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"Capitalist nations have no goals or rationality"???!!!
I think this fundamentally misconceives the relation between nation
states and capital. If one is referring to an imperialist nation (do
you think that imperialism is a reality, btw?) then that nation
certainly does have (imperial) goals and its behavior normally is, at
least to a significant degree, rational in the sense that its behavior is
generally consistent with its (real) goals.
If, for instance, a nation state seeks imperial expansion and a territorial
re-division of the world that benefits that nation's economy and the
interests of the ruling class, then militarism has an important and
logical/rational role as part of that project. E.g., it is entirely rational
for US imperialism to use the military to attempt to preserve US
hegemony in the world capitalist system.
I guess we'd have to look at
particular wars to evaluate these contrary claims more concretely.
I guess you are talking about the war against Iraq. While it's
true that some segments of capitalists from the US would benefit to a
greater degree than the US capitalist class in general, I think the
intent of the war was to benefit US capital and the state as a whole.
Of course, developments there haven't proceeded in exactly the way
planned by the US government .... It should not be forgotten that wars have historically been a means
through which the economies of individual capitalist social formations
have been fueled and an economic crisis overcome. Military spending
in the US, Germany, and Japan all had a role in stimulating capitalist
expansion in those countries. This should not be forgotten - especially
because the bourgeoisie has not forgotten that lesson.
I guess the larger question implied by this discussion is this: does
imperialist rivalry _necessarily_ require a role for militarism or is that simply
one way in which imperialist rivalries have historically often been expressed? Note that I have asked this question but haven't asserted an answer (yet).
As a _practical_ matter, taking into consideration the current relation
among nations, I don't see militarism becoming less of a factor in the immediate
period ahead. And, I don't think the historical trend has been for militarism
to be diminished in importance for individual states and capitalist economies.
//Dave Z _______________________________________________ ope mailing list ope@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/ope
- RE: [OPE] Francis Wheen, "Kapital crimes", (continued)
- RE: [OPE] Francis Wheen, "Kapital crimes", GERALD LEVY Sun 02 Mar 2008, 14:29 GMT
- Re: [OPE] Francis Wheen, "Kapital crimes", Paul Zarembka Sun 02 Mar 2008, 17:19 GMT
- RE: [OPE] Francis Wheen, "Kapital crimes", GERALD LEVY Mon 03 Mar 2008, 13:22 GMT
- [OPE] capitalist states, imperialism, and militarism, GERALD LEVY Sun 02 Mar 2008, 13:34 GMT
- Re: [OPE] capitalist states, imperialism, and militarism, Dave Zachariah Sun 02 Mar 2008, 21:17 GMT
- <Possible follow-up(s)>
- RE: [OPE] capitalist states, imperialism, and militarism, GERALD LEVY Sun 02 Mar 2008, 13:49 GMT
- RE: [OPE] capitalist states, imperialism, and militarism, GERALD LEVY Mon 03 Mar 2008, 12:21 GMT
- Re: [OPE] capitalist states, imperialism, and militarism, Dave Zachariah Tue 04 Mar 2008, 14:37 GMT
- RE: [OPE] capitalist states, imperialism, and militarism, GERALD LEVY Tue 04 Mar 2008, 20:23 GMT