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I still don't know how to start the revolution

 A little while ago Helen Razor's book Total Propaganda - Basic Marxist Brainwashing came up on NetGalley, and I said "yes please". For those of you who don't know, when I was at school Helen Razor used to host a breakfast show on JJJ. I was dating a guy who had the station as his alarm on his clock radio, remember them. I hated it. She was ranty - way too ranty for 7am! Anyway, since that far-off time Helen has been around in various parts of the media, and since I've got an interest in different, fairer, more just ways we could organise our economic system, I requested and received this book. I'm not sure why it is being re-released, quite a lot of the focus is from 4 years ago, with the American election and in Australia Kevin Rudd's apolology. It does not seem to have been updated.


Unsurprisingly, it's ranty, but that's one of it's strengths. It's main weakness is that of modern Marxism itself - it sees Marx as the answer and the only answer, when there may well be other ways to look at things. For example, we won't worry about gender inequity right now, because economic inequity is a larger problem and after the revolution we will have the leisure to sort it out, seems like a strange approach.  

I will say though, that with the reading and learning I've done this winter, I've certainly reconsidered my position as a liberal. I used to think being a liberal was a good thing and it meant I cared about people. Now I realise we need to go much, much further.  We need to redistribute wealth and seize the means of production. Fine fine. This book explains why we need the revolution, and why (in Helen's opinion) it must be a Marxist revolution. It doesn't actually explain how the revolution starts. This wasn't the goal of the book, but it's something I really want to know. Not what changes we need, but how do we do it.

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