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Upstream

A History of California, Capitalism, and the World with Malcolm Harris

Upstream

Upstream

Politics, News, Society & Culture

4.92.1K Ratings

🗓️ 23 May 2023

⏱️ 66 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

We've been taught to think of staggering economic inequality, the disposability of nonwhite  labor populations, hyper-exploitation, and minority rule as bugs within the capitalist system — things to be corrected by capitalist technology and innovation — but in fact, all of these things are anything but bugs — they are features of this system, baked deep into it at its very core.

And, in many respects, the birthplace of modern, global capitalism, with its exclusion of racialized others, its rabid anti-labor ideology, its universalized immiseration, and its unrelenting push for hyperproductivity, is a place that might surprise you at first: California. Specifically? Silicon Valley. Even more specifically? Palo Alto. 

In his book, Palo Alto: A History of California, Capitalism, and the World, author Malcolm Harris traces a very bold line from early Californian history, with its brutal enslavement of Indigenous peoples, its railroad and agricultural barons, the codification of corporations as people, and the founding of Stanford University — the intellectual heart of modern capitalism — all the way to our modern tech-dystopia, marked by permanently unstable and low wage gig jobs, unimaginably harsh housing markets, and one of the deepest divides between the working and owning classes that this country has ever seen. And it all comes back, over and over again, to Palo Alto. 

Thank you to Dead Kennedys for the intermission music. Upstream's theme music was composed by Robert Raymond.

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Transcript

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0:38.3

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1:00.6

There's pretty good consensus about when capitalism itself becomes a world system,

1:07.0

and that's in this mid-19th century with the incorporation of the Pacific, and with

1:11.8

this sort of closing the class of the belt of capitalism around the Earth.

1:16.8

And so that means the incorporation of California into this unified world system of production

1:22.0

and distribution.

1:23.2

And so much of that has to do with just California's relation geographically, right?

1:28.8

So it's relation to the Pacific.

1:30.8

It's relation to Mexico, Central America, and South America means it's at the center of

1:35.9

so many different labor flows from the very beginning, from the very, very beginning.

1:40.7

You are listening to upstream upstream upstream upstream a podcast of documentaries and conversations

1:49.0

that invites you to unlearn everything you thought you knew about economics.

1:53.6

I'm Dela Duncan and I'm Robert Raymond.

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