Author name: InternationalistCommune

TEN – The Tasks in Rebuilding Democratic Modernity

The Tasks in Rebuilding Democratic Modernity I’m not talking about reviving some past “golden age” memories or imagining a new future “utopia.” I wouldn’t consider a proposal in either sense meaningful. Even though the mentality of societies is laden with such thoughts, these recollections and utopias are not explanations or narratives that add much of […]

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9.1 Civilization, Modernity, and the Problem of Crisis

Civilization, Modernity, and the Problem of Crisis Civilization systems with states produce economic depressions by their very structure. These depressions are not incidental events that arise from time to time as a result of the way internal and external factors play out over time and space. The system itself continuously produces depressions (culminating in crises

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NINE – The Reconstruction Problems of Democratic Modernity

The Reconstruction Problems of Democratic Modernity The most tragic aspect of modern revolutions is that they are the victims of the modernism that they contribute to. These revolutions, whose common failure is the inability to analyze their relationship and contradictions with modernism, thought they could nonetheless successfully pursue their objectives. Therefore, these revolutions, with their

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8.3 The Nation-State, Modernity, and Democratic Confederalism

The Nation-State, Modernity, and Democratic Confederalism Modernity’s third and most important discontinuity, the nation-state, is the most fundamental instrumental form of capitalism’s action to conquer and colonize society. While liberalism presents itself as the totality of goals (the sum of ideas), the nation-state represents the fundamental form of power. The most far-reaching conquest and colonization

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8.2 The Industrialism Dimension of Modernity and Democratic Modernity

The Industrialism Dimension of Modernity and Democratic Modernity It is true that our era (our modern way of life) is unprecedentedly dependent on industry. It cannot be denied that the industrial revolution that occurred in the nineteenth century is the second major social revolution after the agricultural revolution. Just as was the case with the

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