早上起来,看到华儿街大跌和伯南基减利息,这标志着美国正式进入衰退。R WORD争议几个月,终于尘埃落地。
想起三个月前和烦你妹的朋友争论,自己当乌鸦嘴,断08肯定衰退,而且比上次规模要大,朋友列举各大公司收益情况,颇不以为然。现在看来,又不幸而言重了。
当时只是一种感觉,并不知其所以然,今天却忽然想到了那个然。
21世纪至今的八年是全球化高歌猛进的八年,中国的繁荣,欧洲的统一,美国的衰落,俄罗斯的生聚,无不是对此的呼应。世俗主义的陷落,宗教极端的抬头,也无
不是对此的反动。但全球化到底是谁的全球化?是谁要全球化,是谁在全球化,是资本,且是大资本。全球化就是全世界大资本的联合,大资本家集团的联合。
如果说两次世界大战是资本和国家利益曾经重合的最高阶段的话,现在全球资本已经和任何一个国家的利益都不再是共同体了,虽然还必须要紧密合作,但已经不是共同体。互为邻阂的国家成了全球一体的资本的一颗颗棋子。更多代表区域多数人利益的国家和更多代表跨国精英的资本集团之间的互动无疑将是本世纪国际政治的棋眼。套句网语,一盘很大的棋正在下,只是大家都是棋子,下棋的是上帝,是道,是那只看不见的人类命运之手。
这盘棋的规则只有一条,利益的最大化。那么全球资本集团的利益最大化是什么呢?要分析资产阶级的利益,一定要用无产阶级的理论,所谓旁观者清。根据马克思的
阶级分析理论,我们可以简单把全球的人民分成三个阶级,顶层的精英,是全球资本集团自己。中间的小部分,是所谓的中产阶级,比如网上的各位,下边的多数,是艰辛的劳动人民,比如苦吃苦作的四川民工。过去几年的经济繁荣,是中间的阶层急剧膨胀,特别是中国和印度的撅起,这个阶层的人数暴增。
全球房价的飙升,各种名牌商品的泛滥,都是这个中产阶级暴长的结果。中产阶级的暴涨,陡然间加速了各种资源的耗费速度,而且使财富分配的比例不再有利于顶
层,在这个用钱说话的世界,这意味着权力的重新分配。一句话,繁荣的最大受利者是中产阶级,在博弈的格局中,此长肯定意味着彼消,中产阶级的壮大,对大资
本就是威胁。
从资本主义稳定发展的利益出发,从大资本自身的利益出发,有一个不太臃肿的中产阶级,和一个苦吃苦作但又任劳任怨不去革命的无产阶级是最有利的金字塔结构。
因此周期性消减中产阶级,稳定无产阶级是大资本的最佳策略。资本要生产,要市场,要消费,所以必须有繁荣,但也不能让繁荣革了自己的命,让大权旁落中产阶
级,所以要萧条。繁荣和萧条轮番上演,这场戏码才能演下去。这不一定是阴谋,在我看来是阳谋,不是哪个人或者集团的谋,是这个系统的天然游戏规则。
所以全球化的大资本需要全周期性球化的大萧条,需要把全球的新兴中产阶级这个巨大的泡沫给挤掉,至少压小。这就是我对此次衰退的预料。
挤的过程是痛苦的,而且是全球化以后的第一次,谁也不知道连锁反应会怎样。昨天领导问我该怎么办,我出去买了两箱红酒回来,怎么办?累了喝酒,闲来弄小金鱼,中产阶级,没了工作就没了一切,有了工作,就有了一切。有活,抗活,没活,革命。
过了春夏有秋冬,
叶发叶落自然成
闲来小鱼尽情刻,
一杯浊酒慰平生。
一九六八年是动乱的年月,时隔四十年的二零零八年,是否会成为另一个动乱之年,且拭目以待。
- Re: 四十胡说:大唱衰 -- 大资本和中产阶级在全球化背景下的新对局posted on 01/23/2008
Haaa, DING little golden fish :-) - Re: 四十胡说:大唱衰 -- 大资本和中产阶级在全球化背景下的新对局posted on 01/23/2008
我觉得全球化的结果就是把中产阶级变成了二十一世纪的奴隶. - posted on 01/23/2008
1968? what happened in 1968?
According to History.com:
The CIVIL RIGHTS Movement 1968 was an especially violent and tumultuous year for the Civil Rights Movement. On April 4, 1968, Martin Luther King, Jr., was shot while standing on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee. The news of the famed civil-rights leader's passing sparked rioting or incidents of violence in over 100 cities across the United States. Civil rights leaders remained divided after King's death, with no single individual stepping in to unite the movement's many factions, as the charismatic Dr. King had once done.
HIPPIES -Changing perceptions, Hippies and the Revolution of a Culture "Tune In, Turn On, and Drop Out" was the motto of the hippie movement, a significant countercultural phenomenon in the 1960s and early 1970s that grew partially out of young America's growing disillusionment with U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. Hippies were mainly white teenagers and young adults who shared a hatred and distrust towards traditional middle-class values and authority. They rejected political and social orthodoxies but embraced aspects of Eastern religions, particularly Buddhism.
The VIETNAM WAR
MUSIC The American music scene during the first part of the 1960s was dominated by male vocalists such as Elvis Presley, Motown artists like Diana Ross & The Supremes and folk performers such as Bob Dylan with their acoustic-based protest songs. By the mid-1960s, though, psychedelic rock had taken root as an intrinsic part of the growing hippie movement. The Flower Power generation was interested in freedom and self-expression and the kind of mind-altering experiences that could be achieved through the use of psychedelic drugs such as marijuana and LSD. Psychedelic rock, which often used electronic sound effects and was sometimes influenced by music from India, attempted to recreate and enhance the feelings resulting from hallucinogenic drug use. Groups including Jefferson Airplane, The Grateful Dead and Janis Joplin and Big Brother & the Holding Company were pioneers of psychedelic rock. They all lived in San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury neighborhood, which became the epicenter of the hippie scene.
The Beatles were at the height of their popularity throughout the 1960s. After bursting onto the scene in their native England in 1962, the band made its first appearance on American television in 1964, on The Ed Sullivan Show, and generated a massive audience. By the second half of the decade, the band's pop rock sound had become more experimental and psychedelic. In June 1967, the Beatles released their eighth album, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Heart Club Band, considered one of the most important records in rock history. Many of the album's hit songs, such as "With a Little Help From My Friends" and "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" were allegedly filled with drug references.
One non-musician who was an important part of the '60s music scene was concert promoter Bill Graham, whose San Francisco auditorium, The Fillmore, became a major venue for psychedelic rock groups such as Jefferson Airplane, Quicksilver Messenger Service, The Grateful Dead and Big Brother & the Holding Company, among others. In 1968, Graham opened the Fillmore East, which became a showcase for counterculture musicians in New York City.
In June 1967, the Monterey International Pop Music Festival, the first widely promoted rock fest, took place in California. Over 200,000 people attended the event, considered a highlight of San Francisco's "Summer of Love." Jimi Hendrix and The Who made their first big U.S. performances at the festival, which also showcased performers such as Janis Joplin, Otis Redding and Ravi Shankar. John Phillips of the Mamas & the Papas, who helped organize the festival, wrote a song, intended as a fest advertisement, called "San Francisco (Be Sure to Wear Flowers in Your Hair)." Sung by Scott McKenzie, "San Francisco" became a Flower Power anthem.
Monterey was a precursor to the Woodstock Festival, which took place in August 1969 on a 600-acre farm in Bethel, New York. An estimated half a million young people turned up for the event, which featured the key musicians of the time, including Hendrix, Joplin, Jefferson Airplane, The Who, Joan Baez, Sly and the Family Stone and Crosby, and Stills Nash & Young, among others. Woodstock later came to be viewed as one of the ultimate events of the hippie era.
- posted on 01/24/2008
中美之外68年大事我记得的就有:布拉格之春,墨西哥城屠杀,巴黎五月风暴。干脆wiki一下——
Events of 1968
January
January 5 - Prague Spring: Alexander Dub?ek is elected leader of the Communist Party in Czechoslovakia.
January 13 - Johnny Cash records "Live at Folsom Prison".
January 15 - An earthquake in Sicily kills 231 and injures 262.
January 17 - Lyndon B. Johnson calls for the non-conversion of US Dollar.
January 19 - At a White House conference on crime, singer and actress Eartha Kitt denounces the Vietnam War directly to President Lyndon Johnson.
January 21 - Vietnam War: Battle of Khe Sanh begins - One of the most publicized and controversial battles of the war begins, ending on April 8.
January 21 - A U.S. B-52 Stratofortress crashes in Greenland, discharging 4 nuclear bombs.
January 22 - Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In debuts on NBC.
January 23 - North Korea seizes the USS Pueblo, claiming the ship violated its territorial waters while spying.
January 25 - The Israeli submarine INS Dakar sinks in the Mediterranean Sea (69 dead).
January 27 - A French submarine sinks in the Mediterranean Sea with 52 men.
January 30 - Vietnam War: The Tet Offensive begins, as Viet Cong forces launch a series of surprise attacks across South Vietnam.
January 31 - Viet Cong soldiers attack the United States Embassy in Saigon.
January 31 - Nauru's president Hammer DeRoburt declares independence from Australia.
February
February 1 - Vietnam War: A Viet Cong officer is executed by Nguyen Ngoc Loan, a South Vietnamese National Police Chief. The event is photographed by Eddie Adams. The photo makes headlines around the world, eventually winning the 1969 Pulitzer Prize, and sways U.S. public opinion against the war.
February 6-February 18 - The 1968 Winter Olympics were held in Grenoble, France
February 8 - American civil rights movement: A civil rights protest staged at a white-only bowling alley in Orangeburg, South Carolina is broken-up by highway patrolmen, leading to the deaths of 3 college students.
February 11 - Border clashes take place between Israel and Jordan.
February 13 - Civil rights disturbances occur at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
February 17 - Administrative reform in Romania divides the country into 39 counties.
February 24 - Vietnam War: The Tet Offensive is halted - South Vietnam recaptures Hué.
February 27 - Ex-The Teenagers singer Frankie Lymon is found dead from a heroin overdose in Harlem.
March
March 7 - Vietnam War: The First Battle of Saigon begins.
March 12 - Mauritius achieves independence from British Rule.
March 12 - U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson edges out antiwar candidate Eugene J. McCarthy in the New Hampshire Democratic primary, a vote which highlights the deep divisions in the country, as well as the party, over Vietnam.
March 14 - Nerve gas leaks from the U.S. Army Dugway Proving Ground near Skull Valley, Utah.
March 15 - George Brown, British Foreign Secretary, resigns.
March 16 - Vietnam War: My Lai massacre - American troops kill scores of civilians.
March 16 - U.S. Senator Robert F. Kennedy (D-NY) enters the race for the Democratic Party presidential nomination.
March 17 - A demonstration in London's Grosvenor Square against U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War leads to violence - 91 police injured, 200 demonstrators arrested.
March 18 - Gold standard: The Congress of the United States repeals the requirement for a gold reserve to back U.S. currency.
March 19 - March 23 - Afrocentrism, Black power: Students at Howard University in Washington, D.C., signal a new era of militant student activism on college campuses in the U.S. Students stage rallies, protests and a five-day sit-in, laying siege to the administration building, shutting down the university in protest over its ROTC program, and demanding a more Afrocentric curriculum.
March 21 - Vietnam War: In ongoing campus unrest, Howard University students protesting the Vietnam War, the ROTC program on campus and the draft, confront Gen. Lewis Hershey, then head of the U.S. Selective Service System, and as he attempts to deliver an address, shout him down with cries of "America is the Black man's battleground!"
March 22 - Daniel Cohn-Bendit and seven other students occupy Administrative offices of Nanterre, launching France into a state of revolution in the month of May.
March 27 - Russian space pioneer Yuri Gagarin is killed in a training flight crash.
March 31 - U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson announces he will not seek re-election.
April
April - Carl Brashear, the first African American United States Navy diver, becomes the first amputee certified to make diving missions, after a long battle which started with the accident which amputated his leg in 1966.
April 2 - Bombs placed by Andreas Baader and Gudrun Ensslin explode at midnight in 2 department stores in Frankfurt-am-Main; they are later arrested and sentenced for arson.
April 4 - Martin Luther King, Jr. is assassinated at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee. Riots erupt in major American cities for several days afterward.
April 4 - Apollo Program: Apollo-Saturn mission 502 (Apollo 6) is launched, as the second and last unmanned test-flight of the Saturn V launch vehicle.
April 4 - La, la, la by Massiel (music and text by Manuel de la Calva and Ramón Arcusa) wins the Eurovision Song Contest 1968 for Spain.
April 6 - Double explosion rocks Richmond, Indiana in downtown area. The explosion killed 41 people and injured more than 150.
April 6 - A shootout between Black Panthers and Oakland police results in several arrests and deaths, including 16-year-old Panther Bobby Hutton.
April 7 - Racing driver Jim Clark is killed in a Formula 2 race at Hockenheim.
April 11 - Joseph Bachmann tries to assassinate Rudi Dutschke, leader of a left-wing movement (APO) in Germany, and tries to commit suicide afterwards, failing in both, although Dutschke dies of his brain injuries 11 years later.
April 11 - German left-wing students blockade the Springer Press HQ in Berlin and many are arrested (one of them is Ulrike Meinhof).
April 11 - U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson signs the Civil Rights Act of 1968.
April 20 - Pierre Elliott Trudeau becomes Canada's 15th Prime Minister.
April 20 - English politician Enoch Powell makes his controversial Rivers of Blood Speech.
April 20 - The film The Wizard of Oz temporarily moves to NBC, after a rights dispute between CBS, which had previously telecast it, and MGM. NBC will telecast the film until 1976. CBS telecasts of the film will resume that year, and will last until 1998, when Turner Broadcasting will win the rights to telecast it.
April 23 - President Mobutu releases captured mercenaries in Congo.
April 23 - Surgeons at the H?pital de la Pitié, Paris, perform Europe's first heart transplant, on Clovis Roblain.
April 23-April 30 - Vietnam War: Student protesters at Columbia University in New York City take over administration buildings and shut down the university. See main article Columbia University protests of 1968
April 29 - The musical Hair officially opens on Broadway.
May
May - "May of 68" is a symbol of the resistance of that generation. Agitations and strikes in Paris lead many youth to believe that a revolution is starting. Student and worker strikes, sometimes referred to as the French May, nearly bring down the French government.
May 2 - The Israel Broadcasting Authority commences television broadcasts.
May 15 - An outbreak of severe thunderstorms produces tornadoes causing massive damage and heavy casualties in Charles City, Iowa, Oelwein, Iowa, and Jonesboro, Arkansas.
May 17 - The Catonsville Nine enter the Selective Service offices in Catonsville, Maryland, take dozens of selective service draft records, and burn them with napalm as a protest against the Vietnam War.
May 19 - General elections are held in Italy.
May 19 - Nigerian forces capture Port Harcourt and form a ring around Biafrans. This contributes to a humanitarian disaster as the surrounded population was already suffering with hunger and starvation.
May 22 - The U.S. nuclear-powered submarine Scorpion sinks with 99 men aboard, 400 miles southwest of the Azores.
June
June 1 - The grand opening of Astroworld theme park in Houston Texas.
June 3 - Radical feminist Valerie Solanas shoots Andy Warhol as he enters his studio, wounding him.
June 4 - The Standard & Poor's 500 index closes above 100 for the first time, closing at 100.38.
June 5 - U.S. presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy is shot at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, California by Sirhan Sirhan. Kennedy dies from his injuries the next day.
June 8 - James Earl Ray is arrested for the murder of Martin Luther King Jr.
June 10 - Soccer: Italy beats Yugoslavia 2-0 in a replay to win the 1968 European Championship. The original final on June 8 ended 1-1.
June 20 - Austin Currie, Member of Parliament (MP) at Stormont in Northern Ireland, along with others, squats a house in Caledon to protest discrimination in housing allocations.
June 23 - A football stampede in Buenos Aires leaves 74 dead and 150 injured.
June 24 - Giorgio Rosa declares the independence of his Republic of Rose Island, an artificial island off Rimini, Italy. Italian troops demolish it not long after.
July
July 1 - The Central Intelligence Agency's Phoenix Program is officially established.
July 4 - Yachtsman Alec Rose, 59, receives a hero's welcome as he sails into Portsmouth, England after his 354-day round-the-world trip.
July 15 - The soap opera One Life to Live premieres on ABC.
July 17 - Saddam Hussein becomes Vice Chairman of the Revolutionary Council in Iraq after a coup d'état.
July 23-July 28 - African-American militants led by Fred (Ahmed) Evans engage in a fierce gunfight with police in the Glenville Shootout of Cleveland, Ohio.
July 25 - Pope Paul VI publishes the encyclical entitled Humanae Vitae, condemning birth control. Many American Catholics defy it.
July 26 - Vietnam War: South Vietnamese opposition leader Truong Dinh Dzu is sentenced to 5 years hard labor, for advocating the formation of a coalition government as a way to move toward an end to the war.
July 29 - Arenal Volcano erupts in Costa Rica for the first time in centuries.
August
August 5-August 8 - The Republican National Convention in Miami Beach, Florida nominates Richard Nixon for U.S. President and Spiro Agnew for Vice President.
August 11 - The last steam passenger train service runs in Britain. A British Rail steam locomotive makes the 120-mile journey from Liverpool to Carlisle and returns to Liverpool before being dispatched to the wrecking yard.
August 18 - Two charter buses push into the Hida river on national highway route 41 in Japan, in an accident caused by heavy rain. 104 killed.
August 20 - The Prague Spring of political liberalization ends, as 200,000 Warsaw Pact troops and 5,000 tanks invade Czechoslovakia.
August 21 - The Medal of Honor is posthumously awarded to James Anderson, Jr. — he is the first black U.S. Marine to be awarded the Medal of Honor.
August 24 - France explodes its first hydrogen bomb, thus becoming the world's fifth nuclear power.
August 22-August 30 - Police clash with antiwar protesters in Chicago, Illinois outside the 1968 Democratic National Convention, which nominates Hubert Humphrey for U.S. President, and Edmund Muskie for Vice President.
September
September 6 - Swaziland becomes independent.
September 11 - French General René Cogny and 94 others die in a Air France Caravelle jetliner crash near Nice in the Mediterranean.
September 17 - The D'Oliveira Affair: The Marylebone Cricket Club tour of South Africa is cancelled when the South Africans refuse to accept the presence of Basil D'Oliveira, a Cape Coloured, in the side.
September 27 - Marcelo Caetano becomes prime minister of Portugal.
September 29 - A referendum in Greece gives more power to the military junta.
October
October 2 - Tlatelolco massacre: A student demonstration ends in a bloodbath at La Plaza de las Tres Culturas in Tlatelolco, Mexico City, Mexico, 10 days before the inauguration of the 1968 Summer Olympics.
October 5 - An illegal civil rights march in Derry, Northern Ireland, which included several Stormont and British MPs, is batoned off the streets by the Royal Ulster Constabulary.
October 8 - Vietnam War: Operation Sealords - United States and South Vietnamese forces launch a new operation in the Mekong Delta.
October 11 - Apollo program: NASA launches Apollo 7, the first manned Apollo mission (Wally Schirra, Donn Eisele, Walter Cunningham). Mission goals include the first live television broadcast from orbit and testing the lunar module docking maneuver.
October 11 - In Panama, a military coup d'etat, led by Col. Boris Martinez and Col. Omar Torrijos, overthrows the democratically-elected (but highly controversial) government of President Arnulfo Arias. Within a year, Torrijos will have ousted Martinez and taken charge as de facto Head of Government in Panama.
October 12-October 27 - The Games of the XIX Olympiad are held in Mexico City, Mexico.
October 12 - Equatorial Guinea receives its independence from Spain.
October 14 - Vietnam War: The United States Department of Defense announces that the United States Army and United States Marines will send about 24,000 troops back to Vietnam for involuntary second tours.
October 16 - In Mexico City, Tommie Smith and John Carlos, 2 African-Americans competing in the Olympic 200-meter run, raise their arms in a black power salute after winning the gold and bronze medals for 1st and 3rd place.
October 16 - Kingston, Jamaica is rocked by the Rodney Riots, provoked by the banning of Walter Rodney from the country.
October 20 - Aristotle Onassis and Jacqueline Kennedy marry on the Greek island of Skorpios
October 31 - Vietnam War: Citing progress in the Paris peace talks, U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson announces to the nation that he has ordered a complete cessation of "all air, naval, and artillery bombardment of North Vietnam" effective November 1.
November
November 5 - U.S. presidential election, 1968: Republican challenger Richard M. Nixon defeats Vice President Hubert Humphrey and American Independent Party candidate George C. Wallace.
November 5 - Luis A. Ferre is elected Governor of Puerto Rico.
November 11 - Vietnam War: Operation Commando Hunt is initiated to interdict men and supplies on the Ho Chi Minh Trail, through Laos into South Vietnam. By the end of the operation, 3 million tons of bombs are dropped on Laos, slowing but not seriously disrupting trail operations.
November 11 - A second republic is declared in the Maldives
November 14 - Yale University announces it is going co-educational
November 17 – The Heidi game: NBC cuts off the final 1:05 of an Oakland Raiders-New York Jets football game to broadcast the pre-scheduled Heidi. Fans are unable to see Oakland (which had been trailing 32-29) score two late touchdowns to win 43-32; as a result, thousands of outraged football fans flood the NBC switchboards to protest.
November 22 - The White Album is released by The Beatles
November 26 - Vietnam War: United States Air Force First Lieutenant and Bell UH-1F helicopter pilot James P. Fleming rescues an Army Special Forces unit pinned down by Viet Cong fire, earning a Medal of Honor for his bravery.
December
December 8 - Great Urdu Poet & Prosodian, Obaid Azam Aazmi born.
December 9 - Douglas Engelbart publicly demonstrates his pioneering hypertext system, NLS, in San Francisco.
December 10 - Japan's biggest heist, the still-unsolved "300 million yen robbery", occurs in Tokyo
December 11 - The film Oliver!, based on the hit London and Broadway musical, opens in the U.S. after being released first in England. It will go on to win the Academy Award for Best Picture.
December 13 - Brazilian president Artur da Costa e Silva decrees the AI-5 (or the fifth Institutional Act), which lasts until 1978 and marks the beginning of the hard times of Brazilian military dictatorship.
December 22 - David Eisenhower marries Julie Nixon, the daughter of U.S. President-elect Richard Nixon
December 22 - Mao Zedong advocates educated youth in urban China to be re-educated in the country. It marks the start of the "Up to the mountains and down to the villages" movement.
December 24 - Apollo Program: U.S. spacecraft Apollo 8 enters orbit around the Moon. Astronauts Frank Borman, Jim Lovell and William A. Anders become the first humans to see the far side of the Moon and planet Earth as a whole. The crew also reads from Genesis. - Re: 四十胡说:大唱衰 -- 大资本和中产阶级在全球化背景下的新对局posted on 01/24/2008
冷木 wrote:
早上起来,看到华儿街大跌和伯南基减利息,这标志着美国正式进入衰退。R WORD争议几个月,终于尘埃落地。
- posted on 01/24/2008
但全球化到底是谁的全球化?是谁要全球化,是谁在全球化..
这个"谁"的问题很容易回答. 黛安娜公主的死就是全球一体化.
一个英国的公主和一个埃及的情人,
开着德国车,
它的引擎在荷兰制造,
由一个喝着苏格兰威士基的比利时司机驾驶,
被骑着日本摩托车的意大利狗仔队跟踪,
在法国的隧道发生了车祸,
当时由美国医生抢救,
用的是巴西急救药品.
冷木 wrote:
也无不是对此的反动。但全球化到底是谁的全球化?是谁要全球化,是谁在全球化,是资本,且是大资本。全球化就是全世界大资本的联合,大资本家集团的联合。
所以全球化的大资本需要全周期性球化的大萧条,需要把全球的新兴中产阶级这个巨大的泡沫给挤掉,至少压小。这就是我对此次衰退的预料。 - Re: 四十胡说:大唱衰 -- 大资本和中产阶级在全球化背景下的新对局posted on 01/24/2008
大资本家和中产阶级,以前都叫资产阶级,有啥好对局的?
大不了多吃一支火腿,少吃两只鸡蛋的事情:)
但我觉得苦瓜说的人与政治的本性,尤其是人口,马尔萨斯和达尔文
意义上的东西,终究还是要起作用的。
估计二零零八年不会有什么。除了总统大选。
- Re: 四十胡说:大唱衰 -- 大资本和中产阶级在全球化背景下的新对局posted on 01/24/2008
st dude wrote:
但全球化到底是谁的全球化?是谁要全球化,是谁在全球化..
中国留学生在美国开二手日本车送意大利比萨饼,也算不算全球化?
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