anti capitalist musings

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Photo of the European Court of Human Rights building
Britain

The ECHR Debate: Sovereignty, Rights, and the Limits of Law

As Britain debates leaving the European Court of Human Rights, the clash between nationalist zeal, technocratic caution, and left-leaning legalism exposes a deeper struggle over sovereignty, immigration, and the meaning of human rights

Satirical illustration of a coin with two faces: one side shows a smiling Nigel Farage in a suit, the other side shows a stern, frowning Nick Griffin in a suit, symbolising two sides of the same coin
Britain

Operation Restoring Injustice

Nigel Farage’s “Operation Restoring Justice” is nothing new. Strip away the slick staging and media amplification, and it’s the same nativist bile the BNP peddled in the 1990s, only now treated as respectable politics.

An image of a contract torn in half
Football

When Is a Contract Not a Contract?

When star forwards can down tools before the season starts and still win the move, a “contract” is just a polite fiction. Isak and Igamane are the canaries in the coal mine.

Britain

Planes That Will Never Take Off

Planes will never take off, but every promise of mass deportation erodes rights, normalises cruelty, and casts the mob as the voice of the nation.

Review of ‘Reclaiming the Future: A Beginner’s Guide to Planning the Economy’ by Simon Hannah

Simon Hannah’s Reclaiming the Future: A Beginner’s Guide to Planning the Economy is a searing indictment of capitalism’s failures and a powerful call for a democratically planned socialist future. In an era of crisis, this book is essential reading for anyone who refuses to accept that the chaos of the market is the best we can hope for. As capitalist crisis deepens, bringing with it ecological catastrophe, resurgent reactionary politics, and growing inequality, Simon lays out an uncompromising case for a planned economy as the only viable alternative. This is not a work of dry economism or abstract theory; it is a call to arms, a rallying cry against capitalist realism and its false sense of inevitability.

Best of 2024 (books)

In V13: Chronicle of a Trial, Emmanuel Carrère immerses readers in the unprecedented legal aftermath of the 2015 Paris terror attacks, illuminating the harrowing testimonies of survivors, the moral quandaries of justice, and the uneasy search for meaning amid almost unfathomable violence.