Writings of Fidel Castro and Che Guevara

Fidel and Che

Fidel and Che

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Writings of Fidel Castro and Che Guevara

Writings of Fidel Castro (1926-2016)

History Will Absolve Me, the Moncada Trial Defense Speech by Fidel Castro, Santiago de Cuba, October 16, 1953, (London: 1967), 126 pages.

Those Who Are Not Revolutionary Fighters Cannot Be Called Communists, speech by Fidel Castro, March 13, 1967, Merit, New York, 1968, 76 pages.

A New Stage in the Advance of Cuban Socialism, speech by Fidel Castro, April 19, 1968, Merit, New York, N.D., 52 pages.

Fidel Castro Speaks, a collection of documents edited by Martin Kenner & James Petras, New York, 1969, 360 pages.

14th Congress of the Cuban Trade Unions, (CTC), Closing Speech, by Fidel Castro, December 2, 1978, Political Publishers, Havana, 1979, 60 pages.

34th Session of the General Assembly of the United Nations, Fidel Castro, October 12, 1979, Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, Havana, 1979, 40 pages.

68th Inter-Parliamentary Conference, Speech, Fidel Castro, September 15, 1981, Editora Politica, Havana, 1981, 45 pages.

Fidel Castro speaks to trade unionists – the US drive to war and the World Economic Crisis, Pathfinder, New York, 1982, 17 pages.

Fidel Castro, Speech, 29th Anniversary of the attack on the Moncada Garrison, Granma, 26th July, 1982, 27 pages.

The World Economic and Social Crisis – Its impact on the underdeveloped countries, its somber prospects and the need to struggle if we are to survive, report given by Fidel Castro at the Seventh Summit Conference of Non-Aligned Countries, Publishing Office of the Council of State, Havana, 1983, 232 pages.

The World Crisis – Its Economic and Social Impact on the Underdeveloped Countries, Zed Press, London, 1984, 228 pages.

Capitalism in Crisis – Globalization and World Politics Today, articles and speeches 1998-2000, edited by David Deutschmann, Ocean Press, Melbourne, 2000, 308 pages.

Fidel Castro Reader, edited by David Deutschmann & Deborah Shnookal, Ocean Press, Melbourne, 2007, 572 pages.

Principles are worth more than life itself, speech given by the President of the Republic of Cuba and First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Cuba, at the closing session of the World Solidarity with Cuba Conference, held in the Karl Marx Theatre, on November 25, 1994, Year 36 of the Revolution, November 8th Publishing House, Ottawa 2022, 45 pages.

Writings of Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara (1928-67)

Man and Socialism in Cuba, by Che Guevara, Guairas Book Institute, Havana, 1967, 118 pages. With an extensive collection of photographs of the Cuban Revolution.

Socialism and Man in Cuba and Other Works, by Che Guevara, Stage 1, London, 1968, 80 pages.

The Marxism of Che Guevara, Michael Lowy, Monthly Review Press, London, 1973, 67 pages.

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Philanthropy is a scam

Bill Gates

In recent years, Bill Gates has become one of the world’s most high-profile philanthropists. Credit: Stephen Voss/Getty Images

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Philanthropy is a scam

by Julieta Caldas

[This article first appeared on the Tribune website on 9th October 2021. It is being reproduced here (exactly as it appeared originally) as it makes some important points about the hypocritical society we have become, with its veneration of so-called ‘celebrities’ and blinding ourselves to the patently obvious – the rich have always, are now and will in the future do anything and everything to ensure that they maintain their power and influence, whatever their actions might appear to be on the surface.]

Charitable giving among the super-rich has one goal, and it isn’t to change the world – it’s to keep it exactly the way it is.

Up until the turn of this century, the word Philanthropy might have called to mind old-money benefactors whose names are printed on walls of galleries, universities, and hospitals. According to a fresh generation of superrich entrepreneurs negotiating their own newfound charitable impulses, it can now refer to almost anything – from tiny peer donations towards medical bills to billionaires propping up foreign regimes. In recent years these new philanthropists, eager to remodel the charitable sector in the image of their business endeavours, have come to unequivocally dominate the field.

Where philanthropists of old felt compelled to selectively fund the arts and sciences to express their exalted taste as representatives of a cultured elite, it is this new generation’s track record of profitmaking which has, in its eyes, earned it the right—and the responsibility—to determine which social problems need solving. If they can invent technologies that uproot the ways we work and live, the logic goes, they can figure out world hunger. As more billionaires promise to donate larger swathes of their fortunes, Big Philanthropy continues to grow as an auxiliary industry – working more quietly and garnering infinitely more influence than the philanthropy of the gala circuit.

For these types, the philanthropic drive no longer seems to stem from public pressure. The congratulatory fervour that met Bill Gates and Warren Buffet’s initial 2010 Giving Pledge has long since faded, and figures like Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk have more recently managed to fly under the radar and give away comparatively miniscule sums. The impetus, instead, is a desire to extend the logic of entrepreneurship out beyond the confines of the market. The key word, borrowed from the world of start-ups, is ‘disruption’.

Defined by ‘disruption guru’ Clayton Christensen as something that ‘displaces an existing market, industry or technology and produces something new and more efficient and worthwhile’, it is a force ‘at once destructive and creative’. The ambitious ‘philanthropreneur’ takes aim at the clunky, inconvenient elements of civic life and international governance and in doing so opens up new avenues for his business.

In the philanthropist’s view, the world is good—a world of growing wealth, a widening middle class, and lesser inequality—but suffers enduring problems which can, with enough money and the right approach, be solved at great scale. The governments and NGOs usually tasked with addressing these problems are beset by tradition, red tape, and bureaucratic sprawl. Their own brand of social justice, by contrast, follows only the imperative for ruthless innovation. While states often struggle to pursue long-term goals while responding to immediate crises, a billionaire’s foundation—far less regulated and with nearly infinite money—can easily do both.

Over the past few years, more and more philanthropists have been producing manifestos, treatises and apologias to make this case. Lisa Greer’s Philanthropy Revolution (2020), Jacqueline Novogratz’s Manifesto for a Moral Revolution (2020), and Alexandre Mars’s Giving: Purpose is the New Currency (2018) each offer a blend of anecdotal praise for their own philanthropic efforts and visions for the future of the field.

These writers overwhelmingly refer to the act of philanthropy using the euphemistic term ‘giving’, which both obviates the need to concretely mention money and stresses the generosity of donors. When it comes to the objectives of the giving, many state that it is not only a social obligation but potentially healthy for business (hence why profits never really suffer even when the billionaires give away large portions of their shares). That giving, therefore has the explicit dual aim of maximising social benefit and return on investment.

Novogratz offers a characteristically half-hearted summation of its altruistic impulses when she suggests that ‘impact investment is not only morally defensible but now also economically advantageous, even necessary’. Indeed, given that philanthropic programmes for change tend to centre around lower-controversy issues like hunger, disease and education access—while fair pay, labour rights, and affordable housing, which would meaningfully reduce poverty and thus are incompatible with the exploitative business models of large tech companies, sit more firmly within the remit of government—philanthropists generally stand to gain a lot more than they lose.

The grandaddy of philanthropy books, Matthew Bishop’s 2008 Philanthrocapitalism: How the Rich Can Save the World, outlines the capitalist motives of Big Philanthropy far more brazenly than any of its more recent counterparts. Closing out with a comprehensive ‘Good Billionaire’s Guide’, Bishop’s contention is that, ‘if philanthrocapitalists are to be a legitimate part of the solution to the world’s problems, a new “social contract” is needed’ to delineate their role. The reasoning behind this is predictable but surprising to see expressed aloud: ‘if the rich do not take on this responsibility, they risk provoking the public into a political backlash against the economic system that allowed them to become so wealthy’.

The fear, then, is not of being falsely accused, but of being found out. Even when taking a category as large and broad as ‘the poor’ as the desired recipient of their aid, it is clear that the philanthropic system depends upon them remaining splintered and isolated as subjects. It represents, at best, a capitalism generously willing to help alleviate the problems it causes.

In their manifestos, however, philanthropists are eager to argue for the field’s transformative potential. A number of the books either have the word ‘revolution’ in the title or repeatedly highlight the need to ‘revolutionise’ the world of giving, and by extension, the way the world works. If ‘revolution’ evokes the overthrow of an oppressive or unworkable regime, the philanthropists seem to take as their target nothing less than the entire apparatus by which states are organised. The inefficiency and stasis of governments, nonprofits, multilateral governing bodies, and the like is—to them—intractable.

While they take pride in their ability to influence government policy on issues they deem important, they are also eager to prove the efficacy of their working above and around politics. In his foreword to Philanthrocapitalism, Bill Clinton states that, at the time of writing, members of his Clinton Global Initiative had made ‘more than 1,400 commitments valued at $46 billion that have already improved the lives of more than 200 million people in 150 countries’.

A new crop of books billed as practical guides to philanthropy—including Lisa Greer’s Philanthropy Revolution and Phil Buchanan’s Giving Done Right—has also recently sought to make the flexible, nebulous concept of philanthropy more appealing at the ground level. The obvious question that the publication of these books begs is: how many people are wealthy enough to be able to be considered philanthropists, as opposed to people who donate money to charity? Surely less than the number of people who would be expected to buy a mass-market paperback. The question—in the eyes of many philanthropists—resolves itself through a radical democratisation of the category.

In the future, they argue, anyone will be able to be a philanthropist. Bishop points to peer-to-peer microfinance platforms like JustGiving as a form of ‘popular philanthrocapitalism’, offering a degree of transparency and feedback that previously was reserved for superrich donors. Alexandre Mars suggests that charitable donation might eventually be woven into the fabric of everyday life, with a few cents tacked onto the cost of a coffee when you tap your card, and so on.

What is shared among all these thinkers is the sense that, whether ordinary people involve themselves in it or not, the power of philanthropy is inexorable, as billionaires continue to get richer and their money begets more influence. Of generations Y and Z, Mars writes: ‘They are not stupid—they can see that political and economic power no longer reside solely in religions and governments’ – and their new appreciation of the workings of power does not, in his account, take the form of a political consciousness, but a recognition of the new supreme power of business. The philanthropists appear to see the implication of corporations in social life as a rising tide which we may be able to divert or quell, but not fully control.

And while they duly acknowledge the potential dangers of the superrich circumventing democracy and buying seats at decision-making tables, they remain optimistic – in both the superior judgement of entrepreneurs and in the market’s ability to develop the best solutions to the world’s problems. In a brief moment of soul-searching, Bishop asks: ‘Should we worry about the growing ambition and ability of the rich to influence political decisions? Will this coming golden age of philanthropy also be an age of plutocracy?’ Perhaps, but the important follow-up is this: ‘and if so, can anything be done to make this prospect less worrying for the public?’

What appears to critics of philanthrocapitalists as a blind spot in their vision of the world (namely, their own implication in the social ills they seek to remedy) is, quite consciously, their point. While the more recent books attempt to cast philanthrocapitalism as a method of more efficiently serving the charitable sector, or less generously of stimulating global economic prosperity in a way that also benefits laypeople, Bishop shows it for what it is: a new window-dressing for the creation of extreme wealth and the expansion of corporate influence over politics and private life.

He articulates the neatly perverse logic of philanthrocapitalism when he anticipates the aftermath of the 2008 crash: ‘The world still has plenty of superrich people. Indeed, overall, the superrich are likely to emerge from the crisis in better financial shape than anyone else.’ Therefore, crucially, ‘the reservoir of wealth to fund philanthrocapitalism is still there.’ This self-fulfilling cycle—capitalism creates wealth, and thereby inequality, and thereby the conditions for the rich to spend surplus money on helping the poor, without ever alleviating poverty—dates back (Bishop points out) to the Renaissance, when both capitalism and philanthropy were born.

Aiming as they do to uphold the class divide that brought about philanthropy in the first place, the philanthrocapitalists’ true enemy is not inequality but populism. Their version of politics, a kind of anti-politics, is endlessly self-obfuscating, but the vast majority of them essentially describe the kind of market-friendly, ‘socially progressive’ politics of the Clinton Third Way. Rather than trickle-down economics as such, they propound the idea that well-informed and benevolent billionaires will consciously pour their money into the right places. Their justifications are cloaked in the language of collaboration and listening, but their guiding principles are nakedly technocratic.

The World Economic Forum, a hotbed for philanthropreneurs like Gates and Buffet, offers a model for the much-vaunted collaboration between public and private sectors in the form of ‘stakeholder governance’, wherein corporations recruit consultants from government, civil society and academia to create their own versions of multilateral organisations. As Ivan Wecke reported for OpenDemocracy, there are now more than 45 multi-stakeholder groups in operation that set policy agendas and establish industry guidelines globally. In 2019, an agreement signed between the WEF and the UN cemented the privileged position afforded to corporations and entrepreneurs on the global stage.

By way of visions for the future of philanthropy, many of the milder books offer up either a promise of greater accountability for foundations, or a reinvention of the concept of taxation. At the end of The Givers, his survey of contemporary philanthropy, David Callahan concludes: ‘None of the reforms I’ve suggested will substantially limit the influence of wealthy philanthropy over public life. Perhaps the best we can hope for is that funders bring greater self-restraint and mindfulness to giving that affects the lives of their fellow citizens’. The neoliberal imagination is nothing if not humble; all it can ask of us is to share its faith that a culture of moderation and transparency could in theory keep the philanthropists’ sprawling networks of influence in check. Accordingly, the purpose of these books is not to imagine a changed world but to foster trust that the billionaires will get us there.

At the end of Novogratz’s book she is at Riyadh Airport, coming back from a trip with fellows from her impact investment fund, when her bubble is burst with the intrusion of a ‘surly worker’ who ‘harasses’ her for unnamed reasons. Her response to the affront is stoic—‘I focused again on holding my composure, reminding myself not to allow his disrespect to inform my actions’—but the sour taste left by the unaccommodating worker lingers on. And here, the paradox inherent to Bishop’s neologism is laid bare: what would a capitalism be that loved its subjects?

About the Author

Julieta Caldas is a writer based in London. Her essays appear in Voiceworks and The Line of Best Fit, among others.

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Britain Number 1 in the world – for all the wrong reasons

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Britain Number 1 in the world – for all the wrong reasons

As with many aspects of British society (especially) in the last forty years or so, if you wrote about events as fiction nobody would believe it as such ideas would be considered too fanciful.

Such is the case with the way the covid pandemic has been (mis)managed since the virus became known to the world at the end of 2019.

Even though it is far from an end already there are reports being published detailing the abysmal record of the Buffoon and his government to ‘lead’ the country through one of the most potentially destructive periods since the Second World War.

The innumerable ‘U-turns’; the hesitation; reports of cronyism and the awarding of billions of pounds worth of contracts to those who were no more than shysters and barrow-boys (at best, if not through and through incompetent and corrupt; the failed and ‘eyewateringly’ expensive Test, Track and Trace system (which was fundamental in getting on top of the virus) failing at every level, and still not really functioning as it should now, just before the winter when there could be potential spikes in infections; and now the vaccination programme, which was the one and only ‘success’ that the country can look back on over the last 18 months, is now faltering for some unknown reason. (For the time being we’ll forget the immorality of vaccinating more and more of the British population when there are so many others in the world more deserving. If you are going to be selfish, parochial and insular at least try and be efficient at it.)

So after more than 18 months of not being able to get to grips with the ‘unprecedented’ event Britain looks like it’s performing among the worst in the world when it comes to the future. It seems that lessons haven’t been learnt from either what went right (nor much) or wrong (a lot) in Britain and nothing at all from the best practice (again not much) in the rest of the world.

For the Buffoon and his cohort that’s not really a problem. They’ve been spending public money as if it were going out of fashion and in the process making more of their friends richer than they were already. At the same time there is a growing number of working people in Britain who are about to face an even harsher winter than the one last year. The hypocrisy of the Tories knows no bounds as they promise that the experience of the pandemic would lead to be better and fairer society although no independent analysis of their latest budget moves gives them any credence for the much vaunted ‘levelling out’. If there’s any equalisation it’s at the lowest common denominator.

Why the Buffoon acts in the way he does is not really a mystery. What is a mystery, however, is the compliance by the overwhelming proportion of the British population. The only ones protesting, in the main although not exclusively, are the fascists and the head-bangers.

When is the organised working class going to get involved in a meaningful manner and not just shouting on the side-lines ‘too little too late’ or ‘too much too soon’?

The vaccination programme in Britain ……

It seems that the moral issue of giving valuable vaccines to those who are less likely to suffer serious consequences of the virus rather than to those in the poorest parts of the world has been ‘lost’ in Britain.Consider the misinformation argument being stronger than the moral one

Covid vaccines for teenagers: what UK parents need to know amid a new wave of misinformation.

What we know about covid-19 jabs for kids.

Spurned Valneva covid jab ‘more powerful’ than AstraZeneca.

Covid vaccines are safe during pregnancy – but catching the virus isn’t.

New antibody treatment could offer up to 18 months’ protection against severe disease.

…… and the rest of the world

Covid vaccines: how to speed up rollout in poorer countries.

World Health Organisation (WHO) warns pandemic will drag on deep into 2022.

How developing countries can make mRNA covid vaccines.

India’s covid vaccine exports resume – but others must step up to vaccinate the world.

The global south is trying to produce more vaccines – but Moderna is standing in the way.

FDA panel approves Pfizer jabs for children 5 and up. This is in the USA. It will ony be a matter of time before the same sort of policies start to be implemented in the other rich, ‘western’ countries. So much for sharing! As time goes on the tribal, parochial approach to how to deal with the pandemic becomes even more pronounced. They’ll be vaccinating foetuses next.

Further on from a vaccination

AstraZeneca antibody cocktail study shows success treating covid-19.

In for a ‘twindemic’?

People who catch coronavirus and flu at same time this winter ‘twice as likely to die’.

Covid and flu: how big could the dual threat be this winter?

Covid variants

Delta ‘Plus’ covid variant may be more transmissible.

How worried should we be about the new AY.4.2 lineage of the coronavirus?

The importance of basic hygiene

Yes, we should be keeping the healthier hand-washing habits we developed at the start of the pandemic.

What does the winter hold for Britain?

This is at a time when one of the richest countries in the world, together with it’s access to a seemingly unlimited supply of vaccines, still can’t get its act together. Towards the end of October 2021 the UK held the record as the ‘disease box’ of the world.

Labour calls for Plan B measures in England.

Increased restrictions in the UK look inevitable as winter arrives.

‘Herd immunity’?

Relaxing restrictions hasn’t made covid cases spike – but this doesn’t mean herd immunity has arrived.

Increased protection for babies?

Breast milk can contain covid antibodies – good news for babies.

Emergency Powers Act

How many people still remember that we are living under almost like wartime emergency laws. The Government hasn’t used them yet – and will, no doubt, make a big issue about them being abolished with the ending of this Act. But we should remember that they have introduced some of the stipulations from this act in new laws being brought in at the moment. When States have such draconian laws at their disposal they are very reluctant to let them go – whatever the Party in power. So people shouldn’t put their faith in any potential Labour Government (or a coalition of the present opposition parties) repealing the laws in the future. There will always be ‘more pressing priorities’.

Coronavirus emergency powers: parliament must not waste its third and final chance to review them.

The testing programme starts to grab the headlines – again, and not always for the right reasons

Why are people testing positive on lateral flow tests then negative on PCR?

Lateral flow tests more accurate than first thought.

Travellers now able to use cheaper covid tests. But even with the changes that came into force after 24th October 2021 people will have to use private companies for the tests to be valid. EVERYTHING the Government of the Buffoon does is to the advantage of private business – and most people seem to accept it.

NHS Test and Trace criticised as ‘eyewatering’ waste of taxpayers’ money.

The scientific advice

Not my job to sugar-coat advice.

Poverty in Britain

More information comes out about the effects in the cut of Universal Credit that took place on 6th October 2021.

Universal credit: what the £20 a week cut will mean for hundreds of thousands of households.

‘I don’t feel like a person any more’: the emotional side of claiming universal credit. But that’s always been the idea of ‘benefits’. Make people feel ashamed and they won’t make a claim.

‘Shameful’ Universal Credit cut ‘will push 22,000 children into poverty‘.

Universal credit uplift was a lifeline during the pandemic – our research shows cutting it will leave families with impossible decisions.

As stated many times in the Journal of the Plague Years, what happens in Scotland is almost exactly replicated in the rest of the UK – but on a bigger scale (due to the population difference).

Renters on low incomes face a policy black hole: homes for social rent are the answer. The technical back-up.

Ethnicity, poverty and the data in Scotland.

And who are allowed to benefit at the expense of the poor?

Most of these issues are not ‘covid related’. They are included here to remind people of the sort of society they have allowed to exist in Britain (and many other parts of the world).

Pandora papers: ‘it’s time to pursue lawyers and accountants who enable tax evasion’.

The secret owners of UK property worth billions.

Tax cheat schemes cost governments billions.

‘Collateral damage’

How covid may leave us with fewer friends if we are not careful.

Covid ‘strategies’ throughout the world

Zero covid worked for some countries – but high vaccine coverage is now key.

The secret to South Korea’s covid success? Combining high technology with the human touch.

Covid mortality

The statistics about death rates have gone quietly lately as the debate has moved on to the issue of vaccination.

How covid deaths compare with other deaths in the UK.

How did it all start?

New WHO group may be last chance to find virus origins.

The analysis

UK’s early response worst public health failure ever.

‘Serious errors’ by ministers and scientific advisers ‘cost thousands of lives’ during pandemic.

When it’s all over ….

Covid-19 could nudge minds and societies towards authoritarianism – that is of the extreme right. Interesting that after all the people have suffered, throughout the world, with the incompetence of the capitalist governments in their handling of the pandemic, and all the corruption that has gone with the incompetence, a study comes out suggesting that most people would want more of the same.

….. unless we fall into the next pandemic

Nipah virus: could it cause the next pandemic?

More on covid pandemic 2020-2?

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