Pantopia Reading Nook 📰🚩
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The news channel of the Pantopia Community. We publish articles, short essays, videos and all kinds of media around leftist theory.

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Pantopia Reading Nook 📰🚩 pinned «https://twitter.com/graylionn/status/1239724296567574529?s=21»
Grenoble city councillor Anne-Sophie Olmos summarised her vision as follows: “For me, Europe should first give local and regional authorities independence in matters of basic needs such as food, water and energy. In these areas public authorities should be able to favour the local if they demonstrate that it allows the community to be autonomous.” This points to the need to re-assess one of the fundamental principles of the EU directives: promoting local economic development via public procurement is currently not allowed.

www.opendemocracy.net/en/oureconomy/how-eu-rules-are-getting-in-the-way-of-progressive-public-policy-and-how-cities-are-fighting-back/
Neoliberalism as Discourse, from "The Discourse of Neoliberalism", by Simon Springer
In early 2018, during a meeting at the World Health Organization in Geneva, a group of experts (the R&D Blueprint) coined the term “Disease X”: They predicted that the next pandemic would be caused by an unknown, novel pathogen that hadn’t yet entered the human population. Disease X would likely result from a virus originating in animals and would emerge somewhere on the planet where economic development drives people and wildlife together.
Disease X would probably be confused with other diseases early in the outbreak and would spread quickly and silently; exploiting networks of human travel and trade, it would reach multiple countries and thwart containment. Disease X would have a mortality rate higher than a seasonal flu but would spread as easily as the flu. It would shake financial markets even before it achieved pandemic status. In a nutshell, Covid-19 is Disease X.

https://thenextrecession.wordpress.com/2020/03/15/it-was-the-virus-that-did-it/
Just as World War II mobilization pulled the United States and other advanced countries out of the Depression, rapid decarbonization could pull us out of today’s secular stagnation. And, as in World War II, the massive demand for labor from a true high-pressure economy might do more to equalize incomes than any more direct program of redistribution.

democracyjournal.org/magazine/56/the-gnd-is-expensive-and-thats-good/
"Neoliberalism is to be read as a verb"

"In other words, because ‘neoliberalism’ indeed does not exist as a coherent and fixed edifice [...] and is instead more appropriately understood as a discourse, it is consequently unlikely to fail in a totalising moment of collapse" - Simon Springer, The Discourse of Neoliberalism
In 2017, 158,000 Americans perished from drug overdoses, suicides, and alcohol-related liver disease. That, as Anne Case and Sir Angus Deaton note, is the equivalent of three 737s crashing every single day for the entire year. Princeton professors Case and Deaton, in a paper published that year, famously coined the term “Deaths of Despair” to collectively refer to these three conditions.

democracyjournal.org/magazine/56/death-and-politics/
The world has witnessed China’s sweeping centralized measures against the coronavirus, sometimes with awe and sometimes with criticism. These cases give a picture from various levels below. At each level, decentralization plays a crucial role and importantly, it is not categorically against collaborations with social, business and state agents at other levels. These are vertical and horizontal social networks of support in the broadest sense of the word ‘social’ and for the interest of the broadest groups.

www.opendemocracy.net/en/oureconomy/social-support-networks-springing-coronavirus-stricken-china/