Slavery. Barbarism. Social and Environmental Change.

The current condition of society, modern culture, is a relatively recent phenomenon.  It was only 1865 when it became illegal to own a human being.

It is hard to say that when slavery was present it was not a stage of barbarism.  Slavery has its roots in the barbaric period of society, primarily in the mid to upper levels of barbarism.  It would seem that black slavery was the higher stages of barbarism, eventually replaced by capitalism.

A slave was not paid.  That is the most basic essence of slavery, the slave worked for a master who owned him, and was used as forced labour.  In the east slaves were used for domestic purposes, for instance by the Muslim Arabs until fairly recently.

“Slavery was formally outlawed in Saudi Arabia in 1962 by a royal decree from King Faisal.”

Google search: What year did Saudi Arabia abolish slavery?  

Christianity and Islam have much in common. Slavery was practiced in the New World from its discovery by Europeans.  It lasted about 400 years; Spain and France were Catholic countries; clearly the ideology of the slave master was Catholicism. 

The British practiced slavery in the New World too, they were Protestant Christians. Canada was the exception, black slavery was never practiced there.  But the practice was present in America, and continued unabated for 91 years after independence.  

The revolution did not abolish slavery.  The feudal system of economics reigned supreme, with slavery practiced.  Society was still barbaric. It wasn’t until 1863  slavery started to end. 

It was replaced by capitalism; it was cheaper to hire a freeman to create commodities than a slave. Slaves escape, and when this occurred the owner was out the value of money he paid for the slave. They also had to be fed and clothed, and it was cheaper to have a freeman paid as wage labour than to have a slave to labour.

But barbarism is still partially present in capitalism.  The practice of part of the day being worked with no pay may be an advancement from the whole day’s labour being unpaid, but the practice of working for a master and not being paid part of the day has lingered on into modern society.  

It is precisely this relationship that capitalism is based on.  It is rooted in the upper stages of barbarism, patriarchal society.  The arrangement common to barbarians, slavery, was present in the New World.  The slaves were for labouring on large farms, as opposed to Arab domestic slaves I mentioned earlier in this article.  Domestic slavery took place in the New World too, but working slaves were more common in the west.  

The lower stages of barbarism were a more civilized arrangement.  Native Americans owned little property, and hunted and fished as a means of living for thousands of years before the upper stage of barbarism reached them, when Spain, France and Britain arrived.   What they found was a matriarchal society with no state, at least nothing like what we know of  as the state.  There was little property, and no fraud or extortion.   Society was organized in gens, familial and tribal.  A good description of this is found in Friedrich Engels The Origin of the Family, State and Private Property.

The upper stages of barbarism also practiced genocide.  Extermination of the native Americans can hardly be considered civilized.  To qualify that though, the Holocaust should show us just how far we are from barbarism.  Clearly we are still in the upper levels of barbarism.

Ecological society comes at and after the late stages of barbarism. Part of this is when the mechanism that creates the surplus value is uprooted, when the state machinery is placed in the museum.  The state is the mechanism which, paid for with surplus value, the class structure is maintained.  It is slowly going away, as less and less people own property, like joint stock company paper.

Another form of barbarism is the practice of polluting air and water by non metric industry.  And it should be obvious the Republican bourgeoisie are still most connected to ownership of these primitive operations, periodically bailed out by the state.  

Legal rights to pollute the ecology are a part of barbaric modern culture.  Although pollution is inevitable, barbarism and modernism condone  it.

An ecological society will outlaw pollution altogether, recycling and composting are part of this.  These two movements came about out of ecological necessity rather than as a surplus value producer for capitalists.  It may cause pollution to recycle, but it is a recognition of man’s effects on ecology to attempt to remove pollution.  It does not condone pollution, rather accepts it as inevitable sometimes.  Making it legal leads to modern ideas of trading carbon emissions, in other words condoning pollution, just making the more primitive pollution causing factories to have to pay for the right to pollute the air and water.  The fact it is traded on the stock market should be enough to tell us where this is going. Society will no longer condone any pollution, but it will still pollute the ecology, the pollution will not be traded on the stock exchange, speculated on to create a profit.

The feudal system of property, when it was acceptable to own a human being, is only a little over a century away.  In Asia minor it is only 63 years away.  Modern society still retained wage labour; work for a master with no pay for part of the day.  Ecological ideas came in the late modern period. Society will come to relate to ecology as a process of symbiosis, rather than as a source of resources to be exploited by capitalism for surplus value.  

Nicholas Jay Boyes

Milwaukee Wisconsin

American Democratic Republic

9 17 2025

Money Capital.  Interest.  Role of the Central Bank.

Money Capital.  Interest.  Role of the Central Bank. 4 21 2025

“Shortly after markets opened, Trump referred to Powell as a “major loser” on Truth Social and said the U.S. economy could slow without an immediate reduction in the cost of money amid the fallout from his trade war.”

Washington Post 4 21 2025

Note the “cost of money” This refers to money capital that is paid interest for its part in the production of commodities.  The money is first loaned to, for example, an industrial capitalist, who uses the money to produce a commodity,  then sells it, and repays the loan, with interest.

The interest is comes from the part of the surplus value created by the industrial capitalist, he calculates ahead of time that he is going to have to pay the money capitalist interest.  The cost of the money capital is referred to as the price of money.  It is the amount of surplus value that money as a commodity produces when loaned out.

Trump is making the price of money to be lower; Federal Reserve Chair Jerome H. Powell is in charge of this.  Apparently there is a separation of powers agreement that Trump cannot just order interest rates to go down, instead we have Powell sort of independent to make these conclusions.

It may make the price of money lower, but it also must interfere with the average rate of profit.  The interest rate is a tangible condition, and it is speculated on by money capitalists.  Where the money capitalist keeps his money that he expects interest to accumulate on, would seem to have to sort of compete with industrial capital.  If there was more than the average rate of profit to be made on money  capital as opposed to industrial capital, people would invest their money in money capital instead of industrial capital. 

But without industrial capital, there can be no money capital.  There is no goose that lays golden eggs.  The Alchemists of the Middle Ages thought all they had to do was figure out how to make gold and they could have anything they wanted.  They failed to see the process by which productive labour created commodities.  The money capitalists can get so caught up in speculation they forget industrial capital is where money capital comes from. The result is a bubble, where speculation runs rampant, often  on high risk investments, backed by nothing more than paper.

It would seem the bubble is starting to break now, and Trump’s capitalists  want the price of money to be cheaper.  If it is cheaper to get a loan, you can invest the money and bring in more profit by speculating on money capital.  

The irrational form of money as a commodity, which can be bought or sold for a price, would explain why in the previous article I noted the stock market feels they are trading commodities.  The commodity money is bought and sold at the exchange, thus they trade commodities.

The exchange of commodities is not where this surplus value is created.  All wealth is the product of human labor, whether or not it is paid for,.  All this exchanging is a cost of production, money capital is originally a product of productive labour, the surplus value this labour has created is where money capital is derived.   

Thus the foolishness of suggesting exchange of a commodity produces wealth.  The merchant may make trading commodities run more smoothly for the  industrial capitalist, but his wealth is from production. Exchange, even if he does make out like a bandit sometimes, the money he makes is a cost of production for the capitalist, the money comes out of industrial capital’s profit.

The accumulation of money capital has reached absurd amounts, the state’s debt alone is 32 trillion dollars.  In this case it is not even speculation on a material commodity, there is no commodity or production of a commodity speculated on several years down the road.  This practice, paid for by bonds, is also connected to the interest rate.  The federal reserve uses its money it gets paid  the interest rate for, the price of money, to loan out to money capitalists, who loan it to industrial capitalists, to produce commodities.   

Calculation of interest on his profit is where money capital is formed. It has a sort of legal agreement, the money loaned has to be paid back with interest, regardless of if the capitalist made a profit producing commodities.  There is a legal relationship between the leader and burrower,  to pay a certain interest rate on the loan  regardless of if it was used productively.

The price of money is real, and Trump knows what it means. He may not have had experience running a factory, but as a luxury real estate person, he knows what lowering the interest rate will do.  It makes it easier to loan out money capital. Speculation on in the process by those in between the industrial capital and the money capital runs rampant. 

Nicholas Jay Boyes

Milwaukee Wisconsin

American Democratic Republic

edit 9 17 2025

Financial Capital.  A Speculative Bubble. 

At the start of what is looking like what could be a crisis,  the question is if the financial bubble will burst.   The speculation on financial capital is reaching a fevered pitch, with investment in money capital feeding a market that is now further and further away from industrial capital, and is producing a mountain of financial services, hedge funds, money markets, etc.

The bourgeois are in bonds heavily too, speculating on the ability of the state to be able to pay off its debts, with the interest paid for by taxes.

The purpose of circulation capital, merchants capital, is to make the turnover of capital occur more smoothly.  Credit and the large banks are also connected with this, they use the stored money to do banking operations that include loaning out money to capitalists to smooth the exchange of commodities.

But beyond this lies the world of joint stock companies, which are simply companies with several owners.  The stock is a title to ownership of the company, and the companies control capital.

But is all this buying and selling of stocks really a movement of industrial capital?  

To some degree yes.  But it is invested in by money market funds, and other financial services that draw interest from industrial capital.  They are a cost of production, and we should always remember the value of a commodity is the amount of labour contained in it, whether or not it is paid for.  David Ricardo showed us this in his Principles of Political Economy and Taxation.  Clearly circulating capital does not miraculously create value; the exchange of commodities does not create surplus value, what Ricardo called profit (surplus value).  The surplus value is the unpaid section of the workday, based on the amount of labour required to produce a commodity. Profit is calculated on the whole capital expenditure, including the means of production and raw materials.

All this speculation and corresponding financial capital has formed a bubble, and in the end, if it breaks, industrial capital will be all that remains.  And if you are a country that has leveraged other countries resources, with money from the home country, importing much more than exporting, financial capital becomes increasingly more important.

The question becomes how much financial capital has accumulated, and what happens when there is overproduction, and crisis occurs.  At this point large amounts of capital are destroyed, we saw this as the markets were crashing of late. The money is just wiped off, the financial capital rendered useless paper. 

Perhaps this is due to the fact the bank does not produce commodities, rather it is connected with merchant capital, circulating capital.  It also makes the process of production turn over more quickly by means of credit, making turnover more smoothly than if the industrial capitalist had to be the one who had to sell his own commodity.

The banks also invest financial capital in industry, in the 20th century they were quickly becoming ever more powerful.  The ability to gain seats in joint stock companies led to the monopoly conditions, led by JP Morgan, who controlled US Steel, most of the eastern railways, General Motors, etc.  Financial capital was connected with this, he used credit to buy companies, which he obtained through the bank. 

But the question remains how much is financial capital used to simply turnover commodities?  The stock market is still called the ‘“Stock Exchange”, implying something tangible is being exchanged. 

“What does a mercantile exchange do?

“The Merc trades several types of financial instruments: interest rates, equities, currencies, and commodities.

Google search mercantile exchange

“Equities, also known as stocks, represent an ownership stake in a company, giving investors a claim on the company’s assets and earnings. Investors purchase equities to gain potential returns through capital appreciation (an increase in share price) and dividends. The value of equities fluctuates based on market demand, company performance, and economic conditions, making them a popular but inherently risky investment.”

Google search equities

Equities seem to now equal stocks., as the jargon in capitalism changes sometimes; Milton Keynes would have been proud of this one. People buy stocks “to gain potential returns through capital appreciation (an increase in share price) and dividends.”

“Capital appreciation is the increase in an investment’s market value over time, leading to a higher price than its original purchase price. This growth occurs due to factors like increased demand, better asset performance, or favorable market conditions. Investors seek capital appreciation for passive growth, while the actual profit realized from selling an asset is known as a capital gain.”

Google search capital appreciation

So now we know profit results from selling an asset, which is an active relationship of the owner of stocks to his glorified hoard.

“Passive growth” refers to growth achieved without continuous, active effort, appearing in several contexts including investment strategies where wealth accumulates over time with minimal management)….

Google search passive growth

And naturally investors in stocks want to think or do as little as possible, and still be able to wring the surplus value out of the workers, whose labour represent the profit..

” increased demand, better asset performance, or favorable market conditions” as reasons for the exploitation of the proletariat is not clear. There are conditions which make it easier or harder for the bourgeois to reap the profits from is ownership of means of production, referred here to as assets. Sort of a more technical term for the accumulation of capital in stock, obtained upon selling, “capital gain”.

google’s explanations are always witty. I don’t know who writes them. It would not seem to be a task to just let a computer so to say wax philosophically ab.out

The bubble occurs when financial capital is divorced from reality, when circulating capital starts to cease to function,

But it is definitely better to be a producer of commodities than a financial capitalist speculating on  the price of commodities when the crisis comes.  I think that  should be obvious, the bubble may break, and the speculation on financial capital becomes more risky.  The next stage will be in production, when the companies who all rely on China for cheap raw materials and machinery have to pay double for them (Trump’s now on now off again tariffs in 2025).  .   The financial capital may cushion the blow, but when the merchant cannot pay the bill at the port, his creditors will be the first to react.  The spectacle of yards in port, parked, waiting for a consumer, and conversely a working class suffering layoffs and loss of employment, the result of the speculative bubble breaking.  

And there are the exports to China, now tariffed 138% by them to enter, now not tariffed, etc. .   America produces commodities China uses, they may have a huge deficit in overall trade, but they still rely on products from America.  Overproduction will likely occur here too, unless new markets are found for finished commodities. As far as commodities produced in both countries jointly, the tariff would be a real impediment to production.

The speculation on financial capital has created  a bubble.  Overproduction is looking likely, we will probably again see the state in its role to bail out the failing companies and agriculture. We see this taking effect in regard to the threat by Trump to lower the price of money to banks to near nothing. A large subsidy to capitalist industry.  It is also a clever way to use the states money, the segment of surplus value separated off and called taxes, by alternately pulling the taxes out of the surplus value, then returning them to capitalists who are having trouble making a profit. The only question is, is it using the state money to make a profit? The bourgeois has a fetish about state assets capable of making a profit, they are sold off, often at bargain basement prices, to any capitalist who wants to take the risk of running them. I fit is the state making money here, it is quite clever. But it is also not capitalism.

Generally it is agriculture that is subsidized and bailed out; the milk wasted and dumped as it cannot be sold at $2.19 a gallon.  The government paying farmers to dump the milk. At the same time the soup kitchens with long lines, often outdoors in winter.

This is a recurring feature of capitalism.  It may be here again, crisis.  If it is, it was sparked by Donald Trump’s protectionism.  The taxes on imports could cause overproduction, social overproduction, at home and abroad.  He backed off this time, but it could be enough to cause confidence investors had in dealing with Americans to be depleted; how can they be trusted? It is a crisis at least partially of their own making.  

Nicholas Jay Boyes 

Milwaukee Wisconsin

American Democratic Republic

edit 9 13 2025

Presence of Trusts.  Monopoly Conditions. Occam’s Razor.

When looking at the concentration and consolidation of the joint stock companies, the socialization of commodity production must be noted.  As the trusts and monopolies dictate production, they are planning what to build, and how much to charge for the commodities they produce in large factories.  

Agriculture uses the state as a planning organization; the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) disburses tens of billions of dollars to large farmers in an attempt to decide what will be grown, how, and by who.

Competition was used to determine by supply and demand the price of a commodity in the earlier stages of capitalism.  The companies would produce as much as possible to drive their competitor out of business, and to maximize surplus value. The USDA keeps this under control by paying farmers not to grow, a central planning structure indicating socialization of production, under capitalism.  

Production of many of the main commodities, gas and electricity for individual households and businesses, for instance, is owned and controlled by Wisconsin Electric and Gas (WEPCO).  There is no competition, the price is determined by the production of gas from the wells, and coal from the mines, and then wherever WEPCO can get away with selling it for a price they set, not by competition with other companies,it is sold by them ot consumers.

Much of the price of gas and oil, according to the monthly bill, is distribution of gas through the lines, which are wholly owned by WEPCO.  The electricity lines, the high voltage ones, as well as the smaller lines, are all property of WEPCO.  This is a  large part of the cost, and we know WEPCO makes a profit through its ownership of these means of production.  

WEPCO is no longer using nuclear energy;. There is only one electrical generator left in Point Beach, 25 km from Green Bay,the last of Wisconsin’s nuclear energy experiment.  It was built in 1970, and has been running for 55 years now.  It was designed to go about 40 years, but the bourgeois fetish with nuclear energy has meant the constant danger to Green Bay of a meltdown to squeeze another ten  years out of it.

Obviously Point Beach’s days are numbered.  Nuclear energy is too dirty, it leaves a spent reactor and waste product mankind has yet to find a way of safely  disposing of for 100,000 years, the length of time before the waste is safe to be handled by humans again.

There are tons of this stuff just sitting in the spent reactors, a monument to bourgeois disdain for ecology, and future generations who live and use Lake Michigan.  

WEPCO now uses coal and gas for generation of electricity, and with Donald Trump in power this will probably not change, at least not soon.  His idea that climate change is not important should keep coal being used for power generation for some time to come.  Even switching to natural gas looks unlikely as Trump supports coal production.

I have previously noted the state of the grocery markets, the presence of a smaller and smaller number of owners of the stores.  WalMart, Kroger, and Albertsons control most of Milwaukee”s markets.  Piggly Wiggly is Albertsons, Pick and Save is Kroger. These two stores used to have competition, but given they were planning to merge, how much competition are we to believe is occurring?  They planned to remove competition  through a merger, they are no longer together?  

Which ultimately leads to revolutionary activity, such as employee owned stores like Woodmans.  The product is sold at its va;lue, determined by how much labour it contains, whether or not it is paid for. .

The alternative of a cooperative for production, proletarian socialization of industry, is the direction society seems to be traversing.

But there is more.  Karl Marx said “ the antithesis of capital is living labour”.  He meant that the individual doing the labour a capitalist would be doing, instead of the contractor, a capitalist,  is revolutionary.  Doing it yourself also removes the capitalist from production.  Plumbing your own drain, for instance, removes a capitalist company coming with the plumber. This saves money, and the instructions for small repairs of this type are all over YouTube.

Youtube brings us much closer to socialism; there are recipes on it a person can cook themselves, and avoid going to the restaurant, which is owned by a capitalist.  

Living labour is a direction society is starting to traverse more and more, reducing the power of large capitalists.  Setting up a rooftop solar panel system is currently expensive, although it pays for itself eventually.  The panels are becoming cheaper, and it is probably no accident it is China, with “ one country, two systems” that produce 80% of the solar panels. 

A more self-sufficient lifestyle, with labour for one’s self and family, combined with the cooperatives, restricts capitalists from total domination. 

There was a time in the past all manual labour was considered to be something to be avoided.  We see this today as luxury cars, for instance, are equipped with a driverless system.  Even if it was safe, (it will always be like riding a motorcycle), the labour of even driving your own car is unpalatable to the bourgeoisie. Imagine cutting your own wood,  or cooking for yourself?

Things are starting to change.  Many people have had enough of the monopolies controlling their lifestyles, and are ready to start to do more for themselves. Combined with the knowledge that cooperatives work,  the trust’s days may be numbered.  Living labour and a changing pattern of ownership, made necessary due to the lack of competition, where WEPCO owns the gas and electricity, produces the commodities, and sets prices, is shifting towards solar generation from home, and other forms of renewable energy..

Socialization of production is occurring in land ownership for agriculture, and production of commodities in the factories.  The days of small shops and competition have given way to trusts and monopolies in control of society.  A central planning mechanism  by capitalists, dictating what and how much to produce, has taken root. Ownership is increasingly in the hands of a few families, who own the shares of joint stock companies, and reap the surplus value. Manual labour is still considered demeaning to the bourgeoisie who own the stocks, but the amount of energy required to produce the lifestyle of luxury looks increasingly ridiculous. A $150 meal for the family at the restaurant, etc. shows the foolishness of our bourgeoisie, whose waste of energy looks much like Roman society’s extravagance towards the end of their rule.  Luxury production is mostly this, and this bourgeois is in control of the state.  Elon Musk, who produces luxury automobiles; Sheldon Addison, casino owner;  contributed more than 350 million dollars to Trump to get reelected. It worked too. The disdain for manual labour could not possibly be more felt than now.  Imagine Musk cutting his own wood, or making  himself dinner.  It’s just not going to happen.

The trajectory of capitalism has not changed, we are just in its late stages. Pressure for a  simpler life without luxury production is becoming more socially acceptable. The simplest answer is usually the right one, Occam’s Razor, comes into play.  It should be possible to cook a better meal than the restaurant, at a fraction of the cost, and energy usage.  When we get over washing the dishes and cooking,, manual labour,, our vision of society changes. Material conditions change, and with it our consciousness. A quest  to produce it yourself comes to be.

Nicholas Jay Boyes 

Milwaukee Wisconsin

American Democratic Republic

1 20 2025

revision 9 20 2025

from the archives FOXCONN revisited

Foxconn, Wisconsin, and Delusions of Grandeur 10 23 2020

In 2017 Foxconn and Donald Trump announced they would be building an LCD screen factory in Wisconsin.  Mount Pleasant was chosen to host the factory, south of Milwaukee, near Racine Wisconsin.

This was when the bourgeois Paul Ryan was speaker of the House of Representatives, the congressman from the district of what was promised by Foxconn to be a huge project.  Scott Walker, another Republican bourgeois, was governor then.  Donald Trump came to Wisconsin to officially open the project, digging the first shovel of soil in 2018 with the leader of Foxconn, Terry Gou.

It was done with fanfare, and reported by the press as a major accomplishment for Trump and his followers Paul Ryan and Scott Walker.   But from the start there were strange things about the factory, a 4 billion dollar state subsidy approved by Scott Walker, that was to arrive as 250 million dollars a year to Foxconn.  There was also the diversion of 7 million gallons a day of water from Lake Michigan, which was to be returned polluted.

Along the same lines there was little or no Environmental Impact Statement, the project was simply approved by the government to go forward.  

Perhaps at this point it should have been clear something was wrong with this picture.  There were no protests, but opposition to the factory due to ecological concerns was common among the people who inhabited the regions near the Great Lake that was going to be polluted to make the LCD Screens, with heavy metals.  It was also going to create air pollution on a large scale.

But the project seemed to be going through, and by 2018 work was underway building the beginnings of the factory. There were huge buildings constructed on land that had to be removed from the residents, often against their will.   A dome started to take shape, and the factory was being built.  The state and local government began investing 400 million dollars into construction of roads and bridges for the factory in Mount Pleasant. 

“Hopes were high among the employees who joined Foxconn’s Wisconsin project in the summer of 2018. In June, President Donald Trump had broken ground on an LCD factory he called “the eighth wonder of the world.” The scale of the promise was indeed enormous: a $10 billion investment from the Taiwanese electronics giant, a 20 million-square-foot manufacturing complex, and, most importantly, 13,000 jobs.

“Which is why new recruits arriving at the 1960s office building Foxconn had purchased in downtown Milwaukee were surprised to discover they had to provide their own office supplies. “One of the largest companies in the world, and you have to bring your own pencil,” an employee recalls wondering. Maybe Foxconn was just moving too fast to be bothered with such details, they thought, as they brought their laptops from home and scavenged pencils left behind by the building’s previous tenants. They listened to the cries of co-workers trapped in the elevators that often broke, noted the water that occasionally leaked from the ceiling, and wondered when the building would be transformed into the gleaming North American headquarters an executive had promised.

“The renovations never arrived. Neither did the factory, the tech campus, nor the thousands of jobs. Interviews with 19 employees and dozens of others involved with the project, as well as thousands of pages of public documents, reveal a project that has defaulted on almost every promise. The building Foxconn calls an LCD factory — about 1/20th the size of the original plan — is little more than an empty shell. In September, Foxconn received a permit to change its intended use from manufacturing to storage.

“Soon, the office began to fill with people who had nothing to do. Many just sat in their cubicles watching Netflix and playing games on their phones.

The Verge 

The Eighth Wonder of the World

10 23 2020

Foxconn was attempting to gain state money to build by gaming the system to make it look like they had been hiring, as the subsidy was based on how many employees they had hired. The office for Foxconn was being packed full of bureaucrats, to make the required number of employees to be able to get the Treasury’s money to keep building.  

It was the employees who began to see there was something wrong, that Foxconn was not what it seemed.  Working for Foxconn was a rough job, with no real work to do in the office, in a broken down old building.  

“Even the handful of jobs the company claims to have created are less than real: many of them held by people with nothing to do, hired so the company could reach the number required for it to get tax subsidy payments from Wisconsin. Foxconn failed at that objective, too: last week, Wisconsin rejected the company’s subsidy application and found it had employed only 281 people eligible under the contract at the end of 2019. Many have since been laid off.

“Foxconn did not return repeated requests for comment.

“It’s not unusual for either the Trump administration or Foxconn to make announcements that prove hollow. But for Foxconn, the show went on — for two years, the company, aided by the vocal support of the Wisconsin GOP, worked to maintain an illusion of progress in front of a business venture that never made economic sense.

The Verge ibid.

The jobs never came, and Foxconn would not get their subsidy.  But the money for the roads and bridges would be spent, all to host what was supposed to employ 13,000 workers, at a 10 billion dollar investment.  

The illusion Foxconn had of a partially completed factory that would soon be producing LCD Screens continued for several years, until now, where it is now obvious there will be no 10 billion dollar LCD factory in Mount Pleasant.  But in the leadup to this realization, the Republican bourgeoisie tried to mislead the public about the progress made by Terry Gou and his Foxconn factory.   

“That illusion has had real costs. State and local governments spent at least $400 million, largely on land and infrastructure Foxconn will likely never need. Residents were pushed from their homes under threat of eminent domain and dozens of houses bulldozed to clear property Foxconn doesn’t know what to do with. And a recurring cycle of new recruits joined the project, eager to help it succeed, only to become trapped in a mirage. 

“Foxconn would spend the next two years jumping from idea to idea — fish farms, exporting ice cream, storing boats — in an increasingly surreal search for some way to generate money from a doomed project. Frequent leadership changes, a reluctance to spend money, and a domineering corporate culture would create an atmosphere employees described as toxic. Many of the employees The Verge spoke with have since left the company, and all of them requested anonymity out of fear of retaliation. It has been a baffling ordeal for the people who thought they were building the Silicon Valley of the Midwest — “Wisconn Valley,” Walker called it — all the more so because so many others still believe the vision.

The Verge ibid.

The broken promise of an LCD factory led to attempts to figure out how Foxconn could possibly make a profit doing something other than producing LCD Screens.  By this time desperation was starting to set in, and it was clear the factory would never produce LCD’s, or any commodity for that matter.

“Foxconn’s Wisconsin saga began two days after Trump’s inauguration, when the company’s founder and CEO, Terry Gou, told reporters he was considering building a $7 billion factory in the US and employing as many as 50,000 people.

“A contract with WEDC (Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation, a state-run organization that administers the Foxconn deal and approves the tax subsidies if the hiring quotas are met) signed in November made it official: nearly $3 billion in “refundable” tax credits, most likely to be made in the form of direct payments to Foxconn. Combined with infrastructure the state promised to build, approximately $800 million in additional incentives mostly from the small town of Mount Pleasant, where the “Fab” was to be located, and other contributions, the package totaled more than $4 billion. In a best-case scenario, the Legislative Fiscal Bureau found the state wouldn’t break even until 2043. Depending on how many people Foxconn hired, each job would cost taxpayers somewhere between $200,000 and more than a million dollars. The average subsidy in the US is around $24,000 per job. 

“Such announcements are far from unusual for Gou, and often, nothing comes of them. In Vietnam in 2007, in Brazil in 2011, in Pennsylvania in 2013, and in Indonesia in 2014, Foxconn announced enormous factories that either fell far short of promises or never appeared. Just this year, the industries minister of Maharashtra, India, which aggressively pursued one of Gou’s multibillion-dollar projects in 2015, finally confirmed the factory isn’t coming, saying the state had learned a lesson about believing businesses promising big investments.

Ibid.

Yet the illusion of Foxconn building in Wisconsin continued, and the subsidy for building was not negated until 2020, when a new governor, a member of the liberal progressive bourgeoisie Tony Evers, removed the subsidy. 

“…the 1,040 people Foxconn intended to hire by the end of 2018, per its contract with the state, or even the 260 needed in order to receive subsidies, an audit found the company had managed to hire only 113. At the Mount Pleasant campus, it had erected a single structure, a 120,000-square-foot space that sat virtually empty. Its very name, “the multi-purpose building,” seemed noncommittal. As for the promised LCD factory, the “Fab,” Foxconn boasted in a letter that a contractor had moved 4 million cubic yards of dirt. As 2018 came to an end, the company froze budgets and canceled planned career fairs. The project entered a complete stall. 

“Foxconn’s vacillations spilled into public view in January 2019, when Woo told Reuters, “In Wisconsin we’re not building a factory,” having finally discovered it was unprofitable to make LCDs in the US. The comment caused an uproar. State Republicans swiftly blamed Evers for driving Foxconn out; the administration expressed surprise at the change; Trump spoke with Gou, and Foxconn immediately announced that LCD production was back on. “Great news on Foxconn in Wisconsin after my conversation with Terry Gou!” Trump tweeted, claiming credit for bringing Foxconn to Wisconsin a second time.

Ibid.

In Works volume 4 I detailed when this occurred, Terry Gou’s admitting the factory could not be built in Wisconsin, as there was no way the company could compete in America. It looked like the end of Foxconn, until Donald Trump intervened to keep the illusion going, saying he was keeping the project going. At this point many of us were starting to question whether or not the factory would go forward.

“If the factory was meant to earn Trump’s goodwill, the January incident showed that the company couldn’t simply vanish as it had elsewhere. Foxconn was stuck in Wisconsin, and it needed to find a way to cut its losses. Employees at every level of the project were enlisted in a search for something — anything — Foxconn could do to generate revenue.

“In meetings at Racine’s City Hall, Foxconn representatives and city officials started developing a plan, elements of which Racine submitted to a competition called the Smart Cities Readiness Challenge in 2019: camera-festooned autonomous vehicles would patrol high-crime areas, the city said in its proposal, guided by 5G cells mounted on lamp posts. Self-driving vehicles — retrofitted golf carts at first, then shuttles as soon as 2020 — would ferry Racine’s workers to Foxconn’s campus. Foxconn, the city noted in the submission, was a “particularly important stakeholder” and would help provide financing and technology. 

“But when city officials started asking basic questions about the sort of infrastructure they needed to build in order to accommodate Foxconn’s technology, Foxconn employees found they were unable to get clear answers from the company. “They were losing confidence, and then we parade in more new shiny ponies, and more people who couldn’t answer what should have been easy questions,” an employee said.

“Foxconn only ever got as far as buying the golf carts. They arrived from China disassembled, in orange, pink, and other festive colors. One employee described them as “the biggest pieces of shit,” like something “bought off Wish.com.” Unable to make them autonomous, Foxconn put them in storage in the multipurpose building. At one point, the company discussed outfitting them with lights and turning them into security vehicles, but the subsidiary in charge of security refused to pay FEWI (Flying Eagle Wisconsin, the Foxconn subsidiary run by Alan Yeung initially tasked with laying the foundation for the Wisconsin project) for the carts, according to one employee. As the divisions bickered, bored employees would come down from the Milwaukee headquarters to race the carts around the empty building, until the batteries finally died.

Ibid.

It looks like Racine was easily fooled by promises of high tech industrial development from capitalists; in the form of a company from Taiwan, that would make a massive amount of profit doing manufacturing in Mount Pleasant. The fraud is a product of the more reactionary bourgeois desperation to appear to be making progress by partnering with large capitalist companies, that society would miraculously prosper if the workers just accepted their leadership, and supported them.

Racine should have known they were being taken, that Scott Walker was not telling them the whole truth about who was going to invest in their city.  But their trust of Republicans led them to believe the false promises delivered by a billionaire with the support of Donald Trump, Paul Ryan. and Scott Walker. 

“Earlier partnerships announced with local companies like Rockwell Automation had been followed by total silence. (Employees say they quickly fizzled; Rockwell did not return a request for comment.) Of the $100 million gift Gou promised the University of Wisconsin-Madison, the school confirmed that only $700,000 ever arrived.

“The original plan had been grandiose: the sphere was to be the dot in the “i” of a complex of data centers spelling out “Fii” (Foxconn Industrial Internet)  when viewed from the air. But according to three employees, Foxconn balked at the cost. An employee with knowledge of the project said that Foxconn finally moved forward with the sphere — and only the sphere — when the architect told the company it had to put a deposit down for the steel if construction was going to finish in time for a long-promised visit from Trump.

“But the building without the data centers was just a glass orb in a field — at best, “really, really, really expensive office space,” in the words of one employee. Adding to Fii’s troubles, FEWI (Flying Eagle Wisconsin, the Foxconn subsidiary run by Alan Yeung initially tasked with laying the foundation for the Wisconsin project.), also trying to cut its losses, had “tricked” Fii into buying more land than was needed for the sphere, according to a second employee. A Foxconn executive briefly entertained an elegant solution, according to two employees: starting a Foxconn tree farm, so the company could get free trees for the terrarium-like interior of the sphere that Gou wanted, and sell the excess trees for profit.

“It’s endless,” said an employee, noting with frantic exasperation that the sorts of tropical trees Foxconn wanted can’t even grow in Wisconsin’s climate. “When you’re desperate and you have no product to sell and the only asset you have is land, what can you do? You build on it or you grow crops on it.”

Ibid.

The sphere now sits empty in Mount Pleasant, Wisconsin, surrounded by farmland.  There are roads to it though, thanks to the state that picked up the costs of building them to the factory.  The buildings that were supposed to be factories are now considered useful for storage.  Their official purpose is now this, storage.

“In many ways, the Foxconn debacle in Wisconsin is the physical manifestation of the alternate reality that has defined the Trump administration. Trump promised to bring back manufacturing, found a billionaire eager to play along, and now for three years the people of Wisconsin have been told to expect an LCD factory that plainly is not there. Into the gap between appearance and reality fell people’s jobs, homes, and livelihoods.

“The buildings Foxconn has erected are largely empty. The sphere has no clear purpose. The innovation centers are still vacant. The heart of the project, the million-square-foot “Fab,” is just a shell. In what an employee says was a final cost-cutting measure, only the portion that was to host the Trump visit was ever finished. Recent documents show the “Fab,” once intended for use as manufacturing, has been reclassified as a massive storage facility.

“WEDC, as part of its audit of the company’s 2019 subsidy application, had Foxconn survey its employees about what they were working on. Not a single respondent mentioned LCDs because no one is working on LCDs, and they never were.

“The project has fallen orders of magnitude short of its hiring and investment targets. WEDC found Foxconn had only 281 eligible employees at the end of 2019, 13 percent of what it had originally aimed for. (Many of the employees Foxconn tried to claim were paid too little or hired too late in the year to get a paycheck in 2019.) After this year’s layoffs, it is nowhere near meeting its 2020 target of 5,200 employees. Foxconn itself acknowledged, in its subsidy submission, that it has so far invested 2.8 percent of the $10 billion it promised. It has built less than 2 percent of the 20 million square feet of manufacturing space it originally planned. 

“The company’s desperate quest to maintain appearances caused it to fail repeatedly and in ways more destructive than mere ordinary failure would have been: local businesses were strung along, civil servants spent years figuring out what the company is doing, residents were removed from land the company didn’t need, and again and again recruits were lured in by the vision of a grand manufacturing renaissance in Wisconsin.

“That vision got Gou regular access to the White House during a trade war and gave Trump a groundbreaking and almost a ribbon-cutting, too. But maintaining the mirage required a culture of secrecy. Employees were warned not to talk to the press (including, specifically, me). Many were afraid to speak — afraid of getting fired, or of retribution even after they’d left. Publicly, the company issued announcement after announcement — innovation centers, career fairs, smart cities, AI 8K+5G, the AI Institute — each one erasing the memory of the last missed deadline. (One employee quipped that one of the few things Foxconn succeeded in making in Wisconsin was press releases.) The illusion was defended by GOP officials at all levels of government, from Mount Pleasant to the State Assembly to the White House, who accused anyone pointing out that the project was off track of trying to scuttle it for partisan ends, as if the existence of the factory were open to debate and positive thinking might make it real. 

“…in actual reality, the project has succeeded in manufacturing mostly this: an endless supply of wonderful things for the President to promise his supporters. This past weekend, in an interview with a local Wisconsin TV station, Trump insisted Foxconn had built “one of the most incredible plants I’ve ever seen” in Mount Pleasant and would keep its promises and more if he was reelected. 

The Verge

10 22 20

It was another Trump promise that was an illusion. The grandiose claims of 13,000 jobs, 10 billion dollars for a small town in Wisconsin, was designed to fool people to support him.

Clearly all that would have occurred if Scott Walker was still Governor, and Paul Ryan Congressman, was the fraud would have continued.

But in the end it had to fail, and reality to make itself felt.  It was after hundreds of millions of dollars were spent by the state to build the roads, bridges, etc. to support the Foxconn factory, which will never make LCD Screens, or employ 13,00 people.  

The factory is a monument to an illusion, and illusion of a bourgeois with worldly connections bringing investment into small town Wisconsin.  Although the office referred to in the article was in Milwaukee, Racine and Mount Pleasant are more like suburbs, the latter mostly rural.  It was to convince Trump’s rural following he could deliver investment, and this would result in prosperity.

It seems to have failed.  It is a relief that the LCD Screens will never be produced here, as it would damage the ecology of Lake Michigan, which is why I was always against it.  Hopefully if anything is produced there, it will have to have a real Environmental Impact Statement, not the farce we were handed last time.  But in reality, it looks like nothing will ever be produced there.  It is a dream of something that was an illusion, like Trump’s vision of America, that society would progress if everyone just believed capitalism was working. 

Nicholas Jay Boyes

Milwaukee Wisconsin

10 23 2020

From the Archive Article about Thomas Malthus

A Paradigm Shift Away from Laissez Faire Economic Ideas 5 1 2021

There is an idea that had gained traction in the 80’s in particular, that was if capitalists made large profits, and used the money as revenue, the workers would benefit.  This idea was called”laissez faire “.  There were also fantasies about not having to use the state to prop up capitalist industry.

The presence of this large group of people who are mostly service workers, producing mostly luxuries, restaurant workers, for instance, is part of capitalist industry.  Every increase in productivity displaces workers in industry; the machinery becomes more advanced, the labour less skilled, or redundant with the advances in machinery.  

This creates a constant industrial reserve army of workers, what Marx called attention to, who are lucky to find employment, and it is often unskilled if they do, as the job the worker used to do has been eliminated.   It is replaced with a machine, and an unskilled worker.

These workers who have been shed by modern industry are often forced into luxury production, or used as some form of menial servant.  The service industry is basically this.  This is supposed to be  a consolation for a displaced worker, that the wealth will trickle down somehow when the bourgeois create capital through the exploitation of the worker, and the worker can become a low wage service worker now that he is no longer producing necessary commodities.

They spend their revenue on these luxury goods, which do not increase profits.  Luxury production is not goods for the workers to consume.  This form of production is for the bourgeoisie, and is for them an expenditure, rather  than an investment. 

The jobs this supports are not much different  from menial servants, which are what Malthus suggested the workers should be thankful for; a large number of workers displaced by industrial progress harnessed by capitalists who are reduced to menial servants. We see this in the number of service occupations that are not far removed from Mathus’s menial servants.

There is more profit to be made as industry progresses, and machinery that displaces workers increases surplus value when productivity increases. It creates the industrial reserve army of workers, a capitalist phenomenon.  The work is unskilled, and throttling the capitalist mechanism forward creates these workers. 

Perhaps they could content themselves as being porters, barmaids, massage workers, etc.  The surplus value has to go somewhere, its production can only be reinvested to a certain degree.  The population rising justifies the surplus; it is for more workers to be able to labour. 

But what happens to the surplus when the workers can only consume so much of it, as they are paid wages that are not able to consume all they are producing?  If they were paid the value of their labour by the capitalist, there would no longer be a capitalist.  The whole system is based on producing a surplus, and it has to be consumed somehow.  

This provided Malthus and the bourgeois a way out, namely increasing the number of servants and menial labourers.  This would seem to be a root of the laissez faire economic ideas which were popular in the  80’s.

Advancement of machinery lowers the value of the product.  It is not the fault of machinery the capitalist relationship of exploitation exists.  It is a social order, a historical condition. It is the way it is used, that more expensive machinery reduces the workers control of the means of production.  

The presence of large numbers of people who are in menial labour indicates a surplus is coming from somewhere, supporting the unproductive classes.  Trickle down ideas justified the increased number of these people.

But the question of if it really did is being rejected.  It may have created more capital, but it increased the proportion of the working class, and left about 1,000 families in control of most of the joint stock companies shares.  They control the surplus value, and laissez faire was a theory that supported them.  The idea of the state money being somehow separate from profit was just plain silly, every crisis bailouts of trillions of dollars occurs with the state money. 

This is because taxes come from profit, and it is claimed by those who pay into the pot, so to speak, of state money.  It is used in times of crisis to keep the business making a profit.

Clearly all capitalists do this.  Yet they suggest the state should have less role in capitalist industry, which is a contradiction.

But the question of where the surplus goes that cannot be reinvested seems to be answered by expenditure of revenue by our capitalist.  The unproductive expenditure would seem to be at odds with abstinence, which is often preached as justification for a bourgeois to have gotten control of business and made a profit, allowing for them to exploit the working class. 

On one hand you have the capitalist wanting more consumption of his commodity, on the other hand his workers are paid minimum wage, and expected to be spendthrifty.

The consumption of luxury items and menial servants, the basis of the restaurant industry, is from the surplus value created in production for capitalist enjoyment.  It doesn’t matter to them the dishwasher or busboy is an unskilled worker getting minimum wage, working 12 hours a day.  This is supposed to be right, the wealth is trickling down.  But from the perspective of the worker the condition is considerably different.  On one hand you have massive wealth, accumulating capital, on the other an industrial reserve army of workers, who have to labour in luxury production or as service workers for the minimum of wages.  Trickle down economics not only justifies their position,  it perpetuates the exploitation of a class who is destined to labour. 

Nicholas Jay Boyes

Milwaukee Wisconsin

American Democratic Republic

5 1 2021

From the Archive: Historical Points on the Ecological Era. Afghanistan War Remembered 3 Years Later

Events in Afghanistan as the Army Leaves There 8 14 2021

As Joseph Biden prepares to completely leave Afghanistan on the 31st of August, 2021, the Taliban has made enormous gains in placing areas under their control. The major cities are falling daily, the Taliban now close to conquering Kabul, the largest city and the Capital.

Biden has said ““One more year, or five more years, of U.S. military presence would not have made a difference if the Afghan military cannot or will not hold its own country. And an endless American presence in the middle of another country’s civil conflict was not acceptable to me,” Biden added.” in the Washington Post.

It is a bold move to end the 20 year long war, started by Republican George Bush II. It’s been a Republican war, with Donald Trump pumping up the air war, like George Bush II did. Barack Obama did keep the war effort going; but it was something he inherited from George II. Under his rule they got Bin Laden, mastermind of the attacks on the New York skyscrapers. They found him in Pakistan, living comfortably in a modest house with a garden. He was killed by the Americans, mostly as revenge. But the war was started by George II, and perpetuated by Trump.

Since the start of the war, there was always the question of what the goals were. It was for capitalism, obviously, but it was never really enunciated clearly, as it was in Iraq. There it was nationalized oil, which was an accomplishment of the Baath Socialist Party. Thus overthrow the government, and get the wells back under Exxon Mobil and Chevron making a profit again. The invasion of Kuwait started with the wells there being nationalized by Saddam Hussein. The goals were clear, not to allow for the petroleum to be the property of the Iraqi people through nationalized ownership, as they were under the Baath Party.

But Afghanistan always sort of looked like revenge. Why was it necessary for George II to go to war? To get even with the Taliban for attacking New York, but it could have been handled differently with more level headed thinking. Iran is currently under American sanctions, and it drives them nuts. It can seriously hinder the regular functioning of the ruling class. Afghanistan could have simply been put under sanctions, until they gave up Bin Laden. It may have not been as severe a punishment viewed by all the world’s people, a message not to fight the Americans. But it may have averted what is now obviously becoming a military failure the minute the Afghans have to fight for themselves.

George II, like Donald Trump, did not command a majority in universal suffrage. Yet George II was fighting “dictatorship vs. democracy”. Trump too, often called his bourgeoisie “pro democracy”. This was connected to the 9/11 incident; the rest of the world did not see the legitimacy of George II as a leader of democracy, and someone attacked the country under his leadership. It was like Trump, everybody knew he did not command a majority, yet we were all expected to go along with it.

It was George II’s war, he was a “war president”. The Republican bourgeoisie he represented should be remembered as having started the war, Biden’s liberal progressive bourgeois the end of it.

The Taliban came to power fighting the Soviet Union, and they were trained and armed by the Americans in the war against the Soviets. They found them in Pakistan’s religious schools, where the Taliban would claim their name from, Taliban means “student” in Pashtun. They were recruited to fight by the Americans, and they defeated the Russians.

The point is, the bourgeois taught these people how to fight, and they turned against them. Now it looks like the Americans and their NATO European Union support have also lost the war there. Kabul may fall shortly, as have Kandahar, Herat, etc. Short of something strange happening, Afghanistan is lost. The war is ending, without a victory for NATO or the Americans. No profit is going to be made there, the investment of a trillion dollars in the war effort there for 20 years is lost.

There are Republicans who still want to fight war there, but given the failure of the Afghan Army, it certainly looks like the only thing that was stopping the Taliban from taking power was the presence of the American Army there. The minute NATO and Americans pulled people out of there, the country started falling. They had 20 years to train the Afghans, would another 20 years be enough for them to take care of themselves?

Biden may be in favor of the Embargo against Cuba, and upset with China. But under his leadership the country is making a hard choice that Trump was unable to make; to extricate themselves from a conflict that they were not winning. Although not everybody agrees with it, he did attain the sanction of universal suffrage to govern, and it was his decision based on the will of the majority. Perhaps that above all else will be remembered in the end.

Nicholas Jay Boyes

Milwaukee Wisconsin

American Democratic Republic

8 14 2021

Here’s another one from the archive:

Afghanistan Falls to the Taliban 8 19 2021

On the 15th of August, 2021, America lost the war against Afghanistan. The largest city, the capital Kabul, fell to the Taliban. The rest of the country by this point was mostly under Taliban control, and the capital falling ended America’s 20 year war, which was a failure.

A nonessential evacuation order (NEO) followed, with a scene resembling the fall of Saigon, an airlift operation from the airport in Kabul. The rush of thousands of Afghans and others attempting to board aircraft to escape resulted in several deaths, with some clinging to military aircraft during takeoff.

About a day later, the military part of the airport was up and running again, with a few thousand Army men guarding the retreating Americans. The press was able to exit, and a few thousand Americans, some diplomats.

Ashraf Ghani, the hand picked diplomat who was running the government, fled to the United Arab Emirates, where he is currently. He fled the country as the government fell, NATO and the American’s leader who was responsible for Afghanistan.

Joseph Biden joins the ranks of Harry Truman, who lost in Korea, John F. Kennedy, who failed to stop the Cuban revolution, and Gerald Ford, who saw the loss of Vietnam. The repeated failure of the Army to win victories against people in the developing world, in this case against a group with no aircraft, in the face of a massive aerial bombing campaign, showed again the weakness of the bourgeoisie, unable to stop peasants after 20 years and more than a trillion dollars spent, on the Afghan Army.

For years we were used to hearing the desperation of the Taliban, when the Americans were losing it was due to suicide bombers, etc. The way it looks now is the minute they started pulling out the men, which Donald Trump had originally agreed to, but could not as he was not elected, Biden was instead, and Afghanistan fell to the Taliban. If anything Biden delayed the inevitable; Trump said May 20th the war would end, BIden was 2 months later.

Yet the Republicans, and some Democrats, are suggesting this was Biden’s fault, that he misled the people by ending war there. We all know Trump’s agreements were often lies, that he often said he would do something, then failed to carry out his decisions; that things would have looked different if Joseph Biden had not commanded a majority of 7 million votes to Trump.

The only difference would have been we all know Trump was lying when he agreed to remove the American Army on May 20th.

Joe Biden stuck to his word, and honored the agreement, and the rest is history. Biden’s decision was a courageous one, standing up the Pentagon in a war started by Republicans under George Bush II, continued by Barack Obama and Donald Trump. The bourgeois finally had to admit the war was costing them men, and was not returning treasure or profits. Even if there was victory, Afghanistan would never have brought the Americans the trillion dollars they spent there in the war. The people they had in their proxy army were mostly illiterate, some even had trouble taking basic commands, like adding up numbers.

Like Vietnam, the airlift is bringing back the bourgeoisie and their supporters from the Kabul airport, many lucky to have saved the skin on their backs. It is not clear how long the Nonessential Evacuation Order will take to be completed, perhaps until the Taliban have had enough. There are still thousands of people trying to fly out of Kabul, and only the military side of the airport is still flying.

It remains to be seen if this is a once in a generation spectacle. Syria was also lost, although it was not as clear looking. Trump had bombed Syria many times, and the Americans are not in control of Syria, Bashar Assad is still in power. They always said removal of Assad was the goal of the Army being deployed there. Another failure, although a slower less sensational one.

The war this time lasted 20 years, the longest yet, only to result in a loss. It must be quite demoralizing, to have lost thousands of men and a trillion dollars, in a small country without even an air force. George II got them into it, and was unable to win; Obama inherited what looks now like a hopeless battle from George II. It was remarkable it lasted this long, the pandemic made fighting in a conflict overseas without vaccinations, Trump’s predicament, impossible to maintain. Even with vaccines, the virus is still spreading, and more than 600,000 people in America have died from Covid 19. The military is just now starting to receive orders to vaccinate all their people. Not good conditions to be tooling around the other side of the world trying to stop peasant rebellion.

The blame lies with the first efforts to support the Taliban against the Soviet Union, which they won. But look what was left behind, the Taliban in power. The same group they armed and trained overthrew their American supported government. The rest of the blame lies with the Republican bourgeoisie, who chose war over sanctions when the skyscrapers were attacked in 2001.

They did get Bin Laden, but revenge was the main motive keeping the conflict going. With only capitalism the motive for fighting, things finally came to a head in August of 2021, when the Army they created was conquered, mostly without even a fight. The flight of Ashraf Ghani to the UAE symbolically ended the foreign invasion of Afghanistan.

Nicholas Jay Boyes

Milwaukee Wisconsin

American Democratic Republic

8 19 2021

Wait there’s more:

The American Occupation of Afghanistan Ends 8 30 2021

The last flight left Afghanistan loaded with the soldiers, ending almost exactly 20 years of war. The pictures of the helicopters evacuating the diplomats from the rooftop a powerful symbol of the end of American intervention in Afghanistan.

It was the second superpower to lose a war there in less than 50 years. First it was the Soviet Union that was removed from Afghanistan in 96’ by the Taliban, with American assistance. They supported the rebels who fought the war against the Communist Party there, and successfully removed the government the Soviet Union had established there.

The same Taliban would refuse to surrender Bin Laden, mastermind of the attacks in 2001 that struck the skyscrapers in New York. Bin Laden, who came from a royal family in Saudi Arabia, would eventually be caught in Pakistan, although at some point he was living in Afghanistan, according to the Americans.

America’s longest war would last 20 years, cost trillions of dollars, yet end in a retreat from the last remaining enclave of control, the Kabul airport. They airlifted a little over 100,000 people in a period of a few weeks; the spectacle of thousands of Afghans who got on the tarmac was another memorable event, much like the airlift from Saigon in 1975.

They got most of the Americans out, anyone left is now on their own in an Afghanistan no longer under the Americans and NATO. The last of the diplomats left, their embassy shuttered, its contents destroyed in order to keep it secret from the Taliban.

The agreement Donald Trump made with the Taliban to leave and end the war was accomplished by Joseph Biden, something that escaped the former, who tried to suggest if he won the election the soldiers would stop fighting by May. We all know Trump was notorious for lying, we came to expect it in the 4 years he was in power. The epitome of Trump lying was his suggestion that the landslide victory of Biden by 7 million votes in suffrage was a fraud. There are still some believers who think someone like me would vote twice.

Voting twice is fraud, Punishment for fraud includes the following: Jail or Prison sentence: A misdemeanor conviction could carry a sentence of up to a year in a local jail, while a felony conviction carries a maximum sentence of 20 to 30 years in federal prison. How would you like to have that on your criminal record? You would never get a job again. The idea that there were thousands of Milwaukeeans who voted twice is being entertained by the State Legislature here of late. Although Joe Biden was preferable to Trump, finding even a dozen ballots cast twice simply has not happened.

The point is we were used to the Republican bourgeoisie and their bold faced lies, and the argument seems to be that Trump would have changed his mind and the Taliban would not have taken power.

So here we are again, like lifting the mask mandates, something the Republicans said they wanted, a May 20th return of the Army home from Afghanistan they are now rejecting. The Covid 19 pandemic continues, the reactionaries afraid that getting vaccinated is really a shot that is going to affect your mind, and you will start liking Joe Biden and Nancy Pelosi.

So here we go again, their own decisions resulting in reality. The pandemic is raging in the South, more than a thousand dead a day; Florida, Texas, Alabama etc. the epicenters of the Delta variant of Covid, due to the politicization of masks and vaccination by the Republicans,

All Biden did is do what Trump told us he wanted to do, like stopping mask mandates, ending the war, etc. It’s been their own decisions that have gotten them to where they are today, there is noone to blame but themselves.

And it was the Republican bourgeoisie who were in power when the war started, under similar conditions. Like Donald Trump, George Bush II did not command a majority in universal suffrage, yet it was “democracy vs dictatorship” in Iraq and Afghanistan. George II could have simply applied trade sanctions on Afghanistan, until they gave up Bin Laden.

Instead 20 years, trillions of dollars, and no treasure returning, American companies making a profit by employing Afghan workers, etc.

They taught the Taliiban how to overthrow the government when they fought the Soviet Union. They won, but in time the knowledge they gave them came back to haunt the Americans. The Taliban, armed with no airplanes; only guns, rocket launchers, and landmines have overthrown what was once a superpower. The nuclear weapons did not help them, or the night vision goggles, stealth aircraft, etc.

The Taliban are not a western movement. The ideas they have did not agree with the Soviet Union either. Are we really to believe that Nato and the Americans value the rights of women more than the Soviets did?

Yet the more liberal ideas of the west are trumpeted as what was lost to the Taliban. They could have just left Russia in control of Afghanistan and the rights of women if anything would be better than what the occupation brought. Equality was a value of the communists the Taliban removed in 96”.

We will soon see what the effects of this loss of territory means to places still occupied, like Iraq. If the oil gets nationalized again we will know for sure they lost. When ExxonMobil and Shell no longer pump the oil there will be no treasure returning home to American capitalists. Departures from bourgeois society such as industry capable of making profit that is not owned by capitalists always proves to be controversial.

It is not clear what Afghanistan is moving towards with the removal of Russia first than the Americans. But it was the fault of the bourgeoisie they are where they are today.

Nicholas Jay Boyes

Milwaukee Wisconsin

American Democratic Republic

8 30 2021

Taxes on Imports.  Attempts to Limit China’s Exports by Raising Taxes here on Commodities. 

Taxes on Imports.  Attempts to Limit China’s Exports by Raising Taxes here on Commodities.  11 29 2024

The cockeyed idea that you can control production from another country of commodities in demand worldwide by raising taxes on the import of these commodities is running into difficulties.  The idea that the American market can pressure China to produce less Electric Vehicles (EV’s)  and Solar Panels, by taxing imports; tariffs, seems to be an argument that without Americans to consume China’s production, they will be unable to sell their EV’s and solar panels. What this view lacks is the recognition that the production of high quality finished goods, which will easily find a market elsewhere, are making the taxes only bite the consumers, primarily American workers, who consume cheap Chinese products at Dollar Stores, WalMart, etc.   

The latest complaint is capitalist production cannot compete with China’s socialist system.

“China is too large to export its way to rapid growth and would benefit by reducing excess industrial capacity which is pressuring other economies, Yellen said in remarks to an audience of about 40 representatives of the American Chamber of Commerce in Guangzhou.”

“”Overcapacity isn’t a new problem, but it has intensified, and we’re seeing emerging risks in new sectors,” Yellen said in China’s southern export hub of Guangzhou, where she met with Vice Premier He Lifeng and Guangdong Province Governor Wang Weizhong.”

“Yellen and other Biden administration officials are growing increasingly concerned about China’s overproduction of electric vehicles, solar panels, semiconductors and other goods that are flooding into global markets in the face of a demand slump in China’s domestic market.”

Reuters 4 5 2024

“Chinese state media have pushed back against Yellen’s excess capacity message, saying it was an example of a double standard.”

“”While it is just basic economics that surplus products naturally seek out markets elsewhere once domestic demand is met, and Western nations have been doing that for centuries, when it comes to China, it becomes an ‘overcapacity problem’ threatening the world,” the China Daily said.” 

Ibid. Reuters

They really look silly telling China to produce less because the market in America cannot compete, and they are starting to refuse to buy the commodities to hurt China.  It’s like cutting off your nose to spite your face.   They are going to deliberately cause inflation with taxes on imports, taxes that will be paid by the consumer, often of products like solar panels for rooftops that have been acknowledged by them as effective to stop climate change.

What logic is it to not buy a cheap solar panel, just because the seller has decided to sell it below its value, the amount of labour time required to produce it?  Why should the buyer care? 

Creating a surplus is the basic rule of all capitalist production.  Suggesting China should not export so many products is a ridiculous request, given this is the overriding goal of capitalist production, to create surplus value.  Do as I say, not as I do.   

“Nov 29 (Reuters) – U.S. trade officials announced on Friday a new round of tariffs on solar panel imports from four Southeast Asian nations after American manufacturers complained that companies there are flooding the market with unfairly cheap goods.”

Article continues…

“According to a preliminary decision posted on the U.S. Commerce Department’s website on Friday, the agency calculated dumping duties of between 21.31% and 271.2%, depending on the company, on solar cells from Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam.”

“Most solar panels installed in the United States are made overseas, and some 80% of imports come from the four nations targeted in the Commerce Department probe.”

“President-elect Donald Trump has called the Inflation Reduction Act too expensive, but also has said he plans to slap hefty tariffs on a range of sectors to protect American workers.”

Reuters 11 29 2024

Trump said his favorite word was “tariffs”, and now he is becoming president again.  What he really means is his favorite word is actually “taxes”, because that’s what tariffs are, a tax on imports.  He already is trying to figure out what to do with the money from the taxes on imports, with lofty goals of being able to use it for his state.

Apparently there  is some contention about if the consumer will be paying these taxes.  They will, unless they purchase American made products, the old non metric, fossil fuel dependent production.   

Solar panels are becoming more out of reach to the worker daily.  China produces 80% of the panels, it is unlikely they will take a loss to sell their panels for less to compensate for the tariffs.  You will see inflation on panels, due to taxes levied by the bourgeoisie, who are not really committed to stopping climate change. 

It would be nice if solar panels were produced here, but instead the focus seems to still be on pumping as much fossil fuels as possible out of the ground, in the least amount of time. China seems to be rapidly becoming superior to American production of a key component of any renewable energy plans, the solar panel.   

China is already talking about putting their own tariffs on large gasoline powered engines, for cars and trucks.  This could get interesting.  How about a tax on non metric products? Imagine if they had to go metric to access foreign markets.

In all this taxing of imports it is the consumer who is going to pay.  This form of taxation will also bite the bourgeoisie, as Sam Walton owns WalMart, for instance, and will have to raise prices on Chinese products popular there due to tariffs.  And if those non metric gasoline large motor powered cars and trucks get tariffed, it could cause an economic crisis.

Most large scale production uses Chinese produced raw materials, for welding, for instance.  This is s tax on their own production; without the cheap welding supplies the commodities rise in value.  Will the bourgeois willingly make less profit to offset the taxes?   

Nicholas Jay B\oyes

Milwaukee Wisconsin 

American Democratic Republic

Technological Advancement and Material Conditions

Technological Advancement and Material  Conditions  

So what we seem to be seeing is what the new government is going to  be doing is to keep the old decaying industry functioning, regardless of its ecological impact.  The appointments Donald Trump has made are all involved with petroleum and fossil fuel production. Either that or they are inexperienced, and will take orders well.

What we can expect is, for instance, Milwaukee’s electrical generation will be remaining coal fired turbines, until Trump leaves office.  For a number of years Wisconsin Electric, the monopoly that sells natural gas and electricity to Southeastern WIsconsin, has talked about switching the Oak Creek power plant to gas. 

This now looks unlikely, regardless of the ecological effects of massive coal storage and burning.  Simply put, the Republican bourgeoisie will not have deep enough pockets to change the turbines to gas.

It also looks like gasoline powered large engines for autos, boats, etc. will be here to stay.  Trump has said he will tariff, or tax, Chinese electric vehicles (EV”S). The current government has already increased for this year 100% tariffs on electric vehicles, a 25% tariff on lithium-ion EV batteries and a 50% tariff on photovoltaic solar cells produced in China.

And this is not enough for Trump, he wants to increase taxes on imports, tariffs, even higher.

China has shown it can produce cheap quality EV’s that are competitive in the world market. They pollute the ecology far less than Detroit’s SUV and pickup trucks that use large gasoline powered engines.  The tax on imports of Chinese EV’s are designed to make Detroit’s products more competitive in the domestic market. 

Who wouldn’t want a cheap quality EV?  Why would a machine that can reduce the ecological impact of climate change not be welcomed?

China now produces 80% of the photovoltaic cells for solar energy.  At some point China decided to move forward industrially, went metric, and shifted to developing the latest technology.  All our bourgeoisie can do is tax imports from China to keep Americans buying Detroit’s gasoline powered large engine vehicles, and consuming fossil fuels for power generation. 

We expect it from Trump, but here is Biden doing it too.  These forms of protectionism are only going to get worse, and you can really see how non metric industry is simply not competitive.  China is still considered a third world country by the United Nations, and American can’t compete.  The statements to expect are something to the effect of “China, India and Russia are polluting the ecology, why should we be held to a different standard?”

Which reduces us to the standards of a declining capitalist model, like Russia, without recycling; or India and China, that are in the developing world. 

How far we have come.  The days of glory are coming to an end; technological progress is changing society, and Detroit is still not metric.  The speed limit signs, the gas pumps, the size of containers at the store, are all not yet metric. 

And do you really expect Trump to do a metric conversion?  He doesn’t even believe climate change is real.  “Make America Great Again” includes inches, gallons, and feet.

Another 4 years without a metric conversion.  And this is supposed to be someone who understands basic economics.  

What this is going to do is fetter the productive forces even worse than they are currently. It will further isolate the workers and industry from the rest of the world.  Who is going to buy a large non metric gasoline powered motor pickup truck outside the domestic market?

Then there is the social conditions; Elon Musk, who invested more than 250 million dollars into getting Trump elected, is now coming to power.  His industry he owns is called Tesla, and produces luxury automobiles.  It is not part of regular commodity production, it is what the surplus value is spent on.  It does not produce a profit, rather it consumes profit.  A worker cannot afford Musk’s cars, they are for the bourgeoisie.  It is what the bourgeois spend their profits on, rather than an affordable car a  worker would consume. 

This and government contracts are how Musk has gained his wealth. Trump will steer more government contracts for space,. to Musk’s monopoly, complete with the knowledge of engineers who created the industry for NASA previously..

These are all part of what to expect around here for the next 4 years.  Buying a Detroit gasoline powered truck, not being able to afford a solar panel for the house, using gas and electricity instead of renewable energy….  The speed limit staying 70 miles per hour on the highway; purchasing gallons of gasoline for the car, etc.  Prepare yourself for it, it is coming.

Nicholas Jay Boyes

Milwaukee Wisconsin

American Democratic Republic

Profit and Taxes.  Wages and Profit. 

Profit and Taxes.  Wages and Profit. 

Wages are the lowest that can be paid, remaining socially acceptable.  The unpaid section of the workday, the surplus value, essentially what profit, is where taxes are divided off from. Escaping from this reality seems to be what is desired now, by cutting taxes for the wealthy.

If you cut taxes from profit and shift it directly on the workers back,. the taxes still have to be paid for. Workers work longer hours, what Marx referred to as increasing the absolute surplus value.  But this too runs into resistance, as there are laws about how many hours workers are supposed to be able to work, 8 hours is the current one.

You have to work them overtime to make up for the loss of wages due to the tax   

Longer hours, a wage cut…  It makes one wonder where the support for this is coming from.

Privations by the proletariat would seem to be coming.  You cannot simply raise the amount of profit.  If you lower the amount of the taxes from profit the taxes have to come from somewhere.  

And as the only thing that creates profit is labour,: lowering taxes on the wealthy is the same thing as increasing the profit kept by the capitalist at the workers expense.  

Either the taxes are coming from the form of profit, or from making the worker privy to part of what was taken as surplus value directly by his employer by charging him yearly, like property taxes, or printing it on the paycheck as a deduction, it still comes from the worker. In either case, divided off of profit, or shifted on to the worker, the surplus value flows into the state.

The bourgeoisie claims the tax money as their own. Obviously for them it is part of their profit. State industry does not make a profit.  It is privatized when it can make a profit, we saw this with recycling.  Waste Management now runs the sorter. Money for the state can only come from taxes.

The wealthy can only cut taxes by increasing privations from its workers.  Surplus value from the worker is needed to maintain the capitalist state.  It is a bourgeois fantasy to massively defund the state. Perhaps some of the savings will come from the prisons, police, etc. whose social function becomes clear during unrest. Like that is going to happen. The whole purpose of the state from its inception is to keep the classes divided.

Perhaps it is more palatable to the bourgeoisie to consider taxing workers directly rather than making a profit and dividing it off to pay for the state.  But in the end, it is all the labor of the workers that has to pay this, out of the surplus value they have created thorough exploitation of their labour.

Nicholas Jay Boyes   

Milwaukee Wisconsin

American Democratic Republic