Economic Terrorism Against Iran via Thinkprogress

Brad Johnson at ThinkProgress and at Grist has posted a little tech­no­cratic note dis­cussing how a carbon cap could cut down on Iran’s income from hydro-carbons, effec­tively a nifty sort of indirect sanction that would have the positive effect of weakening Iranian National Socialism. Put aside the wonk-ish thought-experiment—sanctions never seem to be effective, except at […]

Boston Review Prints my Response!

I think Boston Review showed real integrity in printing my response to the pieces it ran by Claudio Lomnitz and Rafael Sanchez. Thank you. Full:

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Claudio Lomnitz and Rafael Sánchez claim that Boli­var­ian Venezuela is “spo­rad­i­cally but con­sis­tently” showing symptoms of “state-directed anti-Semitism” as part of a political project of rendering the “internal oppo­si­tion as abject and […]

Someone finally says it: a Fifth International

I went to the World Social Forum in Caracas in 2006 and it was great: rife with tremen­dous energy, panels on anarchism and Zionism and post-capitalist social orga­ni­za­tion, on food supply and eco­log­i­cal agri­cul­ture and mil­i­tarism and financial archi­tec­ture, on Latin American inte­gra­tion and South-South links. It was really nice talk. The World Social Fora were […]

The Best Video You’ll Ever See on Bolivarian Venezuela

Before this blog tran­si­tioned to its currently deplorable state of total focus on I-P with a side-trade in Iranology, I wrote a lot about Venezuela. I intend to write more, but it requires too much time. I actually lived in Caracas for 3 months a couple years ago, and have on my screen in front of […]

Full Letter to the Boston Review

To the Boston Review:

I read Claudio Lomnitz’s and Rafael Sánchez’s piece accusing Venezuela of man­i­fest­ing “signs of state-directed anti-Semitism” with a mélange of surprise and shock. Surprise, because frankly, criticism of Venezuela veers far too fre­quently into the hys­ter­i­cal. Lomnitz’s and Sánchez’s piece was a subtler and more textured analysis of the “uses of hate” in […]

Articles etc

My review of Staughton Lynd and Andrej Grubacic’s book is online in the most recent NACLA. Read it, subscribe to NACLA, and tell them to com­mis­sion me. Also: posted imme­di­ately following this will be the full-text of a letter to the Boston Review, which they are gra­ciously pub­lish­ing in abbre­vi­ated form, alongside a link to the […]

Plot to Kill Chavez? Don’t Doubt it

Tech­no­rati Tags: Boli­var­ian rev­o­lu­tion, Chavez, Latin America, oligarchy, resis­tance movements, Venezuela

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The State Department’s Ridiculousness

I was checking out the State Department’s daily press briefings, to see if the Goldstone report had been mentioned. It had been, on the 15th, but in an evasive and oblique manner: “It’s over 500 pages. It has – it covers a number of very complex issues and very sensitive issues. We want to take some […]

Could We Work on Sensicality, Panas?

So one of Hugo Chavez’s allies is Iran, and one of Venezuela’s arms suppliers is Russia. At the mention of the two countries, the right-thinking American is supposed to quiver, quail, and vote Repub­li­can. Or Democrat–what’s the dif­fer­ence, again? The Venezue­lan elite, once again show­cas­ing a cognitive/ideological frame of reference that’s pretty much identical to that […]

Canards and Canaries: Anti-Semitism in Bolivarian Venezuela

I will say I was stunned that the estimable liberal-left Boston Review ran this attack, accusing Hugo Chavez and Boli­var­ian Venezuela of being bastions of bigotry. It was some time ago; I had assumed that the magazine received a flood of letters, and would offer a print forum for responses. Well, the unmod­er­ated comments–online only–savaged the […]