John Wick: Chapter 4 Is the Bloody Finale We’ve Been Waiting For

In John Wick: Chapter 4, Keanu Reeves’s puppy-avenging John Wick returns for one last fever dream of violence and mayhem — and it’s a shame to see him go.

Still from John Wick: Chapter 4. (Lionsgate)

As you might have heard, in this final installment of the franchise, the John Wick 4 creative team really and truly goes for it. And they go for it to such an extent that you’re brought right back to the dire act that ignited the whole vengeful spree — the killing of Wick’s puppy all those years ago. It’s no longer a spoiler to say what’s being widely reported, though you might still consider this a SPOILER, that the shocking murder that occurs early in John Wick 4, the one that’s guaranteed make you gasp with a similar sense of outrage, is the sudden, brutal killing of Charon, the character played by the late, lamented actor Lance Reddick.

Which makes it the perfect setup for the final cathartic paroxysm of violence to come.

Audiences are flocking to see it, of course, as this appears to be the last of John Wick, at least as embodied by beloved actor Keanu Reeves. For years now John Wick’s been there to supply us, at reliable intervals, with those experiences we’re denied in our lives — respect, rough justice, a heightened and meaningful way to conduct ourselves in a bloody, ghastly world, and most of all, exquisitely violent revenge on all the nightmarish power players who won’t just let us live quietly with our dog.

The logic of John Wick’s world is one that we recognize, in that “they” — the wealthy, all-powerful yet unknown people who rule our lives — are always in the act of taking away from us what little we have left. If the dog is all that’s remaining of a once-vibrant and complete household, they kill the dog. If we have only a few friends, they eradicate them. If we’ve found a safe place to stay somewhere in the world, they blow it up. That’s the way of things in John Wick films, and we recognize it as a highly dramatized version of the brutal Big Squeeze we’re feeling in our own lives. We’re not quite picked clean yet, but anything of value we still have, they’re coming for it. Stable jobs? Pensions? Health care? Social Security? Decent affordable housing? Any thriving community? Even if you’ve got any of those things, by some amazing good fortune, do you think they will let you keep any of it? For how long?

The fearless inventiveness of John Wick 4 can’t be praised enough. It plays out like a fever dream. Even the colors are feverish. Early scenes set in the InterContinental Hotel Osaka, one of the several Continental Hotels internationally where assassins gather to relax, regroup, and prepare for their next bloody endeavor, feature colors so intense and expressionistic that faces become lurid masks in acid green or hellfire red. These extremes are necessary to dramatize the peril and the rage overtaking the remaining friends and allies of John Wick, as an all-out attempt to destroy Wick has already led to the destruction of the New York Continental, sending Winston (Ian McShane) and his concierge, Charon (Reddick) to the High Table’s new enforcer, the Marquis Vincent de Gramont (Bill Skarsgård), for clarification about this mad new vendetta — with fatal consequences.

The Marquis is a pampered, baby-faced, satin-wearing French aristo of maximum detestability, whose mission is to destroy any remaining solidarity around John Wick by annihilating every single place where Wick is still welcome — and everyone who considers him a friend. To lead this effort, he’s blackmailed an old crony of Wick’s, the blind High Table assassin Caine, played by martial arts legend Donnie Yen, by threatening Caine’s daughter’s life. Yen, star of the super-successful Ip Man series, is sixty now, and his slight frame and unglamorous, weak-chinned face conveys the wrong impression of ordinary-guy vulnerability until the fighting starts and his quicksilver mastery makes him awesome. Yen’s a director in his own right, as well as a beloved actor, and he had a lot of say in the construction of his character. He gives a performance of such wry humor, he’s lovable even while trying to kill John Wick.

Fights under duress between friends who don’t actually want to hurt each other, get progressively more agonizing throughout the film, as the audience doesn’t want to see either combatant die. At the Osaka Continental, Wick’s loyal friend Shimazu Koji (Hiroyuki Sanada), who runs the place, gives him temporary shelter and is in maximum peril as a result, along with his daughter Akira (Rina Sawayama), who serves as his badass concierge. The inevitable sword fight between Koji and Caine, both actually fighting to defend their daughters, is full of the poignant resolve of old samurai films.

Eventually this friends-fight-friends agon culminates in an elaborately formal Old World pistol duel between John Wick and Caine, in which they’re to fire at each other at thirty paces apart. Then if neither dies, advance ten paces and fire again, until they’re at point-blank range. It was Wick’s plan that he and the Marquis would fight the duel as a way of settling the whole matter without any further violence forced on friends and bystanders. But “the rules,” which the High Table bureaucracy slavishly obeys, allow for the duelist’s second to fight in his stead, so Caine is charged with killing Wick the old-fashioned way.

If it had been swords, Caine the blind swordsman might have prevailed, but pistols make his own chance of dying uncomfortably high. The absurdity of it, and the tension, is so great, Caine tries to break it beforehand with an excess of smiling casualness, saying, “Let’s just get this shit over with.” But neither, it seems, can bear to kill the other, so the flesh wounds accumulate as they get closer and closer.

I won’t give away how they get out of it, but it’s a doozy of a solution, believe me. It was so exciting and inventive, a guy in the theater shouted, “Woo-HOO!” when it happened, then added sheepishly, “Sorry,” for his involuntary outburst.

Of course, if all the action scenes were this intensely meaningful, it wouldn’t be a John Wick film, so there are several memorable scenes involving mass attacks on Wick by ordinary goon entourages or opportunistic jackasses trying to collect the ever-more-enormous bounty on Wick’s head. John Wick having to kill scores of would-be assassins is the hallmark of the series, and there’s still humor operating in a number of these scenes, as always. Near the end, when John Wick has survived the Arc de Triomphe onslaught and made it, bruised and battered, to the steps — two-hundred-and-twenty-two of them — up to the Sacre-Coeur Basilica where the duel will take place, he’s got about five minutes to trot up there in order to be on time. If he’s not on time, that means he’s instantly condemned to be executed, and he’ll be on the run forevermore.

Still, he hesitates a moment, like a regular human being, dreading the climb when he’s so tired already. Then out of the shadows emerge at least a dozen more assailants, standing in threatening postures at regular intervals all the way up the steps. And just walking up, without having to fight more of these idiots, was going to be bad enough.

That’s pretty funny in the world-weary way John Wick 4 functions. So is the part where he’s almost at the top with maybe two minutes to spare and then gets knocked back down a hundred steps. The nearly impossible is always made totally impossible in John Wick movies, and somehow he still has to pull it off. Which suggests, in itself, a necessary end to the series, which has maintained a surprisingly high level of quality across four films — John Wick has to stay mortal, and that means exhaustion has to set in. Supposedly it was Keanu Reeves who initially said what others hardly dared think, which was — SPOILER — “We’ve got to kill John Wick.”

This was a very death-oriented film even before the shocking real-life passing of Reddick, the beloved actor who played Charon. Death broods over many scenes, such as the one in which John Wick and Caine have a détente meeting set in a church lit by a hundred candles, a scene clearly inspired by John Woo’s Hong Kong films with their rueful, melancholy men in loving communion before killing each other. Woo was the great director of operatic action films, full of tragic melodrama and death and expressionistic color schemes.

Wick lights a candle for his late wife and says a few words to her as Caine watches him from a front pew.

CAINE: “Do you really think she can hear you?”

JOHN WICK: “No.”

CAINE: “Then why bother?”

JOHN WICK: “Maybe I’m wrong.”

In another scene, John Wick tells Winston what he wants written on his tombstone: “Loving Husband.”

Though the director, Chad Stahelski, has left a little bit of ambiguity, just enough to resurrect John Wick for a fifth film, it appears as if Wick himself has reached the end of the line. That his crusade to wipe out the High Table members one by one should have expired with such a whimper, with even his friends telling him there’ll always be another weasel-faced rich criminal bastard to take the dead one’s place, seems quietly topical.

John Wick is a man in retreat by the end, blamed even by his friends for daring to take on the all-powerful High Table, which only got more people killed. “Have you learned nothing?” Winston demands to know, and it appears that all Wick has learned is summed up in his final request to Winston: “Would you take me home?”

This from an assassin who has no home in the ordinary sense, hasn’t had one since the puppy his wife arranged to be brought to him after her death got killed by a gangster’s creepy son in the first John Wick. The closest thing he has to home is, apparently, the grave next to his wife’s.

So it’s a despairing ending to an exhilarating ride, but that’s okay. It has, shall we say, a certain credibility.

States Across America Are Trying to Weaken Child Labor Protections

It’s not just Arkansas: in states across the country, Republicans are making a concerted push to roll back laws protecting children from working dangerous jobs like construction and meatpacking.

View of carrying-in boys, reaching in to extract glass from the kilns to be carried to the mold working area, at the Indiana Glass Works factory, Indianapolis, Indiana, 1908. (Lewis W. Hine / Buyenlarge via Getty Images)

Earlier this month, a bill to roll back child labor protections was signed by Arkansas governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders. Spun as a commonsensical instance of red-tape reduction, the innocuously titled “Youth Hiring Act of 2023” in fact eliminates existing protections enforced by the state’s Department of Labor for over a century and makes it possible for employers to hire children as young as fourteen without obtaining parental consent.

The irony here is difficult to miss. Across the country, GOP lawmakers are currently advancing a raft of dystopian laws targeting vulnerable groups, most often under the guise of protecting children and “parental rights.” Arkansas is far from the only place where Republicans apparently see no contradiction between these stated objectives and the rolling back of child labor protections. As a recent analysis from the Economic Policy Institute (EPI) reveals, the much-publicized Youth Hiring Act of 2023 is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the weakening of child labor standards. Over the past two years, some ten states have either introduced or passed legislation in this vein, with eight of such bills appearing in the past few months alone.

One, recently introduced in Minnesota by Republican state senator Rich Draheim, would allow sixteen- and seventeen-year-olds to work on construction sites. Another, proposed in Iowa, aims to lift existing restrictions around hazardous work so that children as young as fourteen can work in some dangerous industrial facilities and would grant employers immunity from civil liability in cases of workplace-related injury, illness, or death. Another, in Nebraska, would make it legal for young workers to be paid less than the minimum wage.

Depressingly, the EPI offers plenty of similar examples from other states. Though sometimes differing at the level of detail, the general idea is to make it easier for employers to demand more hours from younger workers in an expanded number of workplaces at a lower cost — usually by skirting or exploiting loopholes in federal labor law. This employer-friendly ethos is not simply the product of Dickensian-minded GOP lawmakers but part of a concerted effort by corporate interests seeking to cut corners and maximize profits. Unsurprisingly, most of the legislation tracked by the EPI has the explicit backing of various business lobbies.

As Jennifer Sherer and Nina Mast of the EPI explain:

Across the country, the primary proponents of these laws are business groups and their state affiliates, particularly the National Federation of Independent Business, the Chamber of Commerce, and the National Restaurant Association. Hotel, lodging, and tourism associations, grocery industry associations, home builders, and Americans for Prosperity — a billionaire-funded right-wing dark money group — have also supported bills in various states.

Amid this offensive, industry groups have rather unconvincingly claimed that such changes are necessary because of declining youth labor force participation rates. Though the share of sixteen- to twenty-four-year-olds had indeed decreased over the past two decades, the EPI’s analysis finds that the main reason is that increased numbers are going to school.

A much more convincing explanation for the push’s motivation is America’s current labor market. With unemployment now at its lowest level in over fifty years, some industries evidently favor the creation of a new labor pool among younger workers over the messy business of trying to attract prospective employees with higher wages. As is typically the case, corporate lobbyists and their political surrogates are hoping to frame the horror of badly paid teenagers working in meatpacking facilities or scaling girders on dangerous construction sites as an extension of opportunity and agency.

Some employers, in fact, aren’t even bothering with spin or legislative activism and are instead taking much the shorter route of employing children illegally — the EPI’s analysis also finding a chilling surge in the number of outright child labor violations over the past year.

If nothing else, it’s a reminder that businesses in a capitalist economy are perpetually in search of new ways to lower their costs and increase their margins, even if the means to that end are right out of Oliver Twist.

“Microwaving our Planet”: The Disappearance of Amphibians Worldwide?

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‘Antisemitism is an evil:’ UK Labor party bans Jeremy Corbyn from candidacy

During Corbyn’s term as leader, antisemitic rhetoric, much of it targeting Zionism and supporters of Israel, became rife within the party.

By Ben Cohen, The Algemeiner

The former leader of the British Labour Party, Jeremy Corbyn — whose five year term at its helm was marked by a succession of scandals involving antisemitism — has been banned by the party’s national executive from standing as its representative at the next general election.

Labour’s National Executive Committee on Tuesday voted 22-12 in favor of a motion submitted by the party’s leader, Sir Keir Starmer, to eject Corbyn from the party’s roster of election candidates. The decision means that if Corbyn wishes to run again in Islington North, the London parliamentary constituency he has represented since 1983, he would have to do so as an independent candidate.

Speaking after Tuesday’s vote, Starmer said that it was “an important moment in the history of the Labour Party,” pledging “zero tolerance” for racism and antisemitism.

“Antisemitism is an evil and any political party that cultivates it does not deserve power,” Starmer declared.

During Corbyn’s term as leader, antisemitic rhetoric, much of it targeting Zionism and supporters of Israel, became rife within the party, leading to mass resignations of Jewish members and reports from Jewish Labour MPs of harassment both online and in the real world.

In 2018, three years after Corbyn was elected, Sir David Garrard, one of the party’s leading donors, announced that he was withdrawing his support, asserting that Labour under Corbyn “has supported and endorsed the most blatant acts of antisemitism, and yet it has failed to expel many of those who have engaged in the grossest derogatory fantasies about Jewish/Zionist conspiracies – and Jewish characterizations and accusations which conjure up the very kind of antisemitic attacks that led to such unbearable consequences for innocent millions in the past.”

Corbyn’s term came to an end in 2020, a few months after Labour suffered an ignominious defeat in the UK General Election. In October that same year, Starmer removed the party’s parliamentary whip from his predecessor after Corbyn denounced a report into Labour antisemitism from the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) — the UK’s national equality body — as “dramatically overstated.” The report concluded that Labour had been responsible for “unlawful” acts of harassment and discrimination during Corbyn’s tenure.

Asked by reporters on Tuesday whether he would “categorically” rule out a Corbyn candidacy, Starmer replied, ”Let me be very clear about that: Jeremy Corbyn will not stand for Labour at the next general election, as a Labour party candidate.”

He continued: “What I said about the party changing, I meant, and we are not going back, and that is why Jeremy Corbyn will not stand as a Labour candidate at the next general election.”

In a furious response to the NEC’s decision, Corbyn said that Tuesday’s “disgraceful move shows contempt for the millions of people who voted for our party in 2017 and 2019, and will demotivate those who still believe in the importance of a transformative Labour government.”

Intimating that he may run as an independent, Corbyn said that he would “not be intimidated into silence. I have spent my life fighting for a fairer society on behalf of the people of Islington North, and I have no intention of stopping now.”

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Shifting Sands of the Arab Gulf Herald a New Middle East. Rapprochement between Saudi Arabia and Iran

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The WMD Pretext, The Senate Voted “To Approve a Fabricated War”. The AUMF Against Iraq (HJ Res. 114).

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Canada Auditor General Finds a ‘Minimum’ of $27.4 Billion in Suspicious COVID Benefit Payments

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Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC): The Weaponization of Money? WHO’s Health Tyranny: Towards a Totalitarian World Government? No Way!

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Why the National Question Matters to the Left

Karl Marx famously wrote that “the workers have no country” — but he immediately added that they had to become “the leading class in the nation.” For over a century, the Left has struggled to reconcile the two ideas.

For over a century, the “national question” has inspired a great deal of reflection on the Left. (Jorge Gil / Europa Press via Getty Images)

When French prime minister Élisabeth Borne stood up in parliament to push through her controversial pension reform, MPs from the left-wing France Insoumise reacted in a way that their counterparts in many European countries wouldn’t — that is, by singing the national anthem. Unlike Britain’s dismal “God Save the King,” France’s thundering “La Marseillaise” is at least a song rooted in revolution — or more precisely, in revolutionary war. But its strident patriotism means it surely isn’t beloved by all left-wingers, even in France.

The Left’s relationship with patriotism and national identity has no single “solution” — not least given that it doesn’t mean the same things in all countries. Socialists in liberal democracies in the imperial core can hardly address the problem in the same way as parties leading the armed resistance to colonial occupation. Yet, the “national question” has surely inspired a great deal of reflection on the Left, producing different schools of thought that provide insight into the problem today.

Jean-Numa Ducange is a historian of the socialist movement, with a particular focus on France and German-speaking countries. His recent book, Quand la Gauche pensait la Nation (When the Left Reflected on the Nation), discusses how socialists at the turn of the twentieth century thought about the “national” dimension of their politics and how it fit together with their proclaimed internationalism.

He spoke to Lava Media’s Adrian Thomas about how the Left has grappled with the national question — and why it’s still a problem today.

Adrian Thomas

All over Europe, nationalists have the wind in their sails. They saturate the media with fantasy visions of national identity, indeed with some success. The Left seems clueless on this point. For many on the far left, singing the national anthem or waving the flag seems outdated, even suspect of conservative leanings. So, starting from its origins, what actually is the nation — and where does this concept come from?

Jean-Numa Ducange

It is a very old concept that has been through many major upheavals, up to the present. In France, it is usually said that the “nation” was a left-wing theme after the Revolution of 1789 and gradually swung to the right during the nineteenth century with the rise of nationalism. “Vive la nation” was the common rallying cry of the revolutionaries of 1789, over and above other points that might divide them. This was the birth of the idea of a political nation, theoretically open to all nationalities, and which was above all based on a political pact, against monarchs and against any ethnic outlook.

In fact, many historians have shown that the French “nation” is less open than it might seem. Some revolutionaries had a strictly French outlook, linked to the history of a people rooted in a circumscribed piece of territory. But, for many actors — and important revolutionary movements around the world in the nineteenth century — speaking about the nation meant human and political progress.

This may seem an overly French-centric perspective. But the national idea long retained a progressive character for many peoples subject to foreign oppression. This applies to a large part of this historical period. Above all, the nation is not a fixed concept defined once and for all time: from a socialist viewpoint, it is originally a largely “bourgeois” construct, but which could take on a progressive character, depending on the circumstances.

The nation does not have the same meaning when closely linked to a revolutionary process as it does when it is the product of reactionary forces. One of the big questions is the place of the nation faced with supranational bodies (either meaning empires or more recent structures such as the European Union). Who can defend the nation in these circumstances and in the name of what?

These great questions have lost none of their present-day relevance: and even today, there is no consensus on this point among the forces of the radical left (from communists to ex-communists who remain to the left of social democracy…).

Adrian Thomas

What place did Karl Marx give to the nation? Didn’t he write in the Communist Manifesto that the “workers have no country”?

Jean-Numa Ducange

Marx did not give any clear definition of the nation, nor set some strategic plan that would have allowed socialists and communists to say “Marx said that in such-and-such instance, we should support national demands,” etc. He took a kind of case-by-case approach — for instance, backing the demands of oppressed Poland — and granted the question greater or lesser importance depending on the period he was writing. For instance, in the case of l’Algérie française — Algeria, conquered by France from 1830 onward — he was, like many socialists at the time, initially convinced of the benefits of colonization.

But he evolved on this question and became increasingly aware of the specific fate of non-European peoples. From Kevin Anderson to Marcello Musto, many recent researchers have shown that in later life, Marx adopted an ever more multilinear reading of history, abandoning the idea that the development of human history would basically have to be fought and won in Europe.

As for the famous line in the Manifesto that the “workers have no country,” I’d observe that what he says in this text is quite a lot more nuanced when we consider the whole passage. More precisely, he said, “The working men have no country. We cannot take from them what they have not got. Since the proletariat must first of all acquire political supremacy, must rise to be the leading class of the nation, must constitute itself the nation, it is so far, itself national, though not in the bourgeois sense of the word.”

So, if we cite only the first part, we are emphasizing that the workers’ lack of country is the main perspective, also for the future: the abolition of borders ought to be encouraged, and the development of capitalism should lead us there. But if we bring in the second part of the same passage, which explicitly talks about standing for the nation, but in a manner different to the bourgeois sense, then the perspective is changed.

Reading Marx’s work more broadly, I think that he never really envisages the abolition of nations, pure and simple. Rather, he wanted an end to the hostility among nations. He left Marxists many questions still to resolve: When and in what circumstances can they defend the nation? And how far should they go, in terms of their political alliances, to justify a common front within a national framework?

Marx did not elaborate on this point, because he didn’t consider this question to be of such pivotal importance. It was leaders of the subsequent generations that took up this question: [Joseph] Stalin, Leon Trotsky, Karl Renner, Otto Bauer, Jean Jaurès, to name just a few.

Reading Marx’s work more broadly, I think that he never really envisages the abolition of nations, pure and simple. Rather, he wanted an end to the hostility among nations.

The Left’s idea of the nation has varied a great deal. It was a central focus during the Belle Époque (1871–1914), both with Jaurès in France and in Central Europe. The German and Austro-Hungarian socialists were particularly concerned with this issue. For Jaurès in France, amor patria was above discussion: he deeply loved his country, its culture, and its language, which he often praised in lusty tones. But he never had an exclusivist or “racial” conception of the nation.

In his 1911 work The New Army, he closely linked the nation and internationalism: “A little internationalism takes us away from the homeland; a lot of internationalism brings us closer to it.” Loyalty to one’s own country was combined with a defense of internationalism. For Jaurès, France meant the homeland of the Revolution and of the Republic. A historian of the years from 1789–94, he identified with the “patriots” of this period who stood opposed to the “aristocrats.” As for the German-speaking countries, there the picture was rather different. The year 1871 was the moment when German unification was finally achieved. But apart from the fact that Germany was now a political as well as geographic reality, there remained the question of minority peoples whose rights had not been recognized.

The same goes for countries entirely dominated by some other people. In their case, there was a strong determination to assert their national rights, often taking greater prominence than social questions, thus posing powerful challenges to socialists.

We can take the Czechs as an example. Today, they are gathered in one, independent country. At the time of the Austro-Hungarian empire, the Czechs were attached to its Austrian part and had no specific recognition of their nationhood. Yet the Czechs comprised a large number of workers, who were present in various industrial cities. At first, German was the lingua franca; Czech was also learned, but this was relatively little raised as a political issue. But linguistic and national demands gained strength, to the point of sparking conflicts with German-speaking workers.

This was one reason why the Austrians (so-called “Austro-Marxists”) wrote a lot about questions of nationality: essentially, they had no choice but to do so and had to offer some perspectives to these various peoples. But this also defined a wider current of thought and politics, which resulted in a striking number of Marxist studies and analysis, stretching up till the early 1930s.

To stick to the nationalities question — and simplifying things hugely — their vision was the following: faced with the multinational reality of the Habsburg Empire, they proposed a “personal autonomy,” meaning, the possibility to have one’s “national” rights recognized by the state, without the state being synonymous with any one nation. In the context of Austria-Hungary, this notably meant a recognition of the rights of Czechs, but without their collective secession.

For Jean Jaurès, amor patria was above discussion: he deeply loved France, its culture, and its language, which he often praised in lusty tones. But he never had an exclusivist or ‘racial’ conception of the nation.

The socialists thus hoped to avoid the creation of many little nation-states, which they considered unviable. These principles inspired some compromises at the time, especially in Moravia (part of the modern-day Czech Republic). World War I cast aside all these efforts, but there were interesting initiatives close to these ideas, such as the “Balkan Federation”: a sort of supranational body that would make it possible to avoid “Balkanization” (a word that entered everyday language to refer to wars and fragmentation). Some more concrete and long-lasting political systems drew inspiration from these ideas, such as Yugoslavia.

Sometimes we read that the current system in Belgium (which recognizes the specificities of both French- and Dutch-speakers) is inspired by these ideas. For me there are indeed some family resemblances, but we shouldn’t ever forget that the Austro-Marxists were… Marxists!

The fight for nationalities’ rights had to be linked to the social and class struggle. They thought that because of the contradictions that capitalism generates it would be incapable of resolving the problem.

Adrian Thomas

Fundamentally, isn’t this idealizing centralization? Do working-class people have more interest in living in big (pluri-)national units, like the German Social Democracy (SPD) once envisaged with its talk of “Greater Germany” (i.e., including all German speakers), or else in small, more coherent states, as suggested by the principle of national self-determination?

Jean-Numa Ducange

Well beyond the SPD, the idea that proletarians have more interest living in larger imperial or national spaces was very widespread still at the beginning of the twentieth century. The logic was: there is nothing to be gained from an ever-greater number of small states, which amount to so many divisions in the working class.

Hence many militants’ attachment to the idea of “Greater Germany,” a project that can obviously shock us today, given that this greater Germany is connected to the Nazi project for Anschluss (Adolf Hitler’s annexation of Austria to Germany in 1938). But there was an old “Greater-German” project, that had emerged from the revolution of 1848, which sought, in essence, to create a vast German-speaking territory, which some imagined on the model of the French Republic.

For her part, Rosa Luxemburg considered illusory the demand for the independence of Poland, at the time split between Russia, Germany, and Austria. Why, Luxemburg asked, should socialists waste proletarians’ time building up new borders? She thought that backing Polish independence would oblige the Polish workers’ parties to ally with other, “bourgeois” forces, or even reactionary ones, over this question. Hence her rejection of this demand.

This priority placed on larger units was also widespread among Austro-Marxist perspectives, and the French did not necessarily distance themselves from such an outlook either, even though generally they showed little interest for pluri-national approaches, rather alien to their own situation.

Adrian Thomas

But after World War I, the rejection of “social-chauvinism” — as the Social Democrats’ nationalist turn was called — was at the basis of the Communist Parties’ creation. The notion of the patrie — the homeland — seems to have fallen into disgrace after the great bloodbath of 1914–18.

Jean-Numa Ducange

Yes, indeed; one of the explanations for Bolshevism’s great success from 1917 onward was its rejection of chauvinism. There was a powerful rejection of “brainwashing” and war propaganda, and social democrats were associated with this horror because they had almost all backed their own states’ war efforts in summer 1914. So, it is no surprise that in the young Communist Parties there was a visceral repudiation of all patriotism and of any national reference points. The nation — well, it was in its name that men had been called on to massacre their neighbors…

Recently I have been working on the foundation and development of the Communist Parties of Germany and Austria in 1918–20. These young organizations — especially in Austria — at first rallied a minority wing of the workers’ movement and were driven by a radical internationalism that led them to think that a “Red Mitteleuropa,” a sort of USSR on the scale of central and eastern Europe, was within reach.

We know about Luxemburg’s strongly anti-nationalist positions, but in this era, some went even further than her, advocating for a workers’ movement that was “anti-national” both in principle and in practice. Even if we ignore this extreme wing, it is clear that the communist internationalism at the origin of these parties tended to reject the nation, except in the case of oppressed peoples who still had to go though the national stage (the application of the “national right to self-determination”) to get rid of occupying powers.

Even the French Communist movement of the early years — even though it made its first steps in a country that had emerged victorious from World War I and where there was a strong sense of national belonging given the republican order — took a critical view of patriotism. The members of the young French Communist Party (PCF) did not want to sing “La Marseillaise” and refused to commemorate the French Revolution, a “bourgeois” revolution that had nothing to do with the proletariat: room had to be made for 1917 and the future belonged to Sovietism, which, even insofar as it respected national cultures, no longer intended to make reference to the nations of old.

One of the explanations for Bolshevism’s great success from 1917 onward was its rejection of national chauvinism.

But what had applied in 1918–20 very soon changed. In Germany, 1923 was the final year when a large-scale revolutionary movement shook the country. At the beginning of that year, French and Belgian troops marched into the industrial Ruhr region to demand the payment of war reparations. Now, Germany was part-occupied by a foreign army. Did this make Berlin the capital of an oppressed country? It was a debate that ran through the Communist International.

Some Communists advocated national resistance against the occupier, while others challenged this line. But this did show one thing: the Communist movement could not dodge the imperative to take a stance on the national question, which was constantly posed. Ten years later in 1935, when the Communist International drove the turn toward “People’s Fronts,” the Communist Parties radically changed their perspective: now, the PCF sang “La Marseillaise” and reappropriated the legacy of 1789, contradicting its arguments from the 1920s. Left-wing minorities were deeply wounded by this change of attitude.

This turn even intensified during World War II, with the resistance against the Nazi occupier: France was, in turn, somehow in the position of an oppressed country. In the immediate aftermath of the war, the PCF above all presented itself as “the” great national party that defended the country’s independence and sovereignty; some socialists and far-left militants accused it of chauvinism, especially on colonial questions.

This was an excessive way of framing things, if we compare all this to the French population as a whole: the parts of society influenced by the PCF were more internationalist and less chauvinist than the norm, especially compared to the conservative forces who — lest we forget — continued to structurally influence political life.

Adrian Thomas

Didn’t part of the Socialist movement stray into support for war and colonialism, precisely because of an imperialist turn in its idea of the nation? For instance, in Belgium we could cite the case of Émile Vandervelde.

Jean-Numa Ducange

Among the leadership groups of the various parties in the pre-1914 Socialist International, there was indeed an orientation clearly favorable toward the colonial endeavor. There were left-wing minorities, notably around [Vladimir] Lenin and Luxemburg, that challenged this, but doubtless they were isolated.

The idea that it was necessary to reform colonial empires in a more humanistic sense, but without really questioning their foundations, was very widespread: Vandervelde condemned the “wrong kind” of colonization. He had a certain humanistic dimension: he was well able to condemn colonial crimes but not, more fundamentally, the structural system of colonial domination.

The idea that it was necessary to reform colonial empires in a more humanistic sense, but without really questioning their foundations, was very widespread among turn-of-the-century socialists.

This was at the heart of the contradictions in Belgium’s Parti Ouvrier (Workers’ Party): the Congo question was then one of the great issues in debate within the party. This was quite widespread at the time: Eduard Bernstein in Germany and, for a long time, someone like Jaurès in France, were convinced that there was a certain hierarchy of peoples, and they developed a sort of “colonial socialism” which did not imagine the colonized peoples becoming independent.

I think this is also one of the reasons for the international success of Communism from 1919 onward; Lenin had well understood that the twentieth century would be the century of anti-colonial struggles and that the Communists had to fight for the independence of the oppressed countries, even if this required sometimes broad alliances riddled with dangers. Was it necessary to ally with certain bourgeois or nationalist parties, against the colonizer? For their part, the Social Democrats, or at least many of their leaders, had absolutely not seen this development coming.

So rather than speak of a “turn” (which would imply that there had been a clearly anti-imperialist position to start with) it is necessary to distinguish between the opposed lines within the socialist movement from its origins, which do not necessarily overlap with other dividing lines. By that I mean that not all reformists were pro-colonialist, and not all revolutionaries anti-colonialist…

The French example is telling on this score. We know the famous expression “French Algeria,” which brings to mind the slogan of the nationalist far right who wanted to keep Algeria as a French territory. When we talk about the 1950s partisans of “French Algeria,” clearly that’s who we mean. We think of the Organisation armée secrète (OAS), a far-right organization who organized terrorist attacks, especially against leaders of the anti-colonial left. But the expression existed already in the 1830s and ’40s, and was openly embraced and used by many “utopian socialists” (for example, Charles Fourier and the fouriéristes). Many people today have a soft spot for these “utopians” and sing their praises as against Marxist “scientific socialism” — but they totally forget this element of their worldview!

Indeed, the utopian horizon of these early socialists was often colonial: the projects they worked up for alternative societies were often accompanied with an open orientalism, which saw these African “new territories” as the El Dorado where they could try out their social experiments. Eighty years later, the French Socialists divided over the colonial question: in 1912, a certain Lucien Deslinières presented a bill on “Socialist Morocco” to parliament in the name of the Socialist group of MPs. The idea consisted of sending “good,” socialist French settlers to explain to the natives how they ought to seek development. This was a typical “left-wing” colonialist approach.

But, this bill was ultimately withdrawn thanks to the intervention of Jaurès, who considered it outrageous. His position on this question had evolved since the 1880s: he had now become a fierce critic of the colonial order.

But this project was long supported by Jules Guesde, even though it was he who did most to introduce Marxism to France. Certainly, some early French Marxists like Édouard Vaillant were already brilliant critics of the colonial order. But on this point, Jaurès was much more critical of colonialism than others, even though outwardly they were more left-wing on other topics.

It would take the creation of the Communist International in 1919 before there was a clearly anti-colonial position. Then, from the 1930s, the same problem arose once more. The turn toward the People’s Front, and the broad alliances it involved, obliged the PCF to mute its anti-colonialism.

Adrian Thomas

Chaim Zhitlowsky, a Russian Jewish socialist exiled in Switzerland, seems to have tried to define an intermediate position. In 1899, he wrote in one German journal you cite that “[w]hile cosmopolitanism finds its ideal in the disappearance of national differences and understands humanity as a conglomerate of single individuals, internationalism is based on the idea of fraternization among peoples, which does not mean that one brother must be identical to another like peas in a pod.” Is this a tenable line to follow, on the national question?

Jean-Numa Ducange

I’m not necessarily word-for-word in agreement with that, but the basic insight seems right to me. Internationalism doesn’t mean denying the existence of nations and national cultures. Of course, these are always historical constructs, but their longevity and continuity mean they do structurally influence individuals’ daily lives. To try and overlook them, in favor of declarations which — while generous-spirited and fraternal — are totally disconnected from the realities of whole sections of the working classes, does not allow us to move forward and thus leaves the field open to others.

We could hardly adopt Zhitlowsky’s early-twentieth-century attack on “cosmopolitanism,” a line which today has strongly right-wing and even antisemitic connotations. But any attempt to automatically take the opposite position to nationalists — which at first glance may seem a laudable approach — ends up advocating ideas with an only limited circulation and which are not compatible with the effective practice of sovereignty in general, or of popular sovereignty more particularly.

There is an abundant literature on popular and/or national sovereignty, and in this context we can theoretically discuss what national borders can and should mean today. But I think that in terms of concrete practices, social and political change requires a series of situated and identifiable actions involving de facto relatively restricted mobilities, and rootedness in a given workplace, city, and so on.

For instance, in the English-speaking world (and to a lesser extent in other countries, including France), there is a renewed interest in workers’ councils and how they developed after 1918 (the Soviets in Russia of course, the Biennio Rosso in Italy, the Rätebewegung in the German-speaking countries, and so on). In some cases, these councils posed the concrete question of workers’ power, of workers’ control of the tools of production, etc. All this implied collective mobilization and a geographically situated militancy involving regular meetings in the same place.

Internationalism doesn’t mean denying the existence of nations and national cultures. Of course, these are always historical constructs, but their longevity and continuity mean they do structurally influence individuals’ daily lives.

Put like that, it sounds like a rather banal point. But I am struck at seeing how much some people try and cast aside this territorial dimension (which therefore raises questions about the place where power and concrete, “national,” “popular” sovereignty, relying on local roots, can be exercised).

In the age of the digital revolution, it may be argued that a growing number of jobs are being completely de-territorialized. But apart from the fact that manual and blue-collar jobs remain a reality, even if one that part of the Left seems to mostly forget, many jobs that are largely dependent on IT are often linked to situated, collective labor (offices with the obligatory presence of employees for at least part of the week, etc.). So, the celebration of permanent mobility by a certain kind of Left contradicts certain basic realities, and this even apart from the fact that it seems to me to be an illusory claim with regard to a large part of the workforce, given the multiple imperatives of capitalism.

This helps turn important layers of the population away from what this Left says, and for these latter to find greater relevance in a nostalgic-reactionary discourse celebrating the so-called rooted common people. Such people find these latter claims closer to their concerns and to their feeling of dispossession. So, yes, I think that we need an “intermediate” position: one maintaining an internationalist perspective of the union of peoples and that thinks as much as possible about our common, universal destiny, but also asserting that concrete political practice (especially a socialist one) has to be carried out at a level that corresponds to populations’ real horizons. For a very large proportion of the popular layers, this horizon is surely still a national one.

Adrian Thomas

How today would you find a Marxist path through the dilemmas of nationalism and internationalism, borders and free movement, national sovereignty and globalization (or Europeanization), integration (or even assimilation) and multiculturalism?

Jean-Numa Ducange

These questions must be answered starting from the concrete situation in order to arrive at a proper balance. You may tell me I’m dodging the question. Not at all. Let’s briefly go back to what Lenin said about the nation: to support the national endeavor in an imperialist country (France, Great Britain, Germany, etc.) was reactionary and implied a de facto alignment of the workers’ movement with the bourgeoisie, especially in case of war. On the other hand, Lenin supported the national demands of oppressed countries, especially the colonized peoples.

On questions of sovereignty, a subtle position is needed. But at a more general level, I think that we are coming to an end of a cycle with regard to free movement, which the radical left has long perceived as an ideal unto itself.

To reclaim politics and defend social rights, there is, it seems to me, a need to “territorialize” politics. The impressive development of different forms of mobility over the last half-century had long led to the opposite belief. We will never go back to the previous positions, which would be a reactionary idea, in the original sense of the word. But the fight for emancipation cannot do without a concrete framework, a concrete location.

I would like to illustrate these differences between national situations by briefly comparing Western Europe and China. For ten years, I have been developing scholarly exchanges with Chinese researchers on the history of socialism and its various paths in history. These scholars often asked me about French (and European) Communists’ relationship to the market, EU integration, and the nation. For many of them, reticence toward the European project seemed rather hard to understand: they see us (the European countries) as having strong national specificities but now inevitably forming a continental bloc, which must position itself for multilateralism on an international scale.

Similarly, globalization does not have the same meaning, for China played the card of the market and globalization for its development, albeit in a largely controlled manner and under the authority of the state. In France, globalization has meant a challenge to many aspects of its national model. National sovereignty has been fiercely defended in China, even as its global trade was developing at an incredible speed.

All this would of course require a more precise discussion of each of the issues at stake; but it does show that we cannot a priori define a simple and uniform set of answers. All the more reason to revive the original internationalism, which especially implied exchanges between various national experiences.

One last point, on the question of “multiculturalism.” If we remain at a very general level, we may think that “multiculturalism” is a positive thing in itself: the recognition of rights, of the diversity of cultures, and so on. Some even see a family resemblance with Austro-Marxism.

At a certain level of generality, no one will deny the difference of cultures and the need to preserve them. But in practice, one must take into account national realities, the dynamics of assimilation, and dynamics of integration, which have not all been negative — far from it. In the twentieth century, trade unions and left-wing parties played an assimilating role for many immigrants through their struggles and their activities in the workplace, for example in France. This went together with the structuring of a class consciousness.

It is totally naive to believe, as some multiculturalists say, that reality has changed and that any kind of “assimilation” has become reactionary, etc. To have a socialist perspective, it is necessary to create something in common, to “make a people.”

Once again, the balance is hard to find. But the exaltation of all specificities, all differences — apart from the fact that they are sometimes ambivalent and that conservatives can equally well stand for that, in the sense “to each his own religion, his own particularities, etc.” — stand at odds with a real perspective of liberation.

Report: Ultra-Orthodox lawmaker working to bring Gantz into Netanyahu government

United Torah Judaism’s Moshe Gafni reportedly trying to bring in former Defense Minister Benny Gantz to ‘balance’ right-wing parties in the government.

By World Israel News Staff

An Ultra-Orthodox lawmaker from the Coalition is working to bring former Defense Minister Benny Gantz and his National Unity party into the government, according to a report by Kan Thursday.

The report claimed that MK Moshe Gafni, the second highest member of the United Torah Judaism party and leader of the UTJ’s Degel HaTorah faction, is actively courting Gantz in a bid to “balance” the government’s right-wing allies.

Officials who spoke on condition of anonymity were cited by the report, claiming that Gafni began making overtures to Gantz during the first meeting between Opposition and Coalition officials aimed at reaching a compromise on the government’s judicial reform plan.

On Monday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced that he has frozen the judicial overhaul, following massive nation-wide protests, an unsanctioned general strike, and the illegal closure of Israel’s largest airport.

A day later, delegations from the Coalition and Opposition met at the President’s Residence in Jerusalem for an hour-long meeting to kick off the negotiations.

Gafni reportedly used Tuesday’s meeting as an opportunity to reach out to Gantz, telling him that he hopes the centrist National Unity party can be brought into the government to “balance” the influence of the right-wing parties Otzma Yehudit and the Religious Zionist Party.

The report added that Gantz has received similar messages from other Coalition members interested in expanding the government’s support.

Gantz has thus far rejected the offers, however, the report said.

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