21 March 2021
System Crash: An activist guide to making revolution
By Neil Faulkner, Phil Hearse, Nina Fortune, Rowan Fortune, and Simon Hannah.
You can read chapters of the book on the Anti*Capitalist Resistance website.
ABOUT THE BOOK
It is the greatest crisis in human history. We are hurtling towards an abyss. The system is terminally diseased. Pandemic, climate crisis, endless war, mega-slums, police repression, creeping fascism, economic stagnation: these shape our world. On one side, grotesque greed and rampaging corporate power.
On the other, poverty, oppression, and despair.
Capitalism came into the world, Marx wrote, ‘dripping from head to toe, from every pore, with blood and dirt’. Now, the ageing system is putrescent and gangrenous. But the last decade has seen explosions of revolt from below, fire cracking across the globe, toppling dictators, resisting austerity, protesting racism, defending abortion rights, fighting for democracy. Here is the embryo of an alternative future.
Revolution – ending the rule of capital and the state – has become an existential necessity. This book is a call to arms.
CONTENTS
- Introduction: World on Fire
- Pandemic
- Burning Planet
- Social Crisis and Social Class
- Mega-Slums
- Police States and Warfare States
- The New Fascism
- The Economics of Disaster Capitalism
- Can the System Be Reformed?
- The Working Class and the Oppressed
- From Anti-Capitalist Resistance to Post-Capitalist Transformation
- Conclusion: The Revolutionary Imperative
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Neil Faulkner is an archaeologist, historian, and political activist. His books include Rome: empire of the eagles, A Radical History of the World, A People’s History of the Russian Revolution, and Creeping Fascism: what it is and how to fight it. He is currently working on A People’s History of the Spanish Civil War. His books have been translated into a dozen foreign languages. He played a leading role in Brick Lane Debates and is now active in Anti*Capitalist Resistance.
Phil Hearse is a veteran socialist activist. One of the authors of Creeping Fascism, he taught Communication and Culture at a London college until his retirement in 2016. Many of his articles appear on the Socialist Resistance, International Viewpoint, and Mutiny websites. He is a supporter of Anti*Capitalist Resistance.
Rowan Fortune is a socialist, the editor of the utopian short story anthology Citizens of Nowhere, and author of the nonfiction ebook Writing Nowhere.
Simon Hannah is a local government worker and a socialist and trade union activist. He is the author of A Party with Socialists in it: a history of the Labour Left, Can’t Pay, Won’t Pay: the fight to stop the Poll Tax, and Radical Lambeth.
Nina Fortune is an activist with a focus on oppression. She has contributed essays to Mutiny about Black Lives Matter in the US and the disproportionate impact of coronavirus on BAME people in the UK.
The book can be purchased from Resistance Books here.
Already the backsliding begins. ITV news is reporting that the Government has changed one point in the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill. They have accepted that academies will retain their ‘freedom’ to set their own pay scales for teachers. So the criteria in the School Teachers Pay and Conditions document will only apply to teachers in Local Authority schools. Why have the Government climbed down on this issue? It’s not as if this is a major financial problem for academies. But what will be the next change/climb down by the Government? Will academies be exempt from the National Curriculum? Will Local Authorities be able to build schools according to the needs of their communities or will all new schools, as at present, have to be academies?