#81
anime is becoming real i'm so excited
#82

Panopticon posted:

the lenin's tomb guy is a fantastic troll
http://www.breitbart.com/london/2015/09/02/guardian-writer-if-burned-falklands-hero-knew-anything-hed-still-have-his-face/



lmao

#83
<-if bearded wolf 351 hero knew anything he'd still have his face
#84
he won and with 59.5% of the vote completely smashed the blairites lol.
#85
"The Revolutionary Science of Marx-Lenin-Mao-Zedong Thought is real," Jeremy Corbyn said in his post-leadership election speech earlier. "Anime is also real. Stalin is real, and strong, and he's my friend."
#86
tom watson won deputy leadership.

"Labour is now led by Tom and Jerry"
#87
congratulations to the rhizzone for the successful election of their candidate

#88
#89
my hair is turning blue and spiky and my eyes are bigger than my face whats happening desu
#90
#91
#92
but is he brocialist? http://www.telegraph.co.uk/women/womens-life/11863186/Welcome-to-Jeremy-Corbyns-blokey-Britain-where-brocialism-rules.html
#93
so weird how identity politics have ended up being used almost exclusively by liberals to justify supporting center-right neoliberals like hillary clinton or yvette cooper over more leftish candidates
#94

Agnus_Dei posted:

but is he brocialist? http://www.telegraph.co.uk/women/womens-life/11863186/Welcome-to-Jeremy-Corbyns-blokey-Britain-where-brocialism-rules.html



There's an obsessiveness about many of the Corbynistas, a nerdy fascination with process and arcana. Mr Corbyn, for example, takes pictures of manhole covers because apparently there are interesting differentiations in them. "My mother always said there's history in drain covers. I take pictures of them. People think it's a little odd, but there we are," he said. Perhaps there are women up and down the country snapping pictures of manhole covers, but somehow I rather doubt it.

Eh....?

edit: Note that the writer passes over in silence that it was Corbyn's mother who 'always said there's history in drain covers.'

Edited by RedMaistre ()

#95
Mr Corbyn still intends to fulfil his pledge to make half his top team female. That will take some ingenuity, and may well force him to privilege gender over talent or experience, which is never a good thing.

This illustrates the self-defeating bind of neoliberal appropriations of feminism and anti-racism. Since neoliberals don't believe in actually using public power to correct inequalities (since this would violate meritocracy and chain the hand of the free market) their 'critique' from 'the left' is ultimately reveled to be mere pointless capricious carping, self-promotion, and passive-aggressive blackmail.

Edited by RedMaistre ()

#96

RedMaistre posted:

Agnus_Dei posted:

but is he brocialist? http://www.telegraph.co.uk/women/womens-life/11863186/Welcome-to-Jeremy-Corbyns-blokey-Britain-where-brocialism-rules.html

There's an obsessiveness about many of the Corbynistas, a nerdy fascination with process and arcana. Mr Corbyn, for example, takes pictures of manhole covers because apparently there are interesting differentiations in them. "My mother always said there's history in drain covers. I take pictures of them. People think it's a little odd, but there we are," he said. Perhaps there are women up and down the country snapping pictures of manhole covers, but somehow I rather doubt it.


#97

RedMaistre posted:

Mr Corbyn still intends to fulfil his pledge to make half his top team female. That will take some ingenuity, and may well force him to privilege gender over talent or experience, which is never a good thing.

This illustrates the self-defeating bind of neoliberal appropriations of feminism and anti-racism. Since neoliberals don't actually in believe in using public power to correct inequalities (since this would violate meritocracy and chain the hand of the free market) their 'critique' from 'the left' is ultimately reveled to be mere pointless capricious carping, self-promotion, and passive-aggressive blackmail.


also it seems like people are turning themselves into literal pretzels writing articles that blatantly contradict themselves multiple times just so they can tell everyone, spit flying from their mouths, how disgustingly terrible Corbyn is and how he is animated solely by Satan

#98

goats_ebooks posted:

congratulations to the rhizzone for the successful election of their candidate



#99
mods rename me to VERY Radical Divisive Far-Left Unelectable Defender of Putin, ISIS and Palestinian Terrorists Karl Marx Admirer Brocialist Who's Like Donald Trump & Rides Chairman Mao Bicycle
#100
so some hillary PAC sent out an e-mail bashing bernie sanders by comparing him to corbyn and the more left-wing remarks corbyn has made. this was sander's response:



the "dead communist dictator" he is referring to is hugo chavez. just in case you think sanders will be substantially different from obama.
#101
yr7XHq8IBt8

Edited by HenryKrinkle ()

#102
I don't have a Super PAC, Jennifer
#103
Corbyn sounds pretty awful.
#104
he certainly inspires awe
#105
aww inspiring :3
#106
i also link to dead communist dictators. hillary 2016 i guess.
#107
Troup threatens a coup https://mobile.twitter.com/OwenJones84/status/645531319376719872/photo/1
#108
they are true patriots, volunteering to save taxpayers money without severance pay or pensions
#109
PSL gives Corbyn a thumbs up, party activists turning to anime

http://www.liberationnews.org/psl-statement-jeremy-corbyns-election-british-labour-party-leader/

Sept. 12, 2015, recorded a significant development in British and world politics that reflected growing mass opposition to capitalist austerity, environmental destruction and imperialist war. At a special conference, Jeremy Corbyn, a leader of the Labour Party's left wing, long-time Labour MP, former union leader and anti-war activist was announced to have been elected Leader in a landslide victory, with nearly 60 percent of first-preference votes.

On becoming Leader, Corbyn also became Leader of the Opposition to the current Conservative government of David Cameron.

Following a series of televised and radio debates with the other three candidates—Andy Burnham, Yvette Cooper and Liz Kendall—Corbyn went on to gain the support of six of the Labour Party's 14 affiliated trade unions, including the UK's two largest unions, Unite and UNISON, and received the highest number of supporting nominations from Constituency Labour Parties.

Corbyn has been a long-time activist, organizer and spokesperson against the U.S.-British war against Iraq. He was a featured speaker on Jan. 18, 2003, at the massive march and rally attended by hundreds of thousands of people in opposition to the imminent U.S.-British invasion and occupation of Iraq, organized by the ANSWER Coalition in Washington, D.C. He has been a consistent organizer and leader of the anti-war movement in Britain and a champion of Palestinian rights.

Corbyn's election marked a decisive defeat for the “New Labour” former leadership, whose pro-imperialist, neo-liberal policies under Tony Blair had become thoroughly discredited. Liz Kendall, considered by some the “Blairite candidate,” came in dead last in the race.

Along with the dramatic rise of new mass movements against austerity throughout Europe, as well as progressive movements in the United States, Latin America and elsewhere, it has become clear that the long period of reaction that began in the late 1970s and greatly accelerated under Margaret Thatcher in Britain and Ronald Reagan in the United States is drawing to a close. A new period of resistance to monopoly capitalism/imperialism is opening up, potentially leading to a revival of not only the trade unions but the revolutionary workers' movement throughout the world. That this initial revival of anti-capitalism and socialism is being frequently, although not exclusively, expressed through the vehicle of electoral politics is to be expected in the first stage.

Under Tony Blair, the politics of Britain's Labour Party became virtually indistinguishable from that of the U.S. Democratic Party. But the origins of the two parties are very different. The Democratic Party originated as the party of the southern slaveholders and currently serves the interests of U.S. finance capital, though it maintains a mass base within the working class, oppressed communities and sections of the middle class.

The Labour Party, founded in 1900, originated in the British trade union and socialist movements of the 19th century. It grew to overtake the Liberal Party as the main challenger to the Conservative Party during the early 1920s, forming minority governments under Ramsay MacDonald in 1924 and again from 1929 to 1931. In office, it was a firm upholder of the British Empire and colonial rule. It later formed majority governments in various periods, including from 1997 to 2010 under Tony Blair and Gordon Brown.

Despite its working-class origins, from its beginning the Labour Party was shaped by the consolidation of monopoly capitalism/imperialism in Britain and other advanced capitalist countries. Lenin explained in his book “Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism,” the complex of factors that led to the growing conservatism and opportunism of the labor movements of the imperialist countries in the 20th century—including the British Labour Party.

Corbyn's election as Leader of the Labour Party and the program he advocates, if carried through in action, not just in Parliament but more importantly in the streets and mass organizations of the working class, could contribute to a significant new direction for the workers' movement with major ramifications in the United States and elsewhere.

The Labour Party as presently constituted, like the other social-democratic parties in Europe, will not be the vehicle for the revolutionary overturn of capitalist rule. But the capitalists are furious about Corbyn's election and want to destroy his political influence quickly because they fear that his election could be both a sign and a catalyst for a new wave of fightback and resistance. The British and U.S. rulers are supremely class conscious, and are all too aware that the deep assault against the living standards of the working classes could dynamically awaken a new generation to mass struggle. They are keenly aware that a fire of fightback and resistance once lit can spread outside of their control and be the basis for a revival of revolutionary socialism far outside the limits of social democracy.

The British and U.S. ruling establishments, not surprisingly, expressed shock at what The Guardian called “a stunning development.” The headline in The New York Times reads: “With Jeremy Corbyn Elected as New Leader, Britain's Labour Party Takes a Hard Left Turn.” Conservative Defence Secretary Michael Fallon told BBC, “This election shows that Labour now is a serious risk to our national security, to our economic security and to the security of your family.”

The Party for Socialism and Liberation, on the other hand, welcomes this development, which clearly reflects a rise of class-struggle forces in the British workers' movement. This is not isolated from what is happening in other places in Europe. It is not isolated either from the revival of left-wing forces in Latin America over the last 15 years. The emergence of a new generation of leftist and radical politics is a natural consequence of the offensive launched by the capitalist ruling classes against working people. Oppression breeds resistance.

Of course, there will be many issues related to strategy, tactics and organization that will require careful attention, analysis and planning. But in broad historical strokes the election of Corbyn constitutes one more indicator that the three-decade-long period of capitalist global counter-revolution is inevitably leading to a resurgence of leftist politics. All genuinely new, viable political phenomena—like the revival of global socialism that is now underway—do not immediately ascend to the place of their final significance but rather endure many fits and starts and mis-starts before they rise to fulfill their historical mission.

#110

fulfill their historical mission

didn't read the whole thing, is this article about king arthur

#111

Urbandale posted:

PSL gives Corbyn a thumbs up, party activists turning to anime

http://www.liberationnews.org/psl-statement-jeremy-corbyns-election-british-labour-party-leader/

Sept. 12, 2015, recorded a significant development in British and world politics that reflected growing mass opposition to capitalist austerity, environmental destruction and imperialist war. At a special conference, Jeremy Corbyn, a leader of the Labour Party's left wing, long-time Labour MP, former union leader and anti-war activist was announced to have been elected Leader in a landslide victory, with nearly 60 percent of first-preference votes.

On becoming Leader, Corbyn also became Leader of the Opposition to the current Conservative government of David Cameron.

Following a series of televised and radio debates with the other three candidates—Andy Burnham, Yvette Cooper and Liz Kendall—Corbyn went on to gain the support of six of the Labour Party's 14 affiliated trade unions, including the UK's two largest unions, Unite and UNISON, and received the highest number of supporting nominations from Constituency Labour Parties.

Corbyn has been a long-time activist, organizer and spokesperson against the U.S.-British war against Iraq. He was a featured speaker on Jan. 18, 2003, at the massive march and rally attended by hundreds of thousands of people in opposition to the imminent U.S.-British invasion and occupation of Iraq, organized by the ANSWER Coalition in Washington, D.C. He has been a consistent organizer and leader of the anti-war movement in Britain and a champion of Palestinian rights.

Corbyn's election marked a decisive defeat for the “New Labour” former leadership, whose pro-imperialist, neo-liberal policies under Tony Blair had become thoroughly discredited. Liz Kendall, considered by some the “Blairite candidate,” came in dead last in the race.

Along with the dramatic rise of new mass movements against austerity throughout Europe, as well as progressive movements in the United States, Latin America and elsewhere, it has become clear that the long period of reaction that began in the late 1970s and greatly accelerated under Margaret Thatcher in Britain and Ronald Reagan in the United States is drawing to a close. A new period of resistance to monopoly capitalism/imperialism is opening up, potentially leading to a revival of not only the trade unions but the revolutionary workers' movement throughout the world. That this initial revival of anti-capitalism and socialism is being frequently, although not exclusively, expressed through the vehicle of electoral politics is to be expected in the first stage.

Under Tony Blair, the politics of Britain's Labour Party became virtually indistinguishable from that of the U.S. Democratic Party. But the origins of the two parties are very different. The Democratic Party originated as the party of the southern slaveholders and currently serves the interests of U.S. finance capital, though it maintains a mass base within the working class, oppressed communities and sections of the middle class.

The Labour Party, founded in 1900, originated in the British trade union and socialist movements of the 19th century. It grew to overtake the Liberal Party as the main challenger to the Conservative Party during the early 1920s, forming minority governments under Ramsay MacDonald in 1924 and again from 1929 to 1931. In office, it was a firm upholder of the British Empire and colonial rule. It later formed majority governments in various periods, including from 1997 to 2010 under Tony Blair and Gordon Brown.

Despite its working-class origins, from its beginning the Labour Party was shaped by the consolidation of monopoly capitalism/imperialism in Britain and other advanced capitalist countries. Lenin explained in his book “Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism,” the complex of factors that led to the growing conservatism and opportunism of the labor movements of the imperialist countries in the 20th century—including the British Labour Party.

Corbyn's election as Leader of the Labour Party and the program he advocates, if carried through in action, not just in Parliament but more importantly in the streets and mass organizations of the working class, could contribute to a significant new direction for the workers' movement with major ramifications in the United States and elsewhere.

The Labour Party as presently constituted, like the other social-democratic parties in Europe, will not be the vehicle for the revolutionary overturn of capitalist rule. But the capitalists are furious about Corbyn's election and want to destroy his political influence quickly because they fear that his election could be both a sign and a catalyst for a new wave of fightback and resistance. The British and U.S. rulers are supremely class conscious, and are all too aware that the deep assault against the living standards of the working classes could dynamically awaken a new generation to mass struggle. They are keenly aware that a fire of fightback and resistance once lit can spread outside of their control and be the basis for a revival of revolutionary socialism far outside the limits of social democracy.

The British and U.S. ruling establishments, not surprisingly, expressed shock at what The Guardian called “a stunning development.” The headline in The New York Times reads: “With Jeremy Corbyn Elected as New Leader, Britain's Labour Party Takes a Hard Left Turn.” Conservative Defence Secretary Michael Fallon told BBC, “This election shows that Labour now is a serious risk to our national security, to our economic security and to the security of your family.”

The Party for Socialism and Liberation, on the other hand, welcomes this development, which clearly reflects a rise of class-struggle forces in the British workers' movement. This is not isolated from what is happening in other places in Europe. It is not isolated either from the revival of left-wing forces in Latin America over the last 15 years. The emergence of a new generation of leftist and radical politics is a natural consequence of the offensive launched by the capitalist ruling classes against working people. Oppression breeds resistance.

Of course, there will be many issues related to strategy, tactics and organization that will require careful attention, analysis and planning. But in broad historical strokes the election of Corbyn constitutes one more indicator that the three-decade-long period of capitalist global counter-revolution is inevitably leading to a resurgence of leftist politics. All genuinely new, viable political phenomena—like the revival of global socialism that is now underway—do not immediately ascend to the place of their final significance but rather endure many fits and starts and mis-starts before they rise to fulfill their historical mission.


lmao

#112

October, 1983
Barack Hussein Obama is inducted into the KGB (only the G is visible above) by Jeremy Corbyn at an elaborate ceremony which culminated in the rape of more than two-dozen white Latvian and Lithuanian virgins. The unidentified man who took this photograph was later found dead of polonium poisoning.
#113
prime minister david cameron revealed to be secret trotskyist

it's not known if corbyn and him are in league together but at least now we can answer the perennial question, what is trotskyism?

Edited by Panopticon ()

#114

le_nelson_mandela_face posted:

Troup threatens a coup https://mobile.twitter.com/OwenJones84/status/645531319376719872/photo/1



has anyone seen any speculation about who it is? obviously the fact that this is something that they feel able to say is more important than identifying the specific 'bad apple (:blaugh' etc, but I've been wondering if it's an open secret that the media can't report, or if it's genuinely unknown. the indy says that he served in Northern Ireland in the 1980s (http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/ministry-of-defence-condemn-army-general-behind-jeremy-corbyn-mutiny-threat-10510353.html), and he's a senior serving general now ... I really should know more about this, but if there's only 200 generals and brigadiers (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-30962007), and this guy's fairly senior, then can there really be that many people it could be?

#115

Panopticon posted:

prime minister david cameron revealed to be secret trotskyistit's not known if corbyn and him are in league together but at least now we can answer the perennial question, what is trotskyism?

nekro... bestial.... lust....

#116
#117
this is david cameron's response to the allegations
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1QGk8m51WDA
#118

goats_ebooks posted:

le_nelson_mandela_face posted:

Troup threatens a coup https://mobile.twitter.com/OwenJones84/status/645531319376719872/photo/1

has anyone seen any speculation about who it is? obviously the fact that this is something that they feel able to say is more important than identifying the specific 'bad apple (:blaugh' etc, but I've been wondering if it's an open secret that the media can't report, or if it's genuinely unknown. the indy says that he served in Northern Ireland in the 1980s (http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/ministry-of-defence-condemn-army-general-behind-jeremy-corbyn-mutiny-threat-10510353.html), and he's a senior serving general now ... I really should know more about this, but if there's only 200 generals and brigadiers (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-30962007), and this guy's fairly senior, then can there really be that many people it could be?


General Sir John Nicholas Reynolds Houghton GCB, CBE, ADC Gen (born 18 October 1954) is the Chief of the Defence Staff of the British Armed Forces. He was appointed in 2013, following the retirement of former Chief of Defence Staff Sir David Richards. He served as Commanding Officer of 1st Battalion The Green Howards in Northern Ireland during The Troubles and later became Commander of 39 Infantry Brigade in Northern Ireland.

#119
but more seriously afaict they kind of all served there in the 80s. it's like saying he's over 30 years old. or male. or white
#120
but more seriously david cameron fucked a dead pig