Unknown Speaker 00:06 by this post up here. Nadel is also meant to be a self unit apologist of NASA to choose one or the awkward modern dancer in Germany because that's kind of our fascism she's very excited about it Yeah. We also have architects we don't use tend to be working from issues later aerosols Public Market, Machiavelli's Prince and this obviously it's a real project for us to base and he just told me if it's not any percent fixed you know, I'm meant to teach obviously to read the script and also put into stuff on Unknown Speaker 01:16 the blog as far as tax I put in. Unknown Speaker 01:28 Very good. Unknown Speaker 01:32 Okay, and I am here to present called Women in western how much? Unknown Speaker 01:59 Yeah, it's, it really Unknown Speaker 02:00 makes a difference, it makes you step back in there just to understand the Western tradition is the big complicated thing. And they might fight off. Unknown Speaker 02:21 Yeah, yeah. So that's the Unknown Speaker 02:28 key. Yes. Unknown Speaker 02:35 So I get no, I started the course with the lecture. Unknown Speaker 02:42 I've been reading a lot in the last quarter in order to be able to present in the right Unknown Speaker 02:51 actions, not just ideas, history, but also your central ideas for logic. Unknown Speaker 03:01 You You know, as we're trying to get them to actually Unknown Speaker 03:09 assess an idealistic range of life, both in terms of positive content and Unknown Speaker 03:18 negative patient. Pocket healthcare. Unknown Speaker 03:23 So Unknown Speaker 03:26 it's interesting for my class to hear Unknown Speaker 03:28 that I've ever had before, Unknown Speaker 03:30 is it the most diverse girl in the classes really like some very crazy sort of textbook case like Unknown Speaker 03:41 that? A whole bunch of kids from Columbia is destroying a world that they can like, climb out of a tree. A big institutions claim doesn't have Unknown Speaker 04:03 to be very simple. Please, use that. I mean, there's Unknown Speaker 04:11 the thing that's good about this class is that nobody can Unknown Speaker 04:14 kind of get up and just say, you know, John, Unknown Speaker 04:18 which is something that or something that I have to sit there and provide a critique for a class and can't pull it from experience. It's not like, Unknown Speaker 04:27 you know, my pet experience of, you know, also counted velocities in nature of art so that there's nothing that tells them that liberalism isn't working, and that there's got to look elsewhere. And there's just, I feel like a lot of them have a real Unknown Speaker 04:45 to have a real desire to looking outside the standard prescription dictionary of received ideas that Unknown Speaker 04:52 they, they want Unknown Speaker 04:56 you to write, because that impulse makes the world You know, Unknown Speaker 05:03 they come to new office Unknown Speaker 05:09 they'll get if they see on paper Unknown Speaker 05:16 you know, they sort of think of writing some for abstract. And David has to be a master I'd rather Unknown Speaker 05:24 go with Amex. I'm bothered Unknown Speaker 05:40 by their whole way of looking at, as I mean, I really think that they start with looking at what went on to say 1972 Unknown Speaker 05:50 When there were these Unknown Speaker 05:52 highly structured working organizations that Unknown Speaker 05:56 French labor itself with that Unknown Speaker 06:01 emotional state and that demonstration Unknown Speaker 06:03 often we're going to frustrations happen in response to this organization's perception of what the situation is. Unknown Speaker 06:13 And I'm just struck when I read like this this whole Unknown Speaker 06:19 report together I used to consorted organization just had nothing to do with Unknown Speaker 06:27 progress and process and self generated Unknown Speaker 06:31 organization Unknown Speaker 06:32 here the five of you who came from yours she shows up the second day and started wearing red flag international conference this Unknown Speaker 06:49 was Richard city now Unknown Speaker 06:53 from this one, right. After the first not really from the visuals came out bar chart would Unknown Speaker 07:19 have the answer to Unknown Speaker 07:21 that the organization receives a kind of meal, demonstrate demonstration. Just true. Unknown Speaker 07:30 That in fact that you know, that moments of workability they did come up someplace else, and the relationship Unknown Speaker 07:40 between the organization and the working class so long. Unknown Speaker 07:46 I mean, I remember thinking when I was a kid, that it was sort of weird, my grandmother Unknown Speaker 07:53 you know, she had this real Unknown Speaker 07:55 importance plan steel back at some point, and she has a lot of sense to be but you know, now watch. You can look at her various ways. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, I give something up. But I have given the fact that the figures for training, participation, right. Person, most likely your partner is right, but friction stories and analysis Unknown Speaker 08:47 that he doesn't lead as a party, as far as Unknown Speaker 08:56 CGT it was only people who were really active militants in Germany, Unknown Speaker 09:02 the rest of the people my older Unknown Speaker 09:04 boy, older, Unknown Speaker 09:06 but they have all the membership with this idea. Yeah, yes. And so I was here for a passage, there only the most. Unknown Speaker 09:28 Followed Scorsese films. So this word, Unknown Speaker 09:38 they replace every ship with pheromones necessary. Unknown Speaker 09:47 Yeah. Yeah. And I think that the fact that women have to get out of syndicalist meetings in the case that they were looking for some Yes. And they were I don't think they were early on I mean, I think I think that you can be caught at times of evil, it seems like there'd be a lot of meetings, and that the things will happen and we'll find a source of organization or inspiration structures that have been affected by the 1970s that are perhaps differentiated. Imagine at work Unknown Speaker 10:22 they're much more involved in that instead of paying, they just do this thing on their own. And I say that I think that a lot of bedroom Unknown Speaker 10:36 floor and Unknown Speaker 10:39 in a lot of situations where workers are acting out of Unknown Speaker 10:47 their experience more through the whole set, you always get set up to store frustrations, you know, stupid war, they sacrifice and, Unknown Speaker 11:02 and, and the organization's just can't quite keep up. And they keep trying to bury them wherever you're trying to, in some sense, make sense of renewal actually conquer something that is just beyond. And sometimes I think that's also what's happening when there wasn't just get, in some ways, the state by establishment in 1970 structures. Suddenly, state says women should make one frame for this job. And I was, Unknown Speaker 11:45 like, I wasn't, I was just saying, like so much. Unknown Speaker 11:57 Exactly. And that's the other thing when you're the friend, rich person, you have this whole tradition of Unknown Speaker 12:05 friends, why did you stay involved, and everything was, you know, Britain is the nightwatchman state laissez faire. And then there are Unknown Speaker 12:13 more the British government is the tentacles right into those businesses and taxing profits. And it's, it's doing all this stuff to really structurally, is really pushing. Government's just Unknown Speaker 12:27 like, you know, please help us win the war, we'll do anything. And this Unknown Speaker 12:35 is such a paradoxical thing. When you look at the two states just look over. You know, and the French people get pissed off, because the way in which French business is Unknown Speaker 12:50 just Robins. Unknown Speaker 12:52 And in the whole conference that he has promised the Senate trying to work on a taxation Unknown Speaker 12:57 policy, versus Unknown Speaker 13:01 the trade news we're seeing if you are asking us to the industry. Unknown Speaker 13:13 And I wonder sometimes also about the way in which a war creates a situation. Unknown Speaker 13:19 Temporary privilege. Yeah, obviously, in this case a lot but Unknown Speaker 13:27 well certainly written as someone Unknown Speaker 13:37 else. Well, as you know, the French laws that were passed are really crime movies. Unknown Speaker 13:54 And the action is striking that broke out in 1918 in Paris, Unknown Speaker 13:59 was direct resistance to call the young military. Unknown Speaker 14:04 Yeah, and the first class of freshmen was actually since all from day one, like maybe Unknown Speaker 14:16 well yeah, the current issue I have Oh, Unknown Speaker 14:30 for some reason, for me as I was used to be as opposed to getting it out. Subscribe, I think myself, and I feel like well, Unknown Speaker 14:47 it used to be published by David Montgomery at New America published until a little while ago Are we supposed to Unknown Speaker 15:04 which I really enjoyed you know I'm like Unknown Speaker 15:11 thinking about writing issues a lot because now I've done a project about politics and stuff glad we met Unknown Speaker 15:26 I'm always constantly getting Unknown Speaker 15:30 to see your parents situation you're surprised that she did I think she's a little odd I mean, I don't quite get but she was some she just says back but in this case I don't mind it. Yeah, well yeah this case because she knows my work and she really feared Unknown Speaker 16:25 that I felt like she didn't want us Unknown Speaker 16:30 to she didn't like the people who bought it. I mean, she did she does but she didn't say Unknown Speaker 16:38 I think she was was that the last Berkshire conference? That lemonade for my chair that she gave. And also, so there's no way that she doesn't know about Unknown Speaker 16:56 spam, but you've also given papers Unknown Speaker 16:58 a fresh install? Yes, yes. Unknown Speaker 17:00 I just gave one my first French paper last week actually. Unknown Speaker 17:04 How was it I have a bit more grader. Yes, she's a good friend of mine and of course I'm seeing more of her now but I knew her before and she yes she's nice and she went and I but I have to you know, I was getting ready to come down here so I have to find out how it works Mary we have the South Carolina well you know Unknown Speaker 17:38 to me it kind of confirmed a lot of my prejudices and fears but it really did I mean, it Unknown Speaker 17:43 was this ghost town Unknown Speaker 17:45 and they put some booster literature and into our packets registration packet. Unknown Speaker 17:50 Come in play playing in the land in Atlanta, well it's a festival first of all, they have this idea Charleston festival Unknown Speaker 18:05 well this I mean, you know, forget like at the Unknown Speaker 18:07 festival, like the oak forests throughout the Unknown Speaker 18:11 festival, something else some other local food, five food festivals and then it was like celebrate the Confederacy great Unknown Speaker 18:23 to have him working this hotel Unknown Speaker 18:26 right in the center. Evening Evening right Right See. Unknown Speaker 28:19 Right You? Day Are you? Right All right? Right Right Morning You. To come