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Jason Miller
interviewed by Robert Turnbull
11/19/08
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Robert Turnbull: I guess I’ll start with a
rather mundane question. How are you?
Jason Miller: I just looked at some
horrific photos of extremely sick and emaciated
people who suffer from a drug-resistant strain of TB
and AIDS, so I’m feeling blessed because I’m
relatively healthy and able to employ my personal
strengths to carry out my purpose on Earth.
RT: What is that you consider your purpose
on Earth to be?
JM: It’s multi-faceted and complex, but if
I distill it to its essence and put it succinctly,
my primary purpose on Earth is to strive for two
causes: animal liberation and socialism.

I
realize that socialism is a loaded word,
particularly in our benighted land here in the US.
But as we talk you’ll get a better sense of what I
mean when I talk about socialism, which I use as a
bit of a catch-all term to describe a more logical
and just way of interacting socially, politically
and economically.
RT: What do you say to socialism’s critics
who argue that it has failed each time it’s been
tried and that it’s utopian in nature, and therefore
impossible to implement?

JM: Capitalism has predominated for a
couple hundred years, give or take. Obviously we
don’t live in a black and white world, so the line
blurs a bit between feudalism, mercantilism, and
capitalism as one traces the arc of socioeconomic
history. Even capitalism itself has passed through a
number of phases and can be described in a number of
ways, depending on one’s perspective—think of
industrial capitalism, finance capitalism (that
brought us the $700 billion ‘bailout’), relatively
unfettered ‘free markets’ (that gave us the Robber
Barons, child labor, slave wages, deadly consumer
products, horrific working conditions, monopolies,
trusts and the like—the ‘good old days’), a mixed
economy (which means a heavy dose of capitalism
slightly mitigated with just enough socialism to
keep capitalism’s inevitable crises from collapsing
the system and to keep the masses in check),
monopoly capitalism (Microsoft and Wal-Mart),
corporate capitalism and more. By both moral and
practical standards, capitalism is an abject
failure. Concentrating the wealth and power in the
hands of a few while 35,000 people starve to death
each day is unconscionable and attempted infinite
growth on a finite planet is a recipe for disaster.
Socialism hasn’t had the ghost of a chance to take
root, let alone flourish. Pitted against the
militaristic, economic, and propagandistic might of
capitalism, each attempt to tear down and rebuild
socioeconomic and political structures along more
egalitarian, rational, just and democratic lines has
been destined to severe malformation or failure.
Capitalism’s apologists decry the fact that
socialism’s proponents raise that argument
repeatedly, yet there is no intellectually honest
refutation. Time and again Father Capitalism has
strangled Baby Socialism with its umbilical cord as
it has emerged from the womb.

Despite
a heroic effort by the Russians, the forces of
American Capitalism saw to it that the flames of
revolution against the bourgeoisie were extinguished
by the strain of the Cold War on an economy 1/5 the
size that of the US that was already stressed by a
scramble to industrialize a largely agrarian society
and by the loss of 25 million lives sacrificed to
defeat Nazism in WWII.
Cuba is
also illustrative of American capitalism’s
stranglehold on power, though in some ways that
small island neighboring us to the south is an ugly
reminder to the ruling elite that even they are not
omnipotent. Fidel and his fellow revolutionaries
overthrew a US-backed dictator. Castro has since
heroically defied the Capitalist Menace for
decades—practicing heresy in the US power elite’s
backyard! Yet isolation, containment, and the
omnipresent potential of US military intervention
have taken their toll on the Cuban experiment and
severely retarded its capacity to achieve a fraction
of socialism’s potentials.

And Hugo
Chavez continues to hang tough in Venezuela, much to
the chagrin of los Capitalistas…..
Socialism’s critics are myopic, ahistorical,
fundamentally lacking in moral or intellectual
capacity, and/or they derive enough benefit from
capitalism that they fear that exercising
intellectual honesty might derail their gravy train.
And by the way, until I elected to eschew many of
its benefits and consciously direct my blood, sweat
and tears toward the pursuit of a better society
rather than money and power, I was enthusiastically
pursuing the ‘fruits of exploitation’ offered by our
wicked socioeconomic structure. But I found it so
morally reprehensible that I’m now delighted to defy
‘logic,’ ‘look a gift horse in the mouth,’ and bite
the hand that fed me.

Growing
up as a member of Lou Dobbs’s venerated “middle
class,”
I had many advantages as a child and young adult
that billions of people around the globe will never
have. It wasn’t even a conscious decision initially,
but I began rejecting those privileges and many
aspects of “my world” once I hit age 19.
Though I
was mostly apolitical, I went through about a six
year period in which “immature anarchist” would have
described me with a fair degree of accuracy. Walking
away from a full scholarship at the university I had
attended for three years, leaving a failing
marriage, drifting from one low-paying and dangerous
blue collar job to another, experiencing temporary
homelessness, suffering severe burns in an
industrial accident, filing bankruptcy,
experimenting with drugs, struggling with alcohol
dependency, and having a number of skirmishes with
relatives, landlords, employers, and the law—I was
rejecting the “American Way” with nearly every fiber
of my being, but without conscious intent. I was
enraged and defiant, but I didn’t really know why.
After
years of intellectual, spiritual and physical
struggle, I’ve managed to ascend from my
self-imposed hell. By the grace of the Higher Power,
I’ve emerged with a psyche that’s free and
infinitely stronger than it was prior to my ‘fall.’
RT: So you went through some profound
changes as a human being?
JM: I’m one of the extremely rare and
fortunate individuals who, through my innate
strengths of tenacity, persistence, passion, moral
imagination, resourcefulness, and a relentlessly
analytical mind AND thanks to a confluence of other
factors, including serendipitous encounters with
incredibly wise and compassionate mentors, was able
to make a ‘conversion’ not unlike that of Saul of
Tarsus. I make no claims to saint-hood or
perfection, but I have made a significant moral
transformation for the better.
RT: So what triggered your ‘evolution?’
JM: I’m glad you asked because the answer
relates directly to my response to the apologists
for capitalism who despise socialism so.
Raw
emotion and an unconscious rejection of the myriad
toxic elements that comprise our ‘culture’ and
society here in capitalist central, the United
States, triggered my mostly self-inflicted downward
spiral. I was running and fighting like hell, but
from and against what I knew not. To put this into a
chronological perspective, my psychological
nightmare began in about 1986.
Hitting
rock bottom, or actually ramming into it at top
speed to be more accurate, jarred me to my senses. I
finally woke up and had two epiphanies. One was the
fact that I was applying nearly all of my formidable
tenacity into fucking up my life. The second was
that I wasn’t self-destructing because I was
masochistic. I realized I had been born with a very
potent conscience and with a strong tendency to
dissect nearly everything with critical thinking.
These traits often put me at odds with the
capitalist, speciesist world around me. At that time
I had a very limited frame of reference and
pitifully few tools with which I could reconcile the
nightmarish contradictions. Suicide definitely
crossed my mind on more than one occasion.
RT: So you’re saying you’re better than the
rest of us?

JM: No. Not at all. What I’m saying is that
most people with reasonably developed intellects and
consciences are going to struggle in some way in
this ocean of liquefied excrement, and I don’t care
what you call it—capitalism, corporatism,
consumerism, Western civilization—it’s a sea of
shit. Ignorance, anti-intellectualism, avarice, law
of the jungle, deceit, get them before they get you,
selfishness, self-centeredness, narcissism,
exploitation, and nearly every despicable human
trait your mind can conjure are encouraged,
amplified, rewarded, and to some degree,
necessitated by our rotten-to-the-core system of
‘free enterprise.’
Adam
Smith’s ‘invisible hand’ is strangling the life out
of the planet while .0005% of the population sits
atop a mountain of cash that dwarfs Mt. Everest.
These vampiric individuals won’t rest until they’ve
sucked the Earth and its inhabitants dry. Gates,
Mars, Walton, Buffet, Allen, Ellison, Dell, Redstone,
Pritzker, Helu, Albrecht, Mittal, Deripaska,
Ballmer, Koch….you want a who’s who of parasitic
ghouls? Check out Forbes.com’s list of the world’s
billionaires. These poster children for gluttony and
greed don’t work in the sense that most of us do.
They may go to an office and do work, but unlike
most of us, they aren’t compelled to do so in order
to function within the system and survive. We bleed,
sweat, and cry to keep them in the obscenely lavish
lifestyles to which these ruthless bastards have
become accustomed—and philanthropy be damned. The
money these leeches donate is for PR purposes, tax
write-offs and to appease what tiny pricks of
conscience they may feel on occasion.
I want
to interject here that my passion against the
accumulation of wealth does not stem from envy. I
have what I need and there’s little that I want.
Material possessions, power, and wealth hold little
meaning for me—I am a minimalist. My zealous pursuit
of capitalism’s demise is fueled by my insatiable
thirst for justice.
So no, I
don’t think I’m better than others—I’m simply
awakened and motivated. And I’ve surrounded myself
with friends and allies who share similar traits,
worldviews, and objectives. Most of the people I
know who still believe that the hologram of American
Exceptionalism bears even a vague resemblance to
reality, or that we’re actually bettering the world
by infecting it with the virus of the American Way
of Life (at gun and missile point, no less), are
essentially decent human beings who are simply
intellectually disarmed and emotionally pacified by
the steady barrage of bourgeois, corporate
propaganda. Not to mention the fact that many of
them are bought and paid for, in most cases
unwittingly, with the ‘generous’ crumbs the ruling
class throws them to keep them fiercely loyal to a
way of being that provides a relatively comfortable
existence for 5% of the world’s population at an
extreme cost to the Earth, it’s other sentient
inhabitants, and the rest of humanity.
Now some
do ‘play the game’ with eyes wide open. They are
quite aware that the prevailing paradigm is causing
alarming rates of deforestation and species
extinction, Climate Change, Peak Oil, horrific
levels of pollution, gross disparities in access to
basic human necessities, the torture and murder of
billions of non-human animals each year, resource
wars, a serious depletion of potable water supplies,
inevitable and recurring economic crises (like the
current one), soil decimation, and much more
unnecessary murder, mayhem, and destruction. Yet
they forge ahead to get their ‘entitlements.’
Yes,
that’s right; I used the reactionary right’s
pejorative for ‘welfare.’ The dominionist fucks who
think they are ‘entitled’ to exploit every human and
non-human animal and all the Earth’s “resources” for
their personal pleasure and fulfillment are the ones
who are actually leeching off of the rest of us and
the planet.

Sarah
Palin epitomizes virtually all the loathsome
qualities our sociopathic culture inculcates us to
worship. She’s a venomous, conniving, duplicitous,
and hyper-ambitious serpent of a woman who uses
cunning to hide her profound ignorance and
sublimates her repressed sadism by shooting
essentially defenseless animals (she calls it
“hunting”), enabling and applauding the murder of
wolves with rifles and air-planes (now that’s truly
‘sporting’), and fighting attempts to keep the polar
bears from vanishing forever.
Astoundingly, this transparently vile woman actually
came reasonably close to governing the most powerful
nation in the world. It is incomprehensible that a
decent human being with a functioning mind would
vote for a ticket that included such a repulsive
member of our species. For Christ’s sake! Palin’s in
bed with Ted Stevens (an indicted felon and probably
the most corrupt former member of the Senate–now
that’s some serious criminality), Big Oil, a
secessionist (quite literally in bed with one–while
she waves the flag of patriotism until her arm is
limp with fatigue), gay-hating social regressives
(who would vote for Hitler were he alive today and
campaigning against abortion AND who think the
Flintstonian version of humanity coexisting with
dinosaurs is pretty realistic). Politically,
historically, geographically, and socially moronic,
she made Paris Hilton look sharp as a whip until she
had time to memorize the talking points her GOP
handlers spoon fed her.
Yet 58
million people voted for this troglodyte. That’s
pretty disturbing. Does that mean that she is indeed
a reflection of our collective selves? That we
Americans are as petty, mean-spirited, narcissistic,
obtuse, and belligerent (in a “socially acceptable”
way) as Caribou Barbie? That we are but a thin,
flexible veneer of respectability super-glued over a
decaying, putrefied core that, were it fully
exposed, would not even be “decent” enough to make
the cut for Jerry Springer’ show?
RT: You sound very angry. Liberals are
supposed to be a cut above conservatives because
they are open-minded, peace-loving, kind, and
gentle.
JM: First of all, I’m not a liberal. Early
in my sociopolitical evolution I called myself one,
but that was before I understood the meaning of the
word and had begun to deepen my convictions.
Liberals
are reformists. I see no possibility of reforming
the American Way of Life. Fuck Bush, Cheney and
whomever else has said it’s non-negotiable. The
death of the American Way of Life is what’s
non-negotiable. Whether revolutionary forces or
Mother Nature take it down, our abominable way of
being is going to meet a violent end. And I’m doing
my part to help facilitate the demise of American
capitalism, which is the term I prefer to use when
referring to the ruthless, myopic, irrational,
hyper-individualistic, selfish, greedy,
narcissistic, speciesist, patriarchal, grotesquely
hypocritical, and imperialistic “civilized savagery”
we US Americans and our sycophantic allies love to
practice.
And,
yes, I’m angry. In fact, I feel morally outraged and
furious more often than I’d like. Television is both
a cause and a symptom of our diseased existence.
Consider the corporate media. I can only take its
onslaught of pro-corporate, ahistorical, Zionist,
and contextually deficient “reporting” in very small
doses. Mentally deconstructing the barrage of
propaganda posing as news, depraved reality shows,
inane sit-coms, and the intermittent Madison Avenue
attempts to mind fuck me can be entertaining once in
awhile, but more often than not I find myself
infuriated by the time I turn off the TV. So I
rarely gaze into that highly addictive electronic
portal to our hollow, shallow, artificial, instantly
gratifying, egocentric, self-indulgent ‘culture’
that pelts critical thinking and deep feeling
individuals with a steady barrages of insults,
irritations, frustrations, and reasons to be
incensed almost constantly.
RT: If you’re not a liberal then what are
you?
JM: I’m fairly eclectic actually. Mostly
free-thinking Marxist and animal liberationist, I
also lean a bit towards anarchy and have some
strains of anarcho-primitivism to my worldview. I’m
deeply radical in almost all of my thinking but
moderate my actions to the extent necessary to
function in a sociopolitical environment that lacks
the conditions essential for a revolution.
RT: Since you’re a radical, you advocate
the use of violence, right?
JM: Personally, I’d rather solve problems
without resorting to violence. However, sometimes
one has little or no choice. I own more than one gun
and would not hesitate to use them if the need were
to arise—and I don’t hunt, by the way.
I hate
to burst the bubbles of the mean-spirited
regressives who, despite Obama’s victory (which was
still a victory for corporatism and militarism)
still tend to predominate in our cesspool of a
society, but not all intellectuals who feel
compassion for the defenseless, weak and exploited
are pacifists, Hippies, Gandhi-ites, or ‘sniveling
little book-worms.’ My father was an intelligent,
athletic, successful (by capitalist standards) man
with an abusive, explosive temper that he frequently
unleashed on the family. I didn’t let him beat me
down when I was a child, and as I’ve grown older, my
antipathy toward, and resistance against (by
whatever rational means become necessary),
regressive bullies have strengthened.
RT: So are you taunting or challenging
“regressives” as you call them?
JM: Not at all. I’m simply expressing the
fact that not all of us who oppose uber-capitalists,
neoconservatives, paleoconservatives, Christian
fundamentalists, and reactionaries are latte
sipping, Volvo driving, Obama supporting “Blue
Staters” or carbon copies of Fox’s liberal
caricature, Alan Colmes.
RT: Maybe you’re just projecting your anger
at your father onto the world?
JM: I did that for a long time, but not
anymore. My anger is focused—I know why I’m angry
and I have learned where and how to direct it. I was
a slave to rage at one time, but I now channel it so
that it is useful and effective. If my ire is still
invoked by my father at some unconscious level, it
isn’t by him specifically; it’s by the capitalist
archetype he represented.
Remember, I’ve been working as a corporate wage
slave for 15 years now—in fact, I was promoted to
‘overseer’ of my section of the ‘cubicle farm’ about
a year ago. Aside from doing the work I do to pay
the bills for my family, I have learned to function
effectively in many ways within a system premised on
‘principles’ that grate at the very core of my
being.
RT: If our society is so bad, why don’t you
withdraw to the wilderness or move to another
country?
JM: I get those types of questions a lot.
Sure, I
could become the next Ted Kaczynski. While I have a
hard time warming up to his tactics of sending bombs
to individuals, he did recognize what a monstrosity
our civilization has become and was attempting to do
something about it. However, I think I can make more
of a difference from my current vantage point doing
what I am doing than I could by withdrawing to the
hinterlands of Montana and blowing people up via the
mail.
Now
here’s a question for YOU. If I left the US, where
the hell would I go that hasn’t been infected by the
disease of our sociocultural and economic schemes,
invaded or occupied by the Empire’s shock troops
(700 military bases in 150 countries), hijacked by a
US puppet, deeply impoverished by neoliberal Chicago
School economic rape, bombed into the stone age in
the name of ‘humanitarian imperialism,’ driven to
hate Americans for our malevolent foreign policy,
and/or stunted and malformed by the repeated attacks
of American Capitalism?
That was
a rhetorical question.
Besides,
my roots are here, as are my house and my family. I
was born here, and though my ultimate loyalty is to
human and non-human animals and to the Earth, I am
an American citizen. This is my home geographically
and sentimentally and I’m not about to leave. I can
wage my struggle for animal liberation and socialism
from here just as well as I could anywhere else.
RT: And you really didn’t finish answering
my question about the use of violence….
JM: OK, let’s get back into that…

Aside
from Thomas Paine, who was “rewarded” for his
radical intellectual efforts (which were
instrumental in catalyzing the American Revolution,
by the way) by expulsion from the “pantheon of our
Founding Fathers” and persecution throughout his
lifetime, John Brown is my greatest inspiration.
Brown, in a noble and valiant effort, fought fire
with fire as he warred against pro-slavery forces.
Slavery was one of the most evil and violent
institutions in history. Brown’s use of violence was
amply justified from a moral standpoint.
While
I’m on the other end of the social spectrum from
many of them, I do admire the zeal of radical
anti-abortionists. I don’t advocate committing
murder the way some of them have, but violence is a
necessary weapon to have in one’s arsenal when
employing extensional self-defense against a ruling
class that enforces the morally reprehensible status
quo with myriad forms of institutionalized and
wholesale violence carried out by many different
entities. Examples include unprovoked invasions of
sovereign nations, Homeland Security, CIA and FBI
assassinations, “collateral damage” via bombing
campaigns, the War on Drugs, the prison industrial
complex, factory farming, ridiculously thin and
ineffective social safety nets that keep the poor
scrambling just to survive and cause many
unnecessarily premature deaths, ICE immigration
raids, the use of depleted uranium in munitions,
billions of dollars to Israel to finance their
genocide of the Palestinians…..I could go on and on.
Don’t
forget that violence can come in a variety of forms
at the retail level too. Monkey-wrenching,
vandalism, arson, intimidation, and sabotage are
morally defensible means of fighting on behalf of
those who can’t defend themselves against a
merciless, soulless, fascist fusion of the state and
corporations. And if the ruling class deploys armed
thugs to enforce the primacy of capital over life
and Earth, armed insurrection via asymmetrical
warfare is both logical and just.
As an
example of the skillful, effective, and admirable
use of violence, look to the ALF. They have utilized
physical force and destruction to liberate countless
non-human animals and to hinder numerous animal
exploiters and murderers for years—and they’ve not
killed a single human being.

RT: Are you a member of the ALF?
JM: As a vegan and animal liberationist, I
hold very deep convictions about the sanctity of
non-human animal lives and am part of the movement
to eradicate speciesism, which would thereby end the
suffering of billions of sentient beings.
However,
if you understood the nature of the Animal
Liberation Front, you would know better than to even
ask that question.
RT: So what do you actually do to advance
these causes that inspire your passion?
JM: Well, since my gifts are my capacities
to think critically and write, I compose essays that
educate, persuade, awaken, inform, analyze, expose,
and probably infuriate.
I have been publishing Thomas
Paine’s Corner (http://www.bestcyrano.org/thomaspaine/)
since 2004. In 2006 I merged TPC with Cyrano’s
Journal Online (http://www.bestcyrano.org/)
and became Cyrano’s associate editor, maintaining my
site as a semi-autonomous section of CJO. I’ve
devoted countless hours and worked strenuously to
create and maintain a publishing platform for
radical writers, ideas, and organizations. Since
Patrice Greanville, our editor-in-chief, and I place
a high premium on our independence, we accept no
advertising or sponsorship. Hence, we derive zero
income from our endeavor. It actually costs us to
keep the site operational. At last count, Thomas
Paine’s Corner had had almost 2 million visitors in
four years. So it’s been worth it.
Aside from that, I lead a
vegan lifestyle, petition, protest, shun
consumerism, distribute pamphlets, work with
homeless shelters, boycott, network with other
radicals, make personal financial sacrifices that
enable me to make meaningful donations to
organizations that haven’t been co-opted by the
corporatocracy, like Paul Watson’s Sea Shepherd
www.seashepherd.org
and Michele Pickover’s Animal Right’s Africa
www.animalrightsafrica.org ,
and engage in some direct action.
RT: What do you suggest other concerned
people do?
JM: I defer to Derrick Jensen on that one
because I like his answer to that question. I’m
paraphrasing, but he essentially said that in this
war to save the planet there is a need for people of
nearly all ages, capacities, sensibilities, and
capacities. It is up to each person to assess their
gifts, resources, abilities, and circumstances, and
then to decide what they can and are willing to do
in the struggle. I outlined what I do. The answer
will be different for each person.
RT: And what do you think we need to pursue
as mutual objectives?
JM: Ralph Nader advanced an intelligent and
morally palatable agenda in the presidential race
that just ended, including single payer health
insurance, a carbon pollution tax, opening the
presidential debates to all candidates, an
aggressive crackdown on corporate welfare and
corporate crime, repealing the Taft-Hartley
anti-union law, ending corporate personhood, making
huge cuts to the military budget, increasing
spending on rebuilding infrastructure and social
programs, increasing progressive and corporate
taxes, withdrawing our troops from the Middle East,
developing solar, wind and other relatively benign
energy sources, cutting funding for new nuclear
power plants, and cutting financial support to
Israel.
Nader’s
proposals don’t exactly break the back of
capitalism, but since we don’t have the momentum and
consciousness we need for a revolution, these
objectives, coupled with immediate criminalization
of factory farming and animal testing, will need to
be enough.
Attaining these objectives would significantly ease
the wounds we are inflicting on the Earth and move
us closer to balancing the scales of justice. Yet we
would still have a long way to go in the struggle.
RT: Any final thoughts?
JM: I wanted to make a few more
observations concerning the way we have organized
our society versus how we could organize our
society.
As a
product of Western civilization and a member of the
privileged Caucasian race, I spent many of my 42
years as an avowed individualist and devotee of
capitalism. Had I known of Ayn Rand before I began
to refine my social and political views, I would
have bowed at her altar and worshipped selfishness
as a virtue. It’s pretty perverse when we resort to
mental gymnastics to the extent that we enshrine
ignoble human characteristics as “virtues.” Or maybe
those amongst us lauding greed as a good are simply
rotten human beings and don’t give a shit. If that’s
the case, they’re the ones who belong in the
American gulag rather than the hundreds of thousands
of non-violent drug offenders, whose “crime” was
self-medicating to mitigate the misery of
capitalist-induced poverty.
Rather
than perpetuating the ‘all about me’ ethos of
capitalism, how about we the Proletariat organize,
mobilize and exercise the strength of our superior
numbers to storm the castle walls, throw the royalty
out on their fat asses, and open the treasury to
those in need? I’ve got news for you, fellow serfs.
Feudalism didn’t die. It barely evolved. While the
American Revolution had great merit, it was still a
bourgeois revolution, of the rich, by the rich and
for the rich. Our ancestors threw off the yoke of
monarchy only to replace it with that of plutocracy.

There
will come a time when calling for the redistribution
of wealth will inspire the masses rather than
igniting their fury. Yet for now, many of them
continue to take a perverse pride in struggling to
make ends meet so that senile war criminals like
John McCain can marry billionaire beer heiresses and
forget how many mansions they own.
I could
continue asserting the merits of socialism and
cataloguing the contradictions, flaws, and evils of
capitalism. However, that debate seems endless and
these points have been articulated many times by
many others. The proof, as they say, is in the
pudding. And once enough people have been
bitch-slapped hard enough by Smith’s ‘invisible
hand,’ the working class is going to whip up one
hell of a batch of tapioca.

I will
leave you with one final thought on the subject. One
doesn’t even need to look beyond the names to
recognize the priorities of these two modes of
social organization. Capitalism is about property,
the means of production, profit, and money.
Socialism is about people and community. What do you
desire most? Stacks of dead presidents or flesh and
blood companions?
Robert Turnbull is a radical activist residing
in northeastern Kansas. He has penned numerous
political commentaries under a nom de guerre, which
he decided to shelve for this interview.
Jason Miller is the indefatigable associate
editor of
Cyrano’s Journal Online. His main turf is
Thomas Paine’s Corner, Cyrano’s largest blog. He
performs numerous editorial, administrative and
promotional tasks, including CJO’s newsletter, Mind
Detox.
JMiller@bestcyrano.org
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