The Vice of Selfishness
The Left shouldn’t sharply separate “moral” discourse from “self-interested” discourse, because the two are closely intertwined.
Abigail Torre grew up in Chile and now lives in Berkeley, California where she is cochair of the East Bay chapter of Democratic Socialists of America.
The Left shouldn’t sharply separate “moral” discourse from “self-interested” discourse, because the two are closely intertwined.
Cockburn’s hatred was most certainly pure. But it was a joyful hate that he nurtured. An inspiring hate.
Neoliberalism lives and shouldn’t be given a premature obituary, but the American empire has entered a decadent phase.
No act of consumption is completely passive, but even the most active types of consumption form a shaky ground for serious left politics.
Welcome to the “care economy” — the booming service sector that has emerged from America’s rapidly graying boomer population.
“Geeks” are more than passive consumers of corporate media.
What does Sunday’s endorsement of Angela Merkel mean for Germany and its Left Party?
Rick Scott and Obama’s figures may sound impressive, but “job creation” does not equal recovery.
Oregon’s “Pay It Forward” plan is based on a neoliberal understanding of education as a commodity.
A cartoon from Matt Bors, featured in the last print issue of Jacobin.
With your help, Jacobin and the Chicago Teachers Union’s CORE Caucus will produce a color booklet on neoliberal education reform.
Just as mass incarceration uses the gloss of rehabilitation to hide the realities of social control, military intervention has appropriated the language of humanitarianism to disguise imperialist motives.
Friedman fires more volleys of cliche into the densely packed prejudices of his readers.
A letter from Gilbert Achcar on Greg Shupak’s recent Libya piece.
With a vacuous social vision, economics confronts the “return of the social question” woefully unprepared.
Introducing the Jacobin books section.
In his new book, Ben Davis’s arguments too often take the form of smug, self-righteous dismissals that convey only disapproval.
In the popular imagination, opposition to the Vietnam War was driven largely by the privileged, while supposedly reactionary blue-collar workers supported the war effort. That memory is wrong.