She married a Marxist scholar of course she understands dialectic materialism. You do live in the context of all in which you live and what came before you.

She was telling her dipshit lib kids not to be idealist. Critical support to mama Harris.

  • FuckyWucky [none/use name]
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    5 months ago

    In the fall of 1962, at a meeting of the Afro-American Association—a students’ group at Berkeley whose members would go on to give structure to the discipline of Black studies, propose the holiday of Kwanzaa, and help establish the Black Panther Party—Shyamala met a graduate student in economics from Jamaica, Donald J. Harris, who was that day’s speaker.[9] According to Donald Harris, who is now an emeritus professor of economics at Stanford University, “We talked then, continued to talk at a subsequent meeting, and at another, and another."[9] In 1963 they were married without following the convention of introducing Harris to Shyamala’s parents beforehand or having the ceremony in her hometown.[5] In the later 1960s, Donald and Shyamala took their daughters, Kamala, then four or five years old, and Maya, two years younger, to newly independent Zambia, where Shyamala’s father, Gopalan, was on an advisory assignment.[5] After Shyamala divorced Donald in the early 1970s, she took her daughters to India several times to visit her parents in Chennai, where they had retired.[5][10]

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shyamala_Gopalan

    [Donald] Harris’s economic philosophy was critical of mainstream economics and questioned orthodox assumptions. He was once described as a “Marxist scholar”.

    Harris’s research and publications have focused on exploring the process of capital accumulation and its implications for economic growth with the aim of proving that economic inequality and uneven development are inevitable properties of economic growth in a market economy.[22] From this standpoint, he has sought to assess the traditions of economic study inherited from the classical economists and Karl Marx as well as modern contributions while engaging in related economic studies of various countries’ experience.

    Harris is said to work in the tradition of Post-Keynesian Economics.[24][25] He has acknowledged the works of Joan Robinson, Maurice Dobb, Piero Sraffa, Michal Kalecki, Karl Marx, John Maynard Keynes, Joseph Schumpeter, and W. Arthur Lewis as influences upon his work.

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_J._Harris