Michael Parenti, born on this day in 1933, is a Marxist American political scientist and cultural critic. He has taught at American and international universities and has been a guest lecturer before campus and community audiences.

Michael Parenti was raised by an Italian-American working-class family in the East Harlem neighborhood of New York City. After graduating from high school, Parenti worked for several years. Upon returning to school, he received a BA from the City College of New York, an MA from Brown University and a PhD in political science from Yale University.

For many years Parenti taught political and social science at various institutions of higher learning. Eventually he devoted himself full-time to writing, public speaking, and political activism. He is the author of 20 books and over 300 articles.

Parenti's writings cover a wide range of subjects: U.S. politics, culture, ideology, political economy, imperialism, fascism, communism, democratic socialism, free-market orthodoxies, conservative judicial activism, religion, ancient history, modern history, historiography, repression in academia, news and entertainment media, technology, environmentalism, sexism, racism, Venezuela, the wars in Iraq and Yugoslavia, ethnicity, and his own early life.

His book Democracy for the Few, now in its ninth edition, is a critical analysis of U.S. society, economy, and political institutions and a college-level political science textbook published by Wadsworth Publishing. His book Blackshirts and Reds defended the Soviet Union and socialist states of the 20th century from criticism, arguing that they were morally superior compared to capitalist states, that the problems of the Soviet Union were caused by the Russian Civil War and capitalist interference, and that "Left anti-Communist" and "pure socialist" critics have failed to offer any alternatives to the Soviet Union's "siege socialism"

In 1974, Parenti ran for the U.S. House of Representatives in Vermont as the candidate of the democratic socialist Liberty Union Party; he came in third place, with 7.1% of the vote. Parenti was once a friend of Bernie Sanders, but he later split with Sanders over Sanders's support for the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia.

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  • forcequit [she/her]
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    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Is there any reading on the postwar exodus of nazis from germany and occupied lands? or more to the point, how they were integrated into the western apparatus thereafter?

    How tf does a nazi receive a standing ovation in canadian parliament in year of our lord etc etc
    where are the rest of these fucks

      • forcequit [she/her]
        ·
        1 year ago

        oh goodie.

        I'd really like something detailing all this horror in one place, but it's so ubiquitous it's hard to find anything other than individual people and their relatives.

        And as aus has shown, public infrastructure works are enough to recruit and rehabilitate nazis

    • forcequit [she/her]
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      1 year ago

      https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otto_Abetz

      A great-nephew, Eric Abetz, is an Australian conservative and a Liberal Party former member of the Australian Senate, and was at one time a cabinet minister in the government of Tony Abbott. One of Eric's brothers, another great-nephew, the Reverend Peter Abetz, was a member of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly, also representing the Liberal Party. Eric Abetz has publicly distanced himself from his Nazi relative.

      huh wow that's so weird

      • forcequit [she/her]
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        1 year ago

        The youngest of six children, Abetz emigrated from Germany to Australia with his parents in 1961.[3] His father, Walter Abetz, a radio technician who lost a leg fighting with the German army on the Russian Front,[4] came to Australia to work for Tasmania's Hydro Electric Commission, which had advertised for skilled workers in German newspapers

        HUH WOW THATS SO WEIRD