be issued they should focus on attainable objectives so as to show that the movement can achieve concrete and measurable changes
  • anti-representational objection
  • anti-representational objection
  • anti-representational objection
  • anti-representational objection
  • anti-representational objection
  • anti-representational objection
  • movement is an organic and undifferentiated bloc comprised of people from all walks of life, and all racial, cultural, religious, and socioeconomic backgrounds
  • anti-representational objection
  • We are the 99 percent
  • too early for demands
  • Introducing demands now would hinder the organic unfolding of a collective discussion whereby the movement can articulate its own interests and desires
  • 99 percent is not an actual social bloc
  • serious blindspot
  • direct vital energies away from building new forms of collectivity ourselves
  • practice of occupation
  • Both the anti-representational and the autonomist objections fail to recognize two key features of demands. First, we can make demands on ourselves. Second, demands are means not ends
  • problem
  • movement’s inability to deal with antagonism
  • In order to metamorphose from a protest movement into a revolutionary movement, Occupy will have to acknowledge division, build alternative practices and organizations, and assert a commonality
  • The finitude of the commons enables us to address social inequality and environmental limits to capitalist development in their dialectical unity
  • notion of the commons
  • idea of the commons asserts the primacy of collectivity and the general interest
  • contemporary theorists
  • Aristotle’s emphasis on the common good
  • commons does not exist. Destroyed and privatized by over two centuries of capitalist enclosure and “accumulation by dispossession,”1 what Elinor Ostrom calls “common-pool resources”2 have been reduced to tiny pockets of the world economy
  • first question that stems from a radical politics of the commons is “how can truly anti-capitalist commons be created, recreated, and expanded”?
  • centrality of private property to capitalist accumulation
  • Weary of the historical failure of actually existing socialism—and lacking large-scale models of alternative development—most Occupiers seem to content themselves with a neo-Keynesian politics that begins and often ends with demands for fiscal reform and government investment in strategic sectors such as infrastructure, green technologies, education, and health care
  • vast majority of the resources managed by the movement are produced and distributed according to capitalist logic
  • while neo-Keynesian and socialist positions downplay and overlook existing processes of self-organization, the autonomist perspective cannot address the issue of the long-term sustainability of the movement insofar as it fails to recognize that the massive accumulation of wealth in the private sector is a major obstacle for an expansive politics of the commons
  • autonomous organization of the movement and a politics based on radical demands have to go hand in hand if durable transformations are to be achieved
  • Once an expansive politics of the commons is adopted as the centerpiece of the movement’s strategy, demands become tactical devices in the service of such strategy rather than floating signifiers power can use to divide and conquer
  • tactical use of demands creates opportunities for testing and learning from experiments in managing the commons
  • manage these resources not as commodities but as goods whose mode of disposition and usage is determined by the community of their users and producers
  • commons not as a one-size-fit-all solution but as a mobile concept that can and should operate at different levels of granularity and on different plateaus
  • politics of the commons should operate on three levels
  • 1) the management of land and natural resources; 2) the production and reproduction of social life (including care work, housing, education, and labor); 3) the production and allocation of energy, knowledge, and information
  • understanding that the commons is a finite resource that can not only be extracted but needs to be actively reproduced
  • marks a decisive break with the capitalist system of production
  • This system has been thriving by constantly overcoming the limits to its own expansion—with the result of producing an unprecedented demographic explosion while bringing the life support systems to the brink of total collapse. The Occupy movement is an extraordinary opportunity to rethink this model
  • movement has to dispel the illusion that all proposals and visions are equivalent as long as they are democratically discussed, and begin to set priorities on the road to a truly transformative and visionary politics
  • 99% should be seen as a rhetorical strategy and not as an existing social bloc
Shantastic Marie

Distributive Justice (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy) - 0 views

  • Principles of distributive justice are normative principles designed to guide the allocation of the benefits and burdens of economic activity
  • strict egalitarianism, which advocates the allocation of equal material goods to all members of society
  • Rawls
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  • Difference Principle allows allocation that does not conform to strict equality so long as the inequality has the effect that the least advantaged in society are materially better off than they would be under strict equality
  • Resource-based distributive principles, and principles based on what people deserve because of their work, endeavor to incorporate this idea of economic responsibility
  • distributive principles should be designed and assessed according to how they affect welfare
  • Advocates of Welfare-based principles
  • feminist critiques of existing distributive principles note that they tend to ignore the particular circumstances of women
  • Libertarian principles
  • criticize any patterned distributive ideal
  • Distributive principles may vary in numerous dimensions. They can vary in what is subject to distribution (income, wealth, opportunities, jobs, welfare, utility, etc.); in the nature of the subjects of the distribution (natural persons, groups of persons, reference classes, etc.); and on what basis distribution should be made (equality, maximization, according to individual characteristics, according to free transactions, etc.)
  • distribution of the benefits and burdens of economic activity among individuals in a society
  • distributive justice theory is a practical enterprise
  • There has never been, and never will be
  • any society whose distribution conforms to one of the proposed principles
  • Only when people realized that the distribution of economic benefits and burdens could be affected by government did distributive justice become a live topic
  • Governments continuously make and change laws affecting the distribution of economic benefits and burdens in their societies. Almost all changes, from the standard tax and industry laws through to divorce laws have some distributive effect, and, as a result, different societies have different distributions
  • Distributive justice theory contributes practically by providing guidance for these unavoidable and constant choices
  • Contrary to a popular misconception, economics alone cannot decide what policy changes we should make. Economics, at its best, can tell us the effects of pursuing different policies; it cannot, without the guidance of normative principles, recommend which policy to pursue. The arguments and principles discussed in the present entry aim to supply this kind of guidance.
  • One of the simplest principles of distributive justice is that of strict or radical equality
  • every person should have the same level of material goods and services
  • people are owed equal respect and that equality in material goods and services is the best way to give effect to this ideal.
  • The two main problems are the construction of appropriate indices for measurement (the index problem), and the specification of time frames
  • The index problem arises primarily because the goods to be distributed need to be measured if they are going to be distributed according to some pattern (such as equality)
  • requiring identical bundles will make virtually everybody materially worse off than they would be under an alternative allocation
  • Some index for measuring the value of goods and services is required.
  • Money is an index for the value of material goods and services
  • imperfect
  • opportunities
  • Nevertheless, using money as index for the value of material goods and services is the most practical response
  • widely used
  • The second main specification problem involves time frames
  • One version of the principle of strict equality requires that all people should have the same wealth at some initial point, after which people are free to use their wealth in whatever way they choose
  • ‘starting-gate’ principles
  • may lead in time to very inegalitarian wealth distributions
  • The most common form of strict equality principle specifies that income (measured in terms of money) should be equal in each time-frame, though even this may lead to significant disparities in wealth if variations in savings are permitted
  • Hence, strict equality principles are commonly conjoined with some society-wide specification of just saving behavior
  • moral criticisms
  • unduly restrict freedom
  • do not give best effect to equal respect for persons
  • conflict with what people deserve
  • most common criticism is a welfare-based one
  • everyone can be materially better off if incomes are not strictly equal
  • The wealth of an economy is not a fixed amount from one period to the next
  • The most common way of producing more wealth is to have a system where those who are more productive earn greater incomes.
  • most widely discussed theory of distributive justice in the past three decades has been that proposed by John Rawls
  • 1. Each person has an equal claim to a fully adequate scheme of equal basic rights and liberties, which scheme is compatible with the same scheme for all; and in this scheme the equal political liberties, and only those liberties, are to be guaranteed their fair value. 2. Social and economic inequalities are to satisfy two conditions: (a) They are to be attached to positions and offices open to all under conditions of fair equality of opportunity; and (b), they are to be to the greatest benefit of the least advantaged members of society.
  • The main moral motivation for the Difference Principle is similar to that for strict equality: equal respect for persons
  • Difference Principle materially collapses to a form of strict equality under empirical conditions where differences in income have no effect on the work incentive of people
  • Opinion divides on the size of the inequalities which would, as a matter of empirical fact, be allowed by the Difference Principle, and on how much better off the least advantaged would be under the Difference Principle than under a strict equality principle
  • Rawls is not opposed to the principle of strict equality per se, his concern is about the absolute position of the least advantaged group rather than their relative position
  • numerous criticisms
  • The most common explanation appeals to solidarity (Crocker): that being materially equal is an important expression of the equality of persons. Another common explanation appeals to the power some may have over others, if they are better off materially
  • Rawls' response
  • priority of his first principle: The inequalities consistent with the Difference Principle are only permitted so long as they do not compromise the fair value of the political liberties
  • Utilitarian objection
  • Difference Principle is that it does not maximize utility
  • Libertarians object
  • Difference Principle involves unacceptable infringements on liberty
  • redistributive taxation to the poor
  • The Difference Principle is also criticized as a primary distributive principle on the grounds that it mostly ignores claims that people deserve certain economic benefits in light of their actions
  • Desert-Based Principles
  • some may deserve a higher level of material goods because of their hard work or contributions even if their unequal rewards do not also function to improve the position of the least advantaged
  • explanations of how people come to be in more or less advantaged positions is relevant to their fairness
  • Resource-based principles criticize the Difference Principle on the grounds that it is not ‘ambition-sensitive’ enough
  • ‘endowment-sensitive’
  • not sensitive to the consequences of people's choices
  • does not compensate people for natural inequalities
  • Resource-based principles
  • Resource Egalitarianism
  • prescribe equality of resources
  • do not normally prescribe a patterned outcome
  • outcomes are determined by people's free use of their resources
  • provided people have equal resources they should live with the consequences of their choices
  • social circumstances over which people have no control should not adversely affect life prospects or earning capacities
  • unequal natural endowments should attract compensation
  • handicaps, ill-health, or low levels of natural talents
  • Ronald Dworkin, (Dworkin 1981a, 1981b), proposes that people begin with equal resources but end up with unequal economic benefits as a result of their own choices
  • They note that natural inequalities are not distributed according to people's choices, nor are they justified by reference to some other morally relevant fact about people
  • buy insurance against being disadvantaged
  • It is simply not clear how to implement equality of resources in a complex economy and hence despite its theoretical advantages, it is difficult to see it as a practical improvement on the Difference Principle.
  • Welfare-based principles are motivated by the idea that what is of primary moral importance is the level of welfare of people.
  • imprecise
  • concerns of other theories
  • as derivative concerns
  • particular welfare functions to maximize
  • vary enormously
  • most commonly advocated by economists
  • Historically, Utilitarians have used the term ‘utility’ rather than ‘welfare’ and utility has been defined variously as pleasure, happiness, or preference-satisfaction
  • philosophical activity has concentrated on a variant known as Utilitarianism
  • choosing that distribution maximizing the arithmetic sum of all satisfied preferences (unsatisfied preferences being negative), weighted for the intensity of those preferences.
  • Utilitarianism fails to take the distinctness of persons seriously
  • immoral to make some people suffer so that there is a net gain for other people
  • no requirement for people to consent to the suffering or sacrifice
  • individual preferences or interests referring to the holdings of others
  • Utilitarian distribution principles, like the other principles described here, have problems with specification and implementation
  • interpersonal utility comparisons are impossible
  • many Preference Utilitarians believe their principle prescribes strongly egalitarian structures with lots of state invention while many other Preference Utilitarians believe it prescribes a laissez faire style of capitalism
  • Another complaint against welfarism is that it ignores, and in fact cannot even make sense of, claims that people deserve certain economic benefits in light of their actions
  • various forms of welfarism treat people as mere containers for well-being, rather than purposeful beings, responsible for their actions and creative in their environments
  • The different desert-based principles of distribution differ primarily according to what they identify as the basis for deserving
  • three broad categories
  • Contribution
  • Effort
  • Compensation
  • Aristotle argued that virtue should be a basis for distributing rewards, but most contemporary principles owe a larger debt to John Locke. Locke argued people deserve to have those items produced by their toil and industry, the products (or the value thereof) being a fitting reward for their effort
  • people freely apply their abilities and talents, in varying degrees, to socially productive work. People come to deserve varying levels of income by providing goods and services desired by others
  • Distributive systems are just insofar as they distribute incomes according to the different levels earned or deserved by the individuals in the society for their productive labors, efforts, or contributions
  • value of raising the standard of living — collectively, ‘the social product’
  • only activity directed at raising the social product will serve as a basis for deserving income
  • a value societies hold independently
  • societies value higher standards of living, and therefore choose the raising of living standards as the primary value relevant to desert-based distribution
  • Payments designed to give people incentives are a form of entitlement particularly worth distinguishing from desert-payments as they are commonly confused
  • Incentive-payments are ‘forward-looking’
  • desert-payments are ‘backwards-looking’
  • incentives and desert provide distinct rationales for income and should not be conflated
  • While some have sought to justify current capitalist distributions via desert-based distributive principles, John Stuart Mill and many since have forcefully argued the contrary claim — that the implementation of a productivity principle would involve dramatic changes in modern market economies and would greatly reduce the inequalities characteristic of them
  • contemporary Desert-based principles are rarely complete distributive principles. They usually are only designed to cover distribution among working adults, leaving basic welfare needs to be met by other principles
  • difficult to identify what is to count as a contribution, an effort or a cost, and it is even more difficult to measure these in a complex modern economy
  • moral objection
  • make economic benefits depend on factors over which people have little control
  • productivity-based principles — a person's productivity seems clearly to be influenced by many factors over which the person has little control
  • under most welfare-based principles, it is also the case that people's level of economic benefits depend on factors beyond their control
  • desert theorists who emphasize the responsibility of people in choosing to engage in more or less productive activities
  • Most contemporary versions of the principles discussed so far allow some role for the market as a means of achieving the desired distributive pattern
  • advocates of Libertarian distributive principles rarely see the market as a means to some desired pattern, since the principle(s) they advocate do not ostensibly propose a ‘pattern’ at all, but instead describe the sorts of acquisitions or exchanges which are themselves just
  • just outcomes are those arrived at by the separate just actions of individuals; a particular distributive pattern is not required for justice
  • Nozick proposes a 3-part "Entitlement Theory"
  • distribution is just if everyone is entitled to the holdings they possess under the distribution
  • principle of justice in transfer
  • fair contracts while ruling out stealing, fraud, etc
  • principle of justice in acquisition
  • gaining of exclusive property rights over the material world
  • The obvious objection to this claim is that it is not clear why the first people to acquire some part of the material world should be able to exclude others from it
  • Lockean Proviso
  • ‘enough and as good left in common for others’
  • challenges
  • acquisition is just if and only if the position of others after the acquisition is no worse than their position was when the acquisition was unowned or ‘held in common’
  • principle of rectification for past injustice
  • Past injustices systematically undermine the justice of every subsequent distribution in historical theories
  • The numbers of injustices perpetrated throughout history, both within nations and between them, are enormous and the necessary details of the vast majority of injustices are unavailable
  • As a consequence, Nozick's entitlement theory will never provide any guidance as to what the current distribution of material holdings should be nor what distributions or redistributions are legitimate or illegitimate
  • Libertarians inspired by Nozick usually advocate a system in which there are exclusive property rights, with the role of the government restricted to the protection of these property rights. The property rights commonly rule out taxation for purposes other than raising the funds necessary to protect property rights
  • Any taxation of the income from such selling, according to Nozick, ‘institute[s] (partial) ownership by others of people and their actions and labor’.
  • main difficulties
  • other route for trying to justify exclusive property rights has been to argue that they are required for the maximization of freedom and/or liberty or the minimization of violations of these
  • false
  • But the challenge for these Libertarians is to show why only their favored liberties and freedoms are valuable, and not those which are weakened by a system of exclusive property rights
  • There is no one feminist conception of distributive justice; theorists who name themselves feminists defend positions across the political spectrum
  • an interest in what difference, if any, the practical experience of gender makes to the subject matter or study of justice
  • The distributive principles so far outlined, with the exception of strict egalitarianism, could be classified as liberal theories — they both inform, and are the product of, the liberal democracies which have emerged over the last two centuries
  • ‘the personal is political.’
  • critique of liberal theories
  • resulting liberal theories of justice have fundamentally been unable to accommodate the injustices that have their origins in this ‘protected’ private sphere
  • liberal theories of distributive justice are unable to address the oppression which surfaces in the so-called private sphere of government non-interference
  • women have substantial disadvantages in competing in the market because of childrearing responsibilities which are not equally shared with men. As a consequence, any theory relying on market mechanisms, including most liberal theories, will yield systems which result in women systematically having less income and wealth than men. Thus, feminists have challenged contemporary political theorists to rethink the boundaries of political authority in the name of securing a just outcome for women and other historically oppressed groups
  • challenge
  • navigate both a coherent theoretical and practical path in response to the best feminist critiques available
  • distributive decisions arising through the legitimate application of particular democratic processes might even, at least in part, constitute distributive justice
  • Data on people's beliefs about distributive justice is also useful for addressing the necessary intersection between philosophical and political processes. Such beliefs put constraints on what institutional and policy reforms are practically achievable in any generation — especially when the society is committed to democratic processes
  • it is at least possible that the best distributive theory, when implemented, might yield a system which still has many injustices and/or negative consequences
  • Given that distributive justice is about what to do now, not just what to think, alternate distributive theories must, in part, compete as comprehensive systems which take into account the practical constraints we face.
  • Distributive justice is not an area where we can say an idea is good in theory but not in practice. If it is not good in practice, then it is not good in theory either
Shantastic Marie

Demand The Impossible | Adbusters Culturejammer Headquarters - 0 views

  • Some Occupiers feel strongly that the movement should demand absolutely nothing from the economic and political system it’s rising up against. After all, the argument goes, the strength of the Occupy Movement thus far has been its potent indictment of the ruling class, coupled with its refusal to make any discernable demands or empower any official spokespeople
  • However, by taking direct aim at the relationship between capital and the state, Occupy has raised the issue of class struggle in the U.S.
  • Having raised the level of political awareness, the movement must now fashion class consciousness into political action
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  • The legitimacy of the system failed, revealing its true nature. The democracy of the 1 percent is a sham; their police are but armed mercenaries.
  • Repression!
  • And to this end, we do need demands, not to explain ourselves to the 1 percent, but rather to anchor Occupy in the daily lives of the people whom we aspire to involve in our movement.
  • determination to squelch free speech and the right to assembly
  • violence of the police
  • Occupy is the anvil of the people
  • The coordinated repression against encampments nationwide speaks to this–as well as the 1 percent’s penchant for answering a challenge with blunt force.
  • misstep made all too often in the movement
  • draw new people into the movement
  • message that has the potential to resonate within the awakening consciousness of the 99 percent
  • demand of “Tax the rich” implicitly operates beyond the scope of this current capitalist economic system
  • dialogue of wealth redistribution beyond the scope of the 1 percent’s project of capital accumulation.
  • “Where’s our bailout?” directly calls into question the bank bailouts of 2008 and begs the question of why the 99 percent were expected to sacrifice under this tremendous recession, while those responsible for crashing the economy have raked in billions of taxpayer dollars.
  • “Where is our bailout” is a fair statement in favor of both wealth redistribution and for a just and equal society
  • Giving the proverbial bird to the existing power structure in the face of unbearable living conditions the world over isn’t enough at the end of an equally unbearable day.
  • demands for reforms may also germinate broader, more radical platforms
  • CAN THE historic task in front of Occupy be accomplished in its current form? It cannot.
  • This presupposes a unity that the heterogeneous ideologies that flow under the surface of the movement have yet to achieve.
  • It is necessary to articulate demands, and grievances that are bound under a unified set of independent political principles. We cannot ignore the 1 percent–who control the media, poison our skies and seas, and whisper consumer nothings in our ears. We must topple them
  • What is needed is a more potent injection of politics, reclaimed history and the fortitude to continue to fight back
  • heal the fissures of the left
  • solidarity
  • The success of concrete political tactics is measurable.
  • “Going off the grid” isn’t an option
Shantastic Marie

TheSpec - Governments have betrayed their promises to the poor - 0 views

  • Betrayal
  • Betrayal
  • ral governments over th
  • ...15 more annotations...
  • . It all started back in 2008 but culminated last week when social assistance rates were frozen and the Ontario Child Benefit (OC
  • Betrayal
  • ments over the last two politically unholy
  • rnments over the last two politically unholy weeks. For the nearly 90,000 people in Hamilton who live below the poverty line, the betrayal has been most stinging from the provincial Liberals. It all started back in 2008 but culminated last week when social assistance rates were frozen and the Ontario Child Benefit (OCB) was stalled by $100 a month. Back in 2008, Dalton McGuinty’s governmen
  • rnments over the last two politically unholy weeks. For the nearly 90,000 people in Hamilton who live below the poverty line, the betrayal has been most stinging from the provincial Liberals. It all started back in 2008 but culminated last week when social assistance rates were frozen and the Ontario Child Benefit (OCB) was stalled by $100 a month. Back in 2008, Dalton McGuinty’s governmen
  • Back in 2008, Dalton McGuinty’s government, through Minister of Children and Youth Services Deb Matthews, was in conversation with Ontario poverty activists about what should be done to reduce the growing depth of poverty. Setting a target to reduce poverty by 25 per cent in five years sounded doable, and academics and planners came up with concrete actions and numbers that could make it happen
  • first betrayal to the unattached adults who live in poverty and have no dependent children
  • People in poverty and those who care about them were disappointed with the announcement but we played nice anyway. We politely applauded the government for making this commitment. We said it was a good first step
  • We played nice even when yet another review of the social assistance system was announced despite the fact that Matthews had completed one just a few years before
  • Now, just months before they were to release their final report, social assistance rates are frozen
  • It is clear the Ontario government has abandoned its Poverty Reduction Strategy, leaving no hope for achieving even the minimal objective of reducing child poverty by 25 per cent in 2013
  • There’s no more time to play nice
  • At a meeting of the Roundtable for Poverty Reduction’s Social Assistance Working Group last week, the usually composed director couldn’t contain his emotion as he apologized to people on OW and ODSP around the table for continuing to build up their hopes for a government response which ended in betrayal
  • Her continued talk about “Ontario families” ignores the reality of thousands of Ontarians who do not live in family situations
  • It’s time to let her know that she must remember and act on behalf of her 90,000 Hamilton sisters and brothers in poverty
Shantastic Marie

History of Education - The Canadian Encyclopedia - 0 views

  • The history of education is a central theme in Canada's social, economic and political history
  • In the 17th century education was usually an informal process in which skills and values were passed from one generation to the next by parents, relatives and older siblings
  • The Canadian insistence on the collective concerns of peace, order and good government has meant that state projects such as schooling are seen in terms of their overall impact on society
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  • In the years after the Conquest of 1759-60, the British authorities were exceedingly concerned about the strong French Canadian presence in the colony, and they tried repeatedly to assist in the establishment of schools that were outside the control of religious authorities. These efforts were undermined by the Catholic Church and, more importantly, by the disinterest of local communities, in which education was associated more with households than classrooms
  • The establishment of school systems across Canada during the 19th century followed a strikingly similar form and chronology due to the complex and often competing ambitions of both official educators and parents
  • proposals for a public school system
  • The characteristic conviction of the school promoters was that mass schooling could be an effective instrument for instilling appropriate modes of thought and behaviour into children; in their minds, the purpose of mass schooling did not primarily involve the acquisition of academic knowledge. School systems were designed to solve a wide variety of problems ranging from crime to poverty, and from idleness to vagrancy
  • leaders in a variety of communities in central British North America took up arms in pursuit of coherent demands for political change
  • The key element of family reproduction is its orientation toward the future, including considerable anxiety about the direction and pace of social and economic change. This anxiety has involved a fear of downward social mobility both intra- and intergenerationally. Certainly, such fear preoccupied families before the 19th century and explains why land was characteristically seen as the central component of material stability and family cohesion in both New France and British America. And, during the 19th century, land continued to be seen as the most secure foundation for family economies
  • However, the development of agrarian, merchant and industrial capitalism heightened perceptions of economic insecurity. Everyone became aware that while great fortunes could be made, they could also be lost just as quickly. The obvious insecurity of even well-paying jobs or successful businesses came to loom increasingly large in the minds of parents planning for their children as well as themselves as elders in the context of declining land availability.
  • One response was to have fewer children and to invest more in their education
  • Compulsory attendance legislation was passed in the Canadian provinces (except Québec) during the later 19th century but only a minority of parents were not already enrolling their children in class.
  • Some resistance to schooling did develop, particularly from those reluctant to pay extra taxes
  • Why many parents believed that schooling would improve the prospects of their children was primarily connected to the value attributed to academic training. Unlike the emphasis of school promoters on character formation, the shaping of values, the inculcation of political and social attitudes, and proper behaviour, many parents supported schooling because they wanted their children to learn to read, write and do arithmetic.
  • articulation of schooling with the labour market
  • By the late 20th century, schooling had become part of an institutional network which included hospitals, businesses, prisons and welfare agencies.
  • growth of formal instruction funded by taxes and supervised by the state. This growth resulted from concern about cultural, moral and political behaviour, from the emergence of a wage-labour economy, from changing concepts of childhood and the family, and from the general reorganization of society into institutions.
Shantastic Marie

Occupy Wall Street rediscovers the radical imagination | David Graeber | Comment is fre... - 0 views

  • beginnings of the defiant self-assertion of a new generation of Americans, a generation who are looking forward to finishing their education with no jobs, no future, but still saddled with enormous and unforgivable debt
  • working-class
  • college
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  • humiliated – faced with a life of being treated as deadbeats, moral reprobates
  • colossal social failure
  • demand to finally have a conversation we were all supposed to have back in 2008
  • There was a moment, after the near-collapse of the world's financial architecture, when anything seemed possible.
  • Everything we'd been told for the last decade turned out to be a lie. Markets did not run themselves; creators of financial instruments were not infallible geniuses; and debts did not really need to be repaid – in fact, money itself was revealed to be a political instrument
  • t seemed the time had come to rethink everything: the very nature of markets, money, debt; to ask what an "economy" is actually for
  • Then, in one of the most colossal failures of nerve in history, we all collectively clapped our hands over our ears and tried to put things back as close as possible to the way they'd been before.
  • real priority of those running the world for the last few decades has not been creating a viable form of capitalism
  • flaws are irrelevant
  • economic crisis of the 1970s never really went away
  • exact same approach: declare a financial crisis, appoint supposedly neutral technocrats to manage it, and then engage in an orgy of plunder in the name of "austerity"
  • rejection of old-fashioned party politics, the same embrace of radical diversity, the same emphasis on inventing new forms of democracy from below
  • entire political classes
  • target
  • This is why protesters are often hesitant even to issue formal demands, since that might imply recognising the legitimacy of the politicians against whom they are ranged
  • beginning with the Arab Spring
  • opening salvo in a wave of negotiations over the dissolution of the American Empire
  • consider the collapse of the European colonial empires
  • creation of the modern welfare state
  • But if the occupiers finally manage to break the 30-year stranglehold that has been placed on the human imagination, as in those first weeks after September 2008, everything will once again be on the table – and the occupiers of Wall Street and other cities around the US will have done us the greatest favour anyone possibly can.
Shantastic Marie

Politics - The Globe and Mail - 0 views

  • NDP leadership hopeful Nathan Cullen wants wealthy Canadians and corporations — particularly oil and gas companies — to pay more taxes.The British Columbia MP is proposing to create a new tax bracket for individuals earning $300,000 or more.And he's calling for a new corporate tax rate of 25 per cent for oil and gas companies.
  • reverse recent corporate tax cuts, raising the tax rate to 20 per cent from the current 15 per cent
  • need to raise revenue and promoting a healthy climate for business
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  • Mr. Topp has proposed creating a new 35 per cent tax bracket for individuals earning more than $250,000. And he's called for rolling back the corporate tax rate to 22 per cent
  • get the balance right
  • proceeds into incentives to support Canada's flagging manufacturing sector, another third into post-secondary education and the rest into general revenues
  • attempt to reap some broader, cross-country benefits from Canada's non-renewable energy industry before the resources run out
  • He accused the Harper government of living “in a fantasy world where the golden goose will be forever.”“Right now, we're being irresponsible. It's a wild West attitude.”
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    "NDP's Cullen pitches higher taxes for rich Canadians, oil companies "
Shantastic Marie

FAST FACTS: Connecting the Dots | Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives - 0 views

  • rise in attention being paid to the growing poverty and inequality in Canada
  • The Occupy movement can be credited for much of the recent attention but it is the data being released by mainstream institutions and ‘think tanks’ that have made it politically acceptable to challenge the dismal reality. Most recent is the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) report Divided We Stand: Why Inequality Keeps Rising (Dec. 2011). It shines a spotlight on the growing inequality in OECD countries, including Canada, which is shown to have income inequality above the OECD average
  • significant coming from the OECD
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  • recognition that significant change is in order
  • economic policies are at the root of the problem. The report acknowledges that the policies that have given us an increasingly low-wage economy, inequitable tax policies and a shrinking social safety net are not serving us well
  • OECD appears to be realizing
  • For the OECD, this is a major shift in thinking
  • Neoliberalism was supposed to make the world a better place for us all.
  • The OECD Jobs study had a significant influence on policy reforms in Canada through the 1990s, many of which were first outlined in the Liberal government’s 1994 policy paper Agenda, Jobs and Growth. This document provided the template for a restructuring of social policy in Canada throughout the 1990s – a template that continues to guide policy today.
  • “Canada spends less on cash benefits such as unemployment benefits and family benefits than most OECD countries. Partly as a result, taxes and transfers do not reduce inequality by as much as in many other countries. Furthermore, their effect on inequality has been declining over time.”
  • “publicly provided services fulfill an important direct redistributive role” and that the scaling back of employment protection, something that the Jobs Study advocated for “ had an overall disequalizing effect.” The OECD report leaves us with hope because it demonstrates that we need to rethink neoliberal economic theory.
  • begin a process of reversing the damage done
  • As recommended by the OECD, this will require that we return to a more equitable taxation and redistribution model, and invest in education and social programs
  • latest mantra—austerity
Shantastic Marie

Allan Gregg » 1984 in 2012 - The Assault on Reason - 0 views

  •  
    From Dad
Shantastic Marie

Ontario Poverty Reduction Strategy - 0 views

  • ISAC has been very involved in working to advocate for a poverty reduction strategy in Ontario, and in helping communities voice their needs and expectations for poverty reduction
  • Much of ISAC's work on poverty reduction is done in coalition with other partners
  • Many in the anti-poverty movement worked hard to make sure that the commitment became a reality, and ISAC was instrumental in this work
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  • Now that the strategy has been released, ISAC will continue to be involved – primarily through work on the anticipated Social Assistance Review (see below). But we will also continue to advocate for improvements to the strategy, and continue to ensure that government meets its commitments.
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