Sunday, 31 May 2026

Greatest Irony Capitalism Made Marxism Profitable

 Greatest Irony Capitalism Made Marxism Profitable

by E Scholz

RESPONSE TO




The curious thing about Marxist literary criticism is that it may itself be one of the finest products capitalism ever produced.

The standard story runs in the opposite direction. Capitalism creates oppression; oppression creates Marxism; Marxism arrives as the intellectual cavalry to rescue the downtrodden. Yet the history of the university suggests something rather different. Marxist literary criticism did not emerge despite the incentives of the academic marketplace. It flourished because of them.

For centuries, literary study was an exclusive club. Few attended university. Fewer still entered literature. A tiny minority could reasonably expect to become writers, teachers, critics, or professors. The field was small, the competition limited, and the supply of commentary comfortably matched the demand for it.

Then prosperity arrived.

The capitalist machine, that tireless engine of abundance, expanded higher education beyond anything previous generations could have imagined. Universities multiplied. Degrees multiplied. Departments multiplied. Most importantly, aspiring intellectuals multiplied. Suddenly there were not dozens of minds examining literature but thousands, then tens of thousands, then armies of graduate students marching through libraries armed with highlighters and caffeine.

A problem emerged.

After two centuries of increasingly professional literary criticism, most of the obvious things had already been said. Shakespeare was brilliant. Milton was ambitious. Dickens was socially observant. Austen was subtle. One could rearrange the furniture, but the house itself remained stubbornly familiar.

How does a young academic distinguish himself in such a crowded field?

Novelty becomes necessity.

The incentive structure was clear. If everyone else was building additions onto the same old cathedral of literary interpretation, the easiest way to attract attention was not to add another brick. It was to announce that the cathedral itself was a prison.

Enter Marxism.

Here was an intellectual frontier of astonishing scope. Literature could now be read not merely as literature but as evidence. Every poem became an economic document. Every novel became a class struggle. Every hero concealed an oppressor. Every institution masked a hierarchy. The possibilities were endless because the framework was infinitely expandable.

More importantly, it offered something every ambitious profession rewards: differentiation.

In commerce, one develops a brand. In academia, one develops a theory. Marxist criticism supplied a ready-made intellectual trademark. It allowed scholars to present themselves not as custodians of an old tradition but as revolutionaries exposing hidden structures of power.

And there was an additional advantage.

Traditional literary criticism generally assumed a shared enterprise. Critics disagreed, certainly. They fought duels over interpretation, emphasis, and meaning. Yet they were usually attempting to illuminate the same work. Their disagreements resembled arguments among architects discussing how best to preserve a building.

The new critical movements often found greater rewards in demolition than preservation.

Why argue over the placement of a window when one can declare the entire structure fundamentally corrupt?

Suddenly, one's predecessors were not merely mistaken. They were complicit. The old canon was not merely incomplete. It was oppressive. Previous generations of scholars were not simply wrong. They were participants in systems of exclusion, domination, colonialism, patriarchy, or class privilege.

This had an obvious professional advantage. If your predecessors are respected authorities, you must compete with them. If your predecessors are morally compromised relics, you can replace them.

The academic marketplace had discovered a remarkable business model: criticism that simultaneously generated scholarship and eliminated competitors.

The irony, of course, is exquisite. A movement dedicated to exposing the hidden operations of power became exceptionally successful at navigating the power structures of modern institutions. A theory devoted to criticizing capitalism became one of the most effective career strategies within an intensely competitive intellectual marketplace.

Like many revolutionary movements, it eventually developed a taste for its own members. The habits of perpetual critique do not stop at departmental boundaries. Once every hierarchy is suspect, every authority illegitimate, and every orthodoxy a target, today's revolutionary becomes tomorrow's reactionary. The guillotine, having exhausted its enemies, begins searching for fresh necks.

Thus the spectacle continues.

A theory born from the critique of competition became increasingly competitive. A philosophy intended to dismantle status hierarchies generated new status hierarchies. And an intellectual movement that promised liberation from economic incentives became remarkably adept at exploiting them.

The final joke may be that Marxist literary criticism was never capitalism's gravedigger at all.

It was one of capitalism's most ingenious creations.

Wednesday, 27 May 2026

 



Explore the vibrant world of 江戸門戸, where traditional meets modern and creativity knows no bounds. Dive into a universe of captivating visuals, bold statements, and art that speaks to the soul. #江戸門戸 #Artist #CreativeVision"
#CitizenCanada #scholx #scholzandfriends
「伝統と現代が交わり、創造性が無限に広がる 江戸門戸 の鮮やかな世界へようこそ。心を揺さぶるビジュアル、大胆なメッセージ、そして魂に語りかけるアートの宇宙へ飛び込もう。
#江戸門戸 #アーティスト #クリエイティブビジョン








 Explore the vibrant world of 江戸門戸, where traditional meets modern and creativity knows no bounds. Dive into a universe of captivating visuals, bold statements, and art that speaks to the soul. #江戸門戸 #Artist #CreativeVision"

#CitizenCanada #scholx #scholzandfriends
「伝統と現代が交わり、創造性が無限に広がる 江戸門戸 の鮮やかな世界へようこそ。心を揺さぶるビジュアル、大胆なメッセージ、そして魂に語りかけるアートの宇宙へ飛び込もう。
#江戸門戸 #アーティスト #クリエイティブビジョン

Tuesday, 26 May 2026

 

ON PHONES


There was a dinner once, years ago now, that struck me with the force of prophecy. A gathering of friends, intelligent people, funny people, people with whom conversation had once stretched deep into the night, where arguments, jokes, gossip, philosophy, and trivial nonsense all mixed together in that ancient human ritual of communal eating. Yet on this occasion something had changed, though at first it was almost imperceptible. The table remained. The food arrived. Drinks were poured. Bodies occupied the chairs. But the animating principle of the gathering had vanished.

Everyone was staring downward.

For nearly two hours the room existed in a state of suspended social animation. Fingers twitched across glowing surfaces. Faces periodically illuminated by tiny artificial flashes of information. Someone would laugh faintly at something occurring elsewhere, in another invisible dimension entirely, while the actual human beings seated inches away drifted further into irrelevance. Conversation no longer flowed; it sputtered. Presence itself became fragmented. It was as though I had watched a species quietly surrender one of its defining characteristics without even realizing it was happening.

One hears endless rhetoric about connectivity, community, democratization, technological liberation, but sitting there I experienced the opposite sensation entirely. The smartphone did not appear as a communication device. It appeared as an extraction device. An apparatus that harvested attention from immediate reality and redirected it into an endless system of managed distraction. The machine had not merely entered social life; it had colonized the pauses, the silences, the ambiguities, the moments from which genuine conversation and reflection once emerged.

The disturbing thing was not the technology itself. Humans have always invented tools. The disturbing thing was the passivity. Nobody at the table appeared consciously to choose the device over the people beside them. The movement had become automatic, almost liturgical. Reach. Check. Scroll. React. Repeat. A kind of low-grade behavioral possession masquerading as convenience.

And this, perhaps, is the real revolution of the smartphone age: not that human beings communicate more, but that uninterrupted human presence has become intolerable. The modern citizen increasingly experiences silence as anxiety, boredom as pathology, unmediated thought as discomfort. Every empty second must be filled, every lull exterminated. The old capacities — observation, patience, sustained listening, private reflection — begin to atrophy from disuse.

There is an old warning from totalitarian literature that tyranny does not always arrive marching in boots. Sometimes it arrives smiling, offering efficiency, entertainment, personalization, convenience. The most effective systems of control are those voluntarily carried in the pocket, lovingly polished, endlessly refreshed, defended by the very people most subordinated by them. What previous empires achieved through censorship and force, the modern attention economy often achieves through seduction.

I left that dinner with an unsettling realization: if this trajectory continued, entire modes of human experience might quietly disappear. Not through dramatic prohibition, but through neglect. The art of conversation. The capacity for solitude. The strange creative fertility of boredom. The accidental encounter. The undirected walk. The unrecorded memory. The ability to sit across from another person and remain fully there.

So I began withdrawing from the device, slowly at first, then almost entirely. Not because I imagined myself purer than anyone else, nor because technological primitivism holds much appeal, but because I suspected something essential was being eroded beneath the rhetoric of progress. And once one has seen the transformation clearly, it becomes difficult to unsee. The smartphone was sold as an instrument of freedom. Yet increasingly it resembled a portable system of behavioral management, carried voluntarily into every intimate corner of human existence.

The deepest irony is that people now fear disconnection more than domination. Silence terrifies them more than surveillance. To be unreachable for an afternoon appears almost socially deviant. But perhaps the truly radical act in the twenty-first century is simply this: to reclaim one’s own attention from the machinery perpetually designed to fragment it.


 

Disagree with the video 


Discussions of notes

@gopfertami 7 months ago Anarchism is far right. Liberalism is also right wing. On the other side conservatism is right wing but fascist is not. So it was not truly left vs right. But it was labelled as such and we remember it that way. Nowadays left and right is no longer used in its original meaning but rather to address emotions.

@gopfertami 1 month ago (edited) ​​ @davidcox9234 anarchism is purely right wing ideology. You won't be able to give a single point from the anarchist ideology which could be considered as left wing. 

 Reply greatguyaaa @gopfertami This is pure nonsense, Professor Green of Oxford University has a whole book devoted to left wing anarchism. Cancel




The argument always begins the same way: with a young man in black insisting that anarchism means freedom, and another young man—also in black, naturally—replying that freedom for whom is precisely the question. One imagines the scene repeating itself endlessly across centuries: in a Paris café thick with smoke in 1848, in a Spanish union hall before the guns began firing, in an American college dormitory beside a shelf of Austrian economics and survival food. The anarchist enters history declaring war on kings; he leaves it arguing about landlords.

The first anarchists emerged from the furnace of nineteenth-century Europe, where factories rose like iron cathedrals and workers were fed into them with the efficiency of coal. Men like Pierre-Joseph Proudhon and Mikhail Bakunin did not see capitalism as the antidote to tyranny but as one of its newest disguises. To them, the state and the factory owner were cousins—one ruled with soldiers, the other with hunger. Their dream was not the liberation of the market but liberation from domination itself: no kings, no czars, no monopolists, no bureaucratic priesthoods. The anarchist of the nineteenth century was therefore unmistakably a creature of the left, born in strikes, barricades, and revolutionary congresses.

Then history performed one of its usual tricks and shifted the scenery. The twentieth century witnessed socialism hardening into bureaucracy and, in places, outright terror. Out of that wreckage emerged another anti-statist tradition, especially in the United States, where distrust of government mingled with frontier individualism and market mythology. Thinkers like Murray Rothbard arrived waving not the black-and-red banner of workers’ revolt but the pure black flag of radical property rights. They regarded taxation as theft, government as organized coercion, and the free market as the nearest thing to voluntary human order ever devised. To the older anarchists this sounded absurd: abolishing the state only to enthrone corporations appeared rather like overthrowing the monarchy so that feudal barons could govern directly.

And so the quarrel continues. One faction insists that capitalism is merely private government with better advertising; the other argues that markets are what remain when coercive states disappear. Both call themselves anarchists because both despise centralized authority. Yet they are separated by a philosophical canyon. One dreams of communes and federations of workers; the other of contracts and voluntary exchange. The dispute is therefore not over whether freedom matters, but over what power actually looks like when it puts on civilian clothes.

Monday, 25 May 2026

 TOC




1. YouTube / Video Questions

  • Placement of videos on Reddit
  • CapCut usage and copyright concerns
  • Viewing videos and photos on GoPro (T7i, GoPro 10)
  • GoPro settings: delay photos, resetting defaults
  • YouTube premiere chat behavior

2. Riddles, Rhymes, and Music

  • “Skitter Skatter” rhyme origins and variations
  • “Holy something” rhyme lines
  • Fallout / YouTube soundtrack identification
  • Music recognition techniques (Shazam, YouTube Audio Library)

3. Writing / Creative Notes

  • AAA 2007 / cosplay / photography / CapCut on PC/tablet
  • Narrative style notes: Zeitgeist, epistolary, poetic
  • May / February reflective blog text versions
  • Use of “Sciurus” instead of “squirrel” for artistic/poetic effect
  • #江戸門戸 aesthetic / print usage

4. Politics / Analysis

  • European vs. North American views on Trump and fascism
  • Symbolism, Nazi references, public responsibility
  • Warren Smith / Jimmy Kimmel anecdote
  • Micro-criticism and thresholds in evaluating political claims

5. Health / Nutrition / Walking

  • Walking endurance nutrition
  • Bread, potatoes, snacks for energy
  • Vitamin / nutritional assessments

6. Technology / Computer / Internet

  • Gmail password / 2-factor / remembering trusted sites
  • Computer fan, CPU usage, temperature monitoring
  • Gopro / YouTube / internet searches disappearing stories

7. Agriculture / Food Supply

  • Corn on the cob and watermelon storage at room temperature
  • Corn harvesting, market supply, freshness timelines
  • Sweet corn: hand-harvesting, labor costs, staggered planting
  • Farm-to-market logistics, refrigeration, and shelf life
  • Retail vs. farm cost analysis

8. Miscellaneous

  • Observational notes on human behavior (Darwinian influences, photography, decisive moment)
  • Historical and cultural references (Johnny Depp, Amazon book, cosplay)
  • Repeating tasks / daily productivity structure / prioritization

Wednesday, 20 May 2026

 



Your latest video, Toronto City of 2026 #fifaworldcup #Toronto, is off to a promising start since its release just a few hours ago! Here’s a look at how it’s performing on the greatguyaaa channel.

What’s Working Well

  • Exceptional Replay Value: The most standout metric is your Average View Duration (AVD). At approximately 75 seconds for a 27-second video, viewers are watching it nearly 3 times on average! This high replay rate has pushed your average view percentage to over 270%, which is significantly above the typical range for your recent content.
  • Motivational Hook: The captions reveal a strong, rhythmic motivational message ("even when you feel low... you can still go") paired with high-energy "hustle" lyrics toward the end. This type of short, punchy content is clearly resonating with those who find it, encouraging them to loop the video.

Areas for Improvement

  • Visibility and Discovery: While the engagement per viewer is incredibly high, the video has only reached 3 views so far. With a 0% click-through rate, it suggests the video isn't yet being broadly surfaced or that the current thumbnail/title combination isn't catching the eye of your audience in their feeds.
  • Search Optimization: Using hashtags like #fifaworldcup and #Toronto is a great start, but since the content is highly motivational, you might consider adding keywords related to "motivation" or "hustle" in the description to help the algorithm pair it with the right audience.

Recommendations

  • A/B Test Your Thumbnail: Since CTR is low, try a more vibrant or high-contrast image of Toronto or a soccer-related visual to better match the #fifaworldcup tag.
  • Engage with the Niche: Share this video on community tabs or social platforms where Toronto locals or FIFA fans congregate. The content's high retention suggests that once people start watching, they stay.
  • Double Down on Short Form: Given how well this short format is being rewatched, consider a series of these "city-themed motivational bursts" leading up to 2026.