As though the state doesnt already do enough to magnify the power of the rich by its very nature, Walter Williams suggests that people with more money should have more votes.
Because, yknow, them pore ole bosses ….
As though the state doesnt already do enough to magnify the power of the rich by its very nature, Walter Williams suggests that people with more money should have more votes.
Because, yknow, them pore ole bosses ….
Mary Matalin on CNNs Campbell Brown show just now, on the subject of marijuana:
My libertarian sense says lets regulate it.
Jon Stewart, just now:
Weve been given a false choice between tyranny and anarchy.
Hey! When was I offered that choice?
I very much doubt that Im the first person to have thought of this, but I havent found it mentioned anywhere else, so Ill put forward my conjecture: might the title for Karel Čapeks most famous (though certainly not best) work, R.U.R., have been inspired by the formerly all-pervasive (see, e.g., the abbreviation on the postage stamp at right) K.u.K., official symbol of the Austro-Hungarian Empire? (K.u.K. stood for Kaiserlich und Königlich, or Imperial and Royal, signifying that the Habsburg monarch was both Emperor (Kaiser) of Austria and King (König) of Hungary.)
As you can see, it takes only minor editing to transform K.u.K. into R.U.R.:
If this was indeed Čapeks inspiration, he would hardly be the only author in 1920s Czechoslovakia to be slamming the Austrian rule from which his country had just emerged; anarchist Jaroslav Hašeks scathing satire The Good Soldier Švejk would be the most obvious example, though Franz Kafkas The Trial and The Castle have likewise been interpreted as being in part (no one thinks this is the works sole meaning) a critique of quondam Austrian rule.
Could R.U.R., the firm that casually treats the robots (the term comes from a Czech word originally meaning serf labour) as a lower order that can be put to work, especially war work (as one character says: It was criminal of old Europe to teach the robots to fight. … Couldnt they have given us a rest with their politics? It was a crime to make soldiers of them), be meant to symbolise, in part, the K.u.K. monarchy that casually treated the Czechs as a lower order that could be conscripted into a world war in which they had no stake? (Of course Čapeks satire, like Kafkas, tends to operate at multiple levels simultaneously, so his robots can still stand, in addition, for out-of-control technology, social dehumanisation, the oppressed proletariat, etc., etc.)
Since returning from Prague, I’ve been wrestling with an email crisis (my university randomly deleted all my past emails; they keep saying theyll have them back any day now, and in the meantime Ive been scrambling to figure out what the hell Im doing, given that, as it were, a large part of my brain is missing). Thats why I havent had time to blog about my Prague trip or Chomsky response yet.
Today, though, Im off to APEE for our anti-capitalist fest. Später, gator.
Im in the middle of a break at the ASC, finishing up some last-minute business at the office.
Tomorrow Im off to anarchise in Prague, and will thus be largely (though probably not entirely) incommunibloggo until the 24th.
Whilst awaiting my return you can relieve the unbearable monotony by clicking on this pretty picture of Čertovka, a section of Prague on the Vltavas west bank near the Karlův Bridge. I imagine the real thing looks a bit more wintry just now.
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