Deixo um excerto da recensão a Commonwealth, de Negri e Hardt, que foi publicada no Wall Street Journal há já algum tempo...
"For the revolution to succeed, three supposedly corrupt forms of the common must be destroyed. Some of the harshest language in "Commonwealth" targets the family: Mom, dad and the kids might not know it, but they are part of a "pathetic" institution, a "machine" that "grinds down and crushes the common" with "the blindest egoism." Messrs. Hardt and Negri cry: "Down with the family!" The two other killers of the world's spirit: the corporation and the nation. When the multitude seizes "control of the means of production and reproduction," we're promised, the evil trio will wind up on Marx's ash heap of history.
The authors warn the rulers of the capitalist world that if they want to survive a little longer, they need to enact reforms, including global citizenship, a right to income for everyone and participatory democracy. But Messrs. Hardt and Negri don't think that their warning will be heeded. Revolution will erupt—and soon. It could be violent, a prospect that does not seem to trouble them: "What is the best weapon against the ruling powers—guns, peaceful street demonstrations, exodus, media campaigns, labor strikes, transgressing gender norms, silence, irony, or many others—depends on the situation." Pirates, the rioting Muslim banlieusards of Paris and the Black Panthers all are praised in "Commonwealth" as heroes of disruption.
Messrs. Hardt and Negri make little effort to build arguments in support of their wild assertions and predictions. They write as if ignorant of the 20th century and of much else, including economics and social science. (They still quote Lenin and Mao as if they were sources of wise political and economic analysis.) How would abolishing private property not lead to a threadbare totalitarian state, as it has in the past? The authors promise it will be different this time, without explaining why. If you abolish the family, how will children grow into flourishing adults? We must take it on faith that the post-family world will be just fine. (The word "children" almost never appears in the book.) How do the authors explain away capitalist globalization's record of elevating millions of people out of poverty? Answer: They don't.
"Commonwealth" is a dark, evil book, and it is troubling that it appears under the prestigious imprimaturof Harvard University Press. Countless millions were slaughtered by adherents of Karl Marx in the 20th century. God help us if the scourge returns in the 21st."
28/04/10
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4 comentários:
ZNeves-que tenho que conhecer no final do Verão, pessoalmente-trata-se de uma crítica cheia de humor negro ao mais recente livro da dupla Negri/Hardt, realizada pelo emblemático diário dos meios de negócios mais sofisticados do mundo anglo-saxónico. Citam algumas das reivindicações top dos autores- salário mínimo,direitos humanos consagrados,etc- mas frisam que eles, H-Negri, prevêem a Revolução para breve!E para isso convém acabar com os familialismos, entre mais alguns ítens tácticos importantes. O que nós, por cá, não cessamos de pedir e perspectivar, não é? Niet
Adenda: Escrevi sem notas,claro. As três formas corruptas que urge destruir na " comunidade " dos dominados para a Revolução ter sucesso são: a Família, as empresas e a Nação!.Isso preconizam Hardt e Toni Negri! Ora toma lá: o redactor do WSJ deve ter caído da cadeira ao transcrever isto. Go-go! Niet
niet, o verão, por aqui, já chegou. mas a imperialzita espera por nós!
abç
Vá lá...que se fodam a família,empresas e nações. Fica a Santíssima Trindade. Aprovo!
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