Wednesday, March 26, 2025

We Shouldn’t Have to Work This Hard

Poorer Americans work long hours to afford basic necessities. Richer Americans work long hours in pursuit of “the good life” that’s perpetually just beyond their grasp. All of this tedious work is a waste of our precious time and resources.
March 24, 2025
Source: Jacobin


Motivational poster glorifying "the grind", with a quote from Beyonce.



In 1930, economist John Maynard Keynes famously predicted that technological progress and economic growth would solve the problem of material scarcity. In one hundred years, Keynes anticipated in his essay “Economic Possibilities for Our Grandchildren,” humanity was on track to develop the productive capacity to meet its needs with minimal effort, replacing lives of labor with lives of leisure.

The system would require each worker to contribute just fifteen hours of labor per week, freeing people to focus on living “wisely and agreeably and well.” The love of money would finally be recognized as a “disgusting morbidity,” even a mental illness requiring the intervention of specialists. People would devote their time to stimulating, diverting, and fulfilling pursuits. Days wasted on trivial labor would be an ugly memory, provoking a collective shudder before becoming increasingly hard for subsequent generations to fathom.

That was ninety-five years ago. Unless a major upset occurs in the next five years, Keynes’s rosy prediction was a bust.

For part of the twentieth century, it seemed plausible. In the United States, working hours were decreasing while material satisfaction was rising. But in the 1980s, the train went off the tracks. Up to that point, two trends seemed reliable: that people worked less overall in the richest countries, and that the more a person earned, the less they worked. The United States turned the whole theory on its head.

After 1980, Americans started working longer hours despite surging productivity, nearly erasing two decades of postwar leisure gains. Just as surprisingly, the increase applied to low and high earners alike, albeit differently. Low earners were forced to work more to survive, while high earners voluntarily worked more to compete.

As sociologist Jamie McCallum observes in Worked Over: How Round-The-Clock Work Is Killing the American Dream, “The most significant change for low-wage workers was that they increased their weeks worked per year, but for the rich it was hours in a week.” Imagine a fast-food worker who never gets a vacation, then imagine a finance firm manager working late every night.

Today Americans live in the richest country in the world and work like dogs. Transcending a class that has to work long hours to afford basic necessities often means joining a class that chooses to work long hours to alleviate persistent status anxiety. Whatever time isn’t outright stolen from us, we give away. Instead of enjoying Keynes’s age of abundance and leisure, we’re trapped in a rat race that can’t be won.
Nose to the Grindstone

Keynes assumed that productivity would naturally yield free time, as societies and individuals with the means to replace work with leisure would inevitably choose to do so. But increasingly productive capitalist societies don’t work like that. Instead, they consolidate wealth and power in the hands of a few ultrarich elites. Our productivity has soared as Keynes anticipated, but the profits have gone to a handful of people at the very top who wring more work out of the rest, yielding immeasurable wealth for a few and scarcity for everyone else.

The relationship between economic inequality and longer hours for low earners is fairly straightforward. As wealth concentrates, capitalists reshape the economic landscape, weakening labor protections, breaking unions, halting or reversing wage gains, and pushing for tax cuts that primarily benefit themselves. Resulting budget shortfalls justify austerity measures that gut social safety nets.

Workers thus have to take on longer hours or multiple jobs just to maintain basic living standards. Meanwhile, deregulation enables more exploitative labor practices while rising costs for essentials like housing, health care, and education force additional work hours simply to survive.People rationalize their refusal to appreciate the present by appealing to the strong association between hard work and virtue.

But how does runaway inequality compel people who can afford to relax to work more instead? Economists Jan Behringer, Martin Gonzalez Granda, and Till van Treeck attribute it to “Veblen effects,” named for sociologist Thorstein Veblen’s writings on consumption and social status and referring to pressure to keep up with the lifestyles of those on the higher rungs. The problem is that the people above high earners — the top 1 percent towering over the rest of the top 20 percent — have become vastly richer in recent decades.

Consequently, high earners’ sense of what constitutes “the good life” is distorted, producing a permanent sense of subjective material deprivation and endless striving to mitigate it. The researchers point out that the leisure time shift coincided with a significant increase in the income share of the top 1 percent. In this skewed landscape, intangible things like leisure time are less valuable than cash, which workers can exchange for status symbols like a bigger house that shore up their economic position.

In Worked Over, McCallum focuses less on social status jockeying than basic self-preservation in a cutthroat economic environment. Constant downsizing and layoffs have put high earners in competition to prove themselves indispensable by outperforming one another. In 1979, long workweeks of fifty hours or more were more prevalent among the bottom two hourly earnings quintiles. By the 2000s, they were most common in the top quintile.

This “long hours premium” imposed on high earners “rose alongside inequality of earnings within high-paying occupations,” McCallum observes. “This inequality drives competition among employees who fear their own disposability during slumps as they see their peers moving ahead. This fear translates into working longer and longer.”

In Fear of Falling: The Inner Life of the Middle Class, Barbara Ehrenreich identified another impetus to voluntary overwork, especially for the professional-managerial class positioned just below the rich — something “subtler and more psychological. And that’s a fear of going soft. Of losing it,” she said, meaning the “self-discipline and willpower that it takes to achieve in a professional career.”

One can never rest, for downward social mobility hangs over the heads of these professionals like the sword of Damocles. This pressure stems from the meritocratic belief that “the good life” is a testament to hard work and skill, and can be lost through negligence and the deterioration of talent. “Going soft” would be a humiliating exposure of the professional’s unworthiness all along.

In “Economic Prospects for Our Grandchildren,” Keynes offered a more existential explanation for voluntary overwork, speaking derisively of the condition of being a pathological busybody obsessed with one’s own “purposiveness.” Such people are unable to live in the moment, always living for some future time, like a man who “does not love his cat, but his cat’s kittens; nor, in truth, the kittens, but only the kittens’ kittens.” People rationalize their refusal to appreciate the present by appealing to the strong association between hard work and virtue.

Keynes anticipated that there would come a time when this justification would fall away, forcing people to relax. “We have been trained too long to strive and not to enjoy,” he wrote, but we can become “delightful people who are capable of taking direct enjoyment in things.”
Escaping the Rat Race

The bad news, as demonstrated by the American story, is that an age of leisure will not automatically flow from increased productivity. The good news is that political interventions can bring us closer to this vision.

“While Keynes’ predictions regarding productivity growth have actually been exceeded over the past nearly 100 years,” conclude Behringer, Gonzalez Granda, and van Treeck, “the obstacles to more leisure time are primarily socio-political in nature.”

The Scandinavian social democracies, even in their recently weakened states, offer the starkest counterexample. They are highly productive, but their workers put in six to ten fewer hours per week than their American counterparts do, a trend that holds for low and high earners alike.

Unions have proven essential in translating productivity gains into shorter working hours. American union membership has collapsed since the postwar period; Scandinavian union rates have fallen recently, but workers in the region still maintain a powerful, centralized collective bargaining system that secures shorter workweeks, generous paid leave, and predictable schedules.

The comprehensive welfare systems in these countries further reduce overwork. With universal health care, subsidized childcare, free education through university, and robust social safety nets, Scandinavians don’t face the same financial pressures that drive Americans to sacrifice their free time for a paycheck. Importantly, these welfare policies have also increased female workforce participation, reducing women’s spousal dependency and decreasing the pressure on men to work long hours to support their families.

Scandinavian societies have seen inequality expand and their welfare states erode in recent years, but these features are still significantly more pronounced than in the United States. And beyond direct material impacts, they also have positive social effects that are difficult to quantify. Scandinavian countries maintain what sociologists call “low power distance” cultures, where extreme wealth disparities and conspicuous consumption are regarded with suspicion rather than admiration. Status anxiety still exists, but the structural features of the economy take the edge off, making it easier for other prosocial values to emerge. It becomes possible to locate the value of solidarity over competition, social cohesion over social rank, efficiency over theatrical displays of work commitment, and leisure over performance.Capitalism has actually weaponized the concept of ‘the good life’ against the notion of doing what we want with our time.

By contrast, the United States has a culture of competitive individualism fostered by our winner-take-all economic system. Here, things that might otherwise be considered entitlements are almost always commodities instead. Every element of a decent life, from health care to shelter to education, is sold on the private market. The richer the person, the higher the bid, the better the living. Relaxation is a failure to grow wealth, which is in turn a failure to live well. It’s a remarkable perversion: capitalism has actually weaponized the concept of “the good life” against the notion of doing what we want with our time.

When essential components of a dignified life are collectively guaranteed rather than individually bought and sold, “the good life” ceases to be a function of wealth or a reward contingent upon endless work. Instead, it becomes a baseline expectation rooted in human dignity and social citizenship.

The Scandinavian countries got this way through sustained class struggle. Workers’ movements wrested control of productivity gains from capital, refusing to accept that increased efficiency should only benefit shareholders and executives. Ending unnecessary toil requires expanding economic democracy, not just relying on market rationality.
Something Worth Belonging To

In 1991, the New York Times ran an article about Workaholics Anonymous, a new twelve-step program whose participants tended to be high earners — yuppies whose descent into work madness had been concealed by ’80s office culture norms until the consequences became unignorable.

“No matter how much work I did,” said Matt, a middle manager at a large corporation, “it was never enough.” Matt “worked for a company that attracted workaholics, so I didn’t feel strange or out of place when I’d be working every night and part of most weekends.” Likewise, Dan, a cofounder of the program, reached his breaking point when he exploded in rage at his assistant over sluggish progress on a corporate assignment.

“Workaholics are the most antisocial people you can find,” said Dan, citing his own broken relationships, sacrificed at the altar of productivity. There’s truth there: every hour spent working is an hour not spent socializing with family, friends, and neighbors. But paradoxically, status anxiety itself is a deeply social impulse. We all want recognition and affirmation from the collective. We all want to belong.

Making it to the top rungs of a stratified class society is a pitiful substitute for true social belonging. Real belonging would be citizenship in a society that affirms the inherent worth of each person’s life, the value of our fleeting time, and our equal and shared claim to the fruits of human advancement.

Keynes was wrong to predict that the age of shared abundance would smoothly flow from productivity gains. But his vision of human liberation from needless work remains powerful — not as an inevitability but as a political horizon worth fighting for. This isn’t utopian fantasy but a concrete possibility, already partially realized in social democracies and more fully realizable in democratic socialist societies that don’t yet exist.

We can reclaim our time for pursuits that give life meaning: creativity, connection, contemplation, and labors of love. To do it, we’ll need to confront the economic elites who preside over the rat race.

Meagan Day is an associate editor and former staff writer at Jacobin. She is the coauthor of Bigger than Bernie: How We Go from the Sanders Campaign to Democratic Socialism.






















































The European Union Is Endorsing Israel’s Attack on Gaza

European leaders claim to be champions of the liberal international order that Donald Trump is repudiating. But they’re lining up with Trump to support the resumption of Israel’s murderous onslaught against Palestinian civilians.
March 23, 2025
Source: Jacobin


Bombs detonating in Gaza. (Photo: Abubaker Abed)

Since Donald Trump abruptly changed US policy toward Ukraine, there has been a lot of talk about European countries needing to step up to the plate and defend the liberal international order. Politicians like France’s Emmanuel Macron and Germany’s Friedrich Merz have used this line of argument to justify a massive increase in military spending by the states of Europe.

However, when it comes to Israel’s renewed onslaught against the people of Gaza, you couldn’t fit a blue-and-yellow handkerchief between the positions of the US and the European Union (EU).

Thursday’s meeting of the European Council, which brings together the prime ministers of all the EU member states, issued the following statement:


The European Council deplores the breakdown of the ceasefire in Gaza, which has caused a large number of civilian casualties in recent air strikes. It deplores the refusal of Hamas to hand over the remaining hostages. The European Council calls for an immediate return to the full implementation of the ceasefire-hostage release agreement.

Eve Geddie of Amnesty International described this communique as “another shameful attempt to justify Israel’s genocide and war crimes against Palestinians.” As Geddie pointed out, the statement did not even name Israel, let alone condemn it for killing hundreds of people with air strikes that were designed to target civilians during their predawn Ramadan meal.
“Total Devastation”

According to the European Council, it was “the breakdown of the ceasefire in Gaza” that killed those people, not the Israeli bombs and missiles that blew them to pieces. Although the council did not say directly who was responsible for the breakdown, the sentence that followed deploring “the refusal of Hamas to hand over the remaining hostages” made it absolutely clear where it placed the blame. The EU’s most important organ could find nothing to deplore in Israel’s conduct over the past few days.

In reality, as all of the European leaders who gave their approval to this statement know, it was Israel that unilaterally broke the cease-fire after trying to change the terms of the deal to which it signed up in January. If Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu wanted to secure the release of the Israeli hostages who are still in Gaza, he only had to follow through on the commitments that he made two months ago.

Netanyahu refused to begin moving into the second stage of the cease-fire agreement because it would mean a permanent halt to his campaign of mass murder. Resuming the slaughter of Palestinian civilians has kept his far-right coalition partners happy and diverted attention from his purge of the Israeli army and intelligence services.

The European Council statement was all the more shameful because it was issued after the bloodcurdling message that Netanyahu’s defense minister, Israel Katz, addressed to Gaza’s civilian population, leaving no room for misunderstanding:


Residents of Gaza, this is your final warning. The first Sinwar destroyed Gaza, and the second Sinwar will bring upon it total ruin. The Israeli Air Force’s attack against Hamas terrorists was only the first step. What follows will be far harsher, and you will bear the full cost. Evacuation of the population from combat zones will soon resume.

If all Israeli hostages are not released and Hamas is not kicked out of Gaza, Israel will act with force you have not known before. Take the advice of the US President: return the hostages and kick out Hamas, and new options will open up for you — including relocation to other parts of the world for those who choose. The alternative is destruction and total devastation.
Impunity for War Crimes

The statement by Katz supplied further material for the judges and lawyers working on cases against his government at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and the International Criminal Court (ICC). Israel and its leaders are currently facing trial for genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity, with a mountain of evidence already piled up.

It is more than a year since the ICJ issued a set of orders requiring Israel to protect the people of Gaza from the threat of genocide — orders that it has flagrantly violated from day one. It is more than four months since the ICC issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu and his former defense minister Yoav Gallant. Katz, who took over from Gallant when Netanyahu sacked him, has done more than enough to earn a warrant of his own.

Unlike the United States, every EU member has signed up to the Rome Statute that established the ICC. The court is based in the Netherlands, one of the EU’s founding states. António Costa and Ursula von der Leyen, presidents of the European Council and the European Commission respectively, issued statements last month condemning the Trump administration’s move to impose sanctions on the ICC.

However, when they should be condemning Israel’s genocidal rampage in Gaza, EU officials act as if the arrest warrant for Netanyahu simply does not exist. Three European states — France, Italy, and Greece — even allowed Netanyahu’s plane to pass through their airspace last month on his way to and from the United States. A few days later, von der Leyen’s statement on the ICC claimed that Europe would “always stand for justice and the respect of international law.”

There is no difference in practical terms between railing furiously against the ICC on the one hand and paying lip service to its role while rejecting its decisions on the other. Beneath the rhetorical sugarcoating, the attitude of the EU and its leading member states reveals the same contempt for international law and the lives of Palestinian civilians that the Trump administration has so ostentatiously displayed.


Daniel Finn is the features editor at Jacobin. He is the author of One Man’s Terrorist: A Political History of the IRA.
Reproductive Work From The Time Of Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Until Today’s Slovenia:
 An Interview With Sonja Lokar
March 22, 2025
Source: Originally published by Z. Feel free to share widely.


Sonja Lokar speaking at the anniversary of the Antifascist Women's Front in February 2025


The Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia has been well known for its socialist feminism – the politics that helped to create a state with a highly developed health-care system, with excellent childcare and all-day primary school, extended paid maternity and parental leave, public food canteens in the workplace, kindergartens, schools, companies and other state institutions, homes for the elderly in every municipality, an enshrined right to freedom of childbirth in the 1974 Constitution, and a whole system of support for the implementation of women’s reproductive and sexual rights and health. We spoke about this legacy and the current situation in reproductive work and reproductive rights in Slovenia (and other ex-Yugoslav countries) with a renowned Slovenian sociologist, international gender expert, feminist, activist, former politician and the president of The Women’s Lobby of Slovenia, Sonja Lokar.

What was the situation of women in the region of the former Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY) before SFRY was established, so before 1945?

The first Yugoslavia, the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes[1], was very diverse. Half of the country had a history of the Turkish Empire rule (today’s Serbia without Vojvodina, North Macedonia, Kosovo, Montenegro), the other half had a history of the Austro-Hungarian Empire rule (Vojvodina, Croatia, Slovenia). Bosnia and Herzegovina was under Turkish rule, then annexed to the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1908. The formerly Turkish part of the country, with exemption for the large cities, was characterized by a very high illiteracy rate among men and especially among women (over 70% even by 1945), while in the formerly Austro-Hungarian parts there were no illiterate women. In Slovenia, already before World War II, women made 30% of the working class. The majority of the population in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia were peasants and day-labourers, the working class was small in number, but as industry developed, the working class became stronger and more and more unionized and, under the influence of the Soviet revolution, attempted to organize itself also along party lines. But in the Kingdom the Communist Party of Yugoslavia was soon banned and driven underground, where it remained until the beginning of World War II.

The first Yugoslavia was essentially an autocratic constitutional monarchy with an extremely progressive constitution modelled on the German Weimar constitution but, unfortunately, not implemented. Women were not equal before the law, as was then the case almost everywhere in the world except in the Soviet Union. The law made them subordinated to the male members of the family before marriage (father, brother) and after marriage to the husband. This constitution stated that they had the right to vote, but no law was ever passed to give them the right to vote. It was an underdeveloped, peripheral, capitalist, unitary state that sought to erase inherited specificities, above all denying national differences and imposing Greater Serbian nationalism. It recognized religious differences and regulated the private status of women (marriage, inheritance, child allocation, the status of illegitimate mothers and children, divorce – which was not possible because it was contracted under religious law). In Christian religions, only separation from the table and bed was possible, but not total divorce. In Islam, a man could divorce at will, but a woman could not. Schools provided religious education according to three denominations: Orthodox, Catholic and Muslim, which had the status of state religions.

The society of Slovenia was realistically described by writers, playwrights, and poets of that time: Oton Župančič in his poem Duma, Ivan Cankar in Idealist and Hlapci (Idealist, Serfs), Prežihov Voranc in Samorastniki (The Self-Sown), Ivan Potrč, Ciril Kosmač in Tantadruj and Srečko Kosovel. The women were mostly maids, hired daily farm workers and factory workers, as well as teachers, midwives and low-level clerks. Women teachers were not allowed to marry if they wanted to keep their jobs, and many professions were inaccessible to women. Married bourgeois women were housewives. Patriarchy, in the manner of a capitalist, underdeveloped society controlled by religious morals, was thus legitimised in economic, public, and private life.

During World War II, many women were among the Yugoslav partisans, not only as auxiliary personnel, but also as medics, doctors, intelligence gatherers and fighters. Did this emancipatory moment have an impact on the later position of women in the SFRY[2]?
Partisan Woman by Nikolaj Pirnat, 1944

Not only did it have an impact, but it was also crucial. All our basic women’s rights are built on the blood and sacrifice of partisan women, nurses, doctors, couriers, informers, bourgeois women who collected food, shoes, clothes and sanitary supplies and sent them to partisans, peasant women who, in their homes, under the threat of the death of entire families and the burning of their homes, took the partisans under their roofs and fed them, bandaged their wounds and frostbite. What was particularly crucial was that among the partisans there were many dedicated communist women who really knew what had to be done to improve the situation of working women significantly. Vida Tomšič[3] presented a motion at the 5th National Conference of Yugoslav Communists in Dubrava near Zagreb in 1940 on the necessity of communists’ work among women, in which she developed to the last detail the program which the Communist Party had already started during the war, and which it had implemented step by step after the war. By 1990, women communists succeeded in implementing this programme almost fully.

Why was the Anti-Fascist Women’s Front founded and what was its importance in the struggle for women’s equality?  
Vida Tomšič (1913-1998) was a Slovenian Partisan fighter during World War II, prominent communist politician, women’s activist, she was the president of the Antifascist front of Women of Yugoslavia between 1948 and 1953 (Photo: Danilo Škofič)

It was initiated by the leadership of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia. The basic idea was that women, under the ideological leadership of communist women, should organise themselves en masse as the most important support for the armed partisan struggle and, through their participation in the national liberation movement, train themselves in every possible way for a completely different social role, on an equal footing with men in the post-war period. The motto of the founding meeting of the Anti-Fascist Women’s Front (AFWF) in Dobrnič in October 1943 was “All for the partisans until the final victory.” After the end of the war, AFWF played a remarkable role, today we would say the role of a mass civil society organization, replacing the state social policy and its institutions, since a systemic and universal social policy was almost non-existent under capitalism, and could not be established overnight by the communist authorities. In the south of Yugoslavia, the AFWF eliminated female illiteracy within two years by holding seminars of its activists in every village. In Slovenia, for example, the AFWF eliminated the trachoma that caused mass blindness in Prekmurje region, took care of war orphans, of the disabled, who were very numerous after the war, of the health education of uneducated women who knew little or nothing about their bodies and not enough about the care of newborn babies, and made women aware of their equal rights at home, at work, in politics. In 1953, however, the AFWF was abolished by the communist authorities. Vida Tomšič was the President of the AFWF at the time, and she strongly defended this decision. Her argument was that confining women only to the AFWF was harmful because the really important development and political decisions are taken in the party and the organs of national and local governments, without women, who are too concerned only with specific social issues, but who, alone and marginalized, cannot actually solve them successfully. Today, we would say that she has opted for gender mainstreaming – bringing a gender perspective into all policies where they are actually decided. Subsequent insights by women researchers into this abolition of AFWF have also provided different explanations as to why this happened. Some concluded that because the AFWF was in daily contact with the needs of women workers and peasants, it remained revolutionary, while the leadership of the Yugoslav Communist Party slowed down and began to warm up to the idea that women should be more concerned with the home, children and family rather than with social problems, while others noted, that the AFWF was in fact becoming too strong a political force and that AFWF women were too determined and too demanding, fighting uncompromisingly for their priorities, putting them before the Party, which in those days had other priorities and “bigger concerns” than gender equality. In my view, the truth is actually a mixture of all these insights. What is important, however, is that our social development later confirmed that the socialist women’s movement, after the initial organizational shock, had successfully regained momentum and showed that communist women politicians were able to learn from their mistakes.

What were the characteristics of socialist feminism and how was it implemented in the SFRJ?

Typically, it was framed within the ideological scheme of the Marxist theory of the liberation of labor. The leading party feminists firmly rejected and publicly denounced any deviation from this theory as a delusion of petty-bourgeois feminism and a defense of the interests of the privileged women, those who are the better-off, better educated and better-connected to the centers of real economic and political power. By attacking the patriarchy as a timeless social machine for male discrimination against women, these better off women are turning the class struggle into a meaningless, and therefore, ineffective struggle of women against men. The basic idea of our communist feminism, based on the theory of the liberation of labour, was that gender inequality could only be eliminated simultaneously and concomitantly with the abolition of capitalist exploitation of workers and the abolition of private ownership of economic resources, the means of production. In the class struggle, and in the building of a socialist society, female and male workers have a common interest and there must be alliance, comradeship and solidarity between them, because only together can they achieve the fundamental goal: the abolition of the capitalist order in the society and its transformation into a society of equality and freedom for all, not only for those who appropriate political power on the basis of their economic superiority. That is why Vida Tomšič and her female comrades were resolutely opposed to any independent, autonomous self-organization of women in politics, in the Communist League, in the trade unions, in the Union of Socialist Youth. The only exception was the Socialist Union of the Working People, an organization where different social groups that shared a consensus regarding the legitimacy of the socialist constitutional order could meet, freely express their differences, and find out how to work together for the greater common good.

What were the key gains for women in SFRY? What role did women politicians and activists play in the realisation of economic, social and political rights of women?

I would like to stress a few key points first: full equality of men and women before the law, women’s suffrage (already in the election of national liberation authorities in the time of World War II), the right to education and work in almost all professions, the separation of church and state including in public education and kindergartens, civil marriage, civil divorce, the equalization of the rights of legitimate and illegitimate children, special assistance for single mothers, an individualized pension and tax system, the division of marital property in half in the event of divorce, the allocation of the care of the children of divorced parents in accordance with the children’s best interests.

The abolition of the AFWF therefore proved to be a wrong step because the communist women’s movement had been significantly weakened for several years, as there were far too few active women in political decision-making positions, especially in the executive bodies of the Communist League and the elected state organs at different levels: the assemblies and governments. The Federation of Women’s Associations, which was to replace the AFWF, was too dispersed for socially active women, who no longer had their own relatively independent united organization to be able to formulate common women’s social priorities and then successfully mainstream them into political decision-making bodies. The movement really took off only after 1966, when the leadership of the Communist League decided to take a new step in the decentralization of the state and for a more market-oriented economy, for an economic reform that opened up Yugoslavia to international finance and foreign investments, opened up the borders for the free movement of people, and took a new step in the decentralization of the federation. It blossomed anew in the 1970s, when Yugoslavia effectively created a complex welfare state, operating on the basis of social property, integral self-management and a further decentralised federation. The women active at that time established excellent cooperation in the Council for Women’s Social Activity of the Socialist Union of the Working People and achieved a real revolution by participating in delegate assemblies at the level of municipalities, republics and provinces and the federation, and above all in self-governing interest communities for childcare, education, health, housing and social policy. They have become so successful because a social agreement for all social, economic and political delegate decision-making bodies has set a minimum quota of 30% for women and it has been respected. In those days, we were on a par with the Swedes in terms of the proportion of women in the assemblies, and Sweden was then the first country in the world in terms of the proportion of women in parliaments.

Thanks to the Yugoslav socialist feminists of those days, we developed excellent childcare, all-day primary school, public food canteens in the workplace (kindergartens, schools, companies and other state institutions), extended paid maternity and parental leave, built health centers and homes for the elderly in every municipality, enshrined the right to freedom of childbirth in the 1974 Constitution, and set up a whole system of support for women’s reproductive and sexual rights and health. We have established a gynecologist and a pediatrician at the basic level of public health care. The social democrats in power in the most developed European countries at that time learned from us.

How important was political education in SFRY, also in the context of understanding the problematic nature of patriarchy and its connection to capitalism?


The public education system has undoubtedly given people a much better understanding of various societal processes than it does today. Perhaps that is why the process of Slovenia’s independence[4] was so brilliant and genuinely democratic. People, most of whom had at least a secondary school education, were able to grasp what was actually happening and to imagine and choose how society should be changed to make life freer and the economy more prosperous. Today, they come out of schools like idiots. This is not meant as an insult, idiot is a technical term for a person who is socially and politically illiterate. This is not the fault of the pupils and teachers, still less of the young people themselves, make no mistake, it is the fault of the concept of public education as we have developed it since independence.


As far as political literacy is concerned, especially for young people and for self-government activists, socialist Yugoslavia had a truly excellent system. The activists of the social-political organizations, that is, the members of the Union of Communists, the youth organization, the trade unions, the Socialist Union of the working People, the delegates, elected to the assemblies, had to be thoroughly educated about the values on which the economic and political system was based and how it worked. There were serious political schools. Sometimes some people speak derisively of the Kumrovec School[5], where the cadres of the Communist League were trained. This only shows how they do not understand anything. Where do you think the generation that led the process of Slovenia’s independence in government after 1990 was educated? Janša? Bavčar? Even Peterle! Whatever one thinks of them[6], they were certainly not politically illiterate. And look at the members of their parties in the National Assembly today![7]


We were also educated through practical action, the big political school being the youth work brigades[8]. The basic ideas of gender equality were always part of that training, although not exactly something that seemed to be the most important, it was more self-evident, because the basic value of the political system was equality between people living off their paid labor, so discrimination on the basis of gender was unacceptable, because the inequality of women would push half of society into inequality. But it has been much more difficult to integrate serious analyses of the realities of gender power relations into this education. Dr. Maca Jogan[9] has just published an excellent scholarly article on this, entitled “From Man to Men”. She analyses how slowly and with how much resistance sociology, which has been developing as a science in this country since the beginning of the 1960s at the Faculty of Social Sciences, has incorporated gender aspects into its research, taking for granted the concept of man as the first, equating it with the genderless human being and making him the measure of all things. And if there is no critical sociological research that takes gender seriously, there can be no serious awareness of what the real challenges of gender inequalities in the society are. There can be no accurate way of addressing them successfully in the general public and especially among social and political decision-makers without discrimination and violence against women
.
Youth Work Brigade, 1961, Builiding the Brotherhood and Unity Highway in Preševo SFRY

How did socialist feminism in SFRY deal with the problem of the burden of reproductive labor on women’s backs, and what is the state of reproductive labor today in Slovenia?

The partisans liberation movement’s feminists, not only Vida Tomšič, but also Mara Rupena and Majda Gaspari, for example, were very well aware of the burden and the consequences of this burden, which was still on women’s shoulders from the days of capitalism. They have tried very hard to turn as much of this unpaid work of women as possible into paid work and to set up a systemic solution of public services (kindergartens, canteens, elderly people’s homes…).

But younger generations of socialist feminists have subsequently, since the mid-1960s, succeeded in proving that patriarchy is much more long-lived and flexible than the partisan Marxist feminists thought. They made visible that specific kinds of patriarchy have lived in all social formations since humans as a species outgrew the hunter-gatherer phase, i.e. since slave-owning Rome, to feudalism and capitalism, and that it happily lives its adapted life even in socialism. Namely, every time it achieves that the so-called reproductive work, i.e. the work of keeping people fed, clean, healthy, nurtured, provided for when they are old, sick, disabled, helpless, the work that is necessary to raise infants into adulthood and then to become socially functional human beings, is transferred to women’s shoulders. They have shown that, even under our socialism, we have not yet succeeded in getting women’s unpaid caring work to be actually fairly divided between the sexes, that even when it is paid, it remains less valued than male-dominated work. The socialist system has only succeeded in reducing this reproductive work by making it partially paid, professional work. From the mid-sixties, gradually, some relief came also with the wide availability of the technology of washing machines, refrigerators, electric and gas cookers, central heating, vacuum cleaners, irons and other small household appliances. But even under self-managed socialism, parental leave was virtually always taken by women, women stayed on sick leave with sick children, women left the labor market prematurely to care for frail old parents, feminized professions were underpaid – textile workers, shop assistants, routine clerks, educators, nurses, even judges, and because of these, women suffered poverty in old age with shamefully low pensions, especially when their partners died.

The biggest problem of the current young generations in the context of reproductive work is that it does not become their problem at all because they cannot afford to have children. Most of them cannot afford to buy or even to rent a home, they do not have stable jobs or partnerships that are stable enough to dare to risk parenthood. Those who do have these conditions are increasingly divided into two groups: a group where men are increasingly, and consciously, taking a fair share of unpaid re-productive work, and a group, dominated by young men, but with young women increasingly present also, who are looking for a solution in the return of the women to the traditional feminine roles of wife, mother, housewife, even though this is a direct route to poverty and the restoration of the patriarchal domination of men over women.

The second major challenge relates to the aging society with a growing proportion of elderly in need of long-term care. There is a clear trend here of transforming long-term care into a for-profit activity. The concessioners are claiming the right to the profits that flow to them from public funds. This is pushing the prices of services skywards and will, in the long term, divide society between the rich, who can afford these prices and the cost of the above-standard service out of their own pockets, and the very poor and lonely, who will end up in the hellholes, with the miserable services into which public nursing homes will be turned, and those who will fall on the shoulders of their daughters. These daughters will have to leave the labor market early to care for their parents or partners. Many of those will see their pensions substantially reduced by the loss of an important part of their income, since the status of the carer of a very frail family member gets an allowance of 1.2 the minimum wage.

What was the understanding of reproductive rights in SFRY, especially compared to Western countries?

Communist and social democratic feminists were already campaigning for the legalisation and accessibility of abortion on social grounds before the World War II, as women workers were dying from unsafe back street abortions because they could not afford to have an abortion at a doctor’s office, which was forbidden but available for a large sum of money to wealthy women. Immediately after the war, the old Yugoslav law was in force, punishing both the woman who did it and the person who helped her to have an abortion. In SFRY the regime first abolished the punishment of the woman, then allowed abortion for medical and social indications recognized by a special commission, while at the same time taking great care of sex education and the availability of contraception as it was known at the time. Yugoslavia had already developed its own production of condoms and diaphragms in the 1950s, and the contraceptive pill, which American women got in 1960, was already being produced and dispensed on prescription by gynecologists to women in Yugoslavia as early as in 1964. As one of the prominent women leaders of non-aligned countries, Vida Tomšič was fighting in the United Nations for defining free choice in childbirth as a new human right in the 1960s. In doing so, she prevented the state demographic policy of forcing childbirth in developed countries with low birth rates and forcing the prevention of too many births at any cost in developing countries. Her solution was the concept of the desired child, which is a conscious choice made by the parents, because such a child has the best conditions for survival and healthy development. The state should only ensure that the parents are free to make an informed and free choice. In this case it is a woman’s right to decide whether to give birth or to abort after an unwanted conception. In the human right of freedom in giving birth, the duty of the state is to help women to make the decision to abort safely. So the right to abortion has been explicitly included in the human right of the freedom of birth.

The developed Western countries, with the exception of Scandinavia, have always been inclined towards a policy of state-led birth promotion and hypocritical restrictions on the ability of poor women in particular to have an abortion in their own country, and at the same time towards a policy of state-led population explosion control in the countries of the poor global South. The best example of such a policy is Germany, where there is no officially available information on contraceptives and the right to legal abortion, where abortion and contraception are paid for, where a woman has to go to counselling if she decides to have an abortion and then has to wait a week, if she does not change her mind, where the time in which a legal abortion can be performed is being cruelly reduced, where every major city has a baby box, a special box in which a mother who gives up her newborn baby can anonymously and safely deposit and abandon that newborn baby. At the same time, Germany, through its development aid policy, is fervently supporting the policy of state birth restriction, the so-called population policy, in developing countries.

In the 1974 Federal Assembly, Vida Tomšič convinced the delegates in the Constitutional Commission not to accept an amending proposal by Serbian feminists that the article in the new Federal Constitution on the human right to decide freely on the birth of children should be reduced to a woman’s right to decide on her own about the termination of her pregnancy. I have never asked Vida Tomšić whether she really wanted above all to assert the right of both women and men to decide together and consciously freely on the birth of a child, or whether she was just tactically trying to get men to agree that a woman can decide for herself whether or not to keep a foetus. Without men’s support, this article would not have made it into the Constitution. One thing I am sure of, however: the Communist feminists fought to ensure that desired children would be born, that all people would learn at an early age how they could prevent unwanted pregnancies, and that abortions would be kept to a minimum. For them, abortion was not a woman’s right to decide about her own body, but a rational last resort to prevent even greater harm: the health of the woman being endangered or even killed by a smear abortion.

What has changed in the former republics and autonomous regions of SFRY, and more specifically in Slovenia, since the transition to capitalism (from 1991 onwards)?

Slovenia has done best in the area of gender equality, although it has also lost a lot. In particular, it kept the article on freedom to procreate in its new constitution[10]. Croatia, the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, and Kosovo no longer have it. Slovenia has maintained the separation of church and public education, the network of public kindergartens, and even introduced some important innovations: constitutionally protected legal gender quotas, 100% paid maternity, parental and special non-transferable paternity leave, excellent preventive health care for pregnant women, screening programmes for breast and cervical cancer, a lower tax rate for menstrual hygiene products, a redefined definition of rape in the Criminal Code based on the principle of the absence of freely given consent. Women’s access to education has not deteriorated, and women have penetrated the police and the army. The legal discrimination against same-sex couples has ended, and the Constitutional Court has just restored single women’s right to artificial insemination, which they lost in the 2001 referendum.

The only things that can be considered improvements everywhere in the former socialist Yugoslavia are two things:
Firstly, the proportion of women in parliaments at all levels after 2020 has finally surpassed everywhere the best results we had under socialism in the 1980s. The bad news is that there are fewer and fewer women elected to parliament to fight for women’s human rights. There are reasons for that: because many of them have no idea how much work we still have to do to achieve real equality, because they do not dare to fight, because they are afraid of losing support and the chance to be re-nominated and re-elected in their parties, where misogyny and machismo flourish, because of hate speech and threats against feminists, especially on social media, and even physical violence on the streets, that have made it dangerous to be a feminist, or simply because the powerful anti-feminist women politicians are in the front ranks and in the service of their radical right, nationalist, misogynist, homophobic and xenophobic political parties.

Secondly: Violence against women has lost its status as a private matter for the victims and has been given a prominent place in the policies of all the governments of the countries that emerged from SFRY, where truly progressive legislation has been adopted to prevent violence of all kinds against women and to protect the victims. As far as rape is concerned, the best legal solutions have been adopted, you will not believe it, in Kosovo. The bad news is that nowhere is this legislation really being implemented successfully.

Both improvements were won by large national coalitions of conscious civil society activists, experts, journalists, MPs and ministers of different political colors, in the sweat of their brow and with the overwhelming support of international organizations such as, in particular, the Council of Europe, UN Women, the OSCE, the ODIHR, the EU and progressive international political foundations.
But women’s economic and social rights have declined everywhere. The share of women in paid work has fallen sharply. The worst situation is in Kosovo and North Macedonia. The gap between average female and male wages is widening everywhere. Women’s work has become heavily precarious, and with it the rights to paid maternity leave, to an 8-hour working day, to a free weekend, to paid holidays, which remained in the legislation, have in practice all flown out of the window. Health security has deteriorated severely, as privatization has invaded public health care everywhere, bringing with it endless queues and a decline in the quality of public health services. Without money, you cannot get good medicines. There has also been a small decline in access to, and above all in the quality of, education, with higher education becoming increasingly fee-paying. The proportion of women in higher education is declining. In schools, children in Bosnia and Herzegovina are even physically separated, depending on which religion they choose: Catholic, Orthodox, or Muslim. In all three cases, they are taught that God created women to obey and serve men.
What is that – comprehensive sex education? It is nowhere to be seen or heard of anymore!
In Montenegro, kindergartens have been privatized, and quality kindergartens are no longer accessible to children from poor families.

The poverty of older women is spreading and deepening everywhere.
The situation of sexual and reproductive rights varies from one country to another. Abortion is still legal everywhere, but it has to be paid for and is much less accessible. Religious propaganda and public rallies against this right are spreading. Women need to pay for contraceptives everywhere, Slovenia is the only exception, but even here, gynecologists and pediatricians in primary health care are disappearing in practice.


Croatia is a good example: the right to freedom of procreation is no longer mentioned in the Constitution, but the legal framework regulating the right to an abortion has remained unchanged from the socialist times. In 70% of gynecological hospitals, where legal abortion can only be performed, there is not a single male or female doctor who does not claim conscientious objection. That is why women from Croatia are going to Slovenia and Bosnia and Herzegovina to have abortions. To conclude, I draw your attention to comparisons:

Despite the fact that Slovenia has long lacked any noteworthy state mechanisms to prepare and monitor the implementation of improvements in gender equality policies, and despite the fact that our legislation on equal opportunities for women and men is completely outdated, and the draft of a new one has been languishing in the government’s drawers for several years now, Slovenia, in 2024, takes, according to the European Union Institute for Gender Equality, a 12th place among EU Member States. It scores 70.1 out of a possible 100 points, below the EU average for gender equality by 0.9 points. This is a very solid, good result.


Serbia has one of the best legal frameworks for gender equality in the world; even a gender-sensitive budget has been enacted, and the state’s mechanisms for gender equality from municipalities upwards are well organized. But in June 2024, Serbia’s Constitutional Court annulled their law on equal opportunities until further notice. The reason? The law is said to be unconstitutional because it uses the word gender, which does not exist in the Serbian dictionary and it is written in gender-sensitive language, which is unacceptable, since linguistic experts think that male gender in Serbian language is a generic gender, and when used for men and women, it denotes persons of both sexes. This decision blocks the work of all state mechanisms for gender equality, as well as the work of NGOs that provide, with the support of the state budgets, essential services for the women that need them, e.g. SOS phones, safe houses, even psychological counselling for victims of violence against women.

[1] Established on December 1st 1918

[2] Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was established on November 29th in 1945 and then named Socialist People’s Republic of Yugoslavia (it was renamed in 1963). It was composed of six socialist republics (Slovenia, Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Macedonia, Montenegro) and two autonomous regions ( Vojvodina, Kosovo).

[3] Vida Tomšič (1913-1998) was a Slovenian Partisan fighter during World War II, prominent communist politician, women’s activist, she was the president of the Antifascist front of Women of Yugoslavia between 1948 and 1953 and a professor of family law at the Faculty of Law at the University of Ljubljana. She was given the Order of the People’s Hero in postwar Yugoslavia. She was appointed minister for social policy in 1945 and later held important posts in the government of the Socialist Republic of Slovenia. She represented Yugoslavia in international relations, especially in the framework of the Non-Aligned Movement.

[4] Slovenia declared its independence from SFRY on June 25th 1991.

[5] Josip Broz-Tito (1892-1980), communist revolutionary, the president of SFRY, was born in a small Croatian town of Kumrovec close to the Slovenian border.

[6] Janez Janša, Igor Bavčar, Lojze Peterle, in 1991 at the forefront of Slovenian independence process, now right wing politicians and/ or businessmen. Janša and Bavčar both served jail time for corruption.

[7] Janez Janša is the leader of Slovenian Democratic Party (SDS), an extreme right wing party with members being known for their populist, vulgar statements.

[8] The Youth Work Brigades were working groups, active especially in the post-war period in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. They were organised on a voluntary basis and carried out work of public interest. Young people helped to rebuild the war torn country and helped to set up communal and traffic infrastructures. The activity was also important from a political point of view, the participants were also educated in the fields of culture, sport, transport, defence, medicine and first aid, various forms of youth and elderly care, different cultures, and the strengthening of interpersonal relations.

[9] Maca Jogan is Slovenian sociologist and feminist, professor emeritus of sociology at the Faculty of Social Sciences – University of Ljubljana.

[10] “It is a human right to decide freely on the procreation of children”, SFRY wrote the right to abortion in the Constutution in 1974.


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Sonja Lokar
Renowned Slovenian sociologist, international gender expert, feminist, activist, former politician and the president of The Women's Lobby of Slovenia, Sonja Lokar

“When The Banality Of Evil Becomes Normalized, It Grows Unchecked.”

A conversation with UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese
March 23, 2025
Source: The Left Berlin


Francesca Albanese. Photo: Rafael Medeiros

February tends to be a pretty harsh time of year in Berlin. Freezing temperatures, short days, and perpetually gray skies weigh heavy upon the city’s inhabitants, amplifying an already fraught atmosphere in Germany. Amidst a persistently bleak economic outlook, the country is undergoing a sharp rightward shift, with traditional parties increasingly mirroring the rhetoric of the far-right AfD, to the point where the distinctions between them are becoming negligible.

This shift has been accompanied by the criminalization and escalating repression of any movement, initiative, or individual criticizing the Israeli government’s actions, or expressing solidarity with the Palestinian people — the victims of what numerous experts describe as an ongoing genocide. The crackdown has only deepened existing tensions: anti-Arab and anti-Muslim sentiment is rampant, while reports of police violence, arbitrary arrests of pro-Palestine demonstrators, dismissals of individuals for publicly supporting Palestine, and defamatory accusations of antisemitism are countless.

Yet, never before has such repression targeted a high-ranking UN official — not until a series of events that featured Francesca Albanese, the UN Special Rapporteur on human rights in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, became the subject of a coordinated campaign to force their cancellation.

The first event — titled Colonialism, Human Rights, and International Law — was scheduled to be held on February 16, at the Ludwig Maximilian University (LMU) in Munich. Just days before, the event was abruptly cancelled by the university, who cited the event’s “political orientation” and vaguely defined “security concerns”. The nature of these supposed risks remains unclear.

On February 19, Albanese was set to speak alongside the director of Forensic Architecture — Israeli-British scholar Eyal Weizman — at another event, titled Calculated Living Conditions to Destroy — Legal and Forensic Perspectives on the Ongoing Genocide in Gaza. This time, the suppression was even more blatant. The standard justifications (such as “polarization” or “security risks”) collapsed, when it emerged that Günter Ziegler (the President of the Freie Universität Berlin) had been directly pressured by Ron Prosor (the Israeli Ambassador to Germany), Kai Wegner (the Mayor of Berlin, CDU), and the group “WerteInitiative. jüdisch-deutsche Positionen” (which claims to work for “a future for Jews in Germany”). The ambassador reportedly wrote directly to Ziegler demanding the event’s cancellation, while Wegner called for its shutdown in Bild — Germany’s most-read newspaper, inexplicably still treated as credible despite its far-right leanings. WerteInitiative, for their part, accused Albanese of “spreading antisemitic worldviews” in a letter to the university. The coordinated effort achieved its goal: the event was canceled.

A third event, organized by the DiEM25 political alliance in collaboration with Jüdische Stimme, Eye4Palestine, and Gaza Komitee Berlin, was scheduled for February 18, at KühlhausBerlin, with the title Reclaiming the Discourse: A Powerful Stand for Palestine, Justice, and Truth. Despite the prior cancellations, the organizers remained confident that the event would proceed as planned. But on the morning of February 18, it became evident this was no longer the case. Under “immense pressure from German politicians and the Berlin police”, the venue withdrew support. Overnight, the main entrance to Kühlhaus was also vandalized with spray-painted messages: Albanese, you are an antisemite, and UNRWA supports terror.

At the eleventh hour, the Berlin-based Marxist newspaper junge Welt stepped in, offering its premises as an alternative venue, though with a drastically reduced capacity. That morning, ticket holders received an email warning that the police had requested access to the gathering — a chilling prospect, given last year’s Palestine Congress in Berlin, which was forcibly shut down by police, leading to multiple arrests. This time, authorities allowed the event to proceed, only under the condition that five police officers be present throughout, ostensibly to “protect freedom of speech” and to ensure that speakers and attendees did not violate the law. The lecture proceeded peacefully without excessive interference.

Amidst this unprecedented crackdown, we spoke with Francesca Albanese about her experience in Germany, the state of fundamental rights in the country, and the current situation in the Occupied Palestinian Territories.

Let’s start with your experience in Germany, and the political and police pressure that you faced. Did you anticipate this level of repression? Have you ever encountered anything similar?

Political pressure is always present, but usually it’s not directed at me personally. Pro-Israel lobby groups are deeply entrenched in the West, operating in similar ways everywhere: they aim to silence or ignore voices like mine. In Italy, for example, I’m simply disregarded. However, civil society ensures that events proceed despite the pressure. In most countries, universities wouldn’t consider canceling an event.

In my three years of speaking about Palestine in around twenty countries, I’ve never encountered anything like in Germany. The real pressure isn’t just on me — it’s on Germans themselves. This is outright censorship and self-censorship. I was shocked by the level of repression at the event I was part of. It wasn’t physical violence against me, and I’m immune to slander, misogyny, and personal attacks. What struck me was the silencing effect on Germans.

For the first time in three years, I felt fear. And I’ve lived with security protection, received death threats, yet I’ve never felt this way. In Germany I sensed something profoundly disturbing — an atmosphere reminiscent of historical accounts of fascism, where people fear speaking out. That’s why I used the expression “lack of oxygen”.

Have you noticed the situation in Germany worsening, since we last met in May?

Yes. Last year I gave multiple interviews, met Foreign Ministry officials, think tanks, and dozens of NGOs. Some criticized me, but many expressed gratitude. This year? Silence. I met only three NGOs. Many wanted to speak behind closed doors, fearful of repression.

I wonder: what changed? Last year I was one of the few calling out the Gaza genocide so forcefully. Now, major organizations — including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, Forensic Architecture, and individuals of the caliber of Amos Goldberg — have confirmed what I’ve said. Yet I’m somehow perceived as more controversial than ever. But the difference is not in me, it’s in German society itself, after months of crackdowns: police brutality, arrests, home raids, and a climate of fear that spreads rapidly.

As Michael Barenboim and other participants in the event noted, Germany strongly identifies with Israel, which is understandable given its history. But when that identification blinds one to crimes being committed in the name of an ideology, it means repeating the mistakes of the past rather than learning from them. That, I believe, is the real issue.

As an expert in human rights and international law, how do you assess the current violations of individual freedoms in Germany, such as the freedom of expression and assembly?

The issue goes beyond Palestine, which is just the trigger. Germany has aligned itself so blindly to the idea of protecting Israel at all costs, as a pillar of its state identity, that it struggles to see reality for what it is, and fundamental freedoms are being sacrificed. So how do we reclaim these rights? Not by bowing our heads to fit into a repressive system. If hundreds of thousands have taken to the streets against the far-right, then three times as many should be protesting for their own fundamental rights. Academics should refuse to teach until the freedom of expression and academic freedom are restored. Media outlets that engage in defamation and intimidation should be taken to court. Civil society and NGOs should form a protective barrier against systemic abuses.

But now, in Germany, I don’t see this happening. Where is German civil society? Where are the organizations dedicated to fighting racism? Because that’s what this is — Islamophobia and anti-Arab sentiment are forms of racism. Recognizing this reality, in Germany and beyond, is the only way to reclaim and defend these rights. Awareness must be widespread, and action must follow.

Do you think an effective strategy could be to take legal action, namely turning to courts, the European Court of Human Rights or other organs?

Of course. You can appeal to a judge when your fundamental freedoms have been violated. I’ve raised this issue with several groups in Germany, and they say that in many cases, courts have ruled in favor of repression — I can’t comment on that because I don’t know the German legal system well enough.

What I do know is that I was shocked when — I believe it was from the District Court of Frankfurt — I was labeled an antisemite. That is pure and simple defamation. And yet, no one protested. A UN Special Rapporteur is insulted and slandered by a court, and there are no consequences? I can’t fight battles in every country. It should be up to civil society.

When the banality of evil becomes normalized, it grows unchecked. It can be contained at the national level through civil society and the judiciary. And if that fails, then yes, one must turn to international courts like the European Court of Human Rights. But these are long processes. In the meantime, the erosion of rights continues. That’s why I believe so strongly in mass mobilization.

In Germany, perhaps more than in other countries, one of the tools for restricting personal freedoms is the accusation of antisemitism. While antisemitism — like all forms of racism and discrimination — must be condemned and rejected in the strongest terms, this has become a defamatory and instrumental mechanism to silence dissent against the Israeli and German governments. Those who are targeted by these smears appear powerless and unable to defend themselves. Why do you think this happens?

I think it stems from confusion and guilt. When even those whose profession is critical thinking (such as academics) fail to exercise it, it means there is a trauma. That trauma is likely linked to Holocaust guilt. And I understand it — I feel it too as an Italian.

But it is precisely the guilt over the Holocaust that pushes me to do what I do, alongside fellow human rights activists, intellectuals and academics, many of whom are Jewish. Enough with this performative guilt that Germans display: “we did this, and therefore we cannot…” No — on the contrary, because of this history, you can and must act. And yet, what does Germany do? It doubles down on its support for the Israeli government, even as it commits the most heinous crimes.

After the last German elections, Friedrich Merz, the frontrunner to become the next German chancellor, called the Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu. He publicly announced that he would seek to circumvent the ICC’s arrest warrant. Before Merz, Donald Tusk — the Polish Prime Minister — declared that Netanyahu would be welcome in Poland for the commemoration of the anniversary of Auschwitz’s liberation. At a time when the very existence of international law seems precarious, what do you think these stances signify?

There is a deeply concerning political dimension here — a blatant disdain for the international legal order. This is dangerous because it reinforces the perception of double standards, of a selective application of international law; of treating it as just another tool for international politics, rather than as the framework, the regulator — almost the thermostat — of international relations.

The political attitude of indifference and contempt toward international law is troubling in itself. This contributes to the erosion of the international criminal justice system, a system that took decades to build. Since the Nuremberg trials, efforts had been made to establish a permanent international court for crimes against humanity. Over the years, we saw international tribunals for (former) Yugoslavia and Rwanda, and hybrid courts, before the International Criminal Court was finally established. It was an incredible step forward. And now, we are witnessing a rollback, a dismantling of this progress.

The alarming speed at which this is happening is compounded by a third factor: a culture of impunity. There is no longer any fear — neither at the international level, nor regionally, nor in bilateral relations between states. A few dominant powers dictate the global order, overriding the reality of a multipolar world. Instead of harmonizing international relations and using law as a guiding compass, we are moving toward a world shaped by American imperialism — an imperialism that no longer hides its willingness to use military force whenever it sees fit. This is an extremely dangerous scenario — one of lawlessness. And we should all be deeply concerned.

Your latest report, Genocide as Colonial Erasure, has proven to be eerily prophetic. The violence in Gaza has never truly ceased, and it has expanded into the West Bank. A few days ago, the IDF entered the Jenin refugee camp with tanks, for the first time in twenty years. What is your current assessment of the situation?

The situation in the Occupied Palestinian Territories is deeply alarming. The so-called ceasefire created the illusion that the emergency had passed. But humanitarian aid is not reaching people. Tents are not being delivered. Israel continues to fire at civilians in Gaza — over 100 people have been killed since the supposed ceasefire began. Meanwhile, Israel has made it clear that it will not withdraw from the Philadelphi Corridor, signalling its intention to fully entrap Gaza.

Israel must come to terms with the fact that it cannot continue to suppress the Palestinians — it must allow them to live, to be free. This is the lesson it should have learnt over the past 15-16 months, yet it refuses to acknowledge it.

At the same time, the situation in the West Bank is not fundamentally different from what is happening to the Palestinian people as a whole. In Gaza, the attack has been genocidal in its intensity, but the same logic of destruction is being applied in the West Bank — though in a way that garners less attention, with fewer visible explosions. Palestinian communities are being forcibly displaced, their homes demolished, their hospitals destroyed, their farmlands burned.

What worries me most is whether the world will recognize this genocide for what it is — the ability to see Israel’s violence as a systematic attack on the Palestinian people as a whole, across the entire occupied territory. Because that is exactly what it is.

In light of the escalation of violence and the situation you’ve described, Europe continues to appear divided and inadequate in its response to the ongoing emergency in Palestine. Have you noticed any evolution in Europe’s position (or that of the international community) that seems absent to us?

I don’t think it’s absent. I’d say there are three groups: those who act and take measures, like the members of the Hague Group or South Africa, and the other states that have filed a case at the International Court of Justice. They have taken action, especially the Hague Group. There are also some South American states that have suspended trade or military agreements with Israel — these are important steps. There are national-level divestment initiatives from companies operating in occupied territories. These actions matter, but they are still too isolated and not widespread enough.

Then, there is a minority of states — but they are very aggressive — led by the United States and Israel, followed by others. Sometimes it’s hard to tell where Israeli policy ends and U.S. policy begins. This core group is acting in flagrant violation of international law, and they don’t seem to care.

And then there’s the vast majority of states that vote against the occupation but still continue doing business with Israel, failing to take a firm stance. There are many such states.

I believe the situation won’t shift positively — meaning for the freedom and rights of all people — unless there is a massive mobilization. This is a systemic struggle, but unfortunately, people don’t see it. I keep saying it: we are at the potential tipping point of a necessary revolution. Right now, capitalism has armed itself — with technology, communication channels, cloud control, artificial intelligence, and weapons. Either we resist now, or it will be too late. Resisting in defense of rights is a necessary action at this moment.

The Israeli government is effectively dismantling UNRWA, an agency that emanates directly from the UN Security Council. Are there any sanctioning mechanisms or consequences for a UN member state’s actions against the UN itself?

No. Israel has been waging a legal and reputational war against the agency for 20 years. This campaign has intensified in recent years, with constant attacks accusing the agency of recruiting terrorists. Investigations have found no evidence to support claims that UNRWA staff were complicit in acts of violence against Israelis. Yet, even without proof, UNRWA dismissed those employees, going against its own rules.

Frankly, UNRWA has also contributed to its own downfall. As I’ve often said, UNRWA is its own worst defender. Israel has exerted pressure through all its supportive forces, including pro-Israel lobby groups operating in various Western countries. These groups have pushed for funding cuts to UNRWA, but the fiercest battle has been fought through Israeli legislation. This has been the most aggressive attack. In response, I don’t think there has been nearly enough effort to defend UNRWA. The agency should have received stronger support both internally and externally. The office in Jerusalem should never have been abandoned. UNRWA leadership ordered the evacuation, but I would have rather reinforced the presence of international staff. Instead, there seems to have been a retreat — perhaps out of exhaustion. But that’s not fair, because Palestinians are exhausted too.

In recent days, the American organization DAWN has asked the ICC to investigate the former U.S. President Joe Biden, the former Secretary of State Antony Blinken, and the former Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin for “aiding, abetting, and intentionally contributing to war crimes in Gaza”. How significant do you think this development is? Do you believe it’s realistic to expect an actual investigation?

I hope there will be one. The problem is that the Court is under enormous pressure — it has even been sanctioned by the United States. So I hope that this investigation is supported and receives all the necessary materials, but it won’t be easy to proceed.

I certainly think there are grounds to investigate U.S. political leaders, particularly the Biden administration, which has provided military, political, economic, and financial support to this genocide. They knew exactly what Israel was doing, and they supported it anyway.

So justice would absolutely be desirable. But the problem is, we don’t live in a just world. We don’t live in an equitable world. A just and equitable world must be built, and it takes the strength and awareness of everyone to do it.

The Dark Enlightenment: the Tech Oligarch Ideology Driving DOGE’s Destruction

President Donald Trump and Elon Musk aren’t just tearing down institutions—they’re laying the groundwork for an experimental new kind of authoritarian rule.


March 24, 2025
Source: Common Dreams


Photograph Source: Gage Skidmore – CC BY-SA 2.0

The future of American democracy isn’t being dismantled by accident; it’s being systematically replaced to prepare the way for something entirely new.

A radical ideology known as the Dark Enlightenment is fueling a billionaire-led movement to gut our government, erase democratic norms, and install a technocratic elite in their place.

President Donald Trump and Elon Musk aren’t just tearing down institutions—they’re laying the groundwork for an experimental new kind of authoritarian rule.

The audacious experiment Musk has embarked on—which Trump probably doesn’t even understand—involves the fundamental transformation of America from a nation ruled by its own people into one where decisions are made by a very specific elite group of self-selected “genius” white male technocrats.

Americans are baffled by the brutal, relentless attack on the institutions of America that they’ve launched.

Why would they destroy our reputation around the world by shutting down USAID? What’s wrong with the federal government helping poor school districts or giving college students Pell Grants? Why gut billions in scientific research that’s kept America at the forefront of the world and saved literally hundreds of millions of lives?

Paul Krugman recommends a psychiatrist weigh in; Dr. Bandy X. Lee (a frequent guest on my program) points that out, noting, “How exactly this plays out is, as I have said, a spiritual question.” Three New York Times writers even had a lengthy back-and-forth on the topic, under the title: “Is Destruction the Point?”Some speculate that Musk and Trump are both tight with Putin and they’re destroying our government at his direction, helping achieve the goal he’s had since his KGB days to destroy America from within.
Others think it’s just a way of crippling government programs like Social Security, Medicaid, and the Post Office so they can now be profitably taken over by private industry.
Democratic politicians tell us Musk and Trump are just trying to cut government spending to pay for the $4 trillion in tax cuts for billionaires that House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) will be introducing in the House in the next few weeks.

They’re all wrong.

The simple answer is that these people intend to replace the 240+ year “American Experiment” with a brand new governance “experiment” of their own. One that was largely developed in computer rooms around San Francisco.

There’s an actual ideology behind all this, and it isn’t the old-fashioned Ayn Rand libertarianism that was such a rage during the Reagan era.

This hot new experimental ideology, enthusiastically embraced by Silicon Valley billionaires and their “tech bros” dismantling our government, is called the Dark Enlightenment or the neo-reactionary movement (NRx).

And it’s not entirely new; they believe they have proof that it works, which can be found way over on the other side of the planet. I’ve been there, in fact, and it does seem to be working just fine… if you don’t care about freedom.

Back in 1994 I published a book proposing that ADHD wasn’t a brain disease or disorder but, instead, a form of brain wiring that would be highly adaptive during humanity’s long hunter-gatherer period but can present a struggle for people in today’s factory-like school systems. Time Magazine did a cover story about it, including an article featuring my book, and suddenly I was in demand literally around the world.

One of the countries I visited during the book tour that ensued (the book’s available in more than a dozen languages) was Singapore. A parents’ group had reached out to my publisher and set up an opportunity for me to talk about my theory and ways schools could be reinvented to work for both “normal” and ADHD kids.

I gave the speech and laid out a series of suggestions, and during the Q&A that followed, one of the parents asked how to best convince schools to adopt some of my ideas. I suggested they should “become politically active,” a standard answer in most every other country I’d visited (and here in America). Little did I realize the significance of that phrase.

When I got back to my hotel, an internationally famous five-star tower with a beautiful atrium, my room had been torn apart. The mattress and box springs were on the floor, as were the contents of my suitcase. Every drawer was pulled open. My toiletries kit was all over the bathroom floor.

I called hotel security to report what I thought was a break-in or robbery, although I couldn’t immediately see that anything was missing. The head of security showed up in my room five minutes later with the hotel manager. They looked around the room with neither shock nor alarm.

The manager explained, with a hint (but only a hint) of apology in his voice, “The police were here,” as if that explained everything

“They did this?” I asked, as I recall.

He nodded and said, “Presumably.”

“Why?” I demanded.

Both men shrugged. The head of security asked me if I’d engaged in anything illegal while in Singapore, particularly bringing illegal drugs into the country, and I indignantly denied even the possibility. They shrugged their shoulders again and offered to send a maid up to help make put the room back together.

The next morning, I had breakfast with some of the parents I’d met the afternoon before and told them what happened. They explained, in a whisper, that I never should have mentioned “politics” in my speech.

“It is not allowed here,” as I recall one telling me.

Singapore has come a ways from the mid-1990s, but is still an authoritarian state. As Robin Kaiser-Schatzlein wrote for Mother Jones:


During his reign, [Lee Kuan Yew, aka LKY, Singapore’s former leader] successfully fused pro-corporate libertarian economics and state socialism, creating a distinctly conservative mishmash of social and political control.

Singapore has banned all kinds of free speech; intervened in marriages and family planning; encouraged eugenics; caned people for minor crimes; created an ethnically homogeneous ruling class; treated the migrant worker population as second-class citizens; and, famously, banned chewing gum.

This is LKY’s model: economic development above all else—even human rights. A “soft” authoritarianism, as Fareed Zakaria has called it. “The exuberance of democracy,” LKY explained, “leads to indiscipline and disorderly conduct, which are inimical to development.”

According to the philosopher-king of the Dark Enlightenment movement, the guy who woke up JD Vance, and the billionaires who support him, Singapore is their explicit model for America’s future.

As Kaiser-Schatzlein writes about Curtis Yarvin and the other Dark Enlightenment thinkers who have inspired Musk, Theil, Vance, et al.:


For a new breed of right-wing thinkers, politicians, and activists, LKY’s approach to government is appealing. Curtis Yarvin, Silicon Valley’s resident neo-monarchist, compares LKY to FDR—both good examples, he says, of a unilateral leader.

And Nick Land, an accelerationist philosopher, calls LKY an “autocratic enabler of freedom.”


To them, LKY is the paradigm of an illiberal ruler who created a paradise for his subjects: a freedom without rights, a prosperity without disorder.

Sure, Republicans are going to gut government spending to pay for tax cuts for the billionaires who own them. And they definitely want big Wall Street banks to run Social Security just like George W. Bush handed more than half of Medicare (so far) over to giant for-profit insurance companies. After all, both industries represent such big campaign donors.

But this goes way beyond merely making billionaires richer or giving corporations more power over our lives. The audacious experiment Musk has embarked on—which Trump probably doesn’t even understand—involves the fundamental transformation of America from a nation ruled by its own people into one where decisions are made by a very specific elite group of self-selected “genius” white male technocrats.

And once AI reaches the ability to think with the intelligence of a genius-level human—Artificial General Intelligence or AGI—some of these guys believe that most of the decision-makers and agencies of the federal government can simply be replaced by banks of computers, deciding who gets what, when, and why.

All it’ll take is a monarchical leader who, like KLY, brooks no dissent.

Trump could be that leader—or at least the useful-idiot-frontman for the technocrats like Vance and Musk who are really running things—and the gutting of federal agencies opens up a space to replace them (and their workers) with AGI-based computer systems.

Rana Foorahar explains it in The Financial Times:


The philosophy argues that democracy inherently leads to social decline, because of the development of deep state bureaucracies that are unable to control oligarchic forces, and that societies should be run like corporations, with a kind of CEO Monarch in charge.

As Yarvin has said, “If Americans want to change their government, they need to get rid of dictator phobia… One way of dealing with that is… hire two executives and make sure they work together and there is really no other solution…”

And they’re much further along in the process of both gutting government and seizing total control of our political system to implement this experiment than most Americans realize.A new site that lays out exactly how they’re progressing toward their goal of kneecapping the federal bureaucracy is project2025.observer; according to the site, they’re about 40% of the way there, although the courts may set them back temporarily.
And the project for billionaires to take complete control of our elected officials (and thus our government, at all levels) is also nearly complete: Fully 18% of all spending on the 2024 elections was done by just 150 billionaire families who represent a mere .00000045% of the American population.

The Dark Enlightenment has little use for democracy; openly disdains notions of equality as proposed in the Declaration of Independence and our Constitution (viewing them as unnatural and counterproductive); and rejects what they call “Whig historiography,” which assumes history inevitably progresses toward greater liberty and enlightenment.

Instead, like Julius Evola, Thomas Carlyle, and Oswald Spengler, they argue that “classical” societal structures that ruled the world for millennia (like feudalism, monarchy, or cameralism) are superior to democracy and, completely ignoring the history of the development of modern democracy, should—with a high-tech AGI twist—replace today’s democratic “experiment.”

(Ironically, a large portion of the infrastructure that this movement is using was financed by fossil fuel billionaires who simply wanted to avoid paying income taxes and to have their oil companies deregulated so they could make more pollution and thus more profit. Similar to the people who funded the rise of Hitler—including Fritz Thyssen who wrote the book I Paid Hitler after WWII as an apology—many are now surprised, and some even frightened, by the turn of things.)

They are pushing forward with the “move fast and break things” slogan of the Tech industry that Mark Zuckerberg popularized. And they are having breathtaking success, between that strategy and the billions of dollars they are easily able to spend to seize the political power to fulfill their vision. They call themselves “Masters of the Universe” without a trace of irony.

Some high-profile observers of American politics are alert to this takeover-in-progress that most of our media has completely missed. Former Labor Secretary Robert Reich, for example, recently wrote for his Substack newsletter:


Behind Vance and Musk is a libertarian community of rich crypto bros, tech executives, back-to-the-landers, and disaffected far-right intellectuals.

Curtis Yarvin comes as close as anyone as being their intellectual godfather. He has written that political power in the United States is held by a liberal amalgam of universities and the mainstream media whose commitment to equality and justice is eroding America’s social order.

In Yarvin’s view, democratic governments are inefficient and wasteful. They should be replaced with sovereign joint-stock corporations whose major “shareholders” select an executive with total power, who serves at their pleasure.

Yarvin refers to the city-state of Singapore as an example of a successful authoritarian regime.

He notes that these tech-bro “oligarchs of the techno-state” want to replace “inefficient” democracy with “an authoritarian regime replete with technologies they control.”

Rachel Maddow has similarly featured stories about Yarvin and others like him on her program, albeit infrequently. The New Yorker has written about the movement, as have multiple other publications.

Lefty intellectuals and progressive thought leaders are suddenly waking up to the Dark Enlightenment experiment that, like a glacier finally reaching the sea, has been slowly consuming the GOP as it moves along and is now—with hundreds of millions from Elon Musk buying the White House for Trump—suddenly cleaving off massive icebergs of damaged governmental institutions.

But a much wider understanding of what’s really animating Trump’s and Musk’s experimental destruction of our government is needed.

If Americans don’t wake up to the Dark Enlightenment’s creeping grip on the people who control our democracy, we may soon find ourselves living in a country where elections are meaningless, the government serves only the ultra-rich, and freedom exists in name only.

Pass it along… and get into the streets!




Thom Hartmann is a talk-show host and the author of "The Hidden History of Monopolies: How Big Business Destroyed the American Dream" (2020); "The Hidden History of the Supreme Court and the Betrayal of America" (2019); and more than 25 other books in print.