A Political Supersaturated Solution Is Developing In The United States

Discussion in 'Current Events' started by resisting arrest, Nov 13, 2019.

  1. resisting arrest

    resisting arrest Well-Known Member Past Donor

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    Quantity will Transform into Quality

    Professor Richard Wolff offers the analogy of the supersaturated solution to politics in the
    United States.

    In chemistry there is something called a supersaturated solution in which salt crystals are dissolved in water and then, to all appearances they disappear, you just see the water. But if you do that enough times the concentration of salt in the water gets to be so dense that the water cannot absorb another tiny salt crystal and keep its liquid form. That last salt crystal will be the tipping point where the water will congeal around that salt crystal. That is the metaphor. The political situation in the United States is like that supersaturated solution.
    A candidate or a movement will appear or an event will take place which will be the catalyst to unify enough people to bring the final end of capitalism.




    Towards the end of this clip Prof. Richard Wolff talks about the supersaturated solution.





    The bourgeoisie, always blindly empirical, were unable to see the explosive accumulation of subterranean discontent that was quietly gathering force. They were congratulating themselves that no revolution had taken place. Once they had recovered from the initial shock of the crisis of 2008, for the bankers and capitalists it was “business as usual” Like a drunken man dancing on the edge of a precipice, they carried on with the merry carnival of money-making, which acquired an even more feverish pace while the conditions of the masses went from bad to worse.

    Trotsky explained what he called the molecular process of revolution. In the History of the Russian Revolution he points out that, what determines the consciousness of the masses is not just the economic crisis, but rather the accumulation of discontent built up over the whole previous period. The discontent of the masses accumulates unnoticed until it finally reaches that critical point when quantity is transformed into quality.

    https://www.socialist.net/2018-a-year-of-capitalist-crisis-part-three.htm

    To use an example from natural science again, let us imagine the heating of water. You can actually measure ("quantify"), in terms of degrees of temperature, the change that takes place in the water as you add heat to it. From, let us say, 10 degrees centigrade (which is normal tap water) to about 98 degrees centigrade, the change will remain quantitative; i.e., the water will remain water, although it is getting warmer.

    https://www.marxist.com/pickard-dialectical-materialism.htm

    But then comes a point where the change in the water becomes qualitative, and the water turns into steam. You can no longer describe the change in the water as it is heated from 98 degrees to 102 degrees in purely quantitative terms. We have to say that a qualitative change (water into steam) has come about as a result of an accumulation of quantitative change (adding more and more heat).

    https://www.marxists.org/archive/trotsky/1939/12/abc.htm
     
  2. MikeDwight

    MikeDwight Banned

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    Obviously in international standards of law, since the 1800's, there is no such thing as a forced annexation treaty. The annexation of Korea by Japan was an illegal treaty.
    [​IMG]
     
  3. Robert E Allen

    Robert E Allen Banned

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    Marxism is evil. And xan be discounted wholesale. Any professor teaching anything about it to be good should lose his credentials.
     

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