DEBT STRIKE NOW ?

An Online Conversation with Richard Robbins, Devin Singh, and Joshua Ramey

Saturday, April 11, 10am (Eastern Time Zone)

The recent federal emergency stimulus package demonstrates that what politicians often claim is impossible is sometimes necessary: debts that cannot be paid will not be paid. The question is, who will be bailed out, and why? Why is the most important priority of the US government the 4 trillion dollar price of bailing out Wall Street? Is the financial economy really necessary, or is it a parasite destroying the conditions of life on this planet? The Debt Collective ( https://debtcollective.org/ ) and other organizing efforts are already challenging the legitimacy of the debt-based economy, and in view of the current crisis, calls for rent strikes and even a general strike may join with debt strikes to challenge the basis of economic power.

Join Richard Robbins, Devin Singh, and Joshua Ramey online for an investigation into the history of debt politics, the relation of debt to money itself, and a discussion of how to undo the moral, ideological, and even religious attachments most people have to paying their debts.

Discussants

Richard Robbins is the Chair of Anthropology at SUNY-Plattsburgh and the co-author, among many other works, of Debt as Power. is the Chair of Anthropology at SUNY-Plattsburgh and the co-author, among many other works, of

Devin Singh is Associate Professor of Religion at Dartmouth College, and the author of Divine Currency: The Theological Power of Money in the West. is Associate Professor of Religion at Dartmouth College, and the author of

Joshua Ramey is Visiting Assistant Professor of Peace, Justice, and Human Rights at Haverford College. He is the author of Politics of Divination: Neoliberal Endgame and the Religion of Contingency and is currently working on a book entitled For the Remains: Undoing Economic Sovereignty. is Visiting Assistant Professor of Peace, Justice, and Human Rights at Haverford College. He is the author ofand is currently working on a book entitled

On Mutual Aid: We don’t want you to think of it as paying money for a seminar. We do hope that you will, rather, enable our work, will replenish the ruins in which we are struggling to create education and learning community anew. The idea of mutual aid originates with anarcho-communist Peter Kropotkin (1842-1921). Simply put, it means: we voluntarily provide one another with the material means necessary for each of us thrive, or, sometimes, simply to go on. Incite Seminars will continue to create seminars for you as long as we are able to do so. You enable us with material aid. In this way, we mutually benefit one another. So:

Enable-as-you-can: If you are unable to do so at this time, we warmly invite you to attend anything we offer at no cost. For those of you able to pitch in for expenses, please consider making a donation of $10 or more. You can “buy” multiple $10s by entering the corresponding number into the box. For example, 6 = $60, etc. Below. Finally, please consider becoming a member of Incite Seminars through our Patreon. It has five membership options. Even $5 helps.