Truly. Graeber's impact on Occupy, a touchstone for politics in my generation, was profound. The conversational tone of his writing and the clarity of his reasoning lent him influence far beyond the typical readership of anarchist theory. https://twitter.com/peacefulmoron/status/1301522648283967489 …
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In the first five years of the 2010s there were very few active authors on the left who were read as widely as David Graeber. We would be living in a different world without him.
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the sudden passing of
@davidgraeber is terribly sad and premature; I bumped into him once, we had a chat about protest tactics, he was very open and engaging. Interested in the right issues, like debt and work. I hadn't known Yale showed him the door.https://www.youtube.com/watch?list=PLJIs9OvcbZKuBQl92uFmK5ENFPzl9z8P5&v=aw75RdFgBXQ … -
I was suggesting his student occupiers might be outmoded, suggesting other means of technocratic protest and sabotage. An interesting family and academic background. His activism meant he had many political foes and detractors too. https://www.theguardian.com/books/2020/sep/03/david-graeber-anthropologist-and-author-of-bullshit-jobs-dies-aged-59 …pic.twitter.com/DOyShC7J69
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