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Inside the New Print Edition of CounterPunch: News from Pentagon-Babylon

How a Tiny Alaskan Indian Tribe Got Billions in Pentagon Contracts by Jeffrey St. Clair; Dems and Dives by Alexander Cockburn; Spooky Grants: More on the CIA's Recruitment of Campus Professors by David Price. Remember these stories are available exclusively in the print edition of CounterPunch. CounterPunch Online is read by millions of viewers each month! But remember, we are funded solely by the subscribers to the print edition of CounterPunch. Please support this website by buying a subscription to our newsletter, which contains fresh material you won't find anywhere else, or by making a donation for the online edition. Remember contributions are tax-deductible. Click here to make a donation. If you find our site useful please: Subscribe Now!

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Today's Stories

April 2 / 3, 2005

Alexander Cockburn
Death, Depression and Prozac

April 1, 2005

Tom Barry
Michael Chertoff: Legal Storm Trooper

Rahul Mahajan
WMD Commission: Yet Another Intelligence Failure

Charlie Cray / Jim Vallette
Dancing with Wolfowitz

Dave Lindorff
News Media Anguish Over Schiavo's Death

Zeynep Toufe
The Terri Schiavo Success Story

Suzan Mazur
Pension Funds and the Price of Oil

Michael Dickinson
Shut Your Mouth or Go to Prison!

Stan Cox
Iraq Reconstruction Funds Invested on Wall Street

Ra Ravishankar
Et Tu, George?

Daniel Wolff
Patti Scialfa's Conversation with America

 

March 31, 2005

Sharon Smith
Leftwing Apologists for the Occupation

Ron Jacobs
Rounding Out Iraq's History

Tariq Ali
British Elections: Punish the Warmongers

Michael Dickinson
Cartoon Capers: Turkey's War on Political Cartoonists

Kanak Mani Dixit
The Struggle for Nepal's Future

Mitchell Zimmerman
The Bizarre Legal Philosophy of Justice Janice Rogers Brown

Xuan-Trang Ho
Guatemala and CAFTA: Return to the Bad Old Days?

Dave Zirin
Pay the Damn Players!

Joe Bageant
In Praise of Holy Madness

Jeff Halper
The End of a Viable Palestinian State

Website of the Day
Free Nepal

 

March 30, 2005

Gary Leupp
Curing Those People of Their Hatred: Condi's Pitch for a "Different Kind" of Middle East

Ralph Nader / Kevin Zeese
Report on Iraq Intelligence Failure: No One to Blame

Chase Madar
Wolfowitz's Career Move: From Failed Warrior to Humanitarian Banker

Toni Solo
Bush in Latin America

Jackie Corr
Blessed are the Rich: George Bush's Montana Visit

Ahmad Faruqui
Much Ado About F-16s

Mike Roselle
Refuting Dave Foreman: Days of Whine and Posers

Jude Wanniski
America's Gunboat Diplomacy

Francis A. Boyle
Why You Should Boo Illinois

Jeffrey St. Clair
Downwinders be Damned

Website of the Day
Help! Nicaraguan Workers Are Being Poisoned

March 29, 2005

Ralph Nader
Is the End of the Iraq War / Occupation Near?

Gary Leupp
Terri Schiavo's Death and the Birth of an "Elected" Iraqi Government

Sonia Cardenas
A Pandora's Box of Abuses: the Geneva Trap

Stew Albert
Take Back the Life Force!

Mark Weisbrot
Owning Up to the "Ownership Society"

Dave Lindorff
China's Report on Human Rights in US is No Cariacture

Carl G. Estabrook
The Subversive Commandments

 

March 28, 2005

Jeremy Scahill
Sgrena Sets the Record Straight: "There was No Checkpoint; No Self-Defense"

Sonali Kolhatkar
Forgetting Afghanistan...Again

Sasha Kramer
The UN's Betrayal of Haiti

Kevin Zeese
Don't Just Blame the Democrats

Tom Stephens
Sacred Law; Traditional Wisdom: Environmental Justice and Indigenous Peoples

Dr. Teresa Whitehurst
We're Walking Into a Trap

Newton Garver
Reflections on Bolivia

Paul Craig Roberts
A Bail Out Draft for a Cakewalk War?

Website of the Day
Stumped? Ask a Librarian, 24/7

 

 

March 26 / 27, 2005

Gary Leupp
God's Imperialists

Peter Linebaugh
To Render, to Impeach, to Habeas Corpus

Marc Robert
A European Student's Experience at Columbia University

Laura Carlsen
The Threesome in Crawford: Summit as Traveling Stage Show

Saul Landau / Puja Patel
The Price of Privatized "Development"

Dave Foreman
Nature's Crisis

Fred Gardner
Will San Francisco Pander to the Prohibitionists?

Jennifer Matsui
Terri Schiavo: America's Most Desperate Housewife?

Dave Lindorff
Provoking Iran

Dharma Adhikari
The Reversal of Democracy in Nepal

Joshua Frank
The Howard Dean Doctrine

Patrick Barr
Have Box Cutter, Will Travel: a True Story

Christopher Brauchli
F-16s to Pakistan

Ramzy Baroud
Israel's Record is "Not Reassuring"

Jackie Corr
When the Gov. of Montana Declared Martial Law in Butte

Ben Tripp
Off with Your Appurtenances!

Dr. Susan Block
Break a Taboo for Easter: Springtime for Sex and God

Mickey Z.
How Three Unrelated Books Relate

Justin Taylor
Beware of "Beware of God"

Richard Joseph
Cochabamba!: the Water War in Bolivia

Poets' Basement
Martin, Smith, Ford, Bortz and Albert

 

 

March 25, 2005

Scott Richard Lyons
Horror and Hope at Red Lake Nation

Yoshie Furuhashi
No Troops; No Wars

Pat Williams
How a Town Got Poisoned: Libby, MT and the Labor Movement

Mark Engler
Remembering Archbishop Romero: 25 Years After His Assassination

Rahul Mahajan
Culture of Life or Culture of Living Death?

Lance Selfa
Can the Democrats be Moved to the Left?

Ralph Nader
Corporate Cyborg: Cal Nurses Take on Schwarzenegger

John R. Llewellyn
Why Utah's Prosecutors are Soft on Polygamy: a Former Sheriff Speaks Out

Jo Guldi
Beyond Belief: Holy Week in France

 

March 24, 2005

Joshua Frank
The Selling (Out) of the Antiwar Movement

Talli Nauman
Vicente and George: Security by Any Other Name Would Smell Sweeter

Martin Espada
Why I Refused Coke's Money: a Poet Speaks Out About Colombia

Dave Lindorff
Another Social Security Snow Job

Elaine Cassel
When Fools Rush In: the Legal Implications of the Schiavo Case

Jack McCarthy
Jeb Bush's Mob: Snatch, Grab, Insert Tube

Jack Random
Juxtaposition: Terri Schiavo and the Red Lake Massacre

Barbara Ferguson
Wolfowitz Dating Muslim Woman and World Bank Employee

Suzan Mazur
Peak Oil: Debate or Vendetta?

Dorreen Yellow Bird
Suffering Red Lake Nation Endures the Worst of Days

Andrew Wimmer and Mark Chmiel
Torture: Old Hat or Open Wound?

 


March 23, 2005

Patrick Bond
A New War? On Wolfowitz's World Bank

Mike Whitney
Railroading Moussaoui

Becky White
Why I Hung from a Bridge to Defend the Wild Forests of the Siskiyou Mountains

Michael Donnelly
Dissecting the Changeling: How the AuCoin Express Was Really Derailed

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
Remembering Ram Manohar Lohia: the Che of Non-Violence

Ashley Smith
Bush is What Hypocrisy Looks Like

David Swanson
The More Bush Talks, the Less Popular Privatization Becomes

Derrick O'Keefe
Enter Bono, Stage Right

Paul A. Moore
The Fire This Time: the Bush Bros. Racist Crackdown in Florida

Dalton Walker
My Reservation Will Never Be the Same

Patrick Cockburn
The US Frees Iraqi Kidnappers to Become Spies

 

 

March 22, 2005

William Blum
Anti-Empire Report: Democracy--or is it the US Military--on the March

Jim Vallette
Cheney's Oil Change at the World Bank

Greg Moses
A Palm Sunday Chat with Sis Levin

John Farley
Bush's Culture of Life: Let the Insurance Companies Pull the Plug When the Sick Cost Too Much

Ron Jacobs
Halt the Anniversary Rallies and Stop the Damn War

M. Junaid Alam
How the Democratic Party Fosters Conservatism

Rep. Cynthia McKinney
An Immoral and Illegal War: Destroying Iraq Isn't Enough for Them

Dave Lindorff
"Saving" Schiavo; Killing the News

James Petras
Fateful Quadrangle: Cuba and Venezuela Face Off Against the US and Colombia

 

 

March 21, 2005

John Walsh
In the Bars on the Road to Fayettevile: War Support Paper Thin

Werther
The Legacy of George Kennan, Chief Architect of the Cold War

Mike Stark
Where is the "Culture of Life" in Maryland? Time is Running Out for Vernon Evans

David Swanson
Feeding Tubes for the Third World: Put the Hungry into Comas, Then Feed Them!

James T. Phillips
Happy Meals: Behind the Grill at a Baltimore Diner

Mike Ferner
Serving, Refusing, Impeaching

Robert Jensen
The World Waits for an Answer

Paul Craig Roberts
A Threat Greater Than Terrorism

Stew Albert
Vegetable Nation

Website of the Day
American Press Blotter: Jacko, Terry and Steroids vs. the World

 

 

March 19, 2005

Alexander Cockburn
Three-Card Monte and the One-Party State

Tom Reeves
Exposing the Coming Draft: a Draft by Any Other Name is Still Wrong

Saul Landau
The Grandchildren of Roy Cohn: the Politics of the Repressed

Alan Maass
Making Bankruptcy a Life Sentence

Ron Jacobs
Submit or Else: the Nuclear Demon that Won't Go Awayy

David Green
The Holocaust Industry Comes to the University of Illinois

John Blair
Hey, Dick! I'm Still Free: a Blow for Freedom of Speech in Indiana

Steve Greenfield
The Decline of the Green Party: the Numbers are In

Ben Tripp
Nature isn't Real

Mike Roselle
A History of White People in the Conservation Movement

Joshua Frank
Hope in Red State America: Lessons from the Big Sky Country

Mark Weisbrot
The World Bank: a Bigger Problem Than Wolfowitz

Dave Lindorff
Congress on Steroids

Sarah Schaffer
Lula's Nukes: Bush Bullies Iran, Ignores Brazil's Nuclear Ambitions

Warren Hastings
Why the Queen Should Chop Off Tony Blair's Head for Treason

Poets' Basement
Lodge, Albert. Landau, Engel, Davies, Capaccio

 

March 18, 2005

Dave Zirin
The Congressional Urine Testers: Baseball's Theater of the Absurd

Richard Thieme
The Church Committee Candidate: I was a Victim of the KGB

John Walsh
Misdirecting the Anti-War Movement

David Swanson
Hunger Striking for a Living Wage at Georgetown

Ben Terrall
In the Spirit of Rachel Corrie: Confronting Caterpillar in San Leandro

David Boyle
Just Say "No" to Harvard

Dorreen Yellow Bird
Coping with Teen Suicide on the Standing Rock Reservation

Mokhiber / Weissman
Global Bully Goes to Guatemala

Greg Moses
They Don't Shoot Donkeys...Do They?

Website of the Day
800 Protests: Find One Near You

 

March 17, 2005

Christopher Brauchli
Rendered Unto Caesar: the Etymology of Torture

Bill Quigley
The St. Patrick's Four and the Resistance to the War in Iraq

Brian Cloughley
Bush's Herds: Willing to Kick Anyone in the Face

Gary Bass / Adam Hughes
Inside the Bush Budget: Rhetoric vs. Reality

Dave Lindorff
The Incredible Shrinking Coalition

Jude Wanniski
Wolfowitz at the World Bank: a Perfect Fit

Alexander Billet
Irish Republicanism at the Crossroads

John Ross
Wal-Mart Invades Mexico

Website of the Day
Campus Resistance

 

March 16, 2005

Ralph Nader
Filling the Congressional Cop-Out Gap: an Idea for Local Peace Activists

William Cook
Resurrecting the Neo-Con Failures

Kevin Zeese
Two Years of Occupation: Both US and Iraq are Worse Off

Jackie Corr
Why is Dick Cheney Laughing? The New Tax Cut Patriotism

Alan Maass
Bush's Class War Budget

David R. Kolker
Jailed Without Charges in Haiti

Cindy Ellen Hill
Speculative Policing in Northern Ireland

Paul Craig Roberts
America's Has-Been Economy

 

 

March 15, 2005

Gary Leupp
The Plan is Still on Track

Dave Lindorff
Free John Walker Lindh!

Greg Moses
The Fix-It Guys and Their Electoral Filters

Hadas Their / Katrina Yeaw
Military Recruiters Target Campus Activists

Alison Weir
Uprising on the Anniversary of Rachel Corrie's Death

Matt Koehler
A Line in the Ancient Forest: 50 Arrested in Blockade to Save the Siskiyous

Evelyn Pringle
Labeling Kids Mentally Ill for Profit

Harry Browne
War and Peace in Ireland

 

 

March 14, 2005

Ralph Nader
Restarting the Anti-War Movement

David Miller
Ministry of Defence in the Control Booth: Did the BBC Broadcast Fake News Reports?

Stan Cox
Look Deeper, Mr. Moyers

Mike Roselle
Why Women Should Take Over the Environmental Movement

David Swanson
Nursing Against the Odds: the Workers' View

Simona Sharoni
To End the War, Listen to Soldiers

Dave Lindorff
Corporate Surveillance

Dorreen Yellow Bird
Incidents at Standing Rock: Suicide on the Reservation

Tom Barry
John Bolton's Baggage

Website of the Day
Spinwatch

 

 

March 12 / 13, 2005

David H. Price
The CIA's Campus Spies

Noam Chomsky
The Toothpaste Election

Laura Carlsen
Women's Rights Eroding in Latin America

Stan Goff
On Revolutionary Optimism: the View from Cumberland Co, NC

Valentina Nicoli
The Game of Role-Playing and the Ambush of Giuliana Sgrena

Michael Leonardi
Head Shot: Lifting the Veil on the Sgrena / Calipari Incident

Saul Landau / Sarah Anderson
Blood Money and the Riggs Bank: Pinochet's Bank Finally Pays Up

Joe Bageant
It Ain't Easy Being White

Manuel García, Jr.
The Question of American Guilt

Greg Moses
Electoral Lessons from Cuyahoga and Harris Counties

James J. Brittain
Run, Fight or Die in Colombia

Ben Tripp
Communist Watch

Joshua Frank
A Red State Paradox: Montana on the Cusp

Fred Gardner
Pesticides Made Her Sick; Pot Got Her Well

Walter Brasch
Bush's Horse Killers

Ramzy Baroud
Reining in Syria on Behalf of Israel

Christopher Brauchli
Going All the Way for Usurers

Michael Donnelly
The Humiliation of Les "Timber Toad" AuCoin

Ron Jacobs
ZAP Comics: Still Kicking US Culture in the Ass

Richard Oxman
The Eternal Reciprocity of Tears

Poets' Basement
Smith-Ferri, Davies, Ford, Louise and Albert

 

March 11, 2005

Jerry Fresia
Targeting Giuliana

Ron Jacobs
Making Lebensraum in the Middle East for Tel Aviv's Fears & Washington's Dollars

Dave Lindorff
America's Magical Kingdom

William James Martin
Ben Gurion and the Origin of the "Pushing into the Sea" Myth

Muqtedar Khan
Modi's Operandi: American Business and Genocide Linked Again

Kathryn Ledebur
Bolivia on the Brink

Mike Whitney
Saddam's Capture: Just Another Bush Lie?

Dave Zirin
Neo-McCarthyism Slugs Baseball

Website of the Day
William Rivers Pitt, Another Hack for the Occupation

 

 

March 10, 2005

Paul Craig Roberts
So Much for the New Bush Economy

John Marc Leas, Colleen McLaughlin and Ashley Smith
Vermont Vs. the War

Larry Birns
The Pathological John Bolton

Michael Donnelly
The Re-Reinvention of an Oregon Timber Beast

Luis Gomez
In Bolivia, Reality Changes Once Again

Jackie Corr
Whatever Happened to the Social Security Trust Fund?

Uri Avnery
Bush's Guru: Natan Sharansky

Website of the Day
Red Alert in the Siskiyous!

 

 

March 9, 2005

Jeffrey St. Clair
Dirty Harry's Fear of Flying: Making Love, War and Profits at Boeing

Ward Churchill
Who's the Terrorist?

Robert Fisk
Another Species of Cedar: a Half Million Lebanese March for Syria

Bernice Powell Jackson
No Justice for America's Nuclear Guinea Pigs in the Marshall Islands

Mickey Z.
The Revolutionary of Potential Art

Dave Zirin
NHL Says: "Bring On the Scabs!"

Michael Donnelly
Standing Up to Ecocide in Oregon

James Reiss
Stopping by Words in Favor of Privatizing Social Security

Vijay Prashad
Get Modi: a State Terrorist Visits Florida

 

March 8, 2005

Paul Craig Roberts
Bush's Syrian Delusion

Robert Fisk
Lebanon's Nightmare

Kurt Nimmo
War is Peace: John Bolton to the UN

Suzan Mazur
Time for a Truth and Reconciliation Commission on Polygamy?

Evelyn Pringle
Neil Bush and Crest: Another Profiteering Scheme

Giuliana Sgrena
My Truth: "The Americans Don't Want You to Return"

Elaine Cassel
The Appalling Case of Abu Ali

 

 

March 7, 2005

Dave Zirin
Bloodlust in Annapolis: Gov. Ehrlich Wants to Kill Vernon Lee Evans

Brian Cloughley
More War Crimes

John Chuckman
The Creature Walks Among Us

Mike Whitney
Jose Padilla and the 10 Commandments

Mark Weisbrot
Haiti's Torment: Why Are US Human Rights Groups Silent?

Fred Gardner
The Cannabinoid Messenger

Richard Neville
The Italian Job

Uri Avnery
The Next Crusades

 

 

March 5 / 6, 2005

Alexander Cockburn
Arnold vs. the Nurses

Gary Leupp
What's Happening in Lebanon: an Interview with Fadi Agha, Advisor to President Lahoud

Ron Jacobs
Lies Military Recruiters Tell

Tom Reeves
Haiti: One Year After the Coup

Jenna Orkin
Memories of Kawaggi, Saudi Arabia

Tom Barry
Negroponte: Intel Czar or Policy Hack?

Joshua Frank
The Trials of Max Baucus

Moshe Adler
When Pfizer Came to New London: Corporate Giveways vs. Eminent Domain

Jane Stillwater
My Jury Questionnaire: "Do You Agree that a Corporation is a Person?"

Omar Barghouti / Jacqueline Sfeir
Double Standards on S. Africa and Israel: an Open Letter to UNESCO

Christopher Brauchli
Target: Al Jazeera

John Pilger
The Fall of Saigon: 30 Years Later

Raúl Zibechi
Colombia: Militarism and Social Movements

David Krieger
Saving the Nuclear Nonproliferation Agreement

Three Takes on Nepal

Surendra R. Devkota
Another Blow to the King of Nepal

Bhishma Karki
Nepal in Twilight

Joseph Pietri
Murder at the Palace

Ben Tripp
The Good Old Days

Poets' Basement
Hassen, Chief Running Late, Wuest, Albert and Collins

Website of the Weekend
O'Shaughnessy's: All About Medical Pot

 

 

March 4, 2005

Frederick Hudson
Caught in a Cage

 

March 3, 2005

Pat Williams
"Social Security Protects the Young as Much as the Old"

Brian Cloughley
Headlines, Beliefs and Deceptions

Dave Lindorff
Why Do the Democrats Pamper Greenspan?

Amira Hass
Oslo All Over Again

Greg Moses
In Oscar Texas: One Down, One to Go?

Lynne Landes
Exit Poll Madness

Nelson P. Valdés
Rapture Takes Leftists

John Ross
Mexico's Fox Schemes to Jail Front-Running Leftist

 

March 2, 2005

Saul Landau / Farrah Hassen
The "Noble Liars" Attack Syria

Mike Roselle
The State of Oregon vs. Mike Roselle: Criminalizing Environmental Dissent

M. Junaid Alam
Columbia University and the New Anti-Semitism

Suzan Mazur
Inside the Polygamy Cults of Southern Utah

Jackson Thoreau
Texas Congressman Calls for "Nuking Syria"

Michael Donnelly
No Love for Teresa Heinz; John Edwards Gets a Pass

Jeffrey St. Clair
Uncle Bucky Makes a Killing

Website of the Day
The Ghosts of Karl Marx & Ed Abbey

 

 

March 1, 2005

Scott Richard Lyons
Million Dollar Bigotry

David Lindorff
Stealing Workers' Pensions

Patrick Cockburn / David Enders
Bloodbath in Iraq

Ron Jacobs
The Last Poets Recalled

Tanya Garcia
USA Next: the Industry Front Group to Privatize Social Security

Joseph Pietri
The Drug Trail Ends in Kathmandu: Golden Tar Heroin and the Black Prince

Kona Lowell
Woody: Broken in Vietnam

Paul Craig Roberts
The Coming End of the American Superpower

Website of the Day
Petition: No US Intervention in Iran

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Weekend Edition
April 2 / 3, 2005

A Visit with John Holloway

How to Change the World Without Taking Power

By JOHN ROSS

Puebla de Los Angeles, Mexico.

One evening recently, an U.S. correspondent with a lengthy left-wing lineage sat down to dinner with two old comrades. Luis Cota had been a charter member of the long-defunct Mexican Communist Party and visited Moscow several times where he was enrolled at Patrice Lamumba University during the Brezhnev years. Pedro P. is a 40-year veteran of the Cuban news agency Prensa Latina who travels on the left are encyclopedic. He had visited with Lenin's mummy four times (once each with Mao's and the Bulgarian Georgi Dimitrov's), he recounted.

The table talk turned to perspectives for the left in Latin America, a continent where Washington's fetish with deconstructing Iraq has allowed a handful of social democrats to slide in under the radar and occupy the presidencies of their respective countries. The comrades touched glasses to celebrate the trade treaty just forged between Cuba and Venezuela, the ALBA, the anti-ALCA. Companero Chavez would soon be financing an Al-Jazeera-like 24 hour news network to combat CNN lies, the Prensa Latina man confided.

The U.S. reporter, whose work has often focused on the Zapatista rebellion in Chiapas, had just been invited to speak at the University of Puebla by the Irish radical scholar John Holloway and wanted to know if the two old Bolshies had read his controversial screed "Change the World Without Taking Power: the Meaning of Revolution Today."

The mere mention of Holloway's name had a curious effect on my dinner partners. Their garrulousness lapsed into frozen silence as if they had just been doused with a bucket of ice water. "Ufff Holloway!" gestured the Cuban in disgust, making bye bye signs with his small hands. Luis had not read the book but did not hesitate to label it as "treasonous" ­ he had heard that the CIA had financed its publication.

The object of all this old left virtupativeness is a soft-voiced radical scholar who first made his bones at Edinburgh University debunking Marxist shibboleths. Having taken refuge in Latin America, he is now in residence at the Universidad Autonoma Benemerito de Puebla de los Angeles, the UAP, where his latest volume of dense Marxian critique has ignited an unexpected fire fight between the state-oriented left and those who yearn for a less-hierarchal, more anarchistic structure such as embodied by the Zapatista rebellion in Chiapas.

With nine books under his belt ­ four have the word "state" in the title, and "globalization" and "revolution" get one each (he is working on a tome with the Talking Heads-like title "Stop Making Capitalism"), Holloway touched a vein with his 1998 "Zapatista! Re-inventing Revolution" but seems genuinely amazed at the buzz "Change the World" has stirred up. Since its publication in 2002, young radicals have been cramming it into their backpacks when they march off to confront the Global Monster on the barricades at G-8 summits or World Trade Organization conclaves or else wedging it firmly under their arms as they descend into the Lacandon jungle to help the Zapatista autonomous municipalities build infrastructure.

"This is a very difficult book ­ I am surprised and gratified by the interest of young people" the author marvels over coffee at the Institute of Social Sciences, a lone radical enclave in a once-left university scarred in recent years by scandalous corruption. Housed in a creaky old colonial building painted a bright yellow, the Casa Amarilla, Holloway's institute draws aspiring scholars from Argentina and Italy, the U.S. and the U.K. to sit at the Guru's self-effacing feet and reflect on the new realities of the revolution.

Casa Amarilla is a lonely outpost in a city that suddenly finds itself on the frontline of global capitalism. An old and moneyed metropolis dominated by churches and gargoyles, Puebla de los Angeles, Mexico's fourth largest city two hours east of the capitol, is now temporary home base for the Free Trade Area of the Americas (ALCA in its Spanish acronym), an unsigned hemispheric trade treaty, and seeks to become its permanent headquarters (Miami and Panama City are in the running) when and if the scheme to extend NAFTA's dubious benefits all the way to Tierra del Fuego ever becomes a reality.

Global deals are being cut everyday in the backrooms of the glitzy Americas Center here where North American Free Trade Association commissions often meet to iron out kinks in that 11 year-old one-time beacon of corporate globalization. Indeed, Puebla is the gateway to the global south ­ the official departure point for Mexican president Vicente Fox's grand stratagem for opening up resource-rich southern Mexico and Central America to transnational exploitation, the Plan Puebla-Panama.

Given the landscape, John Holloway may be the most subversive soul walking the streets of Angelopolis, as the neo-liberal set dubs the city. The ogre who armed (at least theoretically) the wild-eyed mobs of anti-globalization rioters forever threatening to tear down the gates of Davos or loot the vaults at the World Bank, turns out to be a kindly, sad-eyed academic with a shock of silver hair plastered to his forehead, a sort of thinking man's Naomi Klein, who makes a point of not having all the answers. "How to change the world without taking power?" he asks, "we don't really know what that means" Or again:" Change the World without Taking Power? It sounds absurd but we have no other alternative."

Holloway's book is a difficult slog for this reporter who, in his revolutionary salad days, preferred to take target practice rather than ponder Hegel in socialist study groups. I confess I often utilized the volume, which is studded with indecipherable nuggets like "the negation of the negation", to combat chronic insomnia.

Why has so theoretical a manifesto captured the imagination of a movement that is grounded in action and reaction, the stuff of the street and the barricades and the infamous black blocs?

"Why, that's just it, isn't it?" Professor Holloway parses, "people have been very active and now want to think about what they are doing. This is an on-going process ­ the book did not really launch this debate. These issues have been discussed for the past decade, ever since the Zapatista rebellion I suppose ­ but the Zapatistas too pulled together ideas that had been floating around for ten years before that."

"John, what do you mean when you say there is no alternative to changing the world without taking power? How does this fit into the developing left alignment in Latin America?"

"Well, there is no alternative. I mean, everyone knows that Capitalism is disgusting and disastrous. Although no one talks much about the Revolution these days, everyone knows we need one. But what will we do with this revolution? Take state power again? The error stems from a fundamental misconception of the role of the state in sustaining capitalism. Substituting one state power for another just repeats the same problems over and over again and eventually exhausts the revolution. This is the old way of thinking about revolution and it doesn't work anymore. We have to find a new way. There is no alternative."

For John Holloway, insurgent social formations in Latin America are that other way ­ the Zapatistas in Chiapas, sections of the Ecuadorian indigenous movement, the "piqueteros" at the nadir of the "Argentinazo" three years ago whose cry "que se vayan todos" (that all those who govern should leave) inspired "How to Change the World Without Taking Power." But central to answering the question asked in the book's title is its corollary: with what will we replace those who have left i.e. what do we do with power after we have taken it?

In Holloway's equations, "power" is a word with two terribly distinct meanings ­ "poder hacer" in Spanish (the Spanish edition of "How To Change The World" has outsold the original English version) or the power to create, to do, vs. "poder sobre", "power over", the power of domination and subjugation which stifles the power of the people to create. We know what to do with "power over" ­ overthrow it. But the organization and use of the power to do requires articulation.

During the first years of the Zapatista rebellion, the very act of rising in rebellion itself empowered the rebels and helped them to realize that they already had the power and did not need to take the state to get it. The location of power was not always apparent to the Zapatistas ­ at the beginning of their rebellion, they talked about marching on Mexico City to overthrow the government. But after the "mal gobierno" ("the bad government") failed to honor its pledge to enact the Indian rights legislation the rebels had been battling to achieve for years, they turned their back on the state and begin constructing their own autonomous infrastructure, one they could control through the leadership ethic of "mandar obedeciendo", literally "governing by obeying the will of the people", that is, to serve rather than to rule.

If the Zapatistas had not existed, we would have had to invent them to show the world another way, concedes Holloway.

All over the Americas, from Vermont to Venezuela and Peoria to Patagonia, the Zapatista model on one hand, and that of the democratically elected strongman Hugo Chavez on the other, is being counterpoised by activists and scholars as they peer into the future. Such juxtaposition may be overstating the Zapatistas' weight. The Mayan rebels really did not rise up to save mankind but rather to sort out strategies for their own best survival.

Theoretically obtuse as it is, Holloway's salvo has set off a storm of criticism from the state-oriented or old left, which dismisses the Irishman as an anti-Marxist interloper. Although the electoral triumphs of Brazil's Lula, Kirschner in Argentina, and Tabare Vazquez in Uruguay, and the aggrandizement of Venezuela's Chavez would seem to point to the primacy of taking state power, Holloway issues a caution. When a Lula or a Chavez take the power of the state, they suddenly find themselves trapped in alignments that force obeisance to the World Bank and the White House from which they cannot break away. Their promises begin to sound hollow as transnationals reap fortunes at the expense of the people whose progress is pretty much straight down hill.

Given the probability of such a scenario, John Holloway suggests that the Zapatista model will prosper. "When people are disillusioned, they begin to look for the real solutions. Building a party that's a little more to the left isn't one of them."

On the other hand, the author of "How To Change The World" has to concede, the future of the polemic is hardly assured. "Hugo Chavez is a formidable opponent. He has oil and oil money and the support of international Trotskyists. He could pull it off. The possible election of Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador as president of Mexico would greatly bolster the cause of the state-oriented left."

John Holloway's thesis is not much endorsed by Latin American left leaders who are closest to taking power. "What an absurd idea! We are fighting to take state power because we want to change things. How else can you make these changes?" exclaims Evo Morales, leader of Bolivia's coca farmers and the Movement Towards Socialism which is only a hairsbreadth away from the presidency of his country.

Morales's bitter rival, Felipe Quispe, "El Mallku" ("The Condor"), leader of the powerful Aymara peasant movement, is not much more supportative. Rather than ignoring the state, El Mallku seeks to build one ­ Tahuantinsuyo, the mythical Inca promise of unifying the Indian heart of Latin America into one nation. "We will take power and throw the white man's constitution out and make our own state." Quispe, an advocate of the old Maoist theorem that power grows from the barrel of a gun, is building an Indian army to take state power.

Others are not so sure about where power lies. Ecuador's venerable indigenous coalition, the CONAIE, took state power in alliance with a junta of young military officers and then went on to back the coup leader Lucio Gutierrez in his successful bid for the presidency, for which the Indians were assigned two seats in the cabinet. 200 days later, feeling used and abused by Gutierrez, CONAIE founders Luis Macas and Nina Pacari resigned in despair. "We were in power but we had no power" Pacari later complained to researchers. As the former CONAIE chairman Leonidis Ica explained to this correspondent during a congress of Amazonian Indians last spring, "we made a mistake about where power was to be found. Now we know," he laughed as he took his place at the microphone.

In Cochabamba Bolivia, Oscar Oliviera is still the coordinator of the Committee to Defend the Water which in 2000, after discovering that the local water supply was being privatized, filled the central plaza with a 100,000 angry city dwellers, stood off the military for weeks, and drove the Bechtel Corporation of San Francisco, California from the land in one of the first successful resistance campaigns mounted by the growing anti-globalization movement. Today, Oliviera considers that changing the world is viable without taking state power.

"The state is out of date, its like old medicine ­ it doesn't work anymore and it has no credibility and it is billions of dollars in debt to international capital. What power does it have? Who would want to take it when we have the power right here? That is what we learned in the plaza of Cochabamba five yeas ago."

The prospect of changing the status quo without seizing the reigns of power is not just limited to Latin America. While the two most gargantuan once-upon-a-time state oriented left regimes, Russia and China, now locked in a love frenzy with savage Capitalism, may be a bit cool to Holloway's project, the scholar sees increasing international acceptance of his constructs. A recent first-time visitor to the World Social Forum in Porto Alegre, Brazil, he organized a workshop with speakers from five continents sounding off on how to change the world and was gratified by the resonance for his ideas in such far-off frontiers as Africa and Thailand.

Several years ago, when proponents of this new non-hierarchal approach to making revolution happen sought to mount a public debate at Porto Alegre, they were marginated and silenced by the state-oriented left in the guise of Lula's Party of Labor goons. This year, Holloway reports, he was offered a classroom that accommodated 600 activists. "1500 showed up."

John Ross has just been awarded the 2005 Upton Sinclair Award (an "Uppie") by the San Pedro California chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union for his latest cult classic "Murdered By Capitalism--A Memoir of 150 Years of Life & Death on the U.S. Left". "The Wal-Martization of Mexico" appeared in a truncated form in the March issue of The Progressive.