Thank you for explaining that, I had read the term Israeli Kibbutz in This article on page 429 (it’s really page 2 of 27, but the document shows page 429)but I had no clue what it meant Its a long article and I’ve been reading it on and off for a while. So far I like the article and the analysis is very impressive.
I like that article a lot, eye opening and a little outside of the ML discourse comfort-zone.
If you’re interested in learning more about the kibbutz, labor zionism and its complacency in genocide that Israel apologetic leftists like to dismiss, this is a good article (Jacobin, I know).
I personally agree, the article ultimately has a lot of good info that makes me more comfortable with Market Socialism, some of the economic planning that they discuss and the most likely reasons that Belarus came to those conclusions is very interesting, I’m especially curious about it because my family is originally from Belarus(I’m 3rd generation in US, grandma came over first)
Thank you for explaining that, I had read the term Israeli Kibbutz in This article on page 429 (it’s really page 2 of 27, but the document shows page 429)but I had no clue what it meant Its a long article and I’ve been reading it on and off for a while. So far I like the article and the analysis is very impressive.
I like that article a lot, eye opening and a little outside of the ML discourse comfort-zone.
If you’re interested in learning more about the kibbutz, labor zionism and its complacency in genocide that Israel apologetic leftists like to dismiss, this is a good article (Jacobin, I know).
https://jacobin.com/2016/10/kibbutz-labor-zionism-bernie-sanders-ben-gurion/
I personally agree, the article ultimately has a lot of good info that makes me more comfortable with Market Socialism, some of the economic planning that they discuss and the most likely reasons that Belarus came to those conclusions is very interesting, I’m especially curious about it because my family is originally from Belarus(I’m 3rd generation in US, grandma came over first)