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CrisisJam Special: Technocracy Now!

CrisisJam Special: Technocracy Now!

Contents

Election 2011 is the most important political event in the history of the state. It provides the people of Ireland with the chance to play Bill Cullen and hire the best, those with the liathróidí, nimbleness and expertise to find different ways of telling us there is no alternative. In light of this, CrisisJam presents a bumper edition curated by Gavan Titley. The will of the people, adjusted for reality, approved by experts. It's time for Technocracy Now!

  • The boys are back in town...for 182 days of the year at least – Mary Gilmartin
  • Shut the revolving door on the way out: the politics of negative internationalisation – Hugh Green
  • Ireland first! Gibraltar a close second! – Patrick Barry
  • Fast forward to the Counter-Reformation – Jason Walsh
  • From the 'Soul of Haiti' to 'the Pluck of the Irish': Neoliberalism and the Discourse of Resilience – Audrey Bryan
  • Campaign rhetoric and the geographies of the economic crisis – Patricia Wood
  • What is neoliberalism and why does it matter - Aidan Regan
  • Too stupid to vote? - Angela Nagle
  • D is for Deliberate: the IMF and the uses of stupidity - Andy Storey
  • Band of brothers - Nyder O'Leary
  • Who is homo economicus? - Aidan Regan
  • Our moral duty to lie to pollsters - Joe Galvin
  • Fine Gael: the videogame - Illan Rua Wall
  • Selling off the soul of science - Eadaoin O'Sullivan

(Image left Eadaoin O'Sullivan)

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The will of the people, adjusted for reality, approved by experts. It’s time for Technocracy Now!

Technocracy-Now-ClearElection 2011 is the most important political event in the history of the state. It provides the people of Ireland with the chance to play Bill Cullen and hire the best, those with the liathróidí, nimbleness and expertise to find different ways of telling us there is no alternative. Gavan Titley introduces Crisisjam’s election week celebration of technocracy, now.

 
The boys are back in town... for 182 days of the year at most

Ireland first
We are constantly reassured that there is immense talent and creativity in the country. What a gift, then, when an elite Brains Trust bands together to put Ireland First, relatively speaking. Mary Gilmartin examines the anatomy of yet another proposal for national management.

 
Shut the revolving door on the way out: the politics of negative internationalisation
famine statues
Of the many fulsome initiatives intended to normalise the trauma of forced emigration, an ad campaign for a soft drink goes in at number one with a bullet. By purchasing the product of this global corporation, you enter a draw for the prize of bringing back a group of your recently emigrated friends. They will, if you are successful, be back in Ireland on Saint Patrick's Day for 'the craic'. Recession-busting pizza might give you heartburn, but as Hugh Green examines, there's nothing like an ...
Ireland first! Gibraltar a close second!

cuts
Remaking the country in one’s image, or at least in ways that fit snugly with one’s interests, is all the rage among Ireland’s golfing cosmopolitan elite. On the day when Ed Walsh called for the implementation of economic ‘martial law’, Patrick Barry examines Dermot Desmond’s drive to become Ireland’s leading political moustache.

 
Fast forward to the Counter-Reformation

ask the experts
Dermot Desmond has jetted in for the weekend to join the chorus of voices calling for political reform. Jason Walsh examines several branches of the new reformation, and argues that what they have in common is distrust of the electorate.

 
From the ‘Soul of Haiti’ to ‘the Pluck of the Irish’: Neoliberalism and the Discourse of Resilience

smile or die
The power of neoliberal discourse lies in how it contaminates and thrives on the established language we use to discuss politics and society. In particular, ideas of ‘freedom’ and the ‘individual’ now mainly operate in a shrivelled register of economic instrumentality. Audrey Bryan examines how praise of human resilience has come to mean Croppy lie down.

Campaign rhetoric and the geographies of the economic crisis

globe
Remember when Ireland was but a straw blown about and broken by the ill winds of global collapse? When it was Lehman Brothers wot did it? As the austerity agenda becomes more deeply embedded as the touchstone of Irish political realism, any sustained analysis of what the global capitalist crisis actually meant for Ireland recedes. Patricia K Wood examines the shrinking geography of crisis and conceivable responses.

 
Protests and Events

Ready for Victory Celebration!

Where: The Met Bar, Clifton Court, Eden Quay

When: Sunday 20 February 5-10pm

Vigil against the continuing US military use of Shannon Airport

Where: GPO Dublin

When: Wednesday, 23 February, 4-6pm.

 
Words, pictures, sounds

A weekly round-up of what the CrisisJammers have been reading, watching and listening to.

Irish Left Review/WorldbyStorm - The bailouts: Let confusion be unconstrained

Upstart - Posters

TASCblog - Economists on Ireland's export performance - more sad stories

MediaBite - VinB, Kathleen Lynch and the Twitterati

Dan Hind - The Threat to Reason: How the Enlightenment was hijacked and how we can reclaim it

What is neoliberalism and why does it matter?

wall st blueprint
In the first of a two-part series, Aidan Regan traces a history of neoliberalism, and shows why its supremacy as explanans for all economic activity is based neither on the rigour of its methods or the predictive power of its hypotheses, but on a simple moral argument about the superiority of the individual over the collective; the private over public.

 
Too stupid to vote?

plank
There is an idea abroad. It is the idea that the Irish people are inveterately thick; incapable of rational choice or decision making. Saying that people are too stupid to understand something is the first refuge of the terminally technocratic when faced with dissent. More than that, considering the people “too stupid” for real change reveals one's own unwillingness to be self-critical and constructive about failure as well as revealing an ironic disdain for others, argues Angela Nagle.

 
D is for Deliberate: the IMF and the uses of stupidity

dunce cap
As has been noted on CrisisJam before, failure is no barrier to success in the thin air that prevails in the offices off the topmost corridors of power. The IMF’s dismal record in evaluating and forecasting economic performance – and its tenured poistion as arbiter of same - bespeaks a very special kind of insulation from the consequences of stupidity and failure. But, writes Andy Storey, the degree of the Fund’s stupidity is less important than the political uses of its idiocy, for both s

...
Brand of brothers

brand enda
American companies are usually considered to be at the forefront of attempts to push the boundaries of possibility when it comes to branding things, but in Ireland, two parties - Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael - are true innovators. They have dispensed entirely with the thing a brand is usually attached to, says Nyder O'Leary, and have become all brand.

 
Who is homo economicus?

homo economicus

In part two of his series on neoliberalism, Aidan Regan asks who, exactly, is homo economicus, and finds that he's a mythical beast composed mostly of bits and pieces of brus from the bottom of an ideological barrel.

 
Our moral duty to lie to pollsters

poll of pollsWeek three of the 2011 general election is now underway, and the agenda is still largely dominated by the state of Ireland's beleaguered economy. Econospeak has overtaken Irish as our second most popular language, and the front pages are still filled with stories of bailouts, banks, bondholders, budgets and Brussels. The other big issue of the election, political reform, occasionally gets a look in, but the broadsheets are dissecting daily the minutiae of our economic situation - and with good r...

Fine Gael – the videogame

enda's high score
Illan Rua Wall
has been playing with Fine Gael's latest addition to its already bulging sack of horrendous digital animation, 'Go Ireland - the Videogame', and has found it as, if not more, illuminating than their five point plan.

 
Selling off the soul of science

lab instruments
As Dan Hind points out in The Threat to Reason, "Reason and science can be empolyed for swindling ends but they can also serve in the cause of human liberation. The decision to treat human beings as objects of rational administration does not derive from the operations of rationality. It is an act of will." Below, Eadaoin O'Sullivan tries to rescue science from its ideological hijacking, and suggests that in fighting against technocracy, we should be wary of being drawn into a fight ab

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