Student Solidarity Launches New Mutual Aid Effort

On Thursday, October 28th, Student Solidarity at The Ohio State University announced a new mutual aid effort on their Instagram. The goal of the effort is to help OSU students and community members in a myriad of ways, including providing access to free food, textbooks, or tutoring; providing money for rent, medicine, or tuition; giving rides to help people access needs; and more. This comes after a history of Student Solidarity and Students for a Democratic Society members coming together to raise thousands for Hunter Mattin, a former member of Student Solidarity who was unjustly arrested at a Black Lives Matter protest last April.

According to the announcement, students and community members should DM the Student Solidarity Instagram to make requests. Aaron Reilman, Treasurer of Student Solidarity, shared that this process will be more streamlined soon, which will allow for further anonymity for those requesting aid and make it possible for those without Instagram accounts to request aid. 

Sierra Haurani, a general body member of Student Solidarity, explained that this project is inspired by other college’s mutual aid initiatives, particularly Barnard College’s @barnardmutualaid. Haurani said “I watched Barnard Mutual Aid go from 100 to 1.2K followers… I feel like [that growth] will be easier somewhere like OSU where the student body isn’t [very small].”

Student Solidarity has launched a Cash App account to fund this new initiative. You can find and donate to this account on the app by searching for $OSUStudentSolidarity. All money given will go directly into helping the OSU community.

An Anti-Capitalist Perspective of Squid Game

How Squid Game exposes the backwardness of capitalism 

The main character, Seong Gi-Hun, participates in the Squid Game. Image Credit: https://slate.com/culture/2021/10/squid-game-voice-actor-greg-chun-dubbing-gi-hun-into-english
The main character, Seong Gi-Hun, participates in Squid Game. Image Credit: https://slate.com/culture/2021/10/squid-game-voice-actor-greg-chun-dubbing-gi-hun-into-english

 

Within our society it seems as if we always talk about the successful and the wealthy people in capitalism. Far and few they actually come; what about everyone else? Why do we find it okay to talk about those who become rich in capitalism but never want or find it necessary to mention the vast majority who are not so lucky? The new Korean TV series, Squid Game, highlights those who suffer the most in our overtly wretched society. 

Most of the time when working class people run out of money, they are forced to take out loans or skip payments in order to survive. Whether it be for medical expenses, rent, or even having the nerve to go and seek a higher education. It is not a secret that many of those in the working class have to go into debt if they want to make it through life or try and better their circumstances. In the show, Squid Game, the rich prey on those who are most in debt and persuade them to sacrifice their lives by playing various games in order to wipe their debt and escape misery. Most of the players participating are working class individuals who have families and real struggles in their everyday lives.  

One player, Ali, is an immigrant to South Korea from Pakistan. He brought his wife and kid to the capitalist nation seeking a better opportunity at having a decent life. Capitalism is ever-expanding and uses at-will-employment as one of its key mechanisms of employing workers. Immigrants are critical aspects of capitalism since companies can fire employees whenever they want and always need new workers to replace old ones. In essence, workers are dispensable cogs in a machine. Not to mention, another fundamental characteristic of capitalism is the exploitation of workers’ value of their labor. Thus, many in the working class will go to any extreme so they can better their situation since they are never able to actually “reap what they sow.” In the case of immigrants, people are willing to take a substantial risk and leave their homeland for better opportunities. In the show, Ali works at a Korean factory where his boss withholds payments to him, thus driving him to partake in the Squid Game. This highlights how immigrants’ labor is used against them for only capitalists’ gain. 

Capitalism drains the life out of people due to the demand for infinite growth. In a system where greed for money and capital is the main motivating factor, it is no coincidence that the worst is brought out of people. Capitalism is a backwards system that can best be described by the phrase “dog eat dog”. In the system of capitalism, inequality is necessary for it to be successful. Therefore, if you are lucky enough to have money and resources you will succeed; if not, you will inevitably suffer. Human beings are driven to vulnerable and powerless positions such as homelessness or starvation because of lack of resources. When people are put in these conditions, they are forced to ignore their moral compass and will do anything to take back their resources or power. 

In Squid Game, one character in particular that shows off the dark side of humanity under capitalism is Jang Deok-Su. Introduced as a gangster in gambling debt to other gangsters, he is the contestant that will fabricate and kill his way to victory. While most everyone else is okay with just playing the games to figure out who wins. No matter how someone dies, whether it be in an actual game or while they are sleeping, their death adds to the total amount of prize money. When this was discovered by the contestants, Jang led a night-time riot, to murder as many people as possible. The portrayal of his character in the show can be a direct analogy of real-life struggles under capitalism. It should be common knowledge that the number-one cause of crime is poverty. When people have nothing and can’t get anything without violence that is exactly what they will resort to.  

As capitalism emerged out of feudalism it brought the patriarchal nuclear family along with it. The type of family we see today grew out of the invention of private property and private wealth. As Friedrich Engels put it in Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State, “The first class opposition that appears in history coincides with the development of the antagonism between man and woman in monogamous marriage, and the first class oppression coincides with that of the female sex by the male”. As men were able to subjugate women, they married to pass on their private property and wealth to their sons. Thus, the nuclear family materialized. This family type we can observe is one where there is no extended family just parents and children. The nuclear family under capitalism is one of the basic units of society that helps to uphold the system. Capitalism has turned family life into one of consumption where money can easily make or break a family.  

In Squid Game, this family dynamic is demonstrated a couple of times. The main character, Seong Gi-Hun, has multiple family issues when it comes to money. His mother is a type 2 diabetic who struggles to pay her medical bills and Seong has no way to support her financially. At one point she desperately needs medical attention but decides not to get any as her only choices were either paying medical bills or paying rent. Seong also has a gambling problem and has blown a lot of money away. He also accrued multiple loans that he simply will never be able to pay back. The issue of debt weighs heavily on him and his family. It was the main driver behind his divorce. Not to mention the fact he cannot even afford a birthday present for his daughter. Unfortunately, under capitalism everything is relegated to a money-relation, even the family. 

One of the most startling comparisons that can be made from Squid Game is how similar it resembles the military. Especially in the United States, the military is used to target poor and BIPOC students. Our military recruits 24/7 in high schools, on college campuses, and especially through television and internet advertising. When they do this, they offer incentives like free college, sign-on bonuses, or room and board. Ultimately, they offer a way out for many struggling kids. Their targets are not the rich kids who have their life set; their targets those who have it the worst. It is literally a system of blood for money. We have our young kill and loot in other nations for the rich’s benefit and the poor’s demise. In Squid Game it is no different, they recruit the poor and desperate to play a bloody game for the rich’s entertainment at the poor’s expense (except for one extraordinarily lucky winner). 

The biggest show of the year has reminded the world of the evil system we live under. While it is bloody and hard to watch at times, it is an accurate critique of capitalism and its consequences. Whether it be relegating the family to mere money and property relations, forcing people to immigrate hoping to live a better life, bringing the worst out in human beings, or forcing us to become hired assassins, our system is wretched and must be overthrown and replaced with something focused on the needs of us all. 

References:

Hwang, Dong-Hyuk. (2021). Squid Game. Season One. Television Series.

Engels, Friedrich. (1884). The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State.

The Grippe Trip: The Spy Who Ate Everything

Tarrare’s story starts in 1772 in Lyon, France where he was born to his humble parents. Like all growing boys, he had a growing appetite. Like all growing boys, he noticed changes in his body. By age 17 he was 100 pounds, putridly sweaty, with thin lips, bloodshot eyes, and a large gaping maw that would make a Boa Constrictor jealous. His stomach, when empty, could wrap around his waist like a self-deployable belt (how handy!). Although, he didn’t like to leave his stomach empty for long. As a child, he would eat his own body weight in beef, until it got to the point that Tarrare was gobbling up ¼ of a cow daily. How is that for an after-school snack?   

Needless to say, Tarrare was an incredible medical oddity often overlooked by French history. To this day, it is unclear what medical affliction could’ve caused his uncontrollable hunger. It is theorized that an extreme form of hyperthyroidism could’ve been at play. This disease occurs when the thyroid gland located in the neck is overactive, producing too much thyroxine hormone. This drastically raises the body’s metabolism, making those affected eat more without losing weight, as well as show puffy eyes and excessive sweating.  

Whatever was wrong with their son, Tarrare’s parents didn’t know. As Tarrare and his costly meals grew, his parents simply couldn’t keep up with the financial demands. Teenage Tarrrare was disowned and left to find his own next meal. He quickly fell in with some questionable characters. Despite their controversial lifestyle, this troop of sex workers and thieves was his new family. He would perform on the streets, showing off how powerful gluttony can really be. He would eat inanimate items, like stones and corks. He’d move up to tricks like devouring entire bags of apples and even live animals. The crowd couldn’t take their eyes off the disturbing spectacle. This was their first mistake, as the troop of thieves previously mentioned would swoop in to start pickpocketing the enamored crowd.  

He moved on to perform as a side show for a snake oil salesman. He would devour any items offered by the stunned bystanders. As his stomach swelled up like a balloon, so did the crowds. This drew quite an audience to peddle to. Eventually, Tarrare would head off to start his own solo act. 

During one of these solo acts in 1788, Tarrare finally had his first run in with the medical field. Something got caught in his digestive track. You probably don’t need a medical professionals’ input to know that isn’t good. Onlookers rushed him to the local hospital, where a hardy dosage of laxatives fixed the problem. Apparently, humans have always been great with laxatives. Our primordial ancestors basically crawled out of the mud and immediately got to work on expelling feces. Fun fact, cholera was treated with laxatives in the past. This is quite ironic, because the bacterial disease’s main symptom and cause of death is the dehydration from extreme cases of diarrhea. It was an inadequate treatment to say the least.  

But for Tarrare, it did just the trick and he fully recovered. He even offered to eat the doctor’s pocket watch. The doctor responded that if Tarrare did eat his watch, he would simply use his scalpel to retrieve it.  

There was a change on the horizon. Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity were at the front of everyone’s minds, and these ideas were revolutionary. The French revolution began in 1789 and Tarrare wanted to serve his patriotic duty. During his military service, it wasn’t the guns, death, and destruction that got to him. The biggest hurdle for Tarrare to overcome was the measly food rations assigned to the soldiers. He would do favors and hard jobs for the other soldiers in exchange for their rations. He scavenged for scraps and even started eating garbage. In an attempt to relieve his clear pain and fatigue, Tarrare was assigned quadruple rations. Still, this didn’t stop him from eating all the poultices from the medical supplies.   

Finally, he was transferred to the hospital at Soultz with the diagnosis of extreme exhaustion. Although, this decision was probably made less for Tarrare’s health and more for the benefit of all the other military workers. They were probably pretty tired of dealing with him and his putrid sweats. If Tarrare was trash thrown out by the French military, he was gold to the surgeons now in charge of his care. Dr. Courville and Pierre-Francois Percy, the surgeon-in-chief, were his primary caretakers. The entire medical team was fascinated with Tarrare’s condition and had convinced themselves that there was great scientific growth to be found from it. 

The doctors let him loose on a meal set for 15 laborers, and Tarrare ate the entire spread which included; two large meat pies, four gallons of milk, and finished with plates of grease and salt for dessert. Afterwards, he immediately fell asleep. This piqued the doctors’ curiosity. So, they took the only natural next step; they gave him a live cat. Tarrare ate the live cat. The doctors continued to offer him other live animals. He ate lizards, snakes, and puppies. He even swallowed an eel whole. Someone better call PETA! Apparently, Tarrare’s favorite animal snack was snake. 

These doctors, despite not accomplishing any healing and appearing more like boys daring each other at a sleepover, are the reason why Tarrare’s story can be told in such detail. That is why this article is focused on Tarrare the French spy and not someone like Charles Domerz a Polish turncoat soldier who displayed similar symptoms. They took diligent notes in the name of science, preserving Tarrare’s legacy for future generations to marvel and puzzle over. 

That being said, after seeing the terrible feats this sick man could accomplish, Dr. Courville immediately turned his attention on how to use Tarrare for war. To prove Dr. Courville’s hypothesis they had a meeting in the war room, surrounded by esteemed generals. Tarrare was handed a box. After he ate it successfully, he was rewarded 30 pounds of raw bull parts, which was also eaten. Then I guess all the generals waited awkwardly for a while wondering why they were wasting their time on a sideshow attraction. But eventually, the box was produced out of Tarrare’s other end, still containing a legible note! Dr. Courville argued that this talent could be used to sneak classified information across enemy lines undetected. (I, personally, would’ve just had him eat all the guns.) 

That is how Tarrare became an official spy of the Army of Rhine. A spy who could eat anything. Everyone had been thoroughly convinced of Tarrare’s practical abilities, but there was one issue. He had a short temper, a brash personality, and by all accounts wasn’t considered smart. Either way, Tarrare was assigned a mission. Late in the night he crossed into Prussian boarders dressed as a German peasant. There is no record of exactly what Tarrare said, but I imagine it was something like, “Oui oui, I am German. Where are your baguettes?” Because he couldn’t speak a word of German and was immediately captured. (I said he was The Spy Who Ate Everything, not that he was a particularly good spy.)  

He was searched and whipped but refused to reveal anything about his classified mission. There are two different accounts of the story from here. One says the officers became enraged when they finally retrieved the note from a not so fun digging adventure and discovered there wasn’t any classified information at all. Only a note revealing this was a test run of Tarrare’s capabilities. Another version states that after a 30 hour wait, Tarrare immediately re-ingested the box after it had revealed itself to his captors. Whatever the case, the Prussians weren’t happy. They held a mock execution, which is an oxymoron within itself. They took our hungry, sweaty hero onto the gallows with a noose around his neck. Then stood there for a second before removing the noose, giving Tarrare a beating and then sending him on his way.  

After this expedition Tarrare returned to the doctors. He begged for them to find a cure for his unique disorder. He just wanted this never-ending hunger to stop. Finally, they started using actual medical treatments of the time to relieve Tarrare’s hunger. Opium, wine vinegar, and tobacco pills were all prescribed with no results. Next, Percy decided to feed Tarrare a ridiculous number of soft-boiled eggs to fully gage his appetite. This also failed, as Tarrare ate all the eggs prepared and was still hungry. It looked grim for Tarrare. Any attempted diet only made him more miserable, and he often went on the streets to eat trash and scraps from the butcher. Many doctors believed Tarrare simply had a mental disorder and should be admitted to an asylum, but Percy stood up for Tarrare and continued searching for a treatment.  

However, it was incredibly difficult for Tarrare when he was placed on various diets, and he would stope to anything to try and stop his uncontrollable hunger.  He was found drinking human blood collected from patients during bloodletting sessions. Later he was found in the hospital’s Morge, eating from the dead corpses. This all came to a head when a 14-month-old child went missing from the nursery. It was never proven that Tarrare ate the live child, but Percy could no longer defend Tarrare from all these accusations and he was chased from the hospital and dropped from the annals of history.  

That is until he called for Percy while on his death bed in 1798. Tarrare was weak and bedridden, reaching out for any comfort from the man who had tried so hard to help him. Tarrare confides in Percy that he had eaten a golden fork two years before that had never expelled itself and was convinced this was the cause of his current state. Percy, on the other hand, recognized the late stages of tuberculosis taking hold. A month after calling on Percy, Tarrare died at the age of 26. 

As in life, the doctors found him just as disgusting and fascinating in death. A team attempted an autopsy, searching for insight on Tarrare’s condition. He had an unusually wide mouth and gullet that revealed the inside cavity of the stomach when staring directly into his mouth. His stomach, gallbladder, and liver were all unusually oversized. (If that is truly what the organs were. Doctors of this time weren’t great at identifying organs. As it turns out Marry Shelly most likely had her husband’s liver, not his heart like most believes. ) The doctors didn’t get much further than this, because the cadaver was filled with foul pus. The golden fork was never retrieved. 

Tarrare’s character rapidly shifts in the telling of his own life story. He was a man, sick and suffering like the average human couldn’t even imagine. Seeking anything to relive his never-ending hunger. Simply wanting relief from the torment of his own body. Yet, at times he seems like the furthest thing from human, like a monster sent to eat live animals, babies, and generally torment those trapped in his presence. But in the end, the real monster is the time that couldn’t accept him and the medical system that wouldn’t cure him.  

References 

Knapp, F. (2018, July 13). Whatever You Do, Don’t Tell the French About Tarrare. Messy Nessy Chic. https://www.messynessychic.com/2018/07/13/whatever-you-do-dont-tell-the-french-about-tarrare/ 

Lovejoy, B. (2015, July 27). Tarrare, the Greatest Glutton of All Time. Www.mentalfloss.com. https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/66508/tarrare-greatest-glutton-all-time 

McElroy, S., & McElroy, J. (2017, February 9). The Man Who Ate Everything. Sawbones: A Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine. Episode. 

Not!, R. B. I. or. (2019, May 20). The Medical Mystery Of Tarrare, A Cannibalistic French Spy. Ripley’s Believe It or Not! https://www.ripleys.com/weird-news/tarrare/ 

Percy, P.-F. (1805). Résultats de recherche — Medica — BIU Santé, Paris. Www.biusante.parisdescartes.fr. https://www.biusante.parisdescartes.fr/histoire/medica/resultats/index.php?do=page&cote=90146x1805x09&p=97 

Singh, P. (2020, May 8). The Dark Truth About Tarrare, The Man Who Couldn’t Stop Eating. Factinate. https://www.factinate.com/people/tarrare-facts/ 

Life before Roe: A short history of illegal abortions in the United States

The law only controls those that believe that the law is just. That the system the law upholds is meant for the protection of all and not the oppression of some. For most of recorded history, abortions have been a means of escape and self-determination, and have taken place on kitchen counters and back alleys, supported by midwives and complete strangers. It was a common practice felt to be “women’s issues”, unconcerned by men. It is only recently though that those capable of becoming pregnant have not found a sympathetic society to fall back upon when they wish to have autonomy over their bodies. These people now find crowds of strangers spewing visceral hatred over a common medical procedure. Just for reference, not all people who are capable of getting pregnant identify as a women, so I will use the term “people” as an overarching word to include them.

What happened? How did this transition from “women’s issues” to “everyone’s issues” happen?

Power-hungry white male doctors are what happened. Prior to the mid-1800s, abortion was legal and readily available in the US before around 4 or 5 months, or when a fetus begins moving. It was so common that it inspired its own euphemism, “taking the trade”.

By the 1840s, abortion was BOOMING, and this practice scared the boots off the American Medical Association, comprised almost entirely of upper-class white men, who saw the midwives and homeopaths who profited off of abortion as threats to maintaining power over the highly profitable medical trade. It was most defiantly not a coincidence that these midwives and homeopaths were mainly women and people of color, groups that had gained traction in recent movements. If these people were seen as credible medical resources, then they became threats to the power of the AMA. But by attacking a large portion of their profits, abortion, they become less of a threat and stay in the place deemed for them by society.

In order to further suppress the growing women’s rights movement, controlling access to abortion became tantamount. By labeling suffragists as baby-killers, their message became muddled in the fight towards women’s suffrage. Thus began the anti-abortion campaign in the United States. Attacks on abortion began not as concern for the lives of itty bitty babies, but as a strategic act to further control the spread movements across the US and to give more financial power to the white men that just needed more money and power.

Early abortion laws were primarily poison-control laws, which controlled substances that could bring on miscarriage, but they did not outlaw abortion. But by the late-1800s, almost every single state had outlawed abortion or attempted abortion. People who were accused of attempted abortion were forced to testify against their husband/lover and abortion provider in order to get medical care. Testify or die, what a fair legal system.

Laws are not followed by those that believe the law is wrong though, and many still came out in droves to assert control over their bodies. Despite being subjected to heavy fear and shame, people still navigated a heavily complex system of finding an abortion provider. A class divide now turned into a chasm. Upper-class, white people still dealt with the same laws as everyone else but were able to fly out of country/state for abortions, or got what was labeled as “therapeutic abortions”. These abortions were available as loopholes in 44 states, in which these women paid off two doctors who would say that she will kill herself or die if she carries to term, allowing her the opportunity to abort.

Life can suck for the poor in this capitalist society, and so those with a lower income (largely people of color) are left without the resources the wealthy hold in their hands. Still, they soldiered on. Unfortunately, these soldiers died on the battlefield of bodily autonomy in far greater numbers than their counterparts. From inserting a foreign object into the vagina and/or uteruses (hence the infamous coat hanger) to taking herbs that “brought on the menses” to good ‘ol fashioned throwing yourself down the stairs, the actions of these people created a far greater risk of infection and thus death.

This practice of performing self-managed and back-alley abortions occurred thousands of times per year prior to Roe, and still continue to this day. One might think that even though the pleas of many are seemingly incapable of piercing the hearts of lawmakers, that the continuous cycle of history might guide them in the right direction. As I write this, Roe is being prepared to be challenged in the supreme court, towns across Ohio are passing illegal laws outlawing abortion, and planned parenthood clinics are being shut down despite desperate need for them. A bunch of rich, white men want more power, so they outlaw abortion, and all of a sudden people in the 1830s are more progressive than those in 2021. History is a continuous spinning wheel, and no matter how much we move forward, we are still stuck in that continuous motion over and over again. It is building up something, a voting block, support, a movement, that prevents the wheel from moving forward and continuing the cycle that has plagued so many for so long.