On this first day of the Party of Treason show, wherein the Daddy Warbucks of elite hegemonies of wealth, power, and privilege and their apologists, power brokers, and bottom feeding grifters spin lies and illusions to subjugate the treasonous and dishonorable minions of their base and anoint Our Clown of Terror, Traitor Trump as their idolatrous dark god and king, they have chosen the theme of wealth; which means theft of public wealth through privatization, deregulation which means theft of the rights of citizens and of the laborers who create the wealth for those who would enslave us, and a tax structure which centralizes wealth and power and transforms terminal stage capitalism from corporate to oligarchic or inherited wealth as subversion of democracy and the re-emergence of an aristocratic elite.
As capitalism and the Neoliberal Order embraced by both Democrats and Republicans begins to collapse from the mechanical failures of its internal contradictions, the Party of Treason offers the plutocrat class theft of public wealth as the emergence of a quasi-aristocracy and the subversion of democracy to a monarchy like tyranny.
Those who wish permission to commit such crimes of terror against their fellow citizens and human beings, and to enforce and institutionalize systems of unequal power and oppression.
His Vice Presidential nominee and chosen successor for one, at least for the moment and in public, a fake hillbilly who despises him, a choice which allows Trump to co-opt his internal opposition. It is now official; we are become a nation of Jethros.
But it is not the bizarre clowns and freaks who lead the Party of Treason who worry me truly; it is the grey eminences and faceless men who service and control the great machine of our commodification, falsification, and dehumanization and its systems of oppression of whom I now write, because the first theme of this coronation, wealth and its disparity as unequal power and elite membership as identity politics, is also a central issue of tyranny versus liberty and of the futures of America and humankind which we must now choose between.
For all of this has been tried before, by Milton Friedman and his Chicago Boys in Chile as a laboratory and in America and elsewhere since Reagan, and it has failed. Austerity, privatization, deregulation, and a tax free plutocrat class are both symptoms and causes of our civilizational economic and political collapse.
And such policies will fail us now and always, as democracies become tyrannies and our world dies.
This we must resist, and unite in rage against the dying of the light.
In preface to any interrogations of the Republican Party, we must center our idea and discourse of it in the one inescapable and defining fact of the January 6 Insurrection.
As I wrote in my post of February 11 2021, Profiles in Treason and Terror; The dishonorable and the mad, the delusional and the sadistic epicures of brutality and perversions, the feral predators hooting and champing before the gallows and guillotines they have brought to murder members of congress with and their partners in uniform unleashing racist terror and gun violence in the streets, and the amoral and predatory grifters and puppetmasters of fascism who have subjugated and enslaved them and stolen their honor and their souls; these are among the idolators of Traitor Trump who conspired, enabled, and collaborated in his plot to subvert democracy and overthrow America in the January 6 Insurrection which attempted to seize Congress and execute its members, which like Hitler’s Beer Hall Putsch on which it was modeled was intended to decapitate the government of the people in a single stroke.
As details emerge of the internal operations and massive scale of the plot against America, in terms of its central coordination and logistics under direct operational command of Trump and his cabal of conspirators, we are offered not only the spectacle of his aberrance and monstrosity as a mad idiot Clown of Terror drooling and gloating in bestial depravity at the destruction of our values and institutions, the violation of our ideals and the endless suffering he has caused, but of those of his freakish and degenerate followers as well.
As I wrote in my post of August 25 2020, Welcome to Bizarro World, Where Truth and Lies Change Places and All Our Values Are Reversed; The Republican Party held up a mirror to America in the figure of Trump at last night’s National Convention, and I’m hoping most of us didn’t like what we saw.
A funhouse mirror, filled with distorted images, a thing of surfaces without substance offering a mirage of illusions, lies, and reflections into infinite regress of our atavisms of fear and hate, shadows which we drag behind us in our wake like an invisible reptilian tail, and which like the picture of Dorian Grey reveal our disfigured souls and our failures as Americans and as human beings.
It is an image designed to terrorize us into submission, and to steal our souls.
Among the freaks and monsters, the litanies of victimhood and retribution, of dominion, white supremacy, patriarchy, and fascisms of blood, faith, and soil sung by the barkers and screaming johnnies who warmed up the main show, among all these and reigning over them like a ringmaster was the tyrant himself, Traitor Trump, spewing abominations and depravities as the puppet of the demons he worships, the lies of those who would enslave us.
Thanks for showing us what’s under your masks, Republicans; Treason, Racism, Untruth, Misogyny, Predator.
So for the nature and character of the Republicans and their Party of Treason; next for the centrality of the theft of public wealth to fascism as amorality and dehumanization.
As I wrote in my post of February 26 2022, Origins of the Fourth Reich Part Two: Ayn Rand, Philosopher of American Fascism and the Republican Party of Kleptocracy, Deregulation, and Privatization; As the fourth day of the invasion of Ukraine dawns, with it dawns a hope that it may be faltering; little girl scouts and grandparents and everyone in between are taking their places in the line of battle, grinning as they prepare to match rifles against tanks, artillery, and unquestionable airspace control, Polish and other Allied soldiers are fighting alongside the Ukrainian army, major arms shipments are getting through the Russian sea blockade, President Zelensky has become a national hero for patrolling the streets of Kyiv with his soldiers, and the SWIFT banking system boycott has frozen the banks of the Russian state.
Most important of all, ordinary citizens are confronting tanks, and the tanks are stopping. Besides all of the triumph and tragedy of the Allied side, the solidarity of the Russian people has been magnificent; sustained peace protests continue despite brutal repression and media blackout, Putin’s stronghold of St Petersburg is now in open revolt against his regime, and both spontaneous mutinies and desertions by Russian soldiers and a stunning peace movement within the armed forces, which recalls the one in America that stopped the Vietnam War, have brought the invasion to a standstill in coordination with suicidal last stands by the Ukrainians.
Solidarity between the peoples of Russia and Ukraine may bring peace and freedom to both nations.
This new possibility, longshot though it may be, returns me to the central question of the invasion; why is this happening? Who benefits?
Part of the spectacle of our civilization once again collapsing due to its internal contradictions as mechanical failure which we are witnessing in the conquest of the Ukraine by Russia’s imperial oligarchic kleptocracy is nothing more or less than capital trying to free itself from its host political systems.
This is why sanctions directly against Russia’s oligarchs as ruling clan chieftains, which has cost them nearly 40 billion dollars in three days, strikes at the heart of an unequal system which now threatens to consume not only Ukraine, but the Baltic states and much of Europe, and why the armed forces of Poland and other allied nations are at this moment fighting Russia’s invasion forces in Ukraine.
But oligarchy, plutocracy, and stateless corporatism is common throughout the world, and as a key component, sponsor, and driving force of fascist tyranny which has instrumentalized fear in service to power through divisions of patriarchal, racial, and sectarian violence and national identity, capital as elite hegemonies of wealth, power, and privilege has captured many nations as a global Fourth Reich, among them America during the Trump puppet regime as a fief and colony of Russia.
How did the Fourth Reich seize America, beyond Putin and Trump?
We inherit the consequences of three major trigger events which caused this condition; the capture of the Republican Party by Gideonite fundamentalists in 1980, the emergence of an Imperial militarized state of secret power and surveillance and the counterinsurgency model of policing after 911, and the massive transfer of public wealth to a handful of plutocrats and oligarchs through privatization and the co-optation of our government by corporate ownership which began with the broad adoption of Ayn Rand’s amoral and nihilistic philosophy of power by major business schools and its implementation as national economic policy by her acolyte Milton Friedman, abetted by the Koch brothers creation of an academic and political support structure, and coming to terrible fruition in Citizens United and the institutionalization of corruption and de facto corporate rule.
Ayn Rand is an apologist for amoral nihilism, who based her twisted ideas on Molotov’s anarchism of violence. If Hannibal Lecter had written a literary justification for eating people as a natural right because he’s superior to everyone else and no one can stop him, it would sound like Ayn Rand saying rape is okay because the natural order is one of predator and prey, and only power is real and has meaning, as she declares with the infamous words of her amoral and disgusting protagonist in The Fountainhead; “The question isn’t who is going to let me; it’s who is going to stop me.”
There is a line spoken by the villain in the series The Magicians, possibly the finest portrayal of Donald Trump as an archetypal figure of psychopaths and tyrants in fiction, a survivor of childhood abuse named The Beast for his horrific crimes, once the powerless and terrified Martin Chatwin and now like Saturn a monstrous cannibal god; “You know, when I was a boy, a man who was meant to care for me bent me over his desk and had me over and over every time I was alone with him. It helps me understand a truth. You’re powerful or you’re weak.”
Here is the original lie of the tyrant and the fascist in the apologetics and self-justification of power; the lie that only power has meaning, that there is no good or evil. How we use power is of equal importance as who holds it.
Fear and power are a primary means of human exchange, but not the only means; love, interdependence, membership, and belonging are as important.
The great question which democracy attempts to answer is how to balance the rights and needs of individuals so that none may infringe upon another’s; and this is precisely the relationship which tyranny seeks to disrupt and imbalance as unequal power.
The harnessing of weaponized faith to the amoral nihilism of Ayn Rand’s philosophy of terror, rapine, and plunder, which she developed from Stalin’s propagandist Molotov and Hitler’s theoretician Julius Streicher, and was distributed pervasively throughout our economics and business schools and came to direct national policy under her acolyte Milton Freidman, formed the ideological basis for our descent into fascism, which adds plutocratic capitalism to authoritarian tyranny under the fig leaf of Gideonite fundamentalist patriarchy and sexual terror, and is driven and typified by divisions of exclusionary otherness, hierarchies of belonging, and fascisms of blood as racist terror, faith as sectarian terror, and soil as nationalism and identity politics.
How does this play out as economic policy and its political consequences? To see where such policies inevitably lead, we need look no further than our sister state, Chile.
Chile, a nation with a middle class who scavenges garbage mounds amidst fantastic wealth, provides a case study of the effects of privatization and deregulation; for it is American policies which have failed here, ones we have embraced ourselves. The Chicago Boys, economists whom the tyrant Pinochet installed in 1973 to create a firewall against socialism, had been students of Milton Friedman, a devotee of Ayn Rand’s fascist and nihilistic philosophy of might makes right, who oversaw the remaking of America through an assault on our institutions of social justice and the theft of public wealth through privatization.
As for Ayn Rand, and her sources and references Julius Streicher and Vyacheslav Molotov; her work is for fascist predators and psychopaths only, and if applied to society at large as the Trump Republicans and aligned extremists would have us, would result in a society in which the most ruthless criminal rules.
If anyone mentions her favorably, don’t walk, run. Because you are in the presence of a monster.
As I wrote in my post of July 29 2019, Why Do Plutocrats Fund Nationalist Tyrants; The death spiral of capitalism in its final phase, in which wealth concentrates in the hands of a few plutocratic oligarchs and like a parasite in nature dies as it kills its host, need not end with the total collapse of the global economy. Make the rich pay, says George Monbiot in The Guardian, and through taxation of unearned income we can break “the spiral of patrimonial wealth accumulation”.
His analysis of the rise of tyranny as driven by the changing nature of capitalism is insightful and clear; “everywhere the killer clowns are taking over. Boris Johnson, Nigel Farage, Donald Trump, Narendra Modi, Jair Bolsonaro, Scott Morrison, Rodrigo Duterte, Matteo Salvini, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Viktor Orbán and a host of other ludicrous strongmen.
The question is why? Why are the technocrats who held sway almost everywhere a few years ago giving way to extravagant buffoons?
Social media, an incubator of absurdity, is certainly part of the story. But while there has been plenty of good work investigating the means, there has been surprisingly little thinking about the ends. Why are the ultra-rich, who until recently used their money and newspapers to promote charisma-free politicians, now funding this circus? Why would capital wish to be represented by middle managers one moment and jesters the next?
The reason, I believe, is that the nature of capitalism has changed. The dominant force of the 1990s and early 2000s – corporate power – demanded technocratic government. It wanted people who could simultaneously run a competent, secure state and protect profits from democratic change.
The policies that were supposed to promote enterprise – slashing taxes for the rich, ripping down public protections, destroying trade unions – instead stimulated a powerful spiral of patrimonial wealth accumulation. The largest fortunes are now made not through entrepreneurial brilliance but through inheritance, monopoly and rent-seeking: securing exclusive control of crucial assets such as land and buildings privatised utilities and intellectual property, and assembling service monopolies such as trading hubs, software and social media platforms, then charging user fees far higher than the costs of production and delivery. In Russia, people who enrich themselves this way are called oligarchs. But this is a global phenomenon. Today corporate power is overlain by – and mutating into – oligarchic power.
What the oligarchs want is not the same as what the old corporations wanted. In the words of their favoured theorist, Steve Bannon, they seek the “deconstruction of the administrative state”. Chaos is the profit multiplier for the disaster capitalism on which the new billionaires thrive. Every rupture is used to seize more of the assets on which our lives depend. The chaos of an undeliverable Brexit, the repeated meltdowns and shutdowns of government under Trump: these are the kind of deconstructions Bannon foresaw. As institutions, rules and democratic oversight implode, the oligarchs extend their wealth and power at our expense.
The killer clowns offer the oligarchs something else too: distraction and deflection. While the kleptocrats fleece us, we are urged to look elsewhere. We are mesmerised by buffoons who encourage us to channel the anger that should be reserved for billionaires towards immigrants, women, Jews, Muslims, people of colour and other imaginary enemies and customary scapegoats. Just as it was in the 1930s, the new demagoguery is a con, a revolt against the impacts of capital, financed by capitalists.
The oligarch’s interests always lie offshore: in tax havens and secrecy regimes. Paradoxically, these interests are best promoted by nationalists and nativists. The politicians who most loudly proclaim their patriotism and defence of sovereignty are always the first to sell their nations down the river. It is no coincidence that most of the newspapers promoting the nativist agenda, whipping up hatred against immigrants and thundering about sovereignty, are owned by billionaire tax exiles, living offshore.
As economic life has been offshored, so has political life. The political rules that are supposed to prevent foreign money from funding domestic politics have collapsed. The main beneficiaries are the self-proclaimed defenders of sovereignty who rise to power with the help of social media ads bought by persons unknown, and thinktanks and lobbyists that refuse to reveal their funders. A recent essay by the academics Reijer Hendrikse and Rodrigo Fernandez argues that offshore finance involves “the rampant unbundling and commercialisation of state sovereignty” and the shifting of power into a secretive, extraterritorial legal space, beyond the control of any state. In this offshore world, they contend, “financialised and hypermobile global capital effectively is the state.
Today’s billionaires are the real citizens of nowhere. They fantasise, like the plutocrats in Ayn Rand’s terrible novel Atlas Shrugged, about further escape.
To them, the nation state is both facilitator and encumbrance, source of wealth and imposer of tax, pool of cheap labour and seething mass of ungrateful plebs, from whom they must flee.
Defending ourselves from oligarchy means taxing it to oblivion. It’s easy to get hooked up on discussions about what tax level maximises the generation of revenue. There are endless arguments about the Laffer curve, which purports to show where this level lies. But these discussions overlook something crucial: raising revenue is only one of the purposes of tax. Another is breaking the spiral of patrimonial wealth accumulation.
Breaking this spiral is a democratic necessity: otherwise the oligarchs, as we have seen, come to dominate national and international life. The steepest taxes would be better aimed at accumulated unearned wealth.”
Inside the Republican National Convention
(Sideshow | Official Trailer)
Keynote Speech at the Republican National Convention
(General Ursus, speech from Beneath The planet of the Apes)
Uncle Bernie’s speech to students at George Washington University in June of 2019
““What I believe is that the American people deserve freedom – true freedom. Freedom is an often used word but it’s time we took a hard look at what that word actually means. Ask yourself: what does it actually mean to be free?
Are you truly free if you are unable to go to a doctor when you are sick, or face financial bankruptcy when you leave the hospital?
Are you truly free if you cannot afford the prescription drug you need to stay alive?
Are you truly free when you spend half of your limited income on housing, and are forced to borrow money from a payday lender at 200% interest rates.
Are you truly free if you are 70 years old and forced to work because you lack a pension or enough money to retire?
Are you truly free if you are unable to go to attend college or a trade school because your family lacks the income?
Are you truly free if you are forced to work 60 or 80 hours a week because you can’t find a job that pays a living wage?
Are you truly free if you are a mother or father with a new born baby but you are forced to go back to work immediately after the birth because you lack paid family leave?
Are you truly free if you are a small business owner or family farmer who is driven out by the monopolistic practices of big business?
Are you truly free if you are a veteran, who put your life on the line to defend this country, and now sleep out on the streets?
To me, the answer to those questions, in the wealthiest nation on earth, is no, you are not free.
While the Bill of Rights protects us from the tyranny of an oppressive government, many in the establishment would like the American people to submit to the tyranny of oligarchs, multinational corporations, Wall Street banks, and billionaires.
It is time for the American people to stand up and fight for their right to freedom, human dignity and security. This is the core of what my politics is all about.
In 1944, FDR proposed an economic bill of rights but died a year later and was never able to fulfill that vision. Our job, 75 years later, is to complete what Roosevelt started.
That is why today, I am proposing a 21st Century Economic Bill of Rights.
A Bill of Rights that establishes once and for all that every American, regardless of his or her income is entitled to:
* The right to a decent job that pays a living wage
A dramatic performance before the stage of the world, the wounded hero who refuses to be silenced hurling defiance to his assassin, marked like a hunter riding to hounds on his first kill, a living bloody flag with which to rally the masses; this was Our Clown of Terror’s greatest performance, and one designed to hand him the Presidency.
An ear nicked by a glass shard or fragment of a bullet, fired by a fellow Republican who has unrestricted access to his sniper position, citizen reports of his doing so ignored by police, Secret Service, and campaign security.
How likely, how believable, is this scene had we been offered it in a work of fiction?
My partner Theresa’s immediate reaction was; “This is fake. It’s a show.” Mine was that the Republican Party has decided to free itself from capture by the Fourth Reich and its figurehead Traitor Trump, and that it was funded by Republican power brokers and opportunity created by intelligence provided from within Trump’s inner circle and in collusion with his many layers of public and private security.
I suspect these two reactions will be typical among our electorate, who by now have internalized the motto of X Files; “Trust No One.”
This is the nation we live in now, where no one trusts the state or each other, wherein we are divided and our solidarity is a broken and antique thing, and we are no longer co-owners of the state as a democracy, but an audience for performances of democracy which no longer have any meaning.
We wander lost in a Wilderness of Mirrors, falsifications, lies and illusions, rewritten histories and alternate realities chosen by those who would enslave us. And most of us no longer know the difference, for truth is the first casualty of tyranny.
President Biden has made kiss the booboo noises with his iron jaws like a Tin Woodsman short of oil, “Politics must never be a literal battlefield or, god forbid, a literal killing field,” he said in his address to the nation. Biden called for “national unity” and proclaimed “We can’t allow this violence to be normalized.” Fine words, with which I would agree in normal times. But normal doesn’t live here anymore.
Calls to unity and the rule of law are fine when we have a functioning democracy, or one which is salvageable; but Biden’s Restoration of Democracy has failed, and with it the rule of law and our unity as a nation who hold some truths self evident.
Absolutely democracy is constituted by political violence, and all liberty is created through resistance, seizures of power, and liberation struggle. Here Obama speaks of the internal operations of viable and functioning systems of liberty; but when liberty fails, is sabotaged or subverted, or is yet to be won, democracy must be established by the use of social force and violence beyond the boundaries of its Law. How else can we bring change to systems of oppression?
Law serves power, order appropriates, and there is no just authority.
All Resistance is War to the Knife.
To Traitor Trump, most dangerous enemy spy to have ever tried to bring America down, Russian agent and Nazi fanatic who wants to make of us a white supremacist terrorist state, who conspired in the deaths of policemen and the attempted mass murders of members of Congress in the January 6 Insurrection, rapist who wants to make us a Gideonite theocracy of patriarchal sexual terror, a reality television star who wants to be our king, I send thoughts and prayers; just none of them benign.
As I wrote of Traitor Trump’s puppetmaster in my post of March 6 2022, How if Vladimir Putin Should Be Assassinated? An Interrogation of the Origins of Evil and the Social Use of Force, and of the State as Embodied Psychopathy and Violence; There is a line in Stephen R. Donaldson’s The Power That Preserves, third novel of The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, spoken of a hero who refuses to be summoned to the rescue because in his other world, our own, a child has been bitten by a snake and must be saved; “Could I damn a world to save the life of one child? I’m not sure I could make that choice.”
Today we contemplate its opposite; I’m not sure I could make the decision to let the world burn and trigger the extinction of humankind to save the life of one man, Vladimir Putin, whose mad imperial conquest of Ukraine now threatens the future of us all.
The life of one war criminal versus the incalculable horrors he will bring; I could not choose to save a monster who may destroy us all over saving humankind and our world.
The violence of the slaver cannot be compared to the violence used by a slave to break his chains., as Trotsky in Their Morals and Ours teaches us.
A senator with whom I am not usually aligned made an entirely reasonable suggestion recently, for which he has been denounced in the media by friend and foe alike, even AOC for whom I have already declared in the next Presidential election, regardless of whether or not she is on the ballot.
I am having difficulty understanding why this suggestion was not embraced with great bipartisan enthusiasm, given our history. After all, assassination and overthrowing inconvenient governments is something we do all the time. We even manufacture or capitalize on unforgiveable just causes of war like Russia’s firebombing of a nuclear site this week to launch imperial conquests of our own; the terror attack on the Twin Towers provided a pretext to seize the heroin fields of Afghanistan and the oil fields of Iraq, sacrifices to our shared rituals of public grieving and need for vengeance, and Hearst’s fictions regarding the 1898 sinking of the USS Maine in Havana Harbor gave us the Spanish-American War, Cuba, the Philippines, Guam, Puerto Rico, the Hawaiian Islands which we stole simply because we could, and later the Presidency of the war’s hero, Teddy Roosevelt.
Go us? We normally seize such chances with great avarice.
Perhaps we are growing up, we humans, and abandoning the use of force and violence. The question is whether we can survive to reach the stage of childhood’s end; and this is the inherent dilemma of force and power, for such forces are dichotomous, bidirectional, and have unintended consequences.
As written by Joan E Greve and Vivian Ho in The Guardian; “Lindsey Graham has attracted widespread condemnation after the South Carolina senator suggested Vladimir Putin should be assassinated in order to end Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Graham first made the suggestion in an appearance on Fox News host Sean Hannity’s show on Thursday evening, and he then repeated the idea in a tweet that quickly went viral.
“Is there a Brutus in Russia? Is there a more successful Colonel Stauffenberg in the Russian military? The only way this ends is for somebody in Russia to take this guy out,” Graham said on Twitter. “You would be doing your country – and the world – a great service.”
Brutus refers to one of the assassins of the Roman emperor Julius Caesar, and Stauffenberg was a German army officer who was executed for attempting to kill Adolf Hitler in 1944.
Graham added in a separate tweet: “The only people who can fix this are the Russian people. Easy to say, hard to do. Unless you want to live in darkness for the rest of your life, be isolated from the rest of the world in abject poverty, and live in darkness you need to step up to the plate.”
Despite immediate criticism of Graham’s comments from left and right in the US, he doubled down on the idea in a Friday morning interview with Fox & Friends. “I’m hoping somebody in Russia will understand that he is destroying Russia, and you need to take this guy out by any means possible,” Graham said.
American lawmakers of both parties responded to Graham’s comments with shock, dismay and outrage, pointing out the danger in demanding the assassination of a leader whose troops are currently engaged in shelling nuclear plants.
“I really wish our members of Congress would cool it and regulate their remarks as the administration works to avoid [a third world war],” the progressive congresswoman Ilhan Omar said in a tweet.
Republican members of Congress were no less critical, as Senator Ted Cruz derided Graham’s suggestion as “an exceptionally bad idea”. “Use massive economic sanctions; BOYCOTT Russian oil [and] gas; and provide military aid so the Ukrainians can defend themselves,” Cruz said. “But we should not be calling for the assassination of heads of state.”
Even Marjorie Taylor Greene – the extremist congresswoman who has sparked outrage for, among other things, comparing coronavirus-related restrictions to the treatment of Jewish people during the Holocaust – chimed in from the right with criticism of Graham.
“While we are all praying for peace [and] for the people of Ukraine, this is irresponsible, dangerous [and] unhinged. We need leaders with calm minds [and] steady wisdom,” Greene said on Twitter. “Not blood thirsty warmongering politicians trying to tweet tough by demanding assassinations. Americans don’t want war.”
White House press secretary, Jen Psaki, said: “We are not advocating for killing the leader of a foreign country or regime change. That is not the policy of the United States.”
Really? When has this not been precisely our national policy? President Biden ordered the assassination of Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi, a man in Syria whom our state claimed without any evidence was the new leader of ISIS, who if the charge was true was a danger only to our common enemies al Qaeda and the Assad regime, mass murdering his entire family merely to divert attention from his many failures, just as Trump had done the year before with his supposed predecessor Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
Did America not assassinate Salvador Allende and attempt countless times to assassinate Fidel Castro, both heroes as great as any American President?
Did we not kill in massive and horrific numbers to win our freedom from the British Empire in the Revolutionary War, from slavery in the Civil War, and from fascism in the Second World War?
We are a nation founded in death and terror through the words with which George Washington sent twelve thousand soldiers to put down the Whisky Rebellion of 1792 and demonstrate the power of the new federal government to enforce taxes; “Government is not reason. It is not eloquence. Government is force; like fire it is a dangerous servant — and a fearful master.”
Do not speak to me of the moral superiority of America.
O my brothers, sisters, and others who walk with me through this age of fire, wherein liberty and tyranny hang in the balance and possibly the survival or extinction of humankind, I thank you for the time we have spent together in conversation here, which I cherish as a refuge from the world, as a theatre in which I may process my reactions to the brokenness of the world and the flaws of our humanity, and as a forge of action in the performance of my chosen roles as a truthteller, a maker of mischief for tyrants, and in becoming a fulcrum of change.
Ours is a universe of Chaos, irrational and uncontrollable, and circumstances beyond the scope of our volition may visit disaster and life disruptive events upon us at any moment, for any reasons or none at all, and if by chance this is the last thing I have the opportunity to write, I want you and everyone who has been part of my life to know that you have helped me find balance for the terror of our nothingness in the joy of our freedom and the beauty of the world, healing in the redemptive power of love, and hope for our future possibilities of becoming human in poetic vision and the reimagination and transformation of humankind.
If by chance you knew our time here in which to do and be the things that bring meaning and value to our lives may number not millennia but hours and days, what would you do and be? Do and be that now, and never stop; for as Kurt Vonnegut teaches us in Mother Night, we become what we pretend to be. What matters here is that our performances of ourselves are chosen and owned by us, and that we own the stories in which we live.
The most important question to ask of a story is; whose story is this?
Always there remains the struggle between the masks others make for us and those we make for ourselves. This is the first revolution in which we all must fight; the struggle for ownership of ourselves.
We are about to pass through a Rashomon Gate event, of fracture, relativization, the bifurcation of timelines and propagation of alternate futures and realities, and all bets are off as to what awaits us on the other side.
And all of this because a mad tyrant cowers and rages in his warrens of darkness, fragmented and torn apart by the demons which inhabit him as his dreams of empire and dominion fall apart and in accord with Newton’s Third Law create the forces of their own destruction, much as with his predecessor Adolf Hitler at the end, with one crucial difference; beneath his finger lies the button which will launch nuclear annihilation, and it calls to him, whispering; ”Set me free, and I’ll make you powerful.”
So, as Alfred Doolittle said to Higgins in My Fair Lady, “I put it to you; and I leave it to you”; do we save one life and damn the world?
As I wrote in my post of February 22 2022, Anniversary of the Martyrdom of Malcolm X; We are shaped by our histories as narratives in which we play our parts; and we also change and seize ownership of our histories and our stories as we perform and enact them.
This brings us back to issues of unequal power, identity, and the social use of force and violence, issues which the life and works of Malcolm X center and bring into terrible and wonderful focus.
His principle of action, By Any Means Necessary, is like a riddle challenge uttered by a Zen master, for which there is no single interpretation, and to which no words but only deeds may give answer. It is a principle which helped set us free from history, and which in the end rebounded on him and killed him.
A dangerous idea, for the use of force obeys Newton’s Third Law and always acts in both directions, action and reaction, unpredictable and slippery in one’s grasp. Yet an idea must be dangerous if it is to be useful in the struggle for liberation.
The violence used by a slavemaster cannot be compared to the violence used by a slave to break his chains, as Trotsky in Their Morals and Ours has been paraphrased, an extension of Nietzsche’s dichotomy of master versus slave morality. This dictum has its reverse; the state has no legitimate authority to use death, violence, force, or control in the repression of dissent, theft of citizenship or violations of our universal human rights, or authorization of identities. This got Trotsky killed by Stalin, as he rightly called out tyranny and terror as tyranny and terror regardless of what those who would enslave us call themselves.
Revolutionary struggle, protest movements, and wars of liberation use force and violence to achieve a society free of inequality when there are no other means possible, due to the imposed conditions of revolutionary struggle when the tyranny and terror of authority, state force and control, and elite hegemonies of wealth, power, and privilege answer dissent with repression because they are without legitimacy and have only fear to keep the slaves at their work. Those who would enslave us refuse to negotiate because they see only themselves as human, and without debate we are left only the sword.
Any who stand between the tyranny and state terror of conquest, enslavement, and death, and the lives of innocents are heroes and champions of our humanity. The particulars are irrelevant.
How do such terrible things arise and seize hold of us, shaping us to their uses?
As I wrote in my post of October 24 2021, Embracing Our Monstrosity: Hierosgamos in Frankenstein and Wuthering Heights; Our monsters, ourselves; genius, madness, inspiration, the quest to become as gods; who among us has not longed to steal the divine fire, to look beyond ourselves, to defy all limits and laws? To be, even for a moment, the unconquered Victor Frankenstein?
Yet as Prospero said of Caliban, we must also say of Frankenstein’s monster; “This thing of darkness I acknowledge mine.”
As I have written of Vander Meer’s retelling of Frankenstein in the novel Borne; Mary Shelly’s glorious novel was also about the abandonment of a child who is no longer perfect, among a number of other themes, including the origins of violence.
A major theme of the novel Frankenstein is the monstrosity of God, who like Victor creates and then abandons his child when it is imperfect and no longer a reflection of his, when we become our own free and independent beings. Yes, Victor wants to become a god, which is why the story resonates with everyone, and is an allegory of the failure of science to realize Idealist visions of humanity, the novel being both a codification and critique of Romantic Idealism.
But in his quest to become a god, Victor also desires to be worshipped and obeyed; he wants to free himself from subjugation by authority, but not to liberate others. Instead of changing the nature of power, force, and control in casting down from his throne a tyrant god who bound us to his laws and then abandoned us through the abolition of the Law and of the social use of force and the centralization of power and authority to an elite as would a true revolutionary, Victor’s tragic flaw of pride compels him to become the next tyrant and enact the role of his former nemesis.
It is a cycle of substitutive tyranny which as Vladimir Nabokov pointed out in his novel Lolita, a brilliant critique of the failure of Idealism which led to his father’s execution in the Russian Revolution as an aristocrat, has been recapitulated throughout the world in revolutions which become tyrannies, especially under the imposed conditions of anticolonial struggle.
There is a line spoken by the villain in the series The Magicians, a survivor of childhood abuse and tyrant known as The Beast for his horrific crimes, once the powerless and terrified Martin Chatwin and now like Saturn a monstrous cannibal god; “You know, when I was a boy, a man who was meant to care for me bent me over his desk and had me over and over every time I was alone with him. It helps me understand a truth. You’re powerful or you’re weak. “
Here is the original lie of the tyrant and the fascist in the apologetics and self-justification of power; the lie that only power has meaning, that there is no good or evil. How we use power is of equal importance as who holds it. Fear and force are a primary means of human exchange, but not the only means; love, membership, and belonging are as important. The great question which democracy attempts to answer is how to balance the rights and needs of individuals so that none may infringe upon another’s.
It’s a line which captures perfectly the inherent contradictions of the Wagnerian Ring of fear, power, and force as an origin of evil; for the use of social force is subversive of its own values. Yet the imposed conditions of revolutionary struggle often require violence, and until the gods of law and order have been cast down from their thrones I must agree with the famous dictum of Sartre in his 1948 play Dirty Hands, quoted by Frantz Fanon in his 1960 speech Why We Use Violence, and made immortal by Malcolm X; “by any means necessary.”
As written by Walter Rodney in The Groundings with my Brothers; “We were told that violence in itself is evil, and that, whatever the cause, it is unjustified morally. By what standard of morality can the violence used by a slave to break his chains be considered the same as the violence of a slave master? By what standards can we equate the violence of blacks who have been oppressed, suppressed, depressed and repressed for four centuries with the violence of white fascists? Violence aimed at the recovery of human dignity and at equality cannot be judged by the same yardstick as violence aimed at maintenance of discrimination and oppression.”
And here is the passage he references from Leon Trotsky in Their Morals and Ours: The Class Foundations of Moral Practice; “A slave-owner who through cunning and violence shackles a slave in chains, and a slave who through cunning or violence breaks the chains – let not the contemptible eunuchs tell us that they are equals before a court of morality!”
I have no use for anything that limits our power to resist evil; the boundaries of the Forbidden, the tyranny of normality and other people’s ideas of virtue, or the limits of our humanity.
Yet in reflection I think of those great figures who have been both heroes of liberation and villains of tyranny; Napoleon, Washington, Stalin, Mao, the list is a near endless litany of woes and failures of vision wherein Brave New Worlds became hells and carceral states. In evidence I offer the French and American Revolutions and their imperial successor states, those of the Soviet Union and the Chinese Communist Party, and above all the state of Israel, a dream of refuge forged in the terror of the Holocaust whose victims learned the wrong lessons from the Nazis and assumed their role in the Occupation of Palestine. The dangers of Idealism as taught to us by Vladimir Nabokov in Lolita and by his model Thomas Mann in Death in Venice are very real; but so are the dangers of submission to authority and the complicity of silence in the face of evil.
How does a revolution seize power without becoming a tyranny? How shall we gather the force and will to resist unjust authority, without enforcing our own notions of the good on others in our turn?
This is the dilemma of power; that we must wield force to take it from our oppressors, and that we must relinquish it when it is ours and refuse to shape our fellows to our will.
We must refuse to submit to authority if we are to seize our liberty; and we must refuse to subjugate others that they may do the same if we are to avoid becoming the monsters we hunt.
I like and empathize with the character of Victor in Mary Shelly’s allegory of the origins of evil, and have used variants of this name as aliases because he is a figure of Milton’s rebel angel, but also I admire the monster in all his magnificence, a figure of the Shadow based on Caliban in The Tempest. The story is about their relationship as parent and abandoned and damaged child, about the interplay of these selves in the growth of the psyche and processes of becoming human, and about the political consequences of otherness and monstrosity.
If we cannot embrace our monstrosity and our shadows, how can we bring change to systems of oppression?
Frankenstein addresses themes of science versus nature, reason versus passion, and both of these within a Promethean rebellion against God, authority, and universal Law as a form of Idealism; this from the perspective of the monster’s creator.
From the monster’s view, the novel portrays the disfigurement of the soul through abandonment by a parent who also functions as a figure of a creator-god and of Authority, known as the problem of the Deus Absconditus which refers to the god who bound us to his despicable Laws and then ran away before he was caught, and who drives the child to achievement and supremacy as his proxy of dominion and vindication before the world rather than empowering the child’s own agency to discover and follow a unique bliss and personhood- what the Greeks called Arete or Virtue but also denoting superiority as with the apex predator and ideal of patriarchal masculinity Achilles in the Iliad, one of Mary Shelly’s sources- in a chosen arena but who like Alberich in Wagner’s Ring must renounce love to win supremacy and power, rendering all victory meaningless and hollow, dehumanizing the child and shaping a vessel of rage and vengeance, a tyrant forged in the violence of the struggle to free himself from enslavement, with the iron self discipline and will to enact subjugation of others in their turn, terrible and pathetic and with the grandeur of a tortured defiant beast trapped in the same flesh as the innocent who needs to be loved and cannot understand why he seems monstrous to others. It is about birthing monsters, and the chaotic plasticity of identity and relationships.
As written by Octave Mirbeau in The Torture Garden; “Monsters, monsters! But there are no monsters! What you call monsters are superior forms, or forms beyond your understanding. Aren’t the gods monsters? Isn’t a man of genius a monster, like a tiger or a spider, like all individuals who live beyond social lies, in the dazzling and divine immortality of things? Why, I too then-am a monster!”
A story which is at once Greek tragedy and Freudian study of the processes and relations between the id, ego, and superego, with a third parallel storyline relating a Romantic reimagination of Biblical Genesis like that of Blake, it is both the apotheosis of Romantic Idealism and its first criticism, exegesis and classical myth, dialectic on responsibility and discourse on Aristotle’s categories of being, critique of Rousseau’s natural man and of Nietzsche’s Superman which it also inspired in a recursive loop of influence across the seas of time. Its author was a Pythian visionary whose insight reached centuries into the future, and whose immense scholarship reimagined some of the greatest works of our historical civilization.
Mary Shelly’s influence echoes through time, multiplies, and reshapes the contexts of its polymorphous meanings. One cannot think of Kafka’s Gregor Samsa without thinking of his original, the dual-aspected monster-child created to bind our nature with reason, nor read her sources and references in the prophecies of William Blake and Milton’s Paradise Lost without reevaluating them in terms of Mary Shelly’s novel; her work resonates through past and future, and what touches, it changes.
Who can read the work of Emily Bronte without the meaning of her great novel Wuthering Heights changing with our awareness that its author thought of herself as Victor Frankenstein and as the titan Prometheus cast out of heaven like Milton’s rebel angel? That Heathcliff is her monster, a demon to be united with in an exalted Nietzschean rapture of transformative rebirth? And does this not change one’s reading of her source Frankenstein?
A nested set of puzzle box themes and contexts, multiple narrative threads which create paradoxes of meaning, role reversals and inversions of identities, and the questioning of the mission of civilization and the morality of progress; Mary Shelly created the modern world with her great book Frankenstein.
It is a modernity which can unfold limitless possibilities of becoming human, or like Pandora’s Box and the Lament Configuration of the toymaker LeMarchand in Clive Barker’s Hellraiser mythos unleash horrors beyond our imagination, as Putin now threatens to do with nuclear war and annihilation.
With Putin like Dr Strangelove hypnotized by the siren call of his missiles and their promise of ultimate power, the power of total destruction and the end of humankind, chanting Oppenheimer’s ritual invocation; “Behold! I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds!”, the question before us all changes.
Nuclear annihilation whispers from the darkness, unleash me, and I’ll make you powerful. But this is a lie, for such power will also consume us and steal our souls.
The great question to which we must now find answer is no longer when is it good to be bad, but how much of our humanity we are willing to sacrifice for our survival as a species.
As I wrote in my post of February 5 2020, Democracy Falls in America: the Acquittal of Traitor Trump; At the end I am driven finally to reconsider the position of the great, flawed idol of my youth Malcolm X; by any means necessary.
By any means necessary; this is a horrible, terrible principle of action, one fraught with endless possibilities of inhumanity and malign power, yet if we are forced to a resistance of survival as was Camus, who wrote for those who must claw their way out of the ruins of lost positions and face yet another Last Stand, beyond hope of victory or even survival, how else may we combat our dehumanization?
We must never surrender hope, for our resistance can triumph over anything but the loss of our faith in ourselves and one another. So long as one of us remembers the dream of freedom, we may yet redeem our humanity.
My answer to the Republican subversion of democracy remains NO!
Yet beyond this, we must fight not merely against fascism but also for democracy and the universal rights of man. As we resist fascism to defend equality and freedom as our common human rights, so we must use force and violence against social and institutional systems, structures, and ideologies and not persons, for we may seek truth together nonviolently with those with whom we disagree as the signal virtue of democracy and humanism, even with our enemies as brother warriors.
Resisting evil means resisting that of others against our universal humanity, but it also means resisting the seduction of evil and power and of our own use of force to compel others.
Power is the evil impulse which births monsters.
So often in history those who commit true atrocities are utterly convinced of the justice of their cause, Gott Mitt Uns, are informed and motivated by narratives of victimhood and have abandoned the self-questioning which is the fulcrum of a free society of equals. This, too, we must resist.
For this is why revolutions, once power has been seized and tyranny overthrown, may become themselves tyrannies, and why I prefer to let others run amok and be ungovernable to the specter of authoritarian social control.
Let us send no armies to enforce virtue.
And remember always Nietzsche’s warning in Beyond Good and Evil; “He who fights monsters should be careful lest he thereby become a monster. And if thou gaze long into an abyss, the abyss gazes back into thee.”
Further illumination may be found in Anthony Burgess’ masterpiece Napoleon Symphony, a tragedy of Napoleon and Beethoven’s Eroica and a novel whose discovery was a defining moment of my fourteenth year and has remained with me ever since, despite my teenage adoration of Napoleon as a hero of revolution and liberation, a universal genius and ideal of human being.
Here is the ground of struggle between tyranny and resistance under imposed conditions of systemic unequal power in the use of social force and violence, and between seizures of power as ownership of identity versus the falsification of authorized identities in the struggle between the stories we tell about ourselves and those told about us by others; history, memory, identity.
Read it as I did beneath a print of Klimt’s Beethoven Frieze, depicting a Shadow pantheon with the wonderful image of the rebel Titan Typhoeus as a chthonic ape and his three gorgon daughters to his left under signifying masks of Death, Madness, and Desire (I found Disease redundant and renamed her Desire as a better balance of forces, plus she is depicted as a three aspected goddess to the right as Lasciviousness, Wantonness, and Intemperance); really, what more could a boy ask for?
And here is the dynamism of our relationship with our shadow self and all that we fear and experience as disgust and revulsion, fear of nature and of our instinctive selves externalized and projected as fear of otherness, loss of self and of control, and degradation to an animal state which drive identity politics and social constructions of race, gender, and class or caste which includes nationalism and sectarian faith, especially when overwhelming and pervasive fear and real existential threats are weaponized by authority in service to power, as Malcolm X was falsified by Elijah Muhammed’s Black Muslim separatist nationalism as his herald, in reaction against the greater historical and systemic evils and multigenerational trauma and inequality of white supremacist terror and the legacies of slavery.
Processes of transformational change and social adaptation are chaotic and interdependent, and their causes are circular or more complex as we can see in the case of Malcolm X and liberation struggle, and in all such histories. This is one lesson we can learn from Malcolm X; there is no just authority. And those who claim to speak for you often do so as a primary strategy of fascisms of blood, faith, and soil and in your subjugation to tyranny.
A second such lesson is that racism in general, and all divisions and social hierarchies of elite membership and exclusionary otherness, compel submission to authority through the weaponization of fear as an arbiter of our most important relationship, that of the conscious and unconscious or shadow self, which can be read in how we feel and think about nature and those truths which are immanent in nature and written in our flesh.
We define ourselves through figures of otherness who represent unintegrated parts of ourselves and define the limits of the human; freaks, monsters, and all those beyond the boundaries of the Forbidden and that which we claim as ours.
For this fear of nature as the origin of racism I have a simple solution; let us embrace our monstrosity, and perform violations of normality and transgressions of the Forbidden as sacred acts of Chaos in pursuit of truth.
The third gift of Malcolm X to our limitless future possibilities of becoming human is a life lived in revolutionary struggle and resistance against systems, structures, and institutions of unequal power as direct interrogation and engagement with the state as embodied violence, and with the consequences of the use of social force.
He died for our chance to learn these three things, how authority falsifies and subjugates us as a primary historical process, how racism and other inequalities of power are born of fear of the wildness of nature and the wildness of ourselves, and the dichotomous and bidirectional nature of violence and the dialectical processes of the use of social force in tyranny and terror and in resistance and revolution, and as a martyr and teacher of wisdom Malcolm X is a figure of liberation who belongs to all humankind.
How can we disambiguate the violence of the “slave-owner who through cunning and violence shackles a slave in chains, and a slave who through cunning or violence breaks the chains” as Trotsky phrased it, of tyranny and carceral states from revolutionary struggle and liberation, of action in accord with our duty of care for others and our interdependence and solidarity from the enforcement of virtue and imperialism?
As I wrote in my post of February 4 2022, A Stain of Cruelty: the Assassination of Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi ; To paraphrase the line from Hamlet and Star Trek in season one, episode 13, The Conscience of the King; There’s a stain of cruelty on your armor, President Biden.
We have answered terror and death with terror and death, and this is both tragic and shameful. Force cannot answer force, nor heal the flaws of our humanity.
As written for CNN by Barbara Starr, Oren Liebermann, Jeremy Herb and Eyad Kourdi; “It was the biggest US raid in the country since the 2019 operation that killed ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
Biden spoke from the White House Thursday morning to announce that the operation had taken “a major terrorist leader off the battlefield.”
“Thanks to the bravery of our troops, this horrible terrorist leader is no more,” Biden said from the Roosevelt Room. “Knowing that terrorist had chosen to surround himself with families, including children, we made a choice to pursue a Special Forces raid at a much a greater risk to our own people rather than targeting him with an airstrike.”
Now and then Biden reminds us all that he was among the principal collaborators in Bush’s invasion of Iraq as imperial conquest and colonial plunder to seize the strategic resource of oil by which America maintains a global hegemony of wealth, power, and privilege, an addiction which will result in the extinction of humankind as a species, and in the authorization through the Patriot Act of a carceral state of brutal force and pervasive surveillance and thought control exceeded only by Xin Jinping’s holocaust of the Uighurs of Xinjiang, which has enabled the most massive theft of our freedoms in our history, including the McCarthy era, and the most bizarre and reprehensible regime of torture, most infamous in the crimes against humanity perpetrated at Guantanamo and other secret prisons for political enemies of the regime and its oligarchic, plutocratic, and corporate robber baron paymasters, including even the grisly hysteria of the Salem Witch Trials.
Once again our heroes and champions are proven to have feet of clay, and I mourn the failure of moral vision and addiction to power and the use of force and violence of President Biden, our government, and America as a guarantor of universal human rights and a beacon of hope to the world.
On this day and all too often, the Promethean Fire of the Torch of Liberty which illuminates the gates of our nation in New York Harbor did not reach across the wild seas to foreign shores. This is a great tragedy, and it is a tragedy which is ours and for which we must answer.
The deaths of Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi and his family as a consequence of America’s raid on his home, not an arrest for crimes provable in a court of law but political assassinations, are rightly being compared in the media to the assassination of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi by Trump. This situates Biden and Trump on an equal level of criminal amorality and state terror.
Before the stage of the world and history, it also generates moral equivalence between ISIS and America, as our enemies intend by their provocations as a strategy of delegitimation of a regime. I use this myself as a democracy activist, for the art of revolution is about claiming the moral high ground and the delegitimation of authority and seizing control of the narrative.
Sending armies and police to enforce virtue through violence and repression is not only evil, it is also stupid; for it plays into the hands of the enemy. As Shakespeare teaches us in Henry V; “When lenity and cruelty play for kingdom, the gentler gamester is the soonest winner.”
There are still notable differences between Biden and Trump, and between the goals, values, and ideals of Democrats and Republicans, madness and treason among them. But today those differences became suddenly and horrifically more narrow, and I fear we will need more than the eye of a needle as a window to a better future.
As written in my post of October 28 2019, Trump and al-Baghdadi: Parallel Lives and Reflections; The personal and historical forces which create tyrants and monsters among us have been a lifelong study of mine, aspects of a curiosity regarding the origins and nature of evil born of primary childhood traumas in the Bloody Thursday massacre ordered by Ronald Reagan against a student peace protest in Berkeley 1969 when I was nine and my near execution in Brazil at the age of fourteen defending street children from police bounty hunters, which echoes those of Maurice Blanchot in June 1944 by the Nazis and Dostoevsky’s in 1849 by Czarist police, informed by Jerzy Kosinski’s novel The Painted Bird and focused by the classic study of Adolf Hitler from his speeches and writings, The Psychopathic God by Robert G. L. Waite, both of which I read during high school. Thus I became fascinated by the intersections of literature, philosophy, history, and psychology, and chose the origins of evil as my lifelong field of study.
As the world celebrates the death of al-Baghdadi, both tyrant and monster, and Trump claims credit in this the sole victory of his administration, as if for the trophy head of some dangerous beast shot by a guide while enjoying cocktails at the hunting camp, it may be interesting to compare the parallel lives, methods, and goals of Trump and al-Baghdadi.
A full psychological and historical study of Trump and al-Baghdadi as figures of fascist terror and madness on a global political scale in the context of civilizational conflicts would require a book of Biblical proportions and thesis-level scholarship such as Waite’s brilliant work on Hitler. Here I note only some of the obvious alignments and congruences; both Trump and al-Baghdadi are megalomaniacs and psychopaths who seized power through manipulation of those who perceived themselves as victims and readily dehumanized others to change their status, using disruption of norms and a reimagination of reality through lies and misdirects to shape history, and enacted regimes of state terror and campaigns of religious and ethnic cleansing and of patriarchal misogyny and sexual violence against women.
Of Trump we have a cornucopia of information; Dr Justin Frank’s book Trump on the Couch and The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump: 27 Psychiatrists and Mental Health Experts Assess a President by Bandy X. Lee are excellent resources, particularly illuminating on Trump’s erotic relationship with his daughter, the fantasies of violence and power which are rooted in his childhood relationship with his tyrannical and abusive father, and his inability to love or empathize with others as a result of his abandonment by his mother.
Pathological lies, poor impulse control, and grandiose fantasies and delusions complete the picture of a narcissistic personality and psychopathic predator. Trump cannot distinguish truth from lies and delusions; his madness and childlike feeble mindedness, the tantrums and psychotic rages, the bullying and narcissism of a spoiled brat, does not however absolve him of responsibility for his actions, or those of the treasonous cabal of sex predators and fascists he has gathered around him.
How Trump’s particular madness is expressed in our national policy is a horror which can described with precision; his fear of contamination and faecal fixation translate into his signature campaign against nonwhite others and a policy of ethnic cleansing and racist state terror, his misogyny into a patriarchal wave of legal disempowerment of women’s reproductive rights, his fragile ego, identity confusion, and need for attention into a governance of Nuremberg-like rallies, the cultivation of despicable autocrats, and the obsessive vengeance against anyone who refuses to offer adoration and submission.
Above all what unites Trump and his puppetmaster Putin, his model Hitler, and his mirror image al-Baghdadi, as monsters and tyrants who reflect one another and as parallel figures and historical forces is the theory of politics as theatre of cruelty, the state as embodied psychopathy and violence, and government as performance art.
For their performances of leadership as clowns of terror and madness provide mirror opposite images of the reign of the Roman Emperor described with wit and guile by Antonin Artaud in his great novel Heliogabalus; or, the Crowned Anarchist, a figure who disrupted norms as an agent of change and chaos to transform an inert and ossified society, whereas Trump and al-Baghdadi have acted as partners in reaction to disrupt civilization itself and return us to a pre-democratic barbarian tyranny.
Trump claims to have killed his dark reflection and shadow self by his spurious arrogation of a victory won by our intelligence and military services; but history will always see this second face behind his mask, a secret twin he bears into eternity, a face of power and twisted desires unrestrained by the laws and values of a democratic civilization and a free society of equals: the face of Trump’s heart of darkness, al-Baghdadi.
So I wrote on October 28 2019; and so I must write now of Biden’s secret face and heart of darkness, Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi, linked now for eternity as figures of terror, murderous retribution, and cruelty.
State terror and imperialism has met sectarian and patriarchal terror as tyranny and organizations of institutionalized violence and power; we can only hope now that they will recognize their twin image in the mirror of death which war and acts of force and violence confront us with, and walk away from the precipice which threatens to consume us all.
As Ken Kesey said in his historic speech to a peace protest against the war in Vietnam recorded in Tom Wolfe’s novel The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test; “The way to end war is just walk away and say fuck it. Just walk away and say fuck it.”
Every word of this remains true, in these and all cases of tyranny and the institutional terror of carceral states of force and control, of authorized identities and falsification by propaganda and rewritten histories, of imperial conquest and dominion and colonial exploitation and enslavement. It is also true now of Russia in the invasion of Ukraine.
As I wrote here of Trump we may also say of his master Putin; for Traitor Trump is but a negative space and shadow cast by his original type, and both are atavisms of fear and force, chasms of emptiness which nothing can fill, no amount of dominion and control of others, displays of wealth and power or vainglorious strutting, to which no sacrifices of things loved by others or the terror and pain of their victims can suffice, for such is the nature of psychopathy and of politics as a theatre of cruelty.
What does this mean?
For us in this moment and in the context of the question of violence and the social use of force, it means that in the unequal balance of power between Russia and Ukraine, wherein real people are dying because someone has the power to steal what they have, a predator for whom nothing is real or has meaning but force and power, we must find answer to the declaration of Ayn Rand’s monstrous protagonist Howard Roark in The Fountainhead as he commits rape; “The question isn’t who is going to let me; it’s who is going to stop me.”
Who will stop Putin’s conquest of Ukraine?
If they come for one of us, let them be met with all of us; not divided by hierarchies of elite belonging and exclusionary otherness, nor defeated by learned helplessness and terror, but united in solidarity and refusal to submit as one unconquerable and united humankind.
I am a hunter of fascists, and mine is a hunter’s morality. There is a simple test for the use of force; who holds power?
For me, this is simple; the nation invading another is in the wrong. This is no different from chancing to discover a policeman kneeling on someone’s neck, in which case our duty of care for others requires us to save the life of the person who is being murdered right in front of us, regardless of any irrelevant details like which of them has the badge and the gun, the authority and the power, by any means necessary.
Law serves power, and there is no just authority.
Even if neither nation is a democracy, and victims of unequal power have no inherent moral burden of virtue as Shaw teaches us with the figure of Arthur Doolittle in My Fair Lady, one of them stealing the lives and freedom of the other as the right of sovereignty, self-determination, autonomy, and independence cannot be just, and must be opposed.
By any means necessary.
While the political origins of conflict are often ambiguous, its consequences for the people in the path of a conquest are not. As my long term goals remain a united humankind and a stateless society which has abandoned the social use of force and control and with it all laws, authorized identities, and the tyranny of other peoples ideas of virtue, and the emergence of a free society of equals from divisions of exclusionary otherness, elite hegemonies of wealth, power, and privilege, and from fascisms of blood, faith, and soil, I stand with Ukraine and with any liberation movement of sovereignty and independence anywhere, and with the people of Russia against the oligarchy and Putin and for all democracy movements against tyranny.
Let us stand in solidarity as a band of brothers, wherever men hunger to be free.
Our duty of care for others sometimes requires us to place our lives in the balance with all those whom Frantz Fanon called the Wretched of the Earth; the powerless and the dispossessed, the silenced and the erased. I am only one man, and not extraordinary, with nothing but my witness of history and my vision of our future possibilities of becoming human to hurl against the chasms of darkness and the terror of our nothingness in the face of overwhelming force and amoral imperial and carceral states.
But I cannot be complicit in silence with these crimes against humanity, to which as with fascism there can be but one reply: Never Again! A rallying cry complicated by its popularization in the title of founder of the Jewish Defense League Meir Kahane’s book “Never Again!: A Program for Survival, its origin is in Isaac Lambdan’s 1926 poem Masada; “Never shall Masada fall again”; it first appeared in its current form on signs written by the prisoners of Buchenwald after its liberation.
Elie Wiesel defines the phrase in his novel Hostage; “Never again” becomes more than a slogan: It’s a prayer, a promise, a vow. There will never again be hatred, people say. Never again jail and torture. Never again the suffering of innocent people, or the shooting of starving, frightened, terrified children. And never again the glorification of base, ugly, dark violence. It’s a prayer.”
Here I would declare Sic Semper Tyrannis, but this is a phrase from the shadows and legacies of our history from which we must emerge, and includes the assassinations of Julius Caesar and Abraham Lincoln, whose killers I despise and would not align myself with.
I do not trust certainties or those who act in their name, Gott Mitt Uns bearing a history of atrocities and terror which has no equals, and includes the Crusades, the Inquisition, the Thirty Year’s War, and the Holocaust. As Voltaire wrote in his 1765 essay Questions sur les miracles; “Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities.”
Instead I will say with the magnificent Lt. Aldo Raine in Inglorious Basterds, and I hope in a way which preserves and reflects the moral ambiguity, contingency, and relativity of the original in the film; “Now that I can’t abide. How ’bout you, can you abide it?”
Refences on the Failed Assassination of Trump
Biden urges US to reject ‘extremism and fury’ after Trump assassination attempt: In Oval Office TV address, president forcefully condemns political violence and says country must strive for unity
Here are the references from my essay; first among them my theme song for Last Stands, which I posted on August 24 2021 as I joined the defense of Afghanistan after its fall at Panjshir, and as I prepared to join the defense of Ukraine in Mariupol with the Abraham Lincoln Brigade on March 22 2022.
My hope for us all now is that we may never need to make such Last Stands here in America against a state captured by the Fourth Reich.
Vote this November, friends; I have seen both, and voting is always better than shooting.
Inglourious Basterds: Shoshanna Prepares for German Night
The Undeserving: Alfred P. Doolittle’s Speech in My Fair Lady
The Conscience of the King: Star Trek Season 1, episode 13
The New Annotated Frankenstein, by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, Leslie S. Klinger (Goodreads Author) (Editor), Guillermo del Toro (Introduction), Anne K. Mellor (Afterword)
The Tempest, Folger Shakespeare Library, by William Shakespeare, Paul Werstine (Editor), David Lindley (Editor), Israel Gollancz (Preface & Glossary), Barbara A. Mowat (Editor)
Herein I write a manifesto of action as Socratic dialog and Swiftian satire, which as stated in the title questions “the Origins of Evil and the Social Use of Force, and of the State as Embodied Psychopathy and Violence”.
As the motto of my publication Torch of Liberty declares, my intent is “to incite, provoke, and disturb.”
Consider also that I claim the Four Primary Duties of a Citizen as Question Authority, Expose Authority, Mock Authority, and Challenge Authority, and that I do these things in performance as what Foucault called a truth teller, in the pursuit of truth as a sacred calling.
In this essay I interrogate a set of interdependent problems which I believe are central to the project of becoming human we all share, and the consequences of the Wagnerian Ring of fear, power, and force posed to us by the situation we face in this moment, and here I use the term moment in the ways that Jacques Derrida and Alain Badiou did, wherein a monstrous tyrant threatens nuclear war and the extermination of all humankind on a whim of infantile tantrum, and we must choose one or the other.
It is a dilemma which like all use of social force makes us complicit in evil, a primary strategy of fascism in our subjugation, and which reproduces the conditions from which states arise as embodied psychopathy and violence, elite hegemonies of wealth, power, and privilege, and fascisms of blood, faith, and soil.
Badiou claims events are fundamentally indeterminate and structured by the dialectics of possibility and impossibility, maybe-maybe not as my mother used to say to students who asked her for positional declarations, judgements, authorized versions, singing the words and bouncing her hands from side to side.
For Derrida, as my friend Rene Troy Tun has described, “the event in its absolute singularity is thus resistant to cognitive description, critical objectification, interpretive reduction, and theoretical elaboration.”
Here with this primary existential question of human being, meaning, and value I struggle to find synthesis; like the performance of our identities, this process need not be determinative or prescriptive, but a space of free creative play.
If we have no answers, we must learn to ask better questions.
In this tilting at windmills I use Milorad Pavić’s Dictionary of the Khazars as my model, a magisterial work which comes in male and female versions and whose meaning changes with a difference of seventeen lines between them.
How if Vladimir Putin Should Be Assassinated? Do we save one life, that of a mad tyrant who will destroy us, and damn the world?
We celebrate today a legacy of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity for all humankind, bequeathed to us by the Revolution on this day in 1789 with the storming of the Bastille.
I find it immensely hopeful for the future of humankind that France, a nation where protest historically is seen as a patriotic act with the bizarre exceptions of de Gaulle’s repression of the May 1968 protests and of Macron’s repression of last year’s wave originating in Marseille as a parallel of America’s Black Lives Matter protests of the Summer of Fire 2020, symptoms of systemic racism and unequal power which echoes the era of colonial Algeria and of the incipient collapse of our democracy and global civilization, celebrates as its founding event the seizure of a prison, and one which in part was intended as the jailbreak for the poet laureate of the Revolution, the Marquis de Sade. He had been yelling to the crowd from his cell window that the jailers were executing prisoners; he was unfortunately spirited away to the madhouse at Charenton before he could be liberated, an episode immortalized by Peter Weiss in Marat/Sade. Freed by the Revolution, de Sade became a leader of the radical wing of the Jacobins, until his beautiful elegy for Marat ran afoul of Robespierre’s designs and landed him yet again in prison.
When I describe and think of myself as a Jacobin in terms of political identity, I am thinking of the relationship between Marat and de Sade as negative spaces of each other and of systemic unequal power as the origin of evil and the Wagnerian Ring of fear, power, and force which subverts revolutionary seizures of power as tyranny.
During his time in the Bastille he wrote one of the most brilliant and transgressive interrogations of the origins of evil in unequal power and the Church and State as embodied violence, 120 Days of Sodom. Every word of it is still true, and applies to all tyrannies of force and control, totalitarian and authoritarian states of all kinds and to my thinking fascism especially, as interpreted by the great Pasolini in film, as symptoms of the disease of fear, power, and force. Read it together with its companion work, The Origins of Totalitarianism by Hannah Arendt.
As Pasolini says in his interview during the filming of ‘Salò or the 120 Days of Sodom’;
“PASOLINI: I simply plan to replace the word “God,” as de Sade uses it, with the word “power.” The sadists are always the powerful ones. These four gentlemen in the story are a banker, a duke, a bishop, and a judge. They represent the constituted might. The analogy is obvious, and I didn’t invent it. I am only adding something of my own and am complicating it by bringing it up to date.
BACHMANN: What is the remaining, continuing significance of de Sade s work?
PASOLINI: The fact that the body becomes merchandise. My film is planned as a sexual metaphor, which symbolizes, in a visionary way, the relationship between exploiter and exploited. In sadism and in power politics human beings become objects. That similarity is the ideological basis of the film.”
For further study of de Sade as a pivotal figure of the Revolution, I refer you to Angela Carter’s The Sadeian Woman and the Ideology of Pornography, a feminist interpretation which informs all her work, The Fan-Maker’s Inquisition: A Novel of the Marquis de Sade by Rikki Ducornet, and The Marquis de Sade: A Life, by Neil Schaeffer.
My reading list on the French Revolution includes Citizens by Simon Schama, The Days of the French Revolution by Christopher Hibbert, and A Place of Greater Safety by Hilary Mantel.
As causal sources of global revolution against the system of aristocratic monarchy and state religion, the American and French Revolutions are a tide of democracy and universal human rights which radically reimagined human social and political relations, being, meaning, and value, and continue to propagate throughout the world. It found echoes in the Russian Revolution, and as anticolonial struggle in India, South Africa, and nearly everywhere on earth as humankind awakened from its long darkness as tyrannies of masters and slaves.
Today its values and ideals manifest in revolutions and liberation movements throughout the world, in Hong Kong, Palestine, and Ukraine, among those places to which I have traveled in solidarity with the struggles of their peoples, those whom Franz Fanon called “The Wretched of the Earth”, and whom our Statue of Liberty proclaims the “huddled masses yearning to be free”.
What does Liberty mean for us today?
Memory, history, and identity; a process of becoming human and a ground of struggle between our anchorages and our aspirations, and one in constant motion and a state of change; impermanent, ephemeral, protean, shaped by the dynamism between authenticity and falsification as we wander in a wilderness of mirrors, lies and illusions of authority which seek to capture, distort, and subjugate us, to enslave us and steal our souls.
This is the primary revolution of all humankind; the struggle to create ourselves as autonomous beings, free of authorized identities and the tyranny of other people’s ideas of virtue, against the forces of dehumanization and elite hegemonies of wealth, power, and privilege, divisions of exclusionary otherness and fascisms of blood, faith, and soil, and the inequalities and injustices of state terror, repression of dissent, institutional violence, force, and control.
To become ourselves is the first revolution in which we all must fight, of which other forms of revolutionary struggle are echoes and reflections, and they are united in the struggle for ownership and control of our identity as aspects of a common emergence of human being, meaning, and value.
To refuse to submit is the primary human act which confers freedom, for who cannot be controlled is free. In this moment of Resistance to authority and tyranny we become Unconquered, each if us Living Autonomous Zones and agents of Chaos, Liberty, and the reimagination and transformation of humankind.
Let us throw open the gates of our prisons, and be free.
On Bastille Day last year protestors booed their President during his parade, set fire to his favorite restaurant, and skirmished with police in Paris, not yet a true revolution as he was not in it at the time; this is the identical tipping point faced by Louis XVI on 5 October 1789 when the people besieged Versailles and demanded he return to Paris. All is not yet lost; the Republic can still be saved.
For now the tides of history have changed, and in the election a few days ago which was a referendum on Le Pen’s Nazi revivalists as well as the Macron Presidency, the Left has emerged victorious and France has renounced utterly both fascism and tyranny.
As Guillermo del Toro teaches us in Carnival Row; “Chaos is the great hope of the powerless”. Let us seize our moment and bring change to systems of oppression and unequal power.
In this moment of decision, I say to you Macron and to all who meet protest not with redress of grievances but with brutal repression as a carceral state of force and control, both at home and in former colonies and emerging nations which include New Caledonia/Kanaky; in a free society of equals one must lead from the front of the masses as their champion, and not behind the walls of your palace as their tyrant.
In this moment when state tyranny and terror lies with its throat exposed, let us bring the Chaos.
Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité, ou la Mort!
French
14 juillet 2024 Un héritage de liberté, d’égalité et de fraternité pour toute l’humanité : 14 juillet 2024
Nous célébrons aujourd’hui un héritage de Liberté, d’Egalité et de Fraternité pour toute l’humanité, légué par la Révolution en ce jour de 1789 par la prise de la Bastille.
Je trouve immensément prometteur pour l’avenir de l’humanité que la France, une nation où la protestation est historiquement considérée comme un acte patriotique à l’exception bizarre de la répression par de Gaulle des manifestations de mai 1968 et de la répression par Macron de la vague actuelle provenant de Marseille comme un parallèle des protestations américaines Black Lives Matter du Summer of Fire 2020, symptôme du racisme systémique et de l’inégalité des pouvoirs qui fait écho à l’ère de l’Algérie coloniale et de l’effondrement naissant de notre démocratie et de la civilisation mondiale, célèbre comme événement fondateur la prise d’une prison , et une qui était en partie destinée à servir d’évasion au poète lauréat de la Révolution, le marquis de Sade. Il avait crié à la foule depuis la fenêtre de sa cellule que les geôliers exécutaient des prisonniers ; il fut malheureusement emmené à l’asile de fous de Charenton avant d’être libéré, épisode immortalisé par Peter Weiss dans Marat/Sade. Libéré par la Révolution, de Sade est devenu un chef de file de l’aile radicale des Jacobins, jusqu’à ce que sa belle élégie pour Marat se heurte aux desseins de Robespierre et le conduise à nouveau en prison.
Quand je me décris et me considère comme un Jacobin en termes d’identité politique, je pense à la relation entre Marat et de Sade comme espaces négatifs l’un de l’autre et à l’inégalité systémique du pouvoir comme origine du mal et l’anneau wagnérien de la peur, le pouvoir et la force qui renversent les prises de pouvoir révolutionnaires en tant que tyrannie.
Pendant son séjour à la Bastille, il a écrit l’une des interrogations les plus brillantes et les plus transgressives sur les origines du mal dans un pouvoir inégal dans sa violence incarnée en tant qu’Église et État, 120 jours de Sodome. Chaque mot en est toujours vrai et s’applique à toutes les tyrannies de la force et du contrôle, aux États totalitaires et autoritaires de toutes sortes et à ma pensée fascisme en particulier, telle qu’elle est interprétée par le grand Pasolini dans le film, comme symptômes de la maladie de la peur, du pouvoir , et forcer. Lisez-le avec son ouvrage complémentaire, Les origines du totalitarisme par Hannah Arendt.
“PASOLINI : Je prévois simplement de remplacer le mot “Dieu”, tel que de Sade l’utilise, par le mot “pouvoir”. Les sadiques sont toujours les puissants. Ces quatre messieurs de l’histoire sont un banquier, un duc, un évêque et un juge. Ils représentent la puissance constituée. L’analogie est évidente, et je ne l’ai pas inventée. Je ne fais qu’ajouter quelque chose qui m’appartient et je le complique en le mettant à jour.
BACHMANN : Quelle est la signification restante et continue du travail de de Sade ?
PASOLINI : Le fait que le corps devienne une marchandise. Mon film est conçu comme une métaphore sexuelle, qui symbolise, de manière visionnaire, la relation entre exploiteur et exploité. Dans le sadisme et dans la politique du pouvoir, les êtres humains deviennent des objets. Cette similitude est la base idéologique du film.
Pour une étude plus approfondie de de Sade en tant que figure centrale de la Révolution, je vous renvoie à The Sadeian Woman and the Ideology of Pornography d’Angela Carter, une interprétation féministe qui informe tout son travail, The Fan-Maker’s Inquisition: A Novel of the Marquis de Sade de Rikki Ducornet et Le marquis de Sade : une vie de Neil Schaeffer.
Ma liste de lecture sur la Révolution française comprend Citizens de Simon Schama, The Days of the French Revolution de Christopher Hibbert et A Place of Greater Safety de Hilary Mantel.
En tant que sources causales de la révolution mondiale contre le système de la monarchie aristocratique et de la religion d’État, les révolutions américaine et française sont une vague de démocratie et de droits humains universels qui ont radicalement réinventé les relations sociales humaines, l’être, le sens et la valeur, et continuent de se propager à travers le monde. monde. Il a trouvé des échos dans la révolution russe et dans la lutte anticoloniale en Inde et presque partout sur terre alors que l’humanité se réveillait de sa longue obscurité en tant que tyrannies de maîtres et d’esclaves.
Aujourd’hui, ses valeurs et ses idéaux se manifestent dans les révolutions et les mouvements de libération à travers le monde, à Hong Kong, en Palestine et en Ukraine, parmi ces lieux où j’ai voyagé en solidarité avec les luttes de leurs peuples, ceux que Franz Fanon appelait “Les damnés du Terre », et que notre Statue de la Liberté proclame les « masses entassées aspirant à être libres ».
Que signifie la Liberté pour nous aujourd’hui ?
Mémoire, histoire et identité ; un processus de devenir humain et un terrain de lutte entre nos ancrages et nos aspirations, et un en mouvement constant et un état de changement ; impermanent, éphémère, protéiforme, façonné par le dynamisme entre authenticité et falsification alors que nous errons dans un désert de miroirs, de mensonges et d’illusions d’autorité qui cherchent à nous capturer, à nous déformer et à nous subjuguer, à nous asservir et à voler nos âmes.
C est la première révolution de toute l’humanité ; la lutte pour nous créer en tant qu’êtres autonomes, libres des identités autorisées et de la tyrannie des idées de vertu des autres, contre les forces de déshumanisation et les hégémonies élitaires de la richesse, du pouvoir et des privilèges, les divisions de l’altérité exclusive et les fascismes du sang, de la foi, et le sol, et les inégalités et les injustices de la terreur d’État, la répression de la dissidence, la violence institutionnelle, la force et le contrôle.
Devenir nous-mêmes est la première révolution dans laquelle nous devons tous lutter, dont d’autres formes de lutte révolutionnaire sont des échos et des reflets, et elles sont unies dans la lutte pour la propriété et le contrôle de notre identité en tant qu’aspects d’une émergence commune de l’être humain, sens, et valeur.
Refuser de se soumettre est le premier acte humain qui confère la liberté, car celui qui ne peut être contrôlé est libre. En ce moment de résistance à l’autorité et à la tyrannie, nous devenons invaincus, chacun si nous sommes des zones autonomes vivantes et des agents du chaos, de la liberté, de la réimagination et de la transformation de l’humanité.
Ouvrons les portes de nos prisons et soyons libres.
En ce 14 juillet, des manifestants ont hué leur président lors de son défilé, incendié son restaurant préféré et escarmouche avec la police à Paris, pas encore une vraie révolution puisqu’il n’y était pas à l’époque ; c’est le même point de bascule auquel Louis XVI a été confronté le 5 octobre 1789 lorsque le peuple a assiégé Versailles et exigé son retour à Paris. Tout n’est pas encore perdu ; la République peut encore être sauvée.
En ce moment de décision, je vous dis Macron et à tous ceux qui rencontrent la protestation non pas avec la réparation des griefs mais avec la répression brutale comme un état carcéral de force et de contrôle ; dans une société libre d’égaux, il faut diriger devant les masses comme leur champion, et non derrière les murs de votre palais comme leur tyran.
Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité, ou la Mort!
Les Misérables – Do You Hear The People Sing?
I Dreamed a Dream -film trailer
Valjean’s death
Les Misérables full soundtrack
Marat/Sade film
Quills film trailer
Javert, I mean Emmanuel Macron, booed during Bastille Day parade in Paris
Protesters set fire to a restaurant favoured by Macron and clash with police in Paris, not yet a true revolution as he was not in it at the time; this is the identical tipping point faced by Louis XVI on 5 October 1789 when the people besieged Versailles and demanded he return to Paris. All is not yet lost; the Republic can still be saved.
In this moment of decision, I say to you Macron and to all who meet protest not with redress of grievances but with brutal repression as a carceral state of force and control; in a free society of equals one must lead from the front of the masses as their champion, and not behind the walls of your palace as their tyrant.
Here is a poem which I originally wrote in French for a publisher in Switzerland, a nation with four official languages including German, Italian, and Romansh, and where place name conventions and other government business is conducted in Latin. I have often used its title, a phrase of my own invention, to refer to identity politics and the construction of ideas of race and nationality as authorized identities and an imposed condition of struggle, divisions of belonging and exclusionary otherness, and fascisms of blood and soil.
In my journals I refer to this idea in terms of the redemptive power of love, an interrogation of what is human, and how we may reply to death. I find it bears a definition in context; here then is my poem, and may it serve you as a Rashomon Gate event of transformation and liberation.
On one face of this coin, the tyrant Janus; the terror of our nothingness, commodification, falsification, dehumanization, abjection, and theft of the soul. On its reverse the liberator Janus; the joy of total freedom, seizure of power, self ownership, love which exalts us beyond the limits of our flesh and the discovery of our best selves as truths immanent in nature and written in our flesh.
A maker of mischief, I; named for the god of Chaos, Jay being a form of Janus, Roman god of doors and Guardian of the Gates, change, fate, beginnings and endings, who faces both directions of time and being at once. My mother said her immediate inspiration was Dr. Seuss’ figure of anarchy as a Trickster god in his iconic 1957 book The Cat in the Hat, and at times introduced me as Thing One and Thing Two, dyadic beings or a being with two forms who always do the opposite of what they are told, characters which reference Lewis Carroll’s court jesters as agents of subversion Tweedledum and Tweedledee.
Non Serviam, I Will Not Serve, the declaration with which Milton’s great hero launches his rebellion in Paradise Lost, a legacy of freedom given to me by my mother as an informing, motivating, and shaping force enfolded into my name.
Becoming human as a process of identity formation, self-construal or personae which is the word for a character mask which actors speak through in classical Greek theatre and which I believe describes identity as a performance and a narrative structure with precision, clarity, and great explanatory power, remains fluid, ambiguous, relative, ephemeral, and a primary ground of struggle.
Who chooses how we are to be defined, the boundaries between our limits and the possibilities of what we may become?
This is the first question to ask of any story; whose story is this?
To make an idea about a kind of people is an act of violence.
Let us abandon this claiming and naming, taxonomies of identification and hierarchies of belonging and exclusionary otherness, this use of social force as ideas of virtue, beauty, normality, membership, nation, of the violence of us and them. For until our boundaries become interfaces, the leading edges of such identities draw blood.
When we have escaped the legacies of our history and created ourselves anew as autonomous beings bound by nothing but our own visions and desires, what have we become, and who are we then?
Whoever we wish to be.
The Flag of My Skin
Time, memory, history, identity, and the revolution of becoming ourselves;
the skin I have escaped in serpentine transformation has become a flag,
but of what nation?
Who owns this kingdom of flesh that we share?
This realm of the senses is both a boundary we must transgress
to discover ourselves and seize ownership of our freedom and being,
and an interface by which we shape each other, a propulsive and generative force of the human sublime, of truths written in our skin.
We are interdependent, vast and oceanic beings, exalted by our passion beyond the limits of our form but also autonomous individuals who create ourselves and one another over enormous gulfs of time, limitless in our possibilities of becoming human but also forms described as negative spaces of each other.
Being is a dance of myriad partnerships, transforms of messages and principles of organization and growth which are recursive, chaotic, a beauty of strangeness and the bizarre, a realm of Medusa, goddess and monster.
There is but one rule in nature; anything goes.
Who authorizes and validates the possibilities and performances of our identity?
Shall we not dethrone, mock, and challenge such tyrannies of normality?
Let us forge an art of fire by which to liberate us from the shells of our history, a poetics of revolution by which to incite, provoke, and disturb.
There are no maps of the unknown; only of the history written in our form of how we solved problems of adaptation, assigned values, interpreted meanings, and created ourselves through our anchorages of civilization, a prochronism whose purpose is to buffer the shock of change and shield identity from loss.
Yet it is this history and memory we must escape to create ourselves anew as we wander this wilderness of mirrors and of echoes, a labyrinth of shifting paths which leads both inward to our true selves and outward to other peoples and to their different truths and possibilities of becoming human.
Our senses are transducers through which we change energy into messages and topologies of reality; it is this logosphere within which we live and from which we arise and recreate ourselves continually, transcendent and surreal.
Humans are a system for transforming things into ideas.
So also do we transform our world and each other by our ideas, the real and the ideal reflecting and shaping each other in recursion. And this revolutionary and ongoing coevolution and process of becoming human is the central creative force of existence and of humankind.
The struggle for ownership of identity between the masks that others make for us and those we make for ourselves is the first revolution in which we all must fight. And what of the flag of our skin, of our history which we have unwound from ourselves as an endless scroll of signs, as a shroud, a chrysalis?
This I leave to you, to those we claim and who in turn claim us, to others who are different as well as those alike, and to us all.
We may belong to our past, but the future belongs to us.
It is yours and ours, the undiscovered country; use it wisely.
Prolouge
7 juillet 2024 Le drapeau de ma peau
Voici un poème que j’ai écrit à l’origine en français pour un éditeur en Suisse, un pays avec quatre langues officielles dont l’allemand, l’italien et le romanche, et où les conventions de toponymie et autres affaires gouvernementales se déroulent en latin. J’ai souvent utilisé son titre, une expression de ma propre invention, pour faire référence aux politiques identitaires et à la construction d’idées de race et de nationalité en tant qu’identités autorisées et conditions de lutte imposées, aux divisions d’appartenance et à l’altérité d’exclusion, et aux fascismes du sang et du sang. sol.
Dans mes journaux, j’évoque cette idée en termes de pouvoir rédempteur de l’amour, d’interrogation sur ce qui est humain et sur la façon dont nous pouvons répondre à la mort. Je trouve qu’il porte une définition dans son contexte ; voici donc mon poème, et puisse-t-il vous servir d’événement de transformation et de libération de la Porte Rashomon.
Sur une face de cette pièce, le tyran Janus ; la terreur de notre néant, la marchandisation, la falsification, la déshumanisation, l’abjection et le vol de l’âme. Sur son revers le libérateur Janus ; la joie de la liberté totale, la prise du pouvoir, la propriété de soi, l’amour qui nous exalte au-delà des limites de notre chair et la découverte du meilleur de nous-mêmes comme vérités immanentes à la nature et inscrites dans notre chair.
Je suis un faiseur de mal ; nommé d’après le dieu du Chaos, Jay étant une forme de Janus, dieu romain des portes et gardien des portes, du changement, du destin, des débuts et des fins, qui fait face aux deux directions du temps et de l’être à la fois. Ma mère a dit que son inspiration immédiate était la figure de l’anarchie du Dr Seuss en tant que dieu filou dans son livre emblématique de 1957, Le chat au chapeau, et m’a parfois présenté comme Thing One et Thing Two, des êtres dyadiques ou un être à deux formes qui font toujours le contraire de ce qu’on leur dit, des personnages qui font référence aux bouffons de la cour de Lewis Carroll comme des agents de subversion Tweedledum et Tweedledee.
Non Serviam, I Will Not Serve, la déclaration par laquelle le grand héros de Milton lance sa rébellion dans Paradise Lost, un héritage de liberté que ma mère m’a donné comme force d’information, de motivation et de modelage enfermée dans mon nom.
Devenir humain en tant que processus de formation d’identité, de construction de soi ou de personae, qui est le mot désignant un masque de personnage à travers lequel les acteurs parlent dans le théâtre grec classique et qui, je crois, décrit l’identité comme une performance et une structure narrative avec précision, clarté et grande pouvoir explicatif, reste fluide, ambigu, relatif, éphémère et un terrain de lutte primordial.
Qui choisit la manière dont nous devons être définis, les frontières entre nos limites et les possibilités de ce que nous pouvons devenir ?
C’est la première question à poser à propos de toute histoire ; à qui est cette histoire ?
Se faire une idée sur un type de personnes est un acte de violence.
Abandonnons cette revendication et cette nomination, les taxonomies d’identification et les hiérarchies d’appartenance et d’altérité d’exclusion, cette utilisation de la force sociale comme idées de vertu, de beauté, de normalité, d’appartenance, de nation, de violence de nous et d’eux. Car jusqu’à ce que nos frontières deviennent des interfaces, les contours de ces identités font couler le sang.
Lorsque nous avons échappé aux héritages de notre histoire et nous sommes recréés en tant qu’êtres autonomes liés par rien d’autre que nos propres visions et désirs, que sommes-nous devenus et qui sommes-nous alors ?
Celui que nous souhaitons être.
Le drapeau de ma peau
Le temps, la mémoire, l’histoire, l’identité et la révolution de devenir nous-mêmes;
la peau que j’ai échappée dans la transformation serpentine est devenue un drapeau,
mais de quelle nation?
À qui appartient ce royaume de chair que nous partageons?
Ce royaume des sens est à la fois une frontière que nous devons transgresser
de se découvrir et de s’approprier notre liberté et notre être,
et une interface par laquelle nous nous façonnons, force propulsive et génératrice du sublime humain, de vérités écrites dans notre peau.
Nous sommes des êtres interdépendants, vastes et océaniques, exaltés par notre passion au-delà des limites de notre forme mais aussi des individus autonomes qui se créent et se créent au-dessus d’énormes gouffres de temps, sans limites dans nos possibilités de devenir humain mais aussi des formes décrites comme des espaces négatifs de L’une et l’autre.
L’être est une danse de myriades de partenariats, de transformations de messages et de principes d’organisation et de croissance qui sont récursifs, chaotiques, une beauté d’étrangeté et de bizarre, un royaume de Méduse, déesse et monstre.
Il n’y a qu’une seule règle dans la nature; tout va.
Qui autorise et valide les possibilités et les performances de notre identité?
Ne détrônerons-nous pas, ne nous moquerons-nous pas de ces tyrannies de la normalité?
Forgeons un art du feu pour nous libérer des coquilles de notre histoire, une poétique de la révolution pour inciter, provoquer et troubler.
Il n’y a pas de cartes de l’inconnu; seulement de l’histoire écrite sous notre forme de la façon dont nous avons résolu les problèmes d’adaptation, assigné des valeurs, interprété des significations, et nous nous sommes créés à travers nos ancrages de civilisation, un prochronisme dont le but est d’amortir le choc du changement et de protéger l’identité de la perte.
Pourtant, c’est à cette histoire et à cette mémoire que nous devons échapper pour nous recréer en nous promenant dans ce désert de miroirs et d’échos, un labyrinthe de chemins changeants qui mène à la fois vers nous-mêmes et vers d’autres peuples et vers leurs différentes vérités et possibilités. de devenir humain.
Nos sens sont des transducteurs par lesquels nous transformons l’énergie en messages et en topologies de réalité; c’est cette logosphère à l’intérieur de laquelle nous vivons et dont nous surgissons et nous recréons continuellement, transcendante et surréaliste.
Les humains sont un système pour transformer les choses en idées.
De même, nous transformons notre monde et les uns les autres par nos idées, le réel et l’idéal se reflétant et se façonnant mutuellement en récursivité. Et cette coévolution et ce processus révolutionnaires et continus de devenir humain sont la force créatrice centrale de l’existence et de l’humanité.
La lutte pour la propriété de l’identité entre les masques que les autres fabriquent pour nous et ceux que nous fabriquons pour nous-mêmes est la première révolution dans laquelle nous devons tous lutter. Et qu’en est-il du drapeau de notre peau, de notre histoire que nous avons déroulée de nous-mêmes comme un rouleau de signes sans fin, comme un linceul, une chrysalide?
Je vous laisse ceci, à ceux que nous revendiquons et qui à notre tour nous réclament, à ceux qui sont différents ainsi qu’à ceux qui nous ressemblent, et à nous tous.
Nous pouvons appartenir à notre passé, mais l’avenir nous appartient.
C’est le vôtre et le nôtre, le pays inconnu; fais-en bon usage.
And here is my celebration of Chaos:
January 2 2023 Begin We the Festival of Janus
Janus represents the principles of change, duality, transformation, and the interfaces between bounded realms, though we know him now mainly as a god of Chaos through his portrayal in Halloween, episode six of season two, Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
He is called the Gatekeeper, a guardian and guide of the soul on our journeys through the myriad possibilities of the multiverse and its limitless futures, roles primary to dreamwork, ecstatic trance, and poetic vision, aligned with the mysteries of Orpheus, Asclepius, and Dionysius, whose role as god of beginnings and endings echoes the primary role of Ganesha as opener of the ways. Janus shares with Saturn or Chronos his role as Old Father Time.
Plutarch describes Janus in his Life of Numa; “For this Janus, in remote antiquity, whether he was a demi-god or a king, was a patron of civil and social order, and is said to have lifted human life out of its bestial and savage state. For this reason he is represented with two faces, implying that he brought men’s lives out of one sort and condition into another.”
Ovid writes of Janus in his Fasti; “But what god am I to say thou art, Janus of double-shape? for Greece hath no divinity like thee. The reason, too, unfold why alone of all the heavenly ones thou doest see both back and front.”
My name, Jay, is a form of the name Janus, though also derived from the Latin name Gaius, “to be joyful”; if we are an unfolding of our ancestor’s actions, intentions, dreams, visions, and wishes, part of the history which possesses us as DNA and inhabits us as stories, I imagine being named for the god of Chaos, time, and poetic vision, a name which also suggests states of rapture and exaltation, may have been a shaping force in becoming who I am, a kind of spell cast by my mother who named me so.
Who did my parents want me to become? When as a child I asked my mother why she named me Jay, she said; “It means new beginnings. I wanted you to know you can do anything, be whomever you choose, right now, every moment, every time you hear your name. And whatever uniqueness and truth you create will be just as right and true as anyone else’s.” She said her immediate inspiration was Dr. Seuss’ figure of anarchy as a Trickster god in The Cat in the Hat, and at times introduced me as Thing One and Thing Two.
When I asked my father as a teenager, he said; “Who is Jay? You tell me.”
Of myself in my chosen role as a Bringer of Chaos, transgressions of the Forbidden, violations of normality, and liberation from the tyranny of other peoples ideas of virtue I have written often, also of Chaos as the adaptive range of systems and both destructive and creative forces of nature, of fracture, disruption, delegitimation, and the collapse of order, law, and authority as revolutionary struggle. In the context of the Festival of Janus I mention here that it can also become, as Foucault described, a sacred calling in pursuit of truth.
His startling image of wholeness as a dyadic figure with two faces which may be assigned to any oppositional forces, masks of comedy and tragedy from which developed theatre and the idea of the soul or individual personal self as personae, roles we play, from ritual performances in times of great peril and threat to discover and create paths forward into the future, but is also an image of the masculine and feminine sides of a whole person. In Janus we have at the origin and heart of our civilization a figure and festival of counternarrative and subversion of patriarchy and authorized identities of sex and gender, and a celebration of idealizations of masculine and feminine beauty which also interrogates them. Go ahead, frighten the horses.
Herein we may perform those truths immanent in nature and written in our flesh, and create and discover our own truths through performance of our best selves.
To begin our Festival of Janus at the birth of the new year, I invite you to play a game with me; a Game of Possible Selves. Choose six characters you would like to perform, traditionally in the Roman Festival of Janus three male and three female though any will do, as nature has but one rule; anything goes. If nothing else, randomizing identities as theatre and creative play will tell you what you value, and who you should be looking for in partners as instruments through whom we create ourselves. Write them down, cast a six sided dice, and let the dice decide who you will be today. No matter who you perform, you will still have five identities in reserve, and tomorrow is another day.
That one twelfth of our year is dedicated to Janus as January, figure of the new year, should tell us of his importance in our civilization, and the centrality of Chaos, transformation, rebirth, and change to our historical constructions of identity and its legacies which we drag behind us as shadow selves, like an invisible reptilian tail.
Here I think of patriarchy and sexual terror, white supremacist terror and the epigenetic trauma of slavery and the Holocaust, divisions of exclusionary otherness and fascisms of blood, faith, and soil.
And in the context of the shadows of historical and systemic inequalities and injustices, atavisms of instinct and fear weaponized in service to power and elite hegemonies of wealth, power, and privilege, the liminal time of the new year during the month of January, sacred to change and the emergence of the new like a serpent sloughing off its old skin, is a gate of entrance into the world for hope, that final curse or gift of Pandora, in the midst of our public trauma and grieving since the capture of America by the Fourth Reich in the Stolen Election of 2016 and the final act of Our Clown of Terror, Traitor Trump in the January 6 Insurrection, and the endless chasms of darkness, subversions of our democracy, perversions of our values, and violations of our ideals we have all endured since.
For the principle of change offers us a transformational moment of decision in which all things are possible, and we may escape the consequences of our histories in creating ourselves anew.
Who then shall we become? Asks our self of surfaces, images, and masks which each moment negotiates our boundaries with others.
To which our secret self, the self of darkness and of passion, the self that lives beyond the mirror and knows no limits, unbound by time and space and infinite in possibilities, replies; Who do you want to become?
Here follow excerpts from some of the people who have written beautifully of Janus.
As written on the Anderson Lock website; “The ancient Romans had a specific god who held the key, so to speak, to the metaphorical doors or gateways between what was and what is to come—the liminal space of transitioning out of one period of time and into something new.
In Roman mythology, Janus was the god of doors, gates, and transitions. Janus represented the middle ground between both concrete and abstract dualities such as life/death, beginning/end, youth/adulthood, rural/urban, war/peace, and barbarism/civilization.
Janus was known as the initiator of human life, transformations between stages of life, and shifts from one historical era to another. Ancient Romans believed Janus ruled over life events such as weddings, births, and deaths. He oversaw seasonal events such as planting, harvests, seasonal changes, and the new year.
According to Roman mythology, Janus was present at the beginning of the world. As the god of gates, Janus guarded the gates of heaven and held access to heaven and other gods. For this reason, Janus was often invoked first in ancient Roman religious ceremonies, and during public sacrifices, offerings were given to Janus before any other deity. In fact, there is evidence that Janus was worshipped long before many of the other Roman gods, dating all the way back to the time of Romulus (the founder and first ruler of Rome).
And if you’ve ever wondered how the month of January got its name, you have Janus to thank. As the Roman god of beginnings and transitions, Janus is the namesake of January, the first month of a new year.
Why does Janus have two faces? What is unusual about the god Janus is his iconic image. As the god of transitions and dualities, Janus is portrayed with two faces—one facing the past, and one facing the future. He also holds a key in his right hand, which symbolizes his protection of doors, gates, thresholds, and other separations or openings between spatial boundaries. In ancient Rome, the symbol of the key also signified that a traveler has come to find safe harbor or trade goods in peace.”
As written by Caillan Davenport in The Conversation; “January 1 can be a day of regret and reflection – did I really need that fifth glass of bubbly last night? – mixed with hope and optimism for the future, as we make plans to renew gym memberships or finally sort out our tax files. This January ritual of looking forward and backward is fitting for the first day of a month named after Janus, the Roman god of beginnings and endings.
Doorkeeper of the heavens
In Roman mythology, Janus was a king of Latium (a region of central Italy), who had his palace on the Janiculum hill, on the western bank of the River Tiber. According to the Roman intellectual Macrobius, Janus was given divine honours on account of his own religious devotion, as he set a pious example for all his people.
Janus was proudly venerated as a uniquely Roman god, rather than one adopted from the Greek pantheon. All forms of transition came within his purview – beginnings and endings, entrances, exits, and passageways. The name Janus (Ianus in Latin, as the alphabet had no j) is etymologically related to ianua, the Latin word for door. Janus himself was the ianitor, or doorkeeper, of the heavens.
The cult statue of Janus depicted the god bearded with two heads. This meant that he could see forwards and backwards and inside and outside simultaneously without turning around. Janus held a staff in his right hand, in order to guide travellers along the correct route, and a key in his left to open gates.
War and Peace
Janus is famously associated with the transition between peace and war. Numa, the legendary second king of Rome, who was famed for his religious piety, is said to have founded a shrine to Janus Geminus (“two-fold”) in the Roman Forum, close to the Senate House. It was located in the place where Janus had bubbled up a spring of hot boiling water in order to thwart an attack on Rome by the Sabines.
The shrine was an enclosure formed by two arched gates at each end, joined together by walls to form a passageway. A bronze statue of Janus stood in the middle, with one head facing towards each gate. According to the historian Livy, Numa intended the shrine; “as an index of peace and war, that when open it might signify that the nation was in arms, when closed that all the peoples round about were pacified.”
The gates of Janus are said to have stayed closed for 43 years under Numa, but rarely remained so thereafter, although the first emperor Augustus boasted that he closed the shrine three times. Nero later celebrated his conclusion of peace with Parthia by minting coins showing the gates of Janus firmly shut.
Happy New Year
Romans believed that the month of January was added to the calendar by Numa. The association between Janus and the calendar was cemented by the construction of 12 altars, one for each month of the year, in Janus’s temple in the Forum Holitorium (the vegetable market). The poet Martial thus described Janus as “the progenitor and father of the years”.
From 153 BC onwards, the consuls (the chief magistrates of the Republic) took office on the first day of January (which the Romans called the Kalends). The new consuls offered prayers to Janus, and priests dedicated spelt mixed with salt and a traditional barley cake, known as the ianual, to the god. Romans distributed New Year’s gifts of dates, figs, and honey to their friends, in the hope that the year ahead would turn out to be sweet, as well as coins – a sign of hoped-for prosperity.
Janus assumed a key role in all Roman public sacrifices, receiving incense and wine first before other deities. This was because, as the doorkeeper of the heavens, Janus was the route through which one reached the other gods, even Jupiter himself. The text On Agriculture, written by Cato the Elder, describes how offerings would be made to Janus, Jupiter, and Juno as part of the pre-harvest sacrifice to ensure a good crop.
So if you’re feeling caught between two worlds this January 1, why not head outside and celebrate Roman-style?”
As written by Michael Shanks of the Janus Initiative, which he defines as “archaeological perspectives on understanding and managing change and innovation”; “Our case is that being mindful of the past, hindsight, is essential to being able to act for the future. Looking back, researching and exploring, that we might be better prepared for uncertain futures.
This is not about history – knowing what happened in the past. JANUS is about an archaeological sensibility – connecting (what remains of) the past with the future through our experiences and actions now.
Janus? Janus was the Roman divinity associated with transition, passages from pasts through to futures, windows, doorways and thresholds.
Simultaneously looking back and forward, Janus connects pasts and futures, gaining perspective with hindsight and foresight, finding orientation now, not by telling the story of the past, not by predicting what is to come, but by seeking relationships, passages, flows from the past, ways the past lingers to haunt, hinder, and inspire the building of the future.
The scene offers insights into relationships between temporality and agency – our capacity to matter, to make things happen – exactly the themes we are foregrounding in our initiative.”
The power of story: A quick recap of the story in needed to understand the connections.
Cronos (Kronos, Cronus) was the youngest of the first generation of Titans, giant offspring of primordial Ouranos (Heaven) and Gaia (Earth). Ouranos offended Gaia by imprisoning some of their younger offspring and she sought revenge by persuading Cronos to move against his father. With a stone sickle, gift from Gaia, Cronos castrated Ouranos and threw the bloody parts into the ocean, from which Venus (Aphrodite) emerged.
His actions haunted Cronos. Fearing that one of his own offspring would turn against him, he ate them all as they were born, devouring a threatening future. His wife Rhea eventually put a stop to this when she hid Zeus and tricked Cronos to swallow a stone instead, wrapped as a new-born. Zeus returned in his maturity, poisoned Cronos, and defeated him and his Titans with the help of his brother and sister gods, vomited up alive because of the poison emetic.
Cronos was regularly been associated with Chronos, a divine personification of time. He cut and severed Ouranos, marking the rift between heaven and earth, a gash in eternity. The scythe or sickle has become symbol of the grim reaper harvesting mortal lives.
Dramatis Personae
Romano draws Chronos holding an Ouroboros. Serpent devouring its own tail, a symbol since at least antiquity of eternal return, rebirth, reincarnation. The divinity is Aion, cyclical time, unbounded, the circuit of the heavens represented by the Zodiac, the seasons, in contrast to the divisible, empirical and sequential time of Cronus, cut into past, present, and future. Aion is a god of the ages, of saecula, circling generations of life.
Aion, god of the ages, is within the circuit of the Zodiac, (an eternal mobius strip) between a summer and winter tree. In front is Gaia, Mother Earth, with four children, the four seasons.
The winged figure is usually taken to be Nike, Victoria, holding out the winner’s crown at the moment of success. But another interpretation is possible.
This is a scene from the great conflicts between the Titans and the Gods. With Gaia’s help Cronos has seized the opportunity and cut open the heavens. He too will fall when Zeus in turn seizes his opportunity, poisons Cronos and releases the Olympians to overthrow the Titans. Son of Cronos, or perhaps brother, the god of seizing an opportunity to act is Kairos. And Kairos is usually depicted as a winged youth, and as weighing opportunities in a scale balanced on a knife edge.
Kairos is time to act, or not. A central principle of rhetoric, the art of persuasion, Kairos is a passing instant when an opening appears to be driven through (there are links with shooting an arrow and passing a weaving shuttle through warp and weft). The key to agency, one’s capacity to achieve, to realize potential, is the ability to adapt to and take advantage of changing, complex and contingent circumstances. This is Kairos.
Janus stands by, a horrified witness. Romano has modeled the god(dess) on Aphrodite, who had been born of the castrated heavens, Cronos cutting eternity. Janus is involved, part of the many stories woven in and through this group of four characters or principles, seeing the interconnections between eternity and event, birth and mortality, persuasion and action, planning and opportunity, the return of the past to take vengeance.
Time, decision-making, persuasion, opportunity, action.
This cast of characters and principles, this dramatis personae, takes us into an allegorical world of time eternal, cyclical, and eventful, of perception, persuasion, decision and action.
Connections of past through to future potential, the intermingling of hindsight, insight, foresight: these are also the core of an archaeological sensibility and imagination.
Imagine a person from another time in human history, from any region, race, gender, or religion. No matter the place, time, or status, you will find differences from your present situation. However, one thing remains unchanged: the need to begin again, to follow new paths and to move forward.
If we look at it through the beliefs of ancient times, we realize that the concept of new beginnings is present throughout the history of human beings. For this reason, I explain the relationship between new beginnings and mythology. Because by looking at the past we can better understand the future.
In the ancient Rome, they did not escape this need either. They had their own god to whom they used to pray to give them hope and protect their efforts to start afresh.”
Ritual of Janus as a god of Chaos in “Halloween”, the sixth episode of the second season of Buffy the Vampire Slayer; note the ritual use of masks of our true or possible selves in Halloween trick or treating in connection with Chaos as a sacred path in pursuit of the truth of ourselves
On this the anniversary of one of history’s most terrible examples of man’s inhumanity to man, state terror and racial violence, genocide and ethnic cleansing, and of the massive scale of hate crime when enacted by a government as an authorized policy of fascisms of blood, faith, and soil so very like those recently employed by America against our own Black and other nonwhite citizens and in concentration camps for Latin migrants at our border, let us consider the nature of the path we are on and where it might lead.
There is nothing more dangerous than a man who believes God is on his side, for this belief justifies all evils. He who has granted himself absolution from any crimes committed in the pursuit of a sanctified goal, like the Pope once granted beforehand to all Crusaders for any sins committed during conversion by the sword, has opened the door to a bottomless well of depravity, perversion, brutality, and atavisms of barbarian darkness.
The Srebrenica Massacre stands out from the background of war crimes and atrocities in a chiaroscuro of wickedness and of terrors; the three legged race to the dehumanization of peoples and the degradation of values between the Bosnian Orthodox Serbs, their victims the Muslims of Bosnia who were abandoned in place by the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, and the Catholic Croatians likewise set adrift by the defeat of the Austrian Empire in the wake of World War One having recurred like Nietzsche’s Eternal Return to echo the collapse of civilization in a whirlpool of destruction. The Siege of Sarajevo alone lasted three times longer than the Battle of Stalingrad, to which it compares unfavorably in other respects as well.
Of Sarajevo I shall speak here not of the monstrous acts of those who would be conquerors, nor of the courageous resistance of their intended victims who held true to their faith and to each other in the face of death and torture, nor even of the valor and compassion of the volunteers of the International Brigade who placed themselves between hammer and anvil, but of a small horror which has come to symbolize for me the unimaginable horrors of war; the Jar of Eyes.
On the desk of a commander of death squads sat a jar full of eyes, and beside it an ice cream scoop which he would toy with, stroking its stainless smoothness with an absentminded and sensual languor while interrogating prisoners.
This he did in imitation of the Roman Emperor Basil the Second the Bulgar Slayer, who after the battle of Kleidion in 1014 Christianized Bulgaria by blinding the army he had defeated, and leaving one man in one hundred with a single eye to guide the others home and terrify the nation into submission.
How do I know this, and what were we to each other, this monster and I? Herein I recall and speak as a witness of history a Defining Moment in which we played a game of chess with the life of a prisoner of his as the prize.
Having materialized at his gate and asking to see the commander, itself unusual and a curious thing to a man with his fearsome reputation, I came bearing the gift of a recording of an opera I knew he loved and could not attend due to his duties and price on his head as a war criminal, Leoš Janáček’s House of the Dead set in a Serbian prison and based on the Dostoevsky novel, with the promise of more music in trade for a prisoner he held and did not know the value of. He agreed to the bargain, but with one condition; we would play three games of chess after dinner in the following days, and I must win or force a draw once.
We had three meetings over three days of an hour each, over dinner and chess, during which we conversed of the historical civilization he was fighting to defend, a fight which had made him a monster; music, philosophy, art, literature. Once a prisoner was brought in, seated and held fast by guards like a third companion at dinner whom he tortured while we sipped tea and spoke of the scene between Christ and the Grand Inquisitor in Dostoevsky‘s The Brothers Karamazov. I think he was lonely.
Within the jar the eyes would float randomly, hypnotic, reflective, capturing ones will to resist with a Medusa-like gaze of objectification and dehumanization appropriated from their tormentors, a talisman of transference of power. A jar of silent screams, erased lives, and the lost witness of history; how can we accuse our destroyers when we have no mouths?
Here among the dragons, where the rule of law cannot reach and our maps of meaning and value have given way to tantalizing empty spaces which beckon with the siren call of the Forbidden, where the only currency is fear and the only relationships those of power and dominion, we challenge and define by their absence and contrary the limits of what is human.
For we are all trapped in the Jar of Eyes, and if we are to reawaken and assume our true forms we must find a means of escape.
QUO VADIS, AIDA? | Official UK Trailer
Remembering Srebrenica: 20 Years On | Documentary
John Gielgud as The Grand Inquisitor /BBC 1977 film
Prelude – FROM THE HOUSE OF THE DEAD Janáček – National Theatre Brno
(set in a Serbian prison, based on Dostoevsky’s novel)
Leoš Janáček The House Of The Dead, recording led by Sir Charles Mackerras, courtesy of Operawire
The Brothers Karamazov, a reading list
The Brothers Karamazov: Translated by Richard Pevear & Larissa Volokhonsky, Fyodor Dostoevsky
Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov, by Julian W. Connolly provides the definitive reader’s guide to the novel by a professor who taught it for over twenty years.
Multi-Mediated Dostoevsky: Transposing Novels into Opera, Film, and Drama,
by Alexander Burry explores the interpretation of his works in Sergei Prokofiev’s opera The Gambler, Leos Janacek’s opera From the Dead House, Akira Kurosawa’s film The Idiot, and Adrzej Wajda’s drama The Devils.
How very interesting this set of Russian Doll puzzles each nested within others, complex, nuanced, obscured, relational and interdependent, in Iran’s game of concealed intent and surprise revelations, wherein true power can wear the mask of opposition and all moves must be weighed on two fronts; internal in balancing the Islamic purity from which the theocratic regime’s power derives with the human rights of its citizens, especially those of women, and external in the nuclear brinksmanship with America and with Israel in confronting the genocide of the Palestinians and the Israeli imperial conquest and dominion of her neighbors generally in an escalating regional conflict.
Herein the symbolic and perfunctory tit for tat retaliations between the Arab-American Alliance in regard to our mad dog proxy Israel and the Dominion of Iran which includes Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Yemen has become a theatre of the Third World War as her ally Russia attempts to re-found her empire.
This was the true reason for the assassination of Iran’s former President, opening move in the realignment of Iran and de-escalation of the nuclear front with America and the war for the Rights of Man with Israel which threatens to engulf Lebanon once again. I wish to never come to the attention of whomever assassinated President Raisi, very like that of Prigozhin, with so deft a hand as to leave not even the shadow of his passing on the tides of history.
Iran’s new President Masoud Pezeshkian was elected to change all of this; end the patriarchal sexual terror and control of women which makes Iran a pariah in the international community, of which torture, mutilation, and rape as punishments for hijab violations, education, or other acts of defiance and independence by uppity women and the slave trafficking of often very young women through temporary marriage licenses which fund the syndicate of mullahs are two primary issues, end the brutal repression of dissent and campaign of terror against journalists and freedom of speech, press, and protest for redress of grievances, as well as re-engagement with America through nuclear disarmament process and stepping back from the abyss of total war with Israel.
Such liberalization may signal the birth of a democracy in Iran, and her transformation from an enemy to an ally in the cause of our universal human rights, both within and beyond Iran. We shall see.
In this moment I welcome President Masoud Pezeshkian as a brother and ally in the cause of Becoming Human.
Masoud Pezeshkian: the former heart surgeon who became president of Iran
11 جولای 2024 پیروزی ایران: چرا ایران رئیس جمهور جدید دارد و این به چه معناست؟ ایران در آستانه جنگ تمام عیار با آمریکا و اسرائیل قرار دارد و تنشزدایی میکند
چقدر جالب است این مجموعه از پازلهای عروسک روسی که هر کدام در درون دیگران، پیچیده، ظریف، مبهم، رابطهای و وابسته به یکدیگر، در بازی نیت پنهان و افشاگریهای غافلگیرکننده ایران، که در آن قدرت واقعی میتواند نقاب مخالف را بر تن کند، در درون دیگران قرار گرفته است. دو جبهه؛ درونی در ایجاد توازن بین خلوص اسلامی که قدرت رژیم تئوکراتیک از آن ناشی میشود با حقوق انسانی شهروندانش، بهویژه حقوق زنان، و بیرونی در پرتگاه هستهای با آمریکا و با اسرائیل در مقابله با نسلکشی فلسطینیان و تسخیر امپریالیستی اسرائیل و تسلط بر همسایگانش به طور کلی در یک درگیری منطقه ای در حال تشدید.
در اینجا انتقامجویی نمادین و آشکار بین ائتلاف عربی-آمریکایی در رابطه با نیابت سگ دیوانه ما اسرائیل و سلطه ایران که شامل عراق، سوریه، لبنان و یمن میشود، به عنوان متحد او به صحنه جنگ جهانی سوم تبدیل شده است. روسیه تلاش می کند تا امپراتوری خود را دوباره تأسیس کند.
این دلیل واقعی ترور رئیس جمهور سابق ایران، حرکت گشایش در همسویی مجدد ایران و تنش زدایی از جبهه هسته ای با آمریکا و جنگ برای حقوق بشر با اسرائیل بود که تهدید می کند یک بار دیگر لبنان را در برگیرد. آرزو میکنم هرگز مورد توجه کسی قرار نگیرم که رئیسجمهور رئیسی، بسیار شبیه به پریگوژین، با دستی چنان ماهرانه که حتی سایه مرگ او را بر جزر و مد تاریخ ترور نکرد.
رئیس جمهور جدید ایران مسعود پزشکیان برای تغییر همه اینها انتخاب شد. پایان دادن به ترور جنسی مردسالارانه و کنترل زنان، که ایران را در جامعه بینالملل منحوس میسازد، شکنجه، مثله کردن، و تجاوز جنسی به عنوان مجازات نقض حجاب، آموزش یا سایر اعمال تجاوزکارانه و استقلال طلبانه توسط زنان بداخلاق و تجارت برده اغلب زنان بسیار جوان از طریق جواز ازدواج موقت که به سندیکای ملاها کمک مالی می کند، دو موضوع اصلی است، پایان دادن به سرکوب وحشیانه مخالفان و کارزار ترور علیه روزنامه نگاران و آزادی بیان، مطبوعات و اعتراض برای جبران نارضایتی ها، و همچنین باز هم تعامل با آمریکا از طریق فرآیند خلع سلاح هسته ای و عقب نشینی از ورطه جنگ کامل با اسرائیل.
چنین آزادسازی ممکن است نشان دهنده تولد یک دموکراسی در ایران و تبدیل آن از یک دشمن به یک متحد در راه حقوق بشر جهانی ما، چه در داخل و چه در خارج از ایران باشد. خواهیم دید.
در این لحظه از رئیس جمهور مسعود پزشکیان به عنوان یک برادر و متحد در راه انسان شدن استقبال می کنم.
Iran, a retrospective of my liberation struggles
February 3 2024 Biden’s Presidential Campaign Becomes a War of Imperial Conquest Against the Dominion of Iran
In reply to the victorious Red Sea campaign of allies like myself of Palestine, a counter blockade of Israel’s war crime of blockading humanitarian aid to Gaza, Biden the Baby Killer has launched a broad multistate regional conflict of imperial conquest against the Dominion of Iran, triggered by the deaths of American soldiers at the hands of Iranian allies or proxy forces.
This is horrible, the murders of our guardians at Tower 22and a crime for which its perpetrators must be held responsible and brought a Reckoning; but so also is the Israeli campaign of ethnic cleansing in Gaza. When Netanyahu and Biden are removed from power as war criminals, and the rain of death our taxes pay for in Gaza silenced, there will be time to pursue justice for the victims of this conflict; all the victims, regardless of what nation claims to act in their name as legitimation of war and the centralization of power.
Why do we sink or seize any ship carrying arms to Israel?
We contest the freedom of the high seas for any nation which funds and arms crimes against humanity, war crimes, ethnic cleansing, or genocide.
America’s abandonment of the principle of our universal human rights under the command of President Biden is a historic betrayal of all that we love and hold dear as truths which are self-evident, and this is Biden’s re-election campaign of cruelty, amorality, and imperial terror.
This wave of strikes against Iran’s Axis of Resistance and its nonstate forces is merely Biden’s attempt, confronted with hostile crowds of his fellow Democrats at re-election campaign rallies, to divert us from the fact that in sponsoring Israel’s war crimes he has made us all complicit in genocide and crimes against humanity.
And this we must resist.
January 29 2024 Where Do We Go From Here? As the Gaza War Becomes A Great Powers Proxy War and a Theatre of World War Three, and the Arab-American Alliance With Our Colony Israel Versus the Iranian Dominion of Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Yemen With Their Key Ally Russia Make A Wishbone of the Holy Land
Much fluttering of diplomatic fans and rattling of sabers has attended the news of the missile strike in Jordan against American forces of imperial dominion, to which my first reaction was this; Confusion to the Enemy is a game which can be played by limitless numbers of players.
It is the reaction to this event, as if it were new and transgressive because American soldiers have died, which disturbs me now, and has provoked my interrogation of the escalation of regional conflict.
Biden has reacted to the news with a vow of vengeance, and I now consider the Gaza War to be a regional conflict and Great Powers Proxy War which has become a theatre of World War Three. And I am very much afraid that we are about to march off a precipice from which there is no return.
If you really want to end this war, if peace, equal power, and mutual respect for each other’s humanity is your goal and not the use of others lives in service to your own power, use BDS or any means necessary to break the Israeli blockade of humanitarian aid to Gaza and silence the bombs of ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity.
Ever curious how things look from the perspectives of others, I include herein those of the eminent historian of current events Heather Cox Richardson and of the power brokers themselves as questioned by The New York Times.
Our ideas diverge wildly from one another on many points, but such discontiguous and asymmetrical gaps can become spaces of free creative play and transformative change, just as boundaries may become interfaces.
First, Biden calls the missile strikes against America’s armies of Occupation and imperial dominion “despicable”, which of course may be said of any willful deaths of fellow human beings in war or otherwise, as is true for the Israeli mass murders in Gaza which they reply to. But he also calls them “wholly unjust”; I gather he would also call Little Bighorn an unjust reply to Wounded Knee, or any other victorious act of liberation struggle by an indigenous people against an imperial oppressor.
Biden’s unhinged diatribe against the idea of human rights and the equality of all human beings includes a spurious threat to “hold all those responsible to account at a time and in a manner [of] our choosing”. Clearly he means only the murderers who are not his instruments of terror and dominion, as he continues to fund, arm, and authorize Israel to kill thousands of women and children merely because Hamas claims to act in their name as a strategy of subjugation, much as Netanyahu and his loathsome regime claim to act in the name of all Israel and of Jewish peoples everywhere in service to their own power. I would say there are no good guys here, but numberless innocents and civilians whose lives are being instrumentalized by various forces like chips at a roulette table.
Heather Cox Richardson argues the side of the imperial oppressors Israel and America when she reduces the conflict in this moment to an attempt by the Iranian Dominion to sabotage the creation of a viable Palestinian state, when nothing could be further from the truth. What Iran, and the freedom fighters of Hezbollah, Hamas, and dozens of other entities, polities, and organizations whom I have been fighting alongside in the Red Sea Campaign and other direct actions by placing our bodies between death and its victims as we are able, what we want is independence and sovereignty for the Palestinians, whereas Netanyahu is pursuing his Final Solution to the Palestinian Problem and the client state Biden has proposed would be a puppet regime governed by Israel.
Like the authors of the New York Times article, I too would like to see the establishment of a Palestinian state; but one which is owned and controlled by and belongs to the Palestinians. I like and endorse many of their ideas; a Stage One prisoner exchange and the freeing of hostages.
Stage Two involves the creation of a viable state co-owned by its citizens though not one burdened with connections to or like Frankenstein’s monster stitched together of unlike parts from the carcasses of the Palestinian Authority or other Quisling or proxy regimes either under Iranian or Israeli control, and I believe what our true goal in a new nation must be if it is to endure and be just is a secular state in which Jews and Muslims may act as guarantors of each other’s rights and be each other’s liberators and not each other’s jailors, a nation not of master and slaves but of equals which will require total separation of church and state both in Israel and in Palestine. This is why I speak of the liberation of Israel and the liberation of Palestine as inherently linked together.
Stage three of this plan, the recognition of a sovereign and independent Palestine, requires regime change as well as institutional and systemic reimagination and transformation of the state of Israel, which means America uses defunding the Israeli military and other Boycott, Divestiture, and Sanction to bring change and democracy to Israel as a precondition of the Liberation of Palestine.
So while my stages of change may look like theirs, the results and ideal end states are radically different. I too wish to end the war, but I also wish for a future United Humankind wherein we each of us may perform our uniqueness in ways wherein no one’s happiness is harmed by anyone else’s.
What must be done? To this final question I wish to amplify the voice of Bernie Sanders, as always the moral compass of our nation. Only these points must I object to; first, I have been fighting the state of Israel and to bring change to Israel for a very long time now, since 1982, and have worked with allies from many of the forces involved now in this great liberation struggle, and I cannot say that Hamas was the sole responsible perpetrator of October 7; it is complex and absolutely involved complicity on the part of the state of Israel. Israel, Hamas, and several other groups have mutually infiltrated each other, in a cultural environment where loyalties are often transactional or relativistic, and this horrific crime may also have been orchestrated by an unknown party for unknown purposes, which has spies, saboteurs, influence peddlars, power brokers, puppets and puppetmasters, inside Mossad, the IDF, the Netanyahu regime, and their deniable assets among extremists and Zionist terrorists and assassins; and this is true also of Hamas which is an Israeli created and sponsored front organization as well as a genuine anticolonialist revolutionary group, and this may be said of any group of human beings in the region who hold or control power. This does not count crime syndicates, mercenaries, warlords, and traditional clan chiefdoms. Complex, ambiguous, multidimensional, and shifting; such is the Middle East.
Second, Bernie, may he be Beloved of the Infinite, states that Israel and all states have the right of self defense, and in this I cannot concur. There is no right of self defense against a people you are Occupying.
January 3 2024 On the Manufacture of Just Causes For War: Case of the Bombing of the Anniversary Ceremony For Qassem Suleimani In Iran, America’s Greatest Ally in the Fight Against ISIS Assassinated By Order of Traitor Trump To Sabotage Iran’s Democracy Movement
Unknown enemies of peace have in this moment of Israel’s ethnic cleansing of Gaza and the attacks on Lebanon as the opening move of a regional war of imperial conquest and dominion as a theocratic Jewish crusade, have chosen to put out the fire with gasoline and bombed the anniversary ceremony for one of the most beloved figures of Iran and the Shia world, Qassem Suleimani, once America’s greatest ally in the fight against ISIS, assassinated on this day four years ago by order of Traitor Trump to sabotage the anti-theocratic and anti-patriarchal Democracy movement which has spread from Shiraz, where we stormed the palace of the head mullah in 2019, to the whole of the nations Iran now controls; Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, and Yemen, and even crossing sectarian lines to destabilize Afghanistan and her patron Pakistan.
The design and objective of all of this is to prevent an Arab Spring which will liberate the region from patriarchal theocracy and the tyranny of military dictatorships; to create forms of casus belli or just cause for war. Totalitarian states of all kinds must create such enemies if they do not exist, and exploit divisions and fears, in order to centralize power to authority and the carceral state.
Fear, power, force; the Wagnerian Ring by which we are dehumanized, falsified, and commodified by authority and those who would enslave us.
So very useful for bringing the Iranian Dominion fully into the war with Israel, this; and to the secret puppetmasters of this event I now warn, be careful what you wish for, and whisper as the charioteer was so tasked to Roman emperors during their parades of triumph; “All glory is fleeting.”
As I wrote in my post of January 4 2020, Cry Havoc: Consequences of the American Assassination of the Iranian and Iraqi Shiite Military Leaders; As the consequences of this event ripple outward through the medium of time, multiplying possibilities. alternate futures, transforms of ourselves and our shapings of one another, the true magnitude of the American assassination of the Iranian and Iraqi Shiite military leaders will unfold.
It is a seed of destruction, but of who?
Trump has cried havoc and loosed the dogs of war; but such agents of death, once free of their leash, know no master and may devour us all.
An age of Chaos dawns, and we are abandoned to its whims and to its wantonness as it seizes and swallows the mighty, disrupts and changes power relations and structures of social form, bringer of death as an aspect of Time but also of transformation and rebirth.
Chaos which I celebrate as a principle, but which must be wielded as a dangerous and multidimensional force with great forethought and caution as we play the Great and Secret Game, for action and reaction always strike in both directions.
The magnificent Guillermo del Toro, in his gorgeous work Carnival Row which explores themes of racism and inequality among war refugees in the nation which failed to defend them from their conquerors and in harboring them finds itself confronted with an alien people as neighbors amid squalor, poverty, and social destabilization, much like many nations in our world today, depicts the formation of an alliance between two leaders of rival factions:
“Who is chaos good for?”
“Chaos is good for us. Chaos is the great hope of those in the shadows.”
Yet I cannot overstate its peril.
As I wrote in my post of January 12 2020, A re energized democracy revolution throughout Iran brings the theocracy of the mullahs near its fall in the wake of the government’s mistaken destruction of a civilian aircraft and its lies about its responsibility for the tragedy; After more than two months of massive protests in Iran against the rule of the mullahs, larger than anything seen since the 1979 overthrow of the Shah over forty years ago which brought the Shiite theocracy into power and includes massacres of hundreds of protestors but also open battle in Shiraz and other major cities between the government’s forces of repression and the people of Iran united in the cause of liberty, that no government may stand between man and God nor enforce compulsion in matters of faith, a re-energized democracy revolution brings the theocracy near its fall in the wake of the government’s scandal of murder and failed coverup.
The Islamic Republic’s mistaken destruction of a civilian airliner bearing 82 Iranian citizens among its dead, and the subsequent lies the government told its people regarding its responsibility for the tragedy, has redirected public outrage from America over the assassination of its national hero Qassem Suleimani back to the government and its tyranny of faith and global provocations, shattering a temporary alliance of pro and anti government forces which had aligned to resist American imperialism and the invasion expected to follow Trump’s unprovoked attack.
There has been much speculation regarding Trump’s motive for the Suleimani assassination, both a war crime and an act of war. Sadly, the motives are obvious; Trump ordered the murder of Suleimani from personal jealousy, as well as a diversion from his impeachment for his treasonous and criminal subversion of America and a ploy for the support of the Republican politicians in the pay of plutocrats of war.
As Trump concedes the defeat of America by the Taliban and begs peace after 18 years of pointless war in Afghanistan, he sought to inflate his ego by killing a military genius who was victorious in battle against both the Taliban and ISIS, keeping Iran free from foreign influences and who acted as an important American ally against two of our most implacable enemies.
Telling friend from foe was never a long suit for the Republican party of war, nor the disambiguation of self-aggrandizement from our national interest for our President.
As I wrote in my post of January 28 2020, Protests and Repression in Iraq: America and Iran are now equal ogres of foreign imperialism; As mass protests continue to disrupt Iraq in two interdependent movements, the Revolution for democracy and liberation from sectarian government corruption and the malign influence of Iran’s theocracy, and the resurgent nationalism which unites Shia and Sunni polities against Trump’s groundless and criminal murder of Iranian regional hero Qasem Soleimani and second in command of Iraq’s military forces Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, both relentless and victorious warriors in the fight against ISIS and the Taliban and the most effective allies America had in our struggle against those two greatest of our common enemies and in the regional war on terror, we find ourselves at a strange impasse, who looked to America for help in founding a true secular democracy in Iraq, free of the grip of warlords, semifeudal clan chieftains, and especially the force and repression of armed divisions of faith, for America and Iran are now equal ogres of foreign imperialism.
Casting out both of our benefactors, who are also our adversaries, is a perilous thing and also a sad one, for there are many possible futures in which a liberated Iraq can work constructively with both America and Iran toward a better society and peace throughout the Middle East.
Iran has not always nor in every case been a malign or oppressive force; Hezbollah especially has been a benevolent shield against Israeli militarism and conquest, and I call them my brothers as I did long ago in the days of our resistance in Beirut. This does not mean that I endorse the new government which seized power in Lebanon two days ago, in which pro-Iranian proxies have eliminated plurality of representation in an attempt to co- opt the Revolution and subvert democracy, and which the people will resist.
Nor is America merely the plutocratic fist within the Israeli glove, acting solely from greed and commercial interests to control the strategic resource of oil. Indeed, many of us see ourselves as inheritors and agents of the historic mandate to export the American Revolution, storming the gates of our prisons to bring freedom and equality to all humankind. And primary in this is the principle of freedom of conscience and of faith, that no government may use coercion in matters of faith or in our autonomy and direct personal relationship with the Infinite.
The difference between ally and nemesis, between a nation or any social group as a force of tyranny and authoritarian control or on the reverse side of the coin that of resistance and liberation, is often in how one uses or redirects that force.
In the struggle of good and evil in the human heart and in the public sphere of nations and of history, that which limits us is evil. Efforts by the state to put us in a box of rules severs our connections with each other and with the Infinite, and disfigures the soul by limiting our possibilities for authentic being, which we must each discover for ourselves.
He who stands between the Infinite and each of us serves neither.
September 16 2023 Revolt Against Theocracy and Institutionalized Patriarchal Sexual Terror in Iran: Anniversary of the Martyrdom of Mahsa Ahmini
Mass Protests in Iran and throughout the world on this anniversary of the martyrdom of Mahsa Ahmini in the cause of liberty and women’s rights of bodily autonomy
After more than three years of revolutionary struggle in Iran against the rule of the mullahs, larger than anything seen since the 1979 overthrow of the Shah over forty years ago which brought the Shiite theocracy into power and includes massacres of hundreds of protestors but also open battle in Shiraz and other major cities between the government’s forces of repression and the people of Iran united in the cause of liberty, that no government may stand between man and God nor enforce compulsion in matters of faith, a re-energized democracy revolution brings the theocracy near its fall in the wake of the government’s scandal of murder and failed coverup.
Massa Ahmini is all of us, and we may read our future in her fate should we fail to act in solidarity as guarantors of each other’s universal human rights. In Iran and in America and throughout the world, forces of change are gathering as we refuse to abandon each other.
Comes the whirlwind, and with it escape from the legacies of our history and a reimagination and transformation of the limitless possibilities of becoming human.
As I wrote in my post of September 20 2022, Revolt Against Patriarchy and Theocracy, Not In America This Time But In Iran; In glorious defiance of state sexual terror and patriarchal theocracy, the women of Iran have seized the streets in mass protests throughout the nation and challenged the fearsome and brutal Revolutionary Guards and morality police in several direct actions, a protest movement which may become a general revolt.
Iran is still shaken and destabilized by the echoes and reflections of the near-revolution in its vassal state of Iraq, and as in the chaos of the Battle of Shiraz in December of 2019 in which I fought, mass action provides windows of opportunity in which to bring a reckoning to police and other enforcers of tyranny and to the hegemonic elites whose wealth, power, and privilege they serve, but while we failed to cast those who would enslave us down from their thrones on that occasion three years ago, this time may be different.
For this time we have a martyr, and one who was a member of the Kurdish people, a semi-autonomous nation with vast oil wealth, American and other international support, a dream of independence and a modern army to win it with, and famous for her women warriors and the social equality of genders.
I hope this will be enough to tip the balance; from the moment of Mahsa Amini’s death, the democracy movement against theocracy and patriarchy in Iran has become linked with the independence struggle of Kurdistan as parallel and interdependent forms of liberation struggle.
Patriarchy cannot survive if half of humankind refuses to be unequal to and subjugated by the other half.
The secret of force and control is that it is hollow and brittle; authority loses its legitimacy simply by being disbelieved, and force finds its limit in disobedience and refusal to submit.
As I wrote on the occasion of a previous visit to Iran to make mischief for tyrants in my post of December 2 2019, Battle of Shiraz: the democratic revolution against theocracy in Iran is now an open war; For two weeks beginning Friday November 15 through Monday December 2, Iran’s major city of Shiraz was engulfed in open war as the democracy revolution against the theocratic rule of the mullahs moves into the stage of direct challenge of its military and other tools of state control.
By the count of the neighborhood militia leaders who have now organized themselves into a kind of rebel government, there are 52 or 53 dead among the citizens killed by the police and military throughout Shiraz, plus nine killed in the intense fighting in the Sadra district in which an elite revolutionary unit directly attacked the fortress of the region’s chief mullah on Sunday November 17.
What began as a peaceful protest and a shutdown of the city by abandoning cars in the streets turned quickly to open battle after police shot and killed Mehdi Nekouyee, a 20 year old activist, without cause. Soon armed bands of laborers stormed the police station he was killed in front of, leaving it in flames and marching on other government strongpoints as their ranks swelled.
Throughout the next three days the luxury shopping district on Maliabad Boulevard was largely destroyed, some 80 bank branches and several gas stations set on fire. The Qashqai minority of Turkic nomads and weavers who in Shiraz are an important mercantile polity declared independence and repelled successive waves of attacks by heavy weapons units and helicopter assault cavalry against their outlying district of Golshan. As they are a people virtually unknown to the outside world, I’ve included some pictures.
But the most important revolutionary action of November in Iran was the seizure of the chief mullah of Shiraz and his palace-fortress. An action whose meaning is central to the motives and binding purpose of the secularists who are fighting for democracy and to liberate Iran from the autocratic regime of the mullahs, this was a glorious victory which exposes the hollowness of theocratic rule.
Widely regarded as corrupt, nepotistic, and xenophobic patriarchs, the mullahs, like Catholic priests, were once sacrosanct from personal responsibility and protected by a perceived mantle of piety; so the primary mission of the revolution is to expose their venality and the perversion and injustice of their rule. A task made hideously easy in this case by the pervasive network of pedophile sex trafficking authorized by the mullahs and a major source of trackable income in the form of licenses they sell for temporary “pleasure marriages” in which consent is an imprecise concept. And that’s just one visible part of the vast iceberg of greed and immorality of their regime.
In Iran, the fight for democracy and freedom is also a fight against the patriarchy.
As I wrote in my post of October 13 2022 Embrace What You Fear and Be Free: Case of the Resistance Against Patriarchy in Iran and America; A glorious resistance has swept the world as half of humankind refuses to submit to the authority and power of the other half, a revolt against Patriarchy and an evolutionary shift in consciousness which will transform our possibilities of becoming human; two stunning examples are the mass protests in Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, and elsewhere in the face of brutal repression, murder, torture, and mind control in Soviet-model psychiatric prisons, and the electoral fight for bodily autonomy, reproductive rights, and gender equality here in America.
The women of Iran and other theocratic patriarchies are fighting to free themselves from the same kinds of systemic dehumanization the Republicans are attempting to impose in America as subversion of democracy. We need only look to Iran and Afghanistan to see the fate which awaits us all if we do nothing to resist the weaponization of faith in service to power by those who would enslave us.
Here I question the use of fear by authority and how we may resist subjugation in revolutionary struggle through embrace of our fear as seizure of power.
Marina Warner explores the uses of fear in our topologies of authorized identities and their transgression as revolutionary struggle against internalized Patriarchal oppression in her marvelous and insightful No Go the Bogeyman: Scaring, Lulling, and Making Mock, which maps our Animus while its companion volume, From the Beast to the Blonde: On Fairy Tales and Their Tellers, does the same for our Anima; together some of the finest writing on the dyadic masculine and feminine forces of which human being is made.
Patriarchy is a system and structure of institutionalized sexual terror, one which authorizes identities of sex and gender. The intricacies and diabolical mechanisms of its operations and processes have been described in exhausting detail in the decades since Simone de Beauvoir’s founding work of 1949 The Second Sex; here I wish only to reference it as a system of fear with which all humankind must struggle for self-ownership, autonomy, and authenticity.
Our fears are signposts and anchorages of our shadow self, that which we must swallow but are loath to do, as Nietzsche said of the Toad which embodied his darkness, and which William S. Burroughs was cursed to bear as the avatar of a monstrous god. Feelings of disgust, revulsion, terror, violation, and seizure by the alien and the unclean; these are signs not of warning but of welcome to the secret truths of ourselves which we must discover and embrace.
Sometimes we must let our demons out to play.
As I wrote in my post of October 27 2022, Triumph of the Mahabad Autonomous Zone and the Free State of Kurdistan Over the State Terror of Iran’s Regime of Mullahs: the Iranian Revolution Against Theocracy and Patriarchy; We celebrate the triumph of the Mahabad Autonomous Zone and the Free State of Kurdistan, where the women of Kurdistan, Iran, and Iraq have together in solidarity against the Patriarchy and the state terror of theocracy won an island of liberty in a vast sea of darkness.
It is a darkness now being challenged in street fighting and open mass protests throughout Iran to overthrow the brutal regime and sexual terror of the mullahs in the restoration of a free society of equals, but also in Iraq and Afghanistan, a revolution of women as a slave caste which like America’s #metoo movement and the historic struggle for women’s rights of reproduction and bodily autonomy now being waged in our elections finds echoes and reflections worldwide as a tide of change.
It falls to each of us in this moment to choose a future for ourselves and for humankind, and stand in solidarity with the half of humanity enslaved and dehumanized by the other half; for men to abandon unequal power and the subjugation of women and to join their loved ones, mothers, sisters, partners, daughters, and friends in liberation struggle for a better future and a free society of equals, for the women of America and the women of Iran to unite in common cause and action with women everywhere, and for us all, wherever human beings hunger to be free, to act in solidarity as a United Humankind to free ourselves from the legacies of our history and from systems of oppression and unequal wealth, power, and privilege.
If we do this simple thing, act in solidarity for the liberty of us all, those who would enslave us will fail. Force and control are fragile when authority has no legitimacy and is disbelieved, and when orders are disobeyed. Disbelieve, disobey, and refuse to submit, and we become Unconquered and free.
For we are many, we are watching, and we are the future.
December 8 2022 The Women of Iran Bring a Reckoning to Patriarchy and Theocratic Sexual Terror
The people of Iran have seized their power in a glorious General Strike in support of mass actions of liberation struggle against patriarchy and theocracy throughout the nation, a resistance which has become a regional democracy movement which began as a protest by the women of Iran against the legal right of men to hunt and kill them for refusing to submit to their authority and wear its symbol the hijab, a faceless black shroud of living death and depersonalization.
What kinds of patriarchal sexual terror, dehumanization, enslavement, and chasms of evil does the hijab symbolize?
How did the institution of morality police in Islamic societies begin?
As written by Mustafa Akyol in New Lines Magazine, in an article entitled The Dubious Roots of Religious Police in Islam: The Islamic concept of ‘commanding the right and forbidding the wrong’ is applied across the Muslim world to curtail personal liberties and police morality, but this interpretation is questionable; “n Sept. 16, 2022, thousands of protesters poured into the streets of Iran chanting, “I will kill those who killed my sister.” They were referring to Mahsa Amini, the 22-year-old Kurdish Iranian woman arrested a few days earlier by Tehran’s “Gasht-e Ershad” (literally “guidance patrol,” also known as the “morality police”) on charges of insufficiently covering her hair. She died in detention, following blows to her head, with bruises on her corpse. The popular anger sparked by this atrocity soon turned into nationwide civil unrest, which is still ongoing at the time of writing, undertaken bravely by people from all walks of life, despite the brutal response by security forces.
Over the weekend, it was reported (or misreported) that Iran had decided to scrap its morality police, which would mark a major concession to the protest movement, if it were true. A number of Iranian analysts have since clarified these reports were likely misguided and Iranian state media has formally denied them.
But why does Iran have a “guidance patrol” in the first place? Is this institution really a requirement of Islam, as the Iranian regime claims? These questions are important for the future not only of Iran, but also the broader Muslim world, because Iran is not the only country which employs religious police: They are also active in Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, Nigeria, Malaysia and the Aceh Province of Indonesia. Their strictness may vary, but they all act on the assumption that Islamic religious requirements — as they define them — should be enforced by the state. Thus women should be forced to cover up, alcohol drinkers should be punished and “subversive” books must be banned. In the 1990s, during their first reign in Afghanistan, the Taliban movement went as far as destroying all musical instruments (and punishing their players), chess boards and even kites. Today, back in power for the second time, they claim to be milder but the observable differences are minimal. No wonder female university students in Afghanistan, who are forbidden to receive an education if they do not wear a full-body cover, or burqa, chant the same slogans as the protestors in Iran: “Woman, life, freedom!”
Meanwhile, in many other Muslim countries from the Arab world to Pakistan, there may be no distinct religious police per se, yet the regular police — or its “adaab” (decency) units — still inspect and punish religious misdeeds, such as dancing “seductively” on TikTok or eating or drinking in public during daylight hours in the holy month of Ramadan.
To many Muslims living in the West, especially those accustomed to civil liberties, all these religious dictates often seem baffling. What is the point of any religious practice, many may think, if it is not freely chosen? They might also recall the oft-quoted phrase from the Quran, “There is no compulsion in religion” (2:256) and conclude that any compulsion in religion must therefore be a deviation from the “real Islam.” Yet to question religious coercion in Islam requires a much deeper discussion, because its advocates have long justified it with two authoritative references: the Quranic duty of “commanding the right and forbidding the wrong” and the institution known as the “hisba.”
Let’s begin with the Quran. Variations of the phrase (or references to the concept of) “al-amr bi-l-maaruf wa-n-nahy ani-l-munkar” (“commanding the right and forbidding the wrong”) appear in eight separate verses (3:104, 3:110, 3:114, 7:157, 9:71, 9:112, 22:41, 31:17), either as a feature of true believers or a duty incumbent upon them. The first of these verses, 3:104, is probably the most definitive, as it calls for a specific group to carry out the duty: “Let there arise out of you a band of people inviting to all that is good, enjoining what is right, and forbidding what is wrong: they are the ones to attain felicity.”
It is on the basis of this verse that Saudi Arabia’s religious police, popularly known as the “mutawa,” call themselves the “Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice.” (Since 2016, their powers have been curbed, but by royal decree rather than religious reform per se, and only as an excuse for deepening authoritarianism on the political side.) Similarly, the Taliban has its “Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice.” The Iranian “guidance patrol,” too, is based on Article 8 of the Iranian Constitution, which proclaims the same concept of “commanding the right and forbidding the wrong” to be “a universal and reciprocal duty.”
Yet there is a crucial question that all these religious police forces appear to have answered all too quickly: What is “right” and what is “wrong”? How do we know? Who decides it? And do these interpretations of religion really correspond to all the religious commandments and prohibitions of Islam?
These questions are pertinent, not least due to the terminology found in the Quran. The word used for the “right” that is to be “commanded” is “maaruf,” which literally means “the known,” implying conventional ethical norms. The concept existed well before Islam, as pre-Islamic Arabs used the term maaruf for commonly known ethical values, such as gentleness and charitableness. Hence the Arab lexicographer Ibn Manzur (d. 1312) defined maaruf as “things that people find beneficial, likable.” Its opposite, “munkar,” he defined as abhorrent things that offend human conscience.
Due to this elusiveness of vice and virtue, there emerged different views in the early centuries of Islam about the duty, as examined by Michael Cook, whose 700-page book, “Commanding Right and Forbidding Wrong in Islamic Thought,” is the most comprehensive study on the topic. As Cook notes, the earliest commentators on the Quran did not necessarily interpret the duty as religious policing. Instead, some understood it “as simply one of enjoining belief in God and His Prophet.” One such commentator was Abu al-Aliya (died 712 CE), who was among the “tabiun,” or the first generation after the direct companions of the Prophet Muhammad, who reportedly described the duty as “calling people from polytheism to Islam and … forbidding the worship of idols and devils.” A little later, Muqatil ibn Sulayman (died 767 CE), whose three-volume book is one of the oldest commentaries on the Quran, similarly defined the duty in limited terms. For him, “commanding the right” meant “enjoining belief in the unity of God,” whereas forbidding wrong meant “forbidding polytheism.”
A political interpretation of “commanding the right and forbidding the wrong” also emerged in the early centuries of Islam. In this view, the duty primarily involved speaking out against tyrants and even launching rebellions against them. In fact, as Cook observes, “it was quite common in the early centuries of Islam for rebels to adopt forbidding wrong as their slogan.” Among the advocates of this stance were the rationalist Mutazilites, who blamed their traditionalist opponents for preaching that “obedience is due to whoever wins, even if he is an oppressor.”
This idea of quietist political obedience was indeed established by certain hadiths, or narrations attributed to the prophet. “He who insults a ruler,” one of them read, “Allah will insult him.” Another one ruled: “Listen to the ruler and carry out his orders; even if your back is flogged and your wealth is snatched.” With such guidelines, the Hanafi scholar Imam al-Tahawi (died 933 CE) in his widely accepted statement of the Sunni creed, wrote, “We do not permit rebellion against our leaders or those in charge of our public affairs even if they are oppressors.” There was also a legitimate rationale beneath this doctrine: Early civil wars in Islam, caused by rebellions, had proven disastrous. But seeking peace only in obedience — as long as the ruler upheld the basic tenets of Islam — built an authoritarian political culture that has endured in the Sunni world to the present day.
On the one hand, then, “commanding the right and forbidding the wrong” proved to be a politically modest duty in Sunni Islam. On the other, it was fervently enforced against sinners and heretics. The Hanbalis, who were often the most hardline Sunnis, were the leading example.
In the 10th and 11th centuries in Baghdad, the Hanbalis became notorious for plundering shops or homes to seek and destroy wine bottles, breaking musical instruments or chess boards, challenging men and women who walked together in public and disrupting Shiite practices.
Conceptually, this full-scale religious imposition was accompanied by the equation of “maaruf” (the known good) with all the commandments of the Sharia. The third-century Sunni Quranic exegete al-Tabari reflected this view when he argued, in Cook’s paraphrasing, “‘commanding right’ refers to all that God and His Prophet have commanded, and ‘forbidding wrong’ to all that they have forbidden.” In other words, the duty required the enforcement of all piety, and the punishment of all impiety, at least in public eyes. (The privacy of the home, meanwhile, was generally respected, thanks to the Quranic directives against spying and entering homes without permission.)
To get a sense of this expansion of enforcement, one needs to look at the very beginning of the story: the Quran. It decrees many commandments to its believers, and expects obedience from them out of their belief in God and hope for salvation in the afterlife — not out of any earthly coercive measure.
For example, believing in God is the very first commandment of Islam, yet the Quran threatens unbelievers or apostates only with the wrath of God in the afterlife. Similarly, Muslims are commanded to pray and fast, and to abstain from drinking or gambling, but the Quran does not specify any punishment for violations of these commands. The Quran also orders Muslim women to dress modestly but, again, decrees no earthly consequence for those who don’t.
By contrast, the Quran does decree earthly punishments for five specific misdeeds, four of which later became enshrined in Islamic law as “al-hudud,” or “the boundaries” of God. These are murder or injury, banditry, theft, adultery and false accusations of adultery. All are to be punished corporally, as was the norm in the Quran’s historical context.
The pertinent question for our discussion is this: Why does the Quran penalize theft but not, say, giving up prayer? The Quran itself gives us no answer. But we can reasonably infer the difference: Theft is a punishable crime, in almost every society, because it violates another person’s rights. Prayer, on the other hand, is a private connection between a person and God, which harms no other person when it is not performed. (The same is true, in fact, for all matters of faith and worship. As Thomas Jefferson once put it, “It does me no injury for my neighbor to say there are 20 gods or no God. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg.”)
Yet the Quran was only the beginning of Islamic law. In the first few centuries that followed it, the scope of earthly punishments grew dramatically, often based on hadiths, most of which came from solitary reports (as opposed to widely transmitted ones) and were hence open to doubt. (Apostasy became a capital crime, for example, due to the report, “Whomever changes his religion, kill him.”) Almost all religious commandments also turned into enforceable laws, due to the latter-day interpretation of “commanding the right and forbidding the wrong.”
This was how giving up the daily prayers, for example, became a grave crime, as the prominent 11th-century jurist al-Mawardi explained in his book, “al-Ahkam al-Sultaniyyah” (“Ordinances of Government”), a standard Sunni text on Islamic political theory:
If the person abandons [the prayer], claiming that it is not an obligation, then he is a nonbeliever; and the same ruling as that governing the apostate applies—that is, he is killed for his denial, unless he turns for forgiveness. If he has not done it because he claims it is too difficult to do, but while acknowledging its obligation, then the jurists differ as to the ruling: Abu Hanifa considers that he should be beaten at the time of every prayer, but that he is not killed; Ahmad ibn Hanbal and a group of his later followers say that he becomes a kafir by his abandoning it, and is killed for this denial … Al-Shafiʿi considers… he is not put to death until he has been asked to turn in repentance … If he refuses to make repentance, and does not accept to do the prayer; then he is killed for abandoning it—immediately, according to some, after three days, according to others. He is killed in cold blood by the sword, although Abu’ Abbas ibn Surayj says that he is beaten with a wooden stick until he dies.
What about fasting in the holy month of Ramadan? Al-Mawardi wrote that the Muslim who refuses to fast “is not put to death,” but is still “given a discretionary punishment to teach him a lesson.” Such punishments in Islamic law, called “tazir,” meaning discretionary rules set by the authorities rather than scripture, typically included lashes or short prison sentences.
Who were the authorities responsible for implementing these laws? There were courts ruled by qadis, or judges, but they did not go after lawbreakers themselves. The latter task, which al-Mawardi described as “one of the fundamental matters of the religion,” was called “hisba,” to be carried out by “those who do hisba,” or the “muhtasibs.” While the duty of “commanding the right and forbidding the wrong” was incumbent on all Muslims, it was these state-appointed officials who physically enforced the rules.
What, then, is hisba? Among the many meanings cited by Ibn Manzur, the word implies enforcing and managing limits, as well as sufficiency, monitoring and reckoning. Both classical and contemporary Muslim sources define it as a kind of law enforcement, established by the prophet. However, when we look carefully into the prophetic practice, we see something rather different from religious policing: market inspection.
The marketplace was a fundamental institution in nascent Islam, thanks to the fact that many of the first Muslims, including the prophet himself, were longtime merchants. No wonder that, soon after settling in Medina after his historic hijra (migration) from Mecca, Muhammad designated a spot in the city, declaring: “This is your market, let it not be narrowed, and let no tax be taken on it.” He also began frequenting the market in person to prohibit any fraudulent practices, which the Quran rebuked severely in a number of verses.
This is also why the prophet appointed some of his companions to oversee the market and prevent the occurrence of fraud. Interestingly, one of these inspectors was reportedly a woman named Samra bint Nuhayk al-Asadiyya — a notable example of the prominent public roles played by early Muslim women. A few decades later, the Caliph Umar also appointed a woman, al-Shifa bint Abd Allah, in addition to three men, to oversee the Medinan market.
In the first century of Islam, these market inspectors were called “aamil al-suq,” or “overseer of the market.” In Muslim Spain, they were also called “sahib al-suq,” or “master of the market.” Their functions were described by the Cordoban scholar Yahya ibn Umar (died 901 CE), who wrote about “the orderly running of the marketplace, particularly with regard to weights, measures and scales.” Significantly, he did not mention any religious policing.
Yet the latter function would soon appear. As the historian Abbas Hamdani observed, while “in his previous role as sahib al-suq, the market inspector had mainly material, not spiritual considerations,” a shift later took place. “In the late ninth century, we find that the office of the market inspector begins to be regarded as a religious office and the inspector is now called muhtasib, a person who takes count of the right and wrong deeds of the people and brings them to book.”
This dual function of the muhtasib was also observed by the historian Yassine Essid, who wrote:
In reading the different treatises devoted to the hisbah we discover two categories of responsibilities, or rather, we find ourselves looking at two different figures: the censor of morals who breaks musical instruments, pours out wine, beats the libertine and tears off his silken clothing, and the modest market provost, a man who controls weights and measures, inspects the quality of the foods on sale, ensures that the markets are well supplied.
As time went on, religious policing even became the principal duty of the muhtasib, whereas market supervising turned trivial. This was evident in “The Revival of Religious Sciences,” the highly influential book by the Imam Abu Hamid al-Ghazali (died 1111 CE), one of the towering scholars of the Sunni tradition. Al-Ghazali wrote a whole chapter on hisba, which he defined as “prevent[ing] an evildoing for the sake of God’s right in order to safeguard the prevented from committing sin.” Thus, everything that is considered sin is to be targeted, from drinking wine to leaving prayer. In retribution for such acts, al-Ghazali proposed “direct” punishments, such as “breaking the musical instruments, spilling over the wine, and snatching the silk garment from him who is wearing it.”
Al-Ghazali also justified “hisba against the religious innovations,” meaning heresies. This was, in fact, even “more important than against all the other evildoings.”
In short, hisba, which began under Muhammad with the limited function of market inspection, turned only much later into full-fledged religious coercion — against not only impieties, but also heresies.
Yet wouldn’t religious coercion infringe on an Islamic value, also cherished by pious scholars such as al-Ghazali himself: the sincerity of intentions behind acts of worship? What would be the value of prayer, for example, if it were performed only out of fear of the muhtasib, not fear of God? And if the suppression of heresy were justified, would this not lead to endless religious conflict among Muslims, since one sect’s “heresy” was another’s true faith?
These questions appear to have been asked only rarely in the classical age of Islamic civilization, though there were a few scholars who noticed the problem with coercion.
One was the Ottoman Hanafi-Sufi scholar Abd al-Ghani al-Nabulsi (died 1731), who was troubled by the Istanbul-based Kadizadeli movement, a zealous religious group that created much disturbance in 17th-century Ottoman society. Influenced by Ibn Taymiyya (died 1328), the prominent Hanbali scholar, these were puritans who blamed the Ottomans’ decline on “innovations” in Islam, such as Sufi orders that used religious music, “rational sciences” such as philosophy and mathematics, and perceived social vices such as coffee and tobacco, which had become quite popular across the empire. For a while, the Kadizadelis influenced Sultan Murad IV, who destroyed all the coffeehouses in Istanbul and executed tobacco smokers, not to mention wine drinkers. (Ironically, he himself was a heavy drinker, who died of cirrhosis at the age of 27.) In the late 17th century, the Kadizadeli militancy would decline, but not totally vanish.
Al-Nabulsi patiently argued against these puritans in his book, “al-Hadiqa al-Nadiyya” (“The Dew-Moistened Garden”). First, he opposed the conflation of “commanding the right and forbidding the wrong” with hisba, which had become the standard view since al-Ghazali. In al-Nabulsi’s view, the duty was only a “matter of the tongue,” with no enforcement. In return, people could either heed the advice or not — it was their choice, because “There is no compulsion in religion.” According to Cook, this reference by al-Nabulsi to Quran 2:256 may be the very first use of this verse against coercion in Islam. Traditionally, it had been cited only to rule out forced conversions to Islam of Jews, Christians or others.
Al-Nabulsi also referred, in a letter, to a Quranic verse often downplayed by religious enforcers: “You who believe, you are responsible for your own souls; if anyone else goes astray it will not harm you so long as you follow the guidance.” (5:105) The lesson, al-Nabulsi argued, is that instead of judging others, Muslims would be better off spending time examining their own souls.
Al-Nabulsi also deconstructed the ostensible piety of the Kadizadelis. Zealots of their kind set out to command and forbid, he argued, in Cook’s paraphrasing, “because they crave an ego trip, or see it as a way to establish a role of power and dominance in society, or to gain the attention of important people.” Beneath their claims to righteousness, in other words, lay only self-righteousness.
Another Ottoman scholar, the famous polymath Katip Çelebi (died 1657), had also seen Kadizadeli militancy even more closely, and minced no words against it. In his book, “Mîzânü’l-Hak,” or “The Balance of Truth,” he wrote:
“The most noble Prophet used to deal kindly and generously with his community. The arrogant men of later time, not seeing the disgrace of running counter to him, label some of the community as infidels, some as heretics, some as profligates, for trifling reasons … They bring the people to the grievous state of fanaticism, and cause dissension. Ordinary folk know nothing of these rules and conditions; thinking that it is obligatory in every case to enjoin right and forbid wrong, they quarrel and are pertinacious with one another. The baseless wrangling in which they engage, with stone-like stupidity, sometimes leads to bloodshed. Most fighting and strife between Muslims arises from this cause.”
Today, almost four centuries later, it is remarkable to read this sharp critique by Katip Çelebi. It is also sad, because it remains true today that “most fighting and strife between Muslims arises from this cause,” which is religious zealotry and coercion. Various Islamic regimes or parties, from West Africa to Southeast Asia, struggle with each other, and with secular forces, to “command the right and forbid the wrong,” in the narrow way they define it. In the meantime, they hardly make anyone more faithful or pious, if that is really their goal. On the contrary, as seen in Iran today, in the hijabs defiantly burned by the women on whom they are imposed, they only make people lose respect for Islam.
As such, I believe the way forward for Islamic civilization lies in divorcing “commanding the right and forbidding the wrong” from religious coercion. Sure, in any society, certain things have to be coercively “commanded,” such as honesty in trade, or “forbidden,” such as theft, murder or oppression. These are literally maaruf, in terms of being “known” to all humanity as common sense. But how people believe in God and worship him are matters of their own conscience, which should be left to their private minds to freely determine.
While this argument may sound to some like a big “innovation” in Islam, it has firm roots in the earliest interpretations of the Quranic duty of “commanding the right and forbidding the wrong,” and in fact aligns with the original meaning of hisba. It is also strongly grounded in the Quranic dictum rightly expounded by al-Nabulsi: “There is no compulsion in religion.” Properly understood, this means there should really be no compulsion in religion. People should be at liberty to practice it, or not, based on their sincere convictions and free choices.”
Iran, a reading list
As chosen by myself as a scholar of the Naqshbandi Order of Sufism and literate in Classical Persian
Women’s Voices
Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books, Azar Nafisi
I write to you now from Dollhouse Park, my cottage and refuge from the world between adventures, set among two acres of roses and tea gardens on a hill overlooking the lights of the city among alpine forests fifty miles from the Canadian border and within an hour’s drive of five ski resorts where once I could rely on forty feet of snow in the mountains in winter, a wetlands at the foot of my hill, an underground sea of near limitless glacial water just beneath the surface and ringed with lakes so deep the Navy has a submarine training base at one just across the border with Idaho.
Dolly wanted a park, hence the name; I designed and created it based mainly on Gertrude Jekyll’s designs and some ideas from Penelope Hobhouse. We can see the hill where we first kissed from our home, on a wagon ride in the snow driven by her father; she was twelve, I was a very precocious eight.
As photography is my art and the gardens at Dollhouse Park are my subject, I have a record in albums by month on FaceBook over some years, and for two years now we have had very hard winters in terms of damage to our roses, which number over a hundred of various kinds. Though the snow has been only six or eight inches a few times a year rather than two to four feet as it used to be, and the icy winds no longer desiccate everything with fierce storms during November, the transition between seasons is now too rapid to give the roses time to harden for winter, so they all died back to the ground this year and only started blooming the last week of June instead of May, and in the spring our fruit trees didn’t have time to be pollinated by our bumblebees, so our Montmorency and Rainier cherries are fine but we have no apples or Italian plums.
If the crops die, what will we eat? And globally they are beginning to die, hammered by heat, fire, drought, and floods, and we humans will one day become extinct.
It will never be this good again, and one day humankind will become nothing and unremembered.
One day the seas will die and boil, the coastal cities will be submerged and forgotten, and we will be adrift among a raging lifeless toxic soup of megastorms. What remains of us will be consumed by fire tornados as our world becomes an arid moonscape without water to drink or air to breathe.
On the day the last of us die, proudly trumpeting our splendid dominance of nature, what use will our castles be? From what will our arsenals of death and war protect us? Who will cherish and remember the beauty of our arts and the glory of our triumphs?
All of this is beginning now, not in a distant future. I had predicted 2041 as the threshold event year from which no escape is possible, but it has happened already in 2023 as the world’s mighty debated what can be done and did nothing, as we the people failed to purge our destroyers from among us and abandon the technology which is killing us.
This will be the coolest summer to come in our future. How hot it gets and how quickly may yet be controllable if we act now to abandon fossil fuels.
My hope now is that my roses will live on after me, and I will never need to mourn their passing, or that of the blue heron who reigns over the kingdom of the frogs at the foot of my hill.
Who will remember us, when humankind is gone?
As written in 1817 by Percy Bysshe Shelley in Ozymandias;
I met a traveller from an antique land
Who said: “Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert . . . Near them, on the sand,
Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown,
And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command,
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,
The hand that mocked them, and the heart that fed:
And on the pedestal these words appear:
‘My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!’
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level sands stretch far away.”
As written by Ajit Niranjan in The Guardian, in an article entitled Temperatures 1.5C above pre-industrial era average for 12 months, data shows
Copernicus Climate Change Service says results a ‘large and continuing shift’ in the climate; “The world has baked for 12 consecutive months in temperatures 1.5C (2.7F) greater than their average before the fossil fuel era, new data shows.
Temperatures between July 2023 and June 2024 were the highest on record, scientists found, creating a year-long stretch in which the Earth was 1.64C hotter than in preindustrial times.
The findings do not mean world leaders have already failed to honour their promises to stop the planet heating 1.5C by the end of the century – a target that is measured in decadal averages rather than single years – but that scorching heat will have exposed more people to violent weather. A sustained rise in temperatures above this level also increases the risk of uncertain but catastrophic tipping points.
Carlo Buontempo, director of the Copernicus Climate Change Service, which analysed the data, said the results were not a statistical oddity but a “large and continuing shift” in the climate.
“Even if this specific streak of extremes ends at some point, we are bound to see new records being broken as the climate continues to warm,” he said. “This is inevitable unless we stop adding greenhouse gases into the atmosphere and the oceans.”
Copernicus, a scientific organisation that belongs to the EU’s space programme, uses billions of measurements from satellites, ships, aircraft and weather stations to track key climate metrics. It found June 2024 was hotter than any other June on record and was the 12th month in a row with temperatures 1.5C greater than their average between 1850 and 1900.
Because temperatures in some months had “relatively small margins” above 1.5C, the scientists said, datasets from other climate agencies may not confirm the 12-month temperature streak.
Whether pumped out the chimney of a coal-burning power plant or ejected from the exhaust pipe of a passenger plane, each carbon molecule clogging the Earth’s atmosphere traps heat and warps weather. The hotter the planet gets, the less people and ecosystems can adapt.
“This is not good news at all,” said Aditi Mukherji, a director at research institute CGIAR and co-author of the latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report. “We know that extreme events increase with every increment of global warming – and at 1.5C, we witnessed some of the hottest extremes this year.”
Some ecosystems are more vulnerable than others. In its latest review of the science, the IPCC found that 1.5C of warming will kill off 70-90% of tropical coral reefs, while warming of 2C will wipe them out almost entirely.
A Guardian survey of hundreds of IPCC authors this year found three-quarters expect the planet to heat by at least 2.5C by 2100, with about half of the scientists expecting temperatures above 3C. The increments sound small but can mean the difference between widespread human suffering and “semi-dystopian” futures.
Mukherji compared 1C of global heating to a mild fever and 1.5C a medium-to-high grade fever. “Now imagine a human body with [that] temperature for years. Will that person function normally any more?”
“That’s currently our Earth system,” she added. “It is a crisis.”
François Gemenne, an IPCC author and director of the Hugo Observatory at the University of Liège, said the climate crisis is not a binary issue. “It is not 1.5C or death – every 0.1C matters a great deal because we’re talking about global average temperatures, which translate into massive temperature gaps locally.”
Even in a best-case scenario, he said, people need to prepare for a warmer world and “beef up” response plans. “Adaptation is not an admission that our current efforts are useless.”
As I wrote in my post of July 17 2023, The World is Mad. And It is On Fire.;
The world is mad. And it is on fire.
These existential threats are interdependent faces of a single problem, albeit a Gordian Knot of complex, nuanced, relative and shifting truths, meanings, and values; unequal power.
And both sets of causes and effects which chase each other round in recursion, like the iconic Gahan Wilson cartoon of gleeful devils in pursuit of each other entitled One Damn Thing After Another, are not symptoms of natural processes of change but consequences of political decisions we have made about how to be human with each other.
Extinction and the destruction of earth’s ecosystems and ability to support life is parallel and interdependent with the global subversion of democracy and the dawn of an age of tyrants and fascisms of blood, faith, and soil.
We cannot work toward solutions to extinction and fascist tyranny separately; they must be taken together as a whole.
I write now in reference to an article by Robin McKie in The Guardian entitled, “World experiences hottest week ever recorded and more is forecast to come: There is a good chance that the month of July will see the highest global temperatures for (the past) 120,000 years.“
Yes, but not for the millennium to follow; it just becomes unsurvivable from here. What creatures in some distant future will sift the dead sands of our world for clues to what doomed it, and why?
It will never be this good again, and one day humankind will become nothing and unremembered.
Because we have failed to purge our destroyers from among us, to seize power and control of our destiny from those who would enslave us and steal our future; elite hegemonies of wealth, power, and privilege now locked in a death spiral of terminal stage capitalism as war on nature and subjugation and commodification of our labor which creates benefits for the few who can buy our time at the cost of dehumanization of the many and the extinction of us all.
We must abandon our addiction to power and its ephemeral, transitory, ultimately meaningless and destructive material signs and vanities, and our reliance on fossil fuels as a strategic resource of dominion and hegemony which is consuming us like a poison or cancer, and the whole twisted project and inverted values of civilization not as a conversation and questioning of ourselves and our universe but as systems of oppression and control of nature; and instead embrace the wildness of nature and the wildness of ourselves.
Here follows the McKie essay and Pronouncement of Our Doom:
“The world has just gone through a remarkable experience. It endured the hottest week ever recorded between 3-10 July this year. And meteorologists say there is more to come – a lot more.
Soaring levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and an unusual band of strong winds that have hovered high over the Atlantic have already triggered heatwaves in Texas, Greece, Spain, Italy, and a host of other nations.
Red weather alerts have been issued across Europe; wildfires are raging in Croatia, on the Adriatic coast, and in Navarra in Spain; while tourist targets such as the Acropolis have been closed as temperatures have soared into the forties.
The Earth has not experienced anything like it since instrumental measures of air temperatures began in the 1850s, the World Meteorological Organisation revealed last week. “We are in uncharted territory and that is worrying news for the planet,” said Prof Christopher Hewitt, the WMO’s director of climate services.
This point was backed by Karsten Haustein, a research fellow in atmospheric radiation at Leipzig University. “The chances are that the month of July will be the hottest month ever … ‘ever’ meaning since the Eemian [interglacial period], which is some 120,000 years ago.”
On top of the triggers of the current record-breaking heatwaves, a growing El Niño event in the Pacific is beginning to make its presence felt across the globe.
El Niño is a periodic climatic event that occurs when the circulation of the equatorial Pacific Ocean shifts and its temperature rises, causing knock-on heat impacts around the world.
“A typical El Niño temporarily adds about 0.2C to average global temperature,” said Jeff Knight, manager of climate variability modelling, for the Met Office.
“This increase is dwarfed by the 1.2C that we have seen from climate change since the Industrial Revolution but added to that human-induced warming, a new global temperature record is still likely to be set before the end of next year.”
As a result, many scientists warn that this year or next could see world temperatures pass the 1.5C threshold that was set by the IPCC as being the upper limit for a rise in global warming that would avoid the planet passing through meteorological tipping points that could bring irreversible changes to world weather patterns.
The consequences of a new record heatwave occurring very soon will be profound and dangerous, add scientists. More than 61,000 people are now estimated to have died as a result of the soaring temperatures that gripped Europe last summer.
Given the likelihood of that record being broken this year – or next year at the latest – there is a strong chance that 2022’s grim death toll will be topped very soon with Mediterranean nations such as Greece, Spain and Italy likely to suffer the worst consequences.
According to UN secretary general António Guterres “climate change is out of control”. He warned that if the world persisted in delaying key measures needed to limit fossil fuel emissions, it would move “into a catastrophic situation”.
Many scientists have reacted to this alarm with rueful resignation. They have warned for more than 30 years that continued burning of fossil fuels would trigger the heatwaves that we are now experiencing.
“We should not be at all surprised with the high global temperatures,” Prof Richard Betts, climate scientist at the Met Office and University of Exeter, told the BBC. “This is all a stark reminder of what we’ve known for a long time, and we will see ever-more extremes until we stop building up more greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.”
Pronouncement of Our Doom; it will never be this good again, and one day humankind will become nothing and unremembered
(click photo to enlarge. To reach from FB, click photos, then albums)
If you send me a friend request, message me; why do you want to share posts and be friends? If we know each other, please remind me how. I receive such requests from people I do not know, whose profiles have no history; this makes me suspicious as to motives and true identity . I normally regard such contacts out of nowhere as representing the intelligence services of tyrants whom I have annoyed, and I have tried, as Harley Quinn says in Suicide Squad, to be quite vexing to authorities.
But I am very interested in building networks of social action throughout the world in the causes of democracy and our universal human rights; liberty, equality, truth, and justice, and against fascism and tyranny.
We celebrate the passing by Congress of the 14th Amendment on this day in 1868, as the victory over slavery was consolidated.
Our victory over a human trafficking syndicate which had declared itself a nation ended the Civil War, and this was a glorious triumph of solidarity and resistance, but it did not truly make us all social equals or equal under the law, merely began the liberation struggle which is ongoing now.
Are we Free At Last? So proclaimed Martin Luther King, Jr. in his historic speech; “Five score years ago, a great American, in whose symbolic shadow we stand today, signed the Emancipation Proclamation. This momentous decree came as a great beacon light of hope to millions of Negro slaves who had been seared in the flames of withering injustice. It came as a joyous daybreak to end the long night of their captivity.
But 100 years later, the Negro still is not free. One hundred years later, the life of the Negro is still sadly crippled by the manacles of segregation and the chains of discrimination. One hundred years later, the Negro lives on a lonely island of poverty in the midst of a vast ocean of material prosperity. One hundred years later the Negro is still languished in the corners of American society and finds himself in exile in his own land. And so we’ve come here today to dramatize a shameful condition. In a sense we’ve come to our nation’s capital to cash a check.
When the architects of our republic wrote the magnificent words of the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence, they were signing a promissory note to which every American was to fall heir. This note was a promise that all men — yes, Black men as well as white men — would be guaranteed the unalienable rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
It is obvious today that America has defaulted on this promissory note insofar as her citizens of color are concerned. Instead of honoring this sacred obligation, America has given the Negro people a bad check, a check which has come back marked insufficient funds.
But we refuse to believe that the bank of justice is bankrupt.
We refuse to believe that there are insufficient funds in the great vaults of opportunity of this nation. And so we’ve come to cash this check, a check that will give us upon demand the riches of freedom and the security of justice.
We have also come to this hallowed spot to remind America of the fierce urgency of now. This is no time to engage in the luxury of cooling off or to take the tranquilizing drug of gradualism.
Now is the time to make real the promises of democracy. Now is the time to rise from the dark and desolate valley of segregation to the sunlit path of racial justice. Now is the time to lift our nation from the quick sands of racial injustice to the solid rock of brotherhood. Now is the time to make justice a reality for all of God’s children.
It would be fatal for the nation to overlook the urgency of the moment. This sweltering summer of the Negro’s legitimate discontent will not pass until there is an invigorating autumn of freedom and equality. 1963 is not an end, but a beginning. Those who hope that the Negro needed to blow off steam and will now be content will have a rude awakening if the nation returns to business as usual.
There will be neither rest nor tranquility in America until the Negro is granted his citizenship rights. The whirlwinds of revolt will continue to shake the foundations of our nation until the bright day of justice emerges.
But there is something that I must say to my people who stand on the warm threshold which leads into the palace of justice. In the process of gaining our rightful place, we must not be guilty of wrongful deeds. Let us not seek to satisfy our thirst for freedom by drinking from the cup of bitterness and hatred.
We must forever conduct our struggle on the high plane of dignity and discipline. We must not allow our creative protest to degenerate into physical violence. Again and again, we must rise to the majestic heights of meeting physical force with soul force. The marvelous new militancy which has engulfed the Negro community must not lead us to a distrust of all white people, for many of our white brothers, as evidenced by their presence here today, have come to realize that their destiny is tied up with our destiny.
And they have come to realize that their freedom is inextricably bound to our freedom. We cannot walk alone. And as we walk, we must make the pledge that we shall always march ahead. We cannot turn back.
There are those who are asking the devotees of civil rights, when will you be satisfied? We can never be satisfied as long as the Negro is the victim of the unspeakable horrors of police brutality. We can never be satisfied as long as our bodies, heavy with the fatigue of travel, cannot gain lodging in the motels of the highways and the hotels of the cities.
We cannot be satisfied as long as the Negro’s basic mobility is from a smaller ghetto to a larger one. We can never be satisfied as long as our children are stripped of their selfhood and robbed of their dignity by signs stating: for whites only.
We cannot be satisfied as long as a Negro in Mississippi cannot vote and a Negro in New York believes he has nothing for which to vote.
No, no, we are not satisfied, and we will not be satisfied until justice rolls down like waters, and righteousness like a mighty stream.
I am not unmindful that some of you have come here out of great trials and tribulations. Some of you have come fresh from narrow jail cells. Some of you have come from areas where your quest for freedom left you battered by the storms of persecution and staggered by the winds of police brutality. You have been the veterans of creative suffering. Continue to work with the faith that unearned suffering is redemptive. Go back to Mississippi, go back to Alabama, go back to South Carolina, go back to Georgia, go back to Louisiana, go back to the slums and ghettos of our Northern cities, knowing that somehow this situation can and will be changed.
Let us not wallow in the valley of despair, I say to you today, my friends.
So even though we face the difficulties of today and tomorrow, I still have a dream. It is a dream deeply rooted in the American dream. I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.
I have a dream that one day on the red hills of Georgia, the sons of former slaves and the sons of former slave owners will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood.
I have a dream that one day even the state of Mississippi, a state sweltering with the heat of injustice, sweltering with the heat of oppression will be transformed into an oasis of freedom and justice.
I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character. I have a dream today.
I have a dream that one day down in Alabama with its vicious racists, with its governor having his lips dripping with the words of interposition and nullification, one day right down in Alabama little Black boys and Black girls will be able to join hands with little white boys and white girls as sisters and brothers. I have a dream today.
I have a dream that one day every valley shall be exalted, every hill and mountain shall be made low, the rough places will be made plain, and the crooked places will be made straight, and the glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all flesh shall see it together.
This is our hope. This is the faith that I go back to the South with. With this faith, we will be able to hew out of the mountain of despair a stone of hope. With this faith we will be able to transform the jangling discords of our nation into a beautiful symphony of brotherhood. With this faith we will be able to work together, to pray together, to struggle together, to go to jail together, to stand up for freedom together, knowing that we will be free one day.
This will be the day when all of God’s children will be able to sing with new meaning: My country, ’tis of thee, sweet land of liberty, of thee I sing. Land where my fathers died, land of the pilgrims’ pride, from every mountainside, let freedom ring.
And if America is to be a great nation, this must become true. And so let freedom ring from the prodigious hilltops of New Hampshire. Let freedom ring from the mighty mountains of New York. Let freedom ring from the heightening Alleghenies of Pennsylvania. Let freedom ring from the snowcapped Rockies of Colorado. Let freedom ring from the curvaceous slopes of California. But not only that, let freedom ring from Stone Mountain of Georgia. Let freedom ring from Lookout Mountain of Tennessee. Let freedom ring from every hill and molehill of Mississippi. From every mountainside, let freedom ring.
And when this happens, and when we allow freedom ring, when we let it ring from every village and every hamlet, from every state and every city, we will be able to speed up that day when all of God’s children, Black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, will be able to join hands and sing in the words of the old Negro spiritual: Free at last. Free at last. Thank God almighty, we are free at last.”
Here are the lyrics of the spiritual song referenced at the end of his historic speech;
Free at last, free at last
I thank God I’m free at last
Free at last, free at last
I thank God I’m free at last
Way down yonder in the graveyard walk
I thank God I’m free at last
Me and my Jesus going to meet and talk
I thank God I’m free at last
On my knees when the light pass’d by
I thank God I’m free at last
Tho’t my soul would rise and fly
I thank God I’m free at last
Some of these mornings, bright and fair
I thank God I’m free at last
Goin’ meet King Jesus in the air
I thank God I’m free at last
Remembrance is among the purposes of anniversaries such as today’s, that we may never repeat the mistakes of the past and free ourselves from the legacies of our history. For myself, remembrance has a future-directed purpose as well, provides us mission statements and acts as an informing, motivating, and shaping source, and in regard to Abolition and democracy as interdependent processes of becoming and a praxis of action in this election year, wherein tyranny and liberty play for our nation, it reminds me who we are, we Americans, and what’s worth fighting for.
As written by Heather Cox Richardson in Letters From An American; “On July 9, 1868, Americans changed the U.S. Constitution for the fourteenth time, adapting our foundational document to construct a new nation without systematic Black enslavement.
In 1865 the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution had prohibited slavery on the basis of race, but it did not prevent the establishment of a system in which Black Americans continued to be unequal. Backed by President Andrew Johnson, who had taken over the presidency after actor John Wilkes Booth had murdered President Abraham Lincoln, white southern Democrats had done their best to push their Black neighbors back into subservience. So long as southern states had abolished enslavement, repudiated Confederate debts, and nullified the ordinances of secession, Johnson was happy to readmit them to full standing in the Union, still led by the very men who had organized the Confederacy and made war on the United States.
Northern Republican lawmakers refused. There was no way they were going to rebuild southern society on the same blueprint as existed before the Civil War, especially since the upcoming 1870 census would count Black Americans as whole persons for the first time in the nation’s history, giving southern states more power in Congress and the Electoral College after the war than they had had before it. Having just fought a war to destroy the South’s ideology, they were not going to let it regrow in peacetime.
Congress rejected Johnson’s plan for Reconstruction.
But then congressmen had to come up with their own. After months of hearings and debate, they proposed amending the Constitution to settle the outstanding questions of the war. Chief among these was how to protect the rights of Black Americans in states where they could neither vote nor testify in court or sit on a jury to protect their own interests.
Congress’s solution was the Fourteenth Amendment.
It took on the infamous 1857 Dred Scott v. Sandford decision declaring that Black men “are not included, and were not intended to be included, under the word ‘citizens’ in the Constitution, and can therefore claim none of the rights and privileges which that instrument provides for and secures to citizens.”
The Fourteenth Amendment provides that “[a]ll persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”
The amendment also addressed the Dred Scott decision in another profound way. In 1857, southerners and Democrats who were adamantly opposed to federal power controlled the Supreme Court. They backed states’ rights. So the Dred Scott decision did more than read Black Americans out of our history; it dramatically circumscribed Congress’s power.
The Dred Scott decision declared that democracy was created at the state level, by those people in a state who were allowed to vote. In 1857 this meant white men, almost exclusively. If those people voted to do something widely unpopular—like adopting human enslavement, for example—they had the right to do so. People like Abraham Lincoln pointed out that such domination by states would eventually mean that an unpopular minority could take over the national government, forcing their ideas on everyone else, but defenders of states’ rights stood firm.
And so the Fourteenth Amendment gave the federal government the power to protect individuals even if their state legislatures had passed discriminatory laws. “No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws,” it said. And then it went on to say that “Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article.”
The principles behind the Fourteenth Amendment were behind the 1870 creation of the Department of Justice, whose first job was to bring down the Ku Klux Klan terrorists in the South.
Those same principles took on profound national significance in the post–World War II era, when the Supreme Court began to use the equal protection clause and the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment aggressively to apply the protections in the Bill of Rights to the states. The civil rights decisions of the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s, including the Brown v. Board of Education decision outlawing segregation in public schools, come from this doctrine. Under it, the federal government took up the mantle of protecting the rights of individual Americans in the states from the whims of state legislatures.
Opponents of these new civil rights protections quickly began to object that such decisions were “legislating from the bench,” rather than permitting state legislatures to make their own laws. They began to call for “originalism,” the idea that the Constitution should be interpreted only as the Framers had intended when they wrote it, an argument that focused on the creation of law at the state level. Famously, in 1987, President Ronald Reagan nominated Robert Bork, an originalist who had called for the rollback of the Supreme Court’s civil rights decisions, for a seat on that court.
Reacting to that nomination, Senator Ted Kennedy (D-MA) recognized the importance of the Fourteenth Amendment to equality: “Robert Bork’s America is a land in which women would be forced into back-alley abortions, blacks would sit at segregated lunch counters, rogue police could break down citizens’ doors in midnight raids, schoolchildren could not be taught about evolution, writers and artists could be censored at the whim of the Government, and the doors of the Federal courts would be shut on the fingers of millions of citizens for whom the judiciary is—and is often the only—protector of the individual rights that are the heart of our democracy….”
From the perspective of 2024, Kennedy’s comments seem prescient, but the country could go even further backward. The 2024 Republican Party platform, released today, calls for using the Fourteenth Amendment not to protect equal rights for Americans from discriminatory laws, as those who wrote, passed, and ratified the amendment intended. Instead it calls for using the Fourteenth Amendment to protect the rights of fetuses from the time of fertilization. It says that states should start passing laws protecting those rights: so-called fetal personhood laws that have their roots in the 1960s and were considered a fringe idea until about fifteen years ago. Those laws prohibit all abortion, in vitro fertilization (IVF), and several forms of contraception.
Saying states should pass such laws echoes the language Trump has used to try to avoid the Republicans’ extreme and unpopular abortion stance by claiming, as the Supreme Court did in the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization decision, that states alone should write laws covering abortion. But in its reaction to the Republican platform today, the antiabortion Susan B.
Anthony Pro-Life America organization made it clear that the platform’s reference to the Fourteenth Amendment was designed to open the way for a national abortion ban. The Fourteenth Amendment, after all, gives Congress “power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article.”
“It is important that the [Republican Party] reaffirmed its commitment to protect unborn life today through the 14th Amendment,” the organization said in a statement. “Under this amendment, it is Congress that enacts and enforces its provisions. The Republican Party remains strongly pro-life at the national level.”
Free At Last Martin Luther King speech
The History and Legacy of the 14th Amendment/ National Constitution Center
The Second Founding: How the Civil War and Reconstruction Remade the Constitution, Eric Foner
Susan B. Anthony Pro Life America's public statement on the platform — which would otherwise seem disappointing to the anti-abortion right — is a tell. They characterize the GOP platform as "reaffirm[ing] its commitment to protect unborn life today through the 14th Amendment."…
Of our truths, histories, memories, and identities, which we drag around behind us like an invisible reptilian tail; there are those which must be kept and those from which we must escape, and if we are very lucky, they are not always the same.
Herein I interrogate the discontiguous and boundaries and interfaces between realms of being represented by the two figural images of Biden which are now part of our historical memory and seared into our national identity like a living brand, a Janus-like chiaroscuro of darkness and light like America herself; one a ghost of his former glory as victorious liberty, an echo of sympatico, compassion, and embodied solidarity in revolutionary struggle who gathers into his protection the Wretched of the Earth and all her huddled masses yearning to be free, but now an illusion robbed of its substance, like humankind consumed by the flaws of our humanity and the brokenness of the world.
Limned against this fallen greatness lies the chasms of darkness of an empire of conquest and dominion and a carceral state of force and control written in the blood of those whose lives we have fed into the machine of our wealth, power, and privilege, including the Native Americans whose nations we have assimilated as our own, the African slaves who created our wealth and power at our origins, and the colonized peoples whose labor and resources confer our dominion of the world principally through control of oil as a strategic resource. This is a map of the world and the limits of the human embodied in the figure of Genocide Joe who has made us all complicit in the Israeli ethnic cleansing and genocide of the Palestinians, crimes against humanity by our colony and proxy state Israel whose design and purpose is to divide the indigenous peoples of the region against themselves and secure our control of oil without which our civilization goes dark, resulting in the conflict now ongoing between the Arab-American Alliance and the Dominion of Iran which has become a theatre of World War Three as Iran’s ally Russia and America fight to the death through our proxies.
In Joe Biden we are confronted by an image of America and of ourselves, in all our grandeur and terror. He is become a symbol of our historical duality as conservative and revolutionary forces bound together in one flesh and nation in titanic struggle to become human.
First, the embrace of our darkness as we struggle to become human. Here we find the first Biden-Trump debate an echo and reflection of Biden’s appalling performances against his Democratic rivals during the selection trials and debates of 2019. As I wrote in my post of October 15 2019, America redefines itself: the Democratic Presidential debates round ad nauseum; As Biden goggles in stupefaction, coughing up platitudes and party boilerplate like hairballs, a guttering fire which dimly echoes the scripted glibness of his glory days as a diversionary talking head and apparatchik of hegemonic elites and the carceral state, the Warren-Sanders détente holds while the outliers swarm and hurl barbs at pack leader Elizabeth Warren.
I’d love to have the Progressive alliance of the Elizabeth Warren-Bernie Sanders team as President and Vice President in either configuration of roles; and my wish for this election is for them to run together. The balance of Warren the conservative policy wonk and Beltway insider committed to salvaging capitalism from its death spiral of privatization and Sanders the Democratic Socialist and ideologue committed to revolution and social transformation achieves an ideal state of dynamically unstable forces able to adapt to changing conditions with agility and harness chaos as an engine of growth and life and as a lever of change.
All living systems must have both a revolutionary and innovating force of adaptation through which to evolve and meet the challenge of new threats to our survival, and a conserving force which insulates meaning from change and ensures the survival of our values and principles such as those embodied in our Constitution and Bill of Rights, and of those traditions and anchorages which have allowed us to survive thus far. In both natural and cultural evolution, we need both forces working cooperatively to manage change and shape our future.
The function of conservatism is to buffer order from the shock of the new and withstand stresses and changing conditions without losing ourselves or undergoing morphogenic change, the loss of identity as structural form, or ruptures to our prochronism, the memory and history of our choices, successful adaptations and strategies of survival as expressed in our ideational form, the loss of our culture and traditions.
The function of revolution and innovation is to capitalize on chaos as adaptive potential and to transform, create, and discover new forms, meanings, and values.
For the origins of my idea of life as a game played by representatives of these shaping forces, I refer you to Friedrich Nietzsche’s The Birth of Tragedy, Yasunari Kawabata’s The Master of Go, and Herman Hesse’s The Glass Bead Game.
To return to the immediate subject of the debates, a brief summary:
Joe Biden would have been a good news anchor, if someone else was writing his copy. I think he should run for President against Trump- but as a Republican.
Biden’s handlers advise him to run on his record. I think he should too; the invasion of Iraq, the Anita Hill hearings, his opposition to desegregation. Whoever’s interests he represents, I do not believe that they are ours.
Kamala Harris has changed the course of history in calling Biden out on his antibusing past, in which his hidden face as George Wallace is exposed, and we owe her a great debt. I hope this is the last we shall ever hear of Joe Biden; but I fear that systems of oppression and hegemonies of elite wealth, power, and privilege have already anointed him their figurehead as the President least likely to bring real and meaningful change or seizures of power by the people. Harris is something quite different, and has spoken truth to power on behalf of us all, as she did when she defied the entire Democratic Party in California to outlaw capital punishment. She has established her role as a champion of the people unafraid to defy authority when it is wrong, and I hope she will continue to do so in whatever office she may hold. I am wondering now what form of co-optation they will offer her to silence her voice; perhaps the Vice Presidency as Biden’s performative minder?
Beto O’Rourke has also championed the powerless, and has a lot of good things to say; I agree with his plan to tax churches which refuse to support gay marriage out of existence. Further, I hope we may one day tax all church properties and organizations of faith as authorized identities out of existence, for a state funded faith is inimical to democracy, and this is exactly what we have now with tax free church businesses and properties. He is a committed crusader against gun violence and racism. He’s also learning fast, and is another figure I expect to see in the future national political arena. Beto, we don’t need to confiscate people’s guns, just make the manufacture or sale of guns and ammunition a federal crime equal to murder and possession of a gun legal proof of intent to kill.
Pete Buttigieg has great value as a figure of liberty, being a gay combat veteran with an Arabic name. We need more diversity in our representatives. In his own field of expertise he is unsurpassed among the candidates; in his lockup with Tulsi Gabbard over Syria he was absolutely right. He should be Bernie’s Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; just don’t loose him on any problem that can’t be fixed by breaking it with greater force.
Amy Klobuchar threw groundless accusations at Elizabeth Warren, enacting Margaret Atwood’s analysis of seizures of power from the patriarchy resulting in female on female violence rather than mutual support. I found this ugliness disturbing, enough to overcome the seductive effect of her voice as every time she speaks I see Mrs Maisel from the Prime Video series, and like Circe’s swine am bereft of all reason.
Also the fish-eyed glassy stare of bewilderment as Castro discussed monopolies was that of someone who just isn’t smart enough to follow a high level conversation.
Andrew Yang seems like a nice fellow with a single-issue candidacy, who is utterly clueless about human nature. His breathtaking vision to obsolesce labor in a universal socialist state where our machines do the hard and dirty work to free us to be Plato’s Philosopher-Kings and to dream, create, and invent is Utopian in the extreme, in the negative sense of the word as used by its Marxist critics. This kind of Techno-Anarchism has two problems; first, the technology to obsolesce labor does not yet exist and our sentient artificial intelligences which are the successor species to humankind will first replace human imagination and creativity and enslave us, second that this has been tried before as the New Soviet Man, who free from the profit motive should be without violence or unequal power relations, and we have seen how well that worked out. Give a hundred people a basic living stipend of one thousand dollars a month with no strings attached and 97 of them will refuse to work unless they are bribed, as was endemic and pervasive in the Soviet Union, and was also a contributing cause in the Fall of the Roman Empire. Many will simply go on a bender til the cash runs out. Of the other three, one will take that money out of circulation by ratholing it in savings or buried in the backyard due to the epigenetic trauma of poverty, one will spend it on shiny baubels, and one will squander it on unrealistic ventures and dreams they have no education or background to achieve. The achievement of that education must be primary, and I believe absolutely in universal lifelong free university education. The question is, how to free humankind without condemning us to our most self destructive impulses? Like the abandonment of social force and violence as police and armies, this requires rules about how freedom is used until we have grown beyond its need. Tie the Basic Living Stipend to a target behavior that will pay America forward, like meeting grade targets while enrolled at university or a trade apprenticeship program in critical fields, and we have a winnable plan; while avoiding the horrors of the workhouse and the labor camp. Work never was freedom. Keep trying, Andrew; you’ve got time to learn. I find your vision of an ideal society compelling, but forty years of revolutionary struggle have taught me that we are not yet ready for it.
Would it surprise anyone to learn I’m still voting for Bernie Sanders?
And for the Second Act of this play, witness now our light as we emerge from the shadows of our history. Herein we find echo and reflection of the 2020 First Presidential Biden-Trump Debate in Biden’s magnificent Madison Address to the Nation.
As I wrote in my post of September 30 2020, Against the Monster Himself, Biden Becomes Magnificent: the First Presidential Debate; Biden tricked Trump into revealing his operational command and control of the Proud Boys and other forces of white supremacist terror and fascist aligned militias. And Trump never even noticed how he had been outwitted into a public confession of criminal complicity in racist violence and the disruption of Black Lives Matter protests for equality and justice by what has previously been deniable forces of repression acting in coordination with white supremacist infiltration agents within the police.
Agile as a fox Biden was tonight, and he danced rings around the Clown of Terror. Trump spun nets of lies with which to snare the hearts of men, and Biden smote them asunder like Alexander cutting the Gordian Knot. Trump spat venom and Biden deflected and evaded and stopped his mouth of hate and fear with truths, counterattacking into the line of argumentation like a matador whose glittering rapier weaves through the horns of a raging beast’s charge.
Trump knows but one game, rugby, and brought to this arena his arts of intimidation and the crush and maul of direct charge; but Biden is a master of the old Spanish swordsmanship of La Verdadera Destreza; timing, precision, evasion, encirclement and movement, angle of attack and absention of target, and the envelopment of opposition in counterattack, and tonight the brilliance of his skills was on full display against the rage and arrogance of Trump.
Tonight Biden demonstrated his mastery of Trump as a matador masters a brute of monstrous power but limited understanding, thinking several steps ahead of Trump in multiple dimensions of possibilities like a chessmaster and marshalling layers of Jesuitical rhetoric along them all.
This was a contest of vacuity and bluster against depth and guile, and of amoral greed and vanity against greatness of soul and compassion for others, and this the first Presidential debate of 2020 was a victory for Biden and America, for tonight we have begun to reclaim our heart.
As mass celebrations erupt throughout France, euphoria seizes the nation and the world as the election is called for the Left, and Le Pen’s Nazi revivalists are once again denied capture of the state, for the tide of history has reversed and our odds of avoiding an Age of Tyranny and centuries of global war ending with our extinction are a little better today than they were yesterday.
First the British choose Labour over the Tories, and this stunning reversal of fortunes in an election where all the polls said LePen was unbeatable; it gives me hope for our own election in November, and the forlorn hope of sending Trump back to his golf course.
How this victory was won precisely merits special attention by America and any nation under threat of electoral capture of the state by the enemy, for tactical voting is a form of Fraternity which I often term as Solidarity and applies in all nations with a citizen electorate who are co-owners of the state.
Nothing is beyond the possibilities of mass action and refusal to submit to force and control by authority and those who would enslave us.
Today France has liberated herself and illuminated a path of resistance for us all.
As I wrote in my post of April 25 2022, Victory For Democracy Versus Fascism in France; Celebrate with us the victory of democracy over fascism in the election of Macron over Le Pen in the elections of France.
We share much history, ideology, values, and the institutions of government as partners and champions of a unifying civilization founded on democracy and the Rights of Man, America and France, and many of the same challenges as well.
An imperial and monarchial Presidency may be counted among such challenges to democracy, for the unchecked power of the office and the extraordinary wealth necessary to win it makes of it a prize in the games of elites, and its capture by fascist subversive forces threatens our liberty in a way like no other.
Capture the Presidency of France as the Fourth Reich did in America with Our Clown of Terror, Traitor Trump, in the Stolen Election of 2016, and all of the institutions of the state, its Justice and Legislative branches, and all of the values and ideals of the nation, Liberty, Equality, Solidarity, verifiable and transparent Truth and impartial Justice, a secular state which stands between no one and his personal relationship with the Infinite, all of this becomes destabilized and questionable, and vulnerable to infiltration and subversion from the top.
The Imperial and Monarchial Presidency must be restored to balance with the Legislative and Justice branches of government, for this is a precondition of fascist subversion and tyranny.
For such systems already disastrously out of balance, wherein power becomes centralized to a single authority and the carceral state which functions as his exoskeleton and extends his will throughout a nation become a prison and instrument of tyranny, only the apex predator has agency. And no one, not even the tyrant, is truly human in tyrannies of unequal power. This is why democracy is important; at stake is liberty and equality versus dehumanization and slavery.
France has averted this fate, for now. And for all of our tomorrows? Such is the power we hold in our hands, to choose who we will become from among the limitless possibilities of becoming human.
Let us dream and forge better Brave New Worlds.
As written by Harrison Stetler in Jacobin, in his article entitled Marine Le Pen Would Destroy French Democracy; “ Emmanuel Macron has hacked away at civil liberties, with heightened police repression and ministers promising to root out “Islamo-leftism.” Marine Le Pen would be much worse — she’ll wage all-out war on France’s democratic institutions.
Spirits were low last Tuesday at the Dorothy, a café and community space in Paris named after Catholic American labor activist Dorothy Day. Two days earlier, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, leader of the left-wing France Insoumise, had finished third in the first round of France’s presidential election, a little over 400,000 votes shy of qualifying for the runoff. The reality was sinking in that on April 24, voters will again have to choose between Marine Le Pen and Emmanuel Macron. The incumbent Macron and the slew of conservative candidates divided up some 68 percent of the first-round electorate, an unmistakable sign of the country’s lurch to the right.
With a keen eye for timing, the anti-capitalist, Christian-inflected magazine Limite chose this moment to host a public discussion with François Bégaudeau. A novelist, filmmaker, and essayist, Bégaudeau is one of the few great polymaths in contemporary French culture, a keen observer whose unpretentious novels channel a frank realism. His 2008 film The Class, on a teacher assigned to a difficult Paris school, won the Palme d’Or at the Cannes Festival and was nominated for Best Foreign Picture at the Academy Awards.
But it’s as a social critic that Bégaudeau has most distinguished himself. His controversial 2019 essay, The Story of Your Stupidity, pillories the moral pretensions of what Bégaudeau now calls the “cool bourgeoisie”: the upper-middle-class Macronists who go to such ends to distinguish themselves from crass reactionaries like the Marine Le Pen and Éric Zemmour ilk. When their interests depend on it, Bégaudeau argues, the hip side of the ruling classes shed their easygoing mystique and become indistinguishable from their stiffer cousins. The pressure to do so would only become more intense as capital struggles to sustain itself through the twenty-first century’s wave of social, economic and climate shocks. This is a fine description of the lopsided politics of the Macron era, and has made Bégaudeau one of its most lucid observers.
Except on one subject. Bégaudeau did not vote on April 10, and, needless be said, he won’t be voting on April 24. Reared on decades of political retreat, he has become one of the leading voices for abstention on the French left. In mid-March, he released How to Occupy Yourself on an Election Sunday, a lively essay on the inanity of electoral politics and the totem of voting. The book stated in clearer form what was already one of the central threads of The Story of Your Stupidity: Bégaudeau’s abstention from the last Le Pen–Macron face-off.
The struggle, real or imagined, between the “cool” and the “hard” wings of the French elite — the Macronists and the far-right — was the official the subject of the April 12 talk at the Dorothy. But this was a natural pretext to discuss the subject on everyone’s mind: voting. “For someone with the luxuries that you have,” a woman in the audience commented, “I find that your position is irresponsible.”
“Luxury . . . irresponsibility . . .” Bégaudeau retorted. “When I hear those words, the Nietzschean in me starts to get riled up.”
In less intellectualized form, Bégaudeau’s dilemma is something that many French people will be facing today. Already on April 10, roughly 26 percent of the electorate abstained — the highest level since 2002, when the far-right then led by Jean-Marie Le Pen first qualified for the runoff. Macron seems to have a strong enough lead to win anyway: 15 percentage points, according to an Ipsos poll released on April 21. But this is still a historically small margin, with some polls showing him only 6 percentage points ahead. And he surely can’t count on votes from the Left. According to an internal consultation by Mélenchon’s France Insoumise released on April 17, 38 percent planned to cast a null ballot, expressing their discontent at the runoff, while 29 percent would abstain entirely.
For left-wing voters specifically, relativism between Le Pen and Macron is fed by the experiences of the last five years, which have been lived as a series of attacks and humiliations that quickly earned Macron the nickname “president of the rich.” Le Pen, however, would not mark a rupture from the deeply antisocial democratic tenor of the Macron years, despite her attempt to position herself as an advocate of France’s lower and middle classes. Le Pen has, notably, abandoned her 2017 campaign plank of reversing recent changes to the labor code that undermined job security. Her propositions on purchasing power, mainly to achieved through tax rebates, are a reminder of the Reaganite origins of the 1980s National Front.
Social and economic policy aside, it’s Macron’s attacks on public liberties and his cynical exploitation of right-wing cultural anxieties that have left-wing voters most dismayed by the choice faced. But there is fundamentally a difference of kind between Macron and Le Pen when it comes to preserving democratic norms. Macron’s administration has done little to stop a slippage that began well before his administration. The 2017 turning of the state of emergency into law, the 2018 “Collomb law” on immigration and asylum, the 2021 “global security law,” the 2021 law on “Islamic separatism,” the dissolution of associations, and Macron’s cajoling of police forces have only accelerated this trend. A Le Pen presidency would close the circle entirely.
Rule by Referendum?
Le Pen plans to kick off her term with a series of attacks on France’s constitutional architecture. One of her main propositions is the establishment via referendum of what the far-right calls “national priority,” institutionalizing a hierarchy of rights between French citizens and foreigners in employment, housing, and social welfare. To clear the way for measures that would directly contradict European and international law on immigration, asylum, and human rights, she also plans also plans to impose the primacy of French law over European law, a reversal that Sorbonne law professor Bastien François said would amount to a “de facto exit from the European Union.”
A French president bolstered by a parliamentary majority, and therefore with a pliant prime minister, leads an extremely powerful executive. Enjoying the initiative in much legislative activity, the president and prime minister can in some cases circumvent Parliament entirely via constitutional pathways such as Article 49.3, which allows the executive to force a law through unless the National Assembly approves a censure vote in under twenty-four hours.
Without a parliamentary majority, however, the president’s agenda-setting capabilities are severely weakened. This is why, throughout the campaign, Le Pen has highlighted her intention to govern by referendum — a way to circumvent a likely hostile Parliament. In doing so, Le Pen hopes to position herself as a direct tribune of the French people, using the bully pulpit to force through opposition from mediating institutions such as the court system, the National Assembly, and the Senate — at the risk of provoking a constitutional crisis.
The actual legal argument for this is flimsy. Constitutional reform in France is organized under Article 89 of the constitution, requiring supermajority approval from both chambers of Parliament. A hypothetical Le Pen majority in the National Assembly, the lower chamber, is already a stretch. The advantage enjoyed by entrenched parties in the Senate suggests that the upper house would almost certainly be under opposition control.
In the April 20 presidential debate, however, Le Pen again insisted that she would use Article 11 of the constitution to bypass the official constitutional reform process. This article, which is meant to be used for the approval of traditional pieces of legislation or questions pertaining to “the organization of public powers,” was controversially used in 1962 by Charles de Gaulle to institute the direct election of French presidents by universal suffrage. The article stipulates, however, that a referendum must result in a consultation from the government in Parliament — a detail that De Gaulle ignored in 1962.
Le Pen has also brushed over these technicalities. “Only the people are sovereign,” she stammered during the April 20 debate, implying that it’s a simple question of the balance of power — between institutions, but more importantly, between institutions and segments of French society of which a rogue president would claim to be the sole representative.
“It’s at this point that we can start speaking of a coup d’état” François said.
What exactly happens? We don’t know. The Parliament can decide to impeach the president. Do state functionaries call a general strike? We’d enter into very murky terrain. It’s like seeing what would have happened if the January 6 assault on the Capitol had worked: as soon as we step outside the rules, it becomes very difficult to say how things will go.
“I have a hard time actually seeing her go down this path,” François tempered. “We don’t have the spoils system,” anticipating that, within state administrations at least, Le Pen would find little enthusiasm. An opposed Parliament could lead Le Pen to call for dissolution, of course, ushering in a snap election in the unlikely hope of demanding and winning a new parliamentary mandate.
Regime Crisis
But even what the attorney and legal expert Jean-Pierre Mignard called a “shackled” Le Pen — boosted by a presidential mandate, hobbled institutionally — would bring the country to the limits of a “regime crisis.” This sort of situation would only further galvanize France’s confident far-right ecosystem. Friendly media organizations, retired generals, and extra-parliamentary political clubs already relish talk of civil war and seek to constantly outdo each other in racist saber-rattling. This flattered though minoritarian counter-society would become a dominant pole in possession of actual state power. They would eagerly follow Le Pen’s anti-institutional adventurism — just what France can’t afford right now.
For all these reasons, left-wing voters need to be clearheaded about what today’s vote really means. In the society that they want to build, there is space for “neither Le Pen nor Macron,” as the slogan rejecting the election goes. But from today, France’s next president will be either Le Pen or Macron.
That is the only thing being resolved. Bégaudeau is surely right to point out that elections are only one aspect of our political existence: a vote on Sunday is a momentary intervention to reduce the harm that can come from a figure with major sway over what people are able to do elsewhere in their social and political lives. The everyday injustices already endured by many French people have festered or been swollen by Macron — they would grow exponentially through a Le Pen administration. On the erosion of democratic institutions and rights, the response is no different. Without question, fighting back against, or eventually reversing, France’s rightward drift would be massively less difficult during a second Macron term.”
Here is my previous essay on this year’s elections in France, April 11 2022 France Chooses a Future; France chooses a future in April’s elections, and as in America and much of the world it is one in which the forces of democracy and the founding Revolution of Liberty, Equality, and Solidarity is increasingly eclipsed by fascisms of blood, faith, and soil and by a centrist neoliberal order whose rallying cry is the return to normal; a normality whose internal contradictions of systemic and structural unequal power long unraveling now threaten us with civilizational collapse and extinction.
As I wrote of our own elections in my post of November 2 2021, which parallel those of France this April, entitiled This General Elections Day, Let Us Seize Our Power in the Reimagination and Transformation of America and Humankind; We face a great threat of fascist tyranny at a balance point of history throughout America and the world, and how we choose to give answer will decide both the course of our lives and those of future generations for centuries to come, perhaps for all time til the end of humankind if our choices bring extinction.
Today we have an opportunity to choose one another and not the wealth, power, and privilege of hegemonic elites, equality, diversity, and inclusion and not the divisions and hierarchies of exclusionary otherness, liberty and not the centralization of power and authority to a carceral state owned by the wealthy, democracy and not tyranny, hope and not fear, love and not hate.
Use the power of your voice and your vote while these rights are still yours, and refuse to submit to those who would enslave us. For at stake in our elections is our power to choose our own identity and our own destiny, and once lost to tyranny and state terror a free society of equals can only be reclaimed through seizures of power and revolutionary struggle.
As written by Sigmund Freud in 1893; “The first human being who hurled an insult instead of a stone was the founder of civilization.” Voting is better than fighting. Let us throw words and not stones.
As I wrote in my post of November 22 2020, Normal Doesn’t Live Here Anymore; One of the things which concerns me about the use of the term normal in the current political moment is its inherent confusion and ambiguity, especially by the Collaborationist wing of the Democratic Party as an apologetics to reclaim their hegemony of power which was shattered and seized by the three successive waves of mass protests which have ruled the streets of America’s cities for a year or so now and handed the Presidency to the miscast champions of Revolution and Socialism Biden and Harris; the Black Lives Matter protests for racial justice and equality, a new Green Movement driven by Greta Thunberg’s mass global school strike and the guerilla theatre of Extinction Rebellion calling for economic and ecological justice and championing the Green New Deal as the last, best hope for humankind, and the #metoo movement which preceded them as a social transformation and reckoning of Patriarchy.
If we squander our opportunity to enact real change with Executive control, if Biden and the fossil structures of a failed system which he represents return us to the conditions which led to the rise of fascism and state tyranny and terror, if we fail to seize our day and reforge the social contract of a free society of equals as the praxis or action of our values of liberty, equality, truth, and justice, there may never be another chance for us to do so.
Now is the time for change, and we must be its champions and bringers.
We must be the Party which leads from the front of the three mass movements which have brought us to the White House, and let the Republicans be the Party that cowers from its people in bunkers and behind walls. History has handed us a hammer with which to smash the old and build the new; and to seize it we must abandon normality as the illusion that it is, behind which elite power enslaves us and swindles the public wealth. Always pay attention to the man behind the curtain.
Normal doesn’t live here anymore.
David Walsh disambiguates kinds of normalcy writing in the Boston Review; Last year Joe Biden began his presidential campaign with a simple premise: “I believe history will look back on four years of this president and all he embraces as an aberrant moment in time.” The question of whether Donald Trump really has been an aberration in U.S. history has dominated political discourse for years, and in the face of both Trump’s incessant antics and the upheavals of the pandemic, Biden positioned himself as the “return to normalcy” candidate. (Before 2020, that political rhetoric was perhaps most closely associated with the presidential campaign of Warren G. Harding a century ago.) Even though Biden himself has walked back some of this language on the campaign trail, it has served as the bedrock of his message. And it worked: it unseated an incumbent president for the first time in nearly three decades, even if with razor-thin margins in some states.
What do these claims of aberration and normalcy actually mean? The simplicity of messaging conceals a multiplicity of interpretations, each with their own implications for politics.”
Nor is this shift toward fascism and the centralization of authority and power to a carceral state of force and control a sudden and unforeseen event; it has been gathering force as a counter-revolution and the subversion of democracy for some time.
Historically I would link the origins of fascist revivalism in France to the mass immigration and infiltration of the former Nazis who had joined the Foreign Legion and ruled the colony of Algeria as a white ethnostate until its fall, who now form the core of Le Pen’s party which threatens capture of the government of France, with the earlier importation of Nazi elites and scientists by America’s intelligence services during the Red Scare era of McCarthy’s blacklist, not only Werner von Braun and others recruited for the space race but also war criminals drafted into our intelligence and military services, in some cases including the Green Berets and Central Intelligence Service entire Nazi military units and espionage networks retaining their former rank in new uniforms.
Fascism remains a beast with many heads and fifth columns within such security services throughout the world; and must be resisted globally whenever it crawls out of the darkness to ambush us.
How best can it be resisted? Exposure and relentless pursuit unto destruction when identified; but we must also set counterfires and starve it of the fear it feeds on. For this is a consequence of overwhelming and generalized fear weaponized in service to power through division and shaped as fear of otherness by falsification, lies, propaganda, rewritten histories, and alternate realities.
We must speak directly to the fear of those authority seeks to subjugate by claiming to act in their name; fear is a primary basis of human exchange as politics, and whomever best speaks to such fear wins, especially when fear is based in very real existential threats and unjust and unequal systems.
As I wrote in my post of November 17 2021, The Revolution Goes Ever Onward: France’s Gilets Jaunes; This month marks the anniversary of three years of revolution and the Gilets Jaunes protests in France; one which has been met with repression and a shift in the government of France not toward liberation, but toward a brutal police state of force and control.
The Yellow Vest movement emerged with a new precariat as a response to globalization, privatization, worsening economic conditions, and government complicity in the systemic mechanical failures of our civilization from its internal contradictions as we enter the terminal phase of capitalism. Historical forces sweep all before like an unstoppable tide, but like the fall of previous civilizations ours is dying because the final causes are often political decisions.
This means that there is yet hope; we can still change our future from an age of tyranny to one of liberty and a free society of equals.
As with all tyrannies, dissent and resistance become pretexts for the militarization of the police through the counterinsurgency model of policing and the escalation of force and state terror, the universalization of surveillance, and the centralization of power to authority and a carceral state which serves the wealth, power, and privilege of hegemonic elites.
Herein we see the globalization of tyranny which employs the strategy of Trump’s numerous coup attempts in 2020 to provide a causus belli for the federal occupation of Democratic cities by having police provocateurs and deniable forces of white supremacist terror disrupt the Black Lives Matter protests with violence and looting. The parallels between America under Trump and France are alarming, but illuminating as well.
Such historical progression from liberty to tyranny is not unique but universal; the nature of states is service to elites, law serves power, fear becomes reaction, and the centralization of power to authority creates tyranny. Here is the origin of evil in the Wagnerian Ring of fear, power, and force; not in personal sin, unfitness, or the innate depravity of man in the absence of restraining force and control but in systemic inequality.
Tyranny is born of overwhelming and generalized fear weaponized by authority in service to power, using the lies and illusions of propaganda, false histories, and alternate realities to divide and conquer its citizens by making some of us complicit in the subjugation of the others through hierarchies of membership and exclusionary otherness, thus creating fascisms of blood, faith, and soil.
Other nations have proven less resilient to this subversion of democracy; among them France, which I would have thought impossible. Consider the cultural shift necessary to transform a nation in which protest is enshrined and valorized in the national identity as a patriotic duty to one wherein police brutalize protesters rather than embrace them as comrades in the cause of liberty, equality, and fraternity, and the universal Rights of Man are become contingent on their service to authority. I’d have said the same of us, once.
France is fallen, but like America with our electoral repudiation of Trump and fascism, may yet rise again.
As written by the philosopher Alain Badiou in his Verso Books blog; “That there are numerous reasons for this revolt, and that the movement may therefore be regarded as legitimate, is something I grant without hesitation. I am aware of the depopulation of rural areas, the sad silence of abandoned streets in small and even medium-sized towns; the continuous removal for masses of people of public services, which are gradually being privatized: health centres, hospitals, schools, post offices, train stations, telephones. I know that pauperization, initially creeping and then accelerated, is affecting sections of the population that forty years ago still enjoyed almost continually increasing spending power. I am well aware that material existence is becoming a headache for whole families, especially for many women, who are highly active in the yellow vests movement.
In short, in France there is a very high level of discontent on the part of what we might call the labouring part of the middle class, provincial in the main and with a modest income. The yellow vests movement is a significant representation of this discontent in the form of active, vehement revolt.
For those willing to attend to them, the historico-economic reasons for this uprising are perfectly clear. Moreover, they explain why the yellow vests date the onset of their woes to forty years ago: crudely, the 1980s, which marked the onset of a long capitalist-oligarchical counter-revolution, incorrectly dubbed ‘neo-liberal’ when it is liberal full stop. Which means: a return to the savagery of nineteenth-century capitalism. This counter-revolution occurred in response to the ten ‘red years’ – roughly 1965–75 – whose French epicentre was May 68 and whose global epicentre was the Cultural Revolution in China. But it was considerably accelerated by the collapse of the global enterprise of communism in the USSR and then China: nothing on a world scale now opposed capitalism and its profiteers, in particular the trans-national oligarchy of billionaires, wielding unlimited power.
Meanwhile, from the 1980s to the present France’s situation has gradually deteriorated. This country is no longer what it was during the trente glorieuses of post-war reconstruction. France is no longer a strong world power, a conquering imperialism. Today, it is frequently compared to Italy or even Greece. Competition is causing it to fall back everywhere; its colonial rent is on its last legs and requires innumerably military operations in Africa, which are costly and uncertain, to maintain it. In addition, as the cost of working-class labour power is much lower in Asia, for example, large factories are gradually being relocated abroad. This massive deindustrialization entails a sort of social degradation extending from whole regions, such as Lorraine and its steelmaking or the North of textile factories and coal mines, to the Parisian suburbs, abandoned to property speculation on the countless wastelands left behind by ruined industries.
The consequence of all this is that the French bourgeoisie – its dominant oligarchy, the shareholders of the CAC 40 – can no longer maintain a politically servile middle class on the same footing as before, notably before the 2008 crisis. That middle class was an almost constant historical support of the electoral pre-eminence of the various right wings – a pre-eminence directed against the organized workers of the great industrial concentrations, tempted by communism between the 1920s and the 1980s and 90s. Hence the current uprising by a significant popular section of this middle class, which feels it has been abandoned, against Macron, who is the agent of local capitalist ‘modernization’ – meaning: tightening the screw everywhere, economizing, imposing austerity, privatizing without any of the consideration that still existed thirty years ago for middle-class comfort in exchange for their consent to the dominant system.
The yellow vests, pleading their all too real pauperization, want to be paid a high price for this consent once again. But this is absurd precisely because Macronism results from the fact that the oligarchy, firstly, has had less need of middle-class support, which was expensive to finance, since the communist danger disappeared; and secondly, no longer has the resources to pay for an electoral domestic staff on the same scale. And it therefore has to shift, under the cover of ‘indispensable reforms’, towards an authoritarian politics: a new form of state power will serve as a support for lucrative ‘austerity’, extended from the popular class of the unemployed and workers to the lower strata of the middle class. And this for the benefit for the real masters of this world – namely, the principal shareholders of the major groups in industry, commerce, raw materials, transport and communications.
In the Communist Manifesto, written in 1848, Marx had already examined this kind of conjuncture and referred, in essence accurately, to what are today’s yellow vests. He wrote this: ‘The lower middle class, the small manufacturer, the shopkeeper, the artisan, the peasant, all these fight against the bourgeoisie, to save from extinction their existence as fractions of the middle class. They are therefore not revolutionary, but conservative. Nay more, they are reactionary, for they try to roll back the wheel of history.’
They strive all the more bitterly today because the French bourgeoisie is no longer in a position, given the turn taken by globalized capitalism, to maintain, let alone increase, their spending power. It is true that the yellow vests ‘fight against the bourgeoisie’, as Marx puts it. But they do so to restore an old, outdated order, not to invent a new social and political order, whose names have been ‘socialism’ or, above all, ‘communism’ since the nineteenth century. For close on two centuries anything that was not more or less defined in accordance with a revolutionary orientation was quite rightly regarded as pertaining to capitalist reaction. In politics, there are only two main roads. We must absolutely return to this conviction: two ways in politics, only two, and never a ‘democratic’ dusting of pseudo-tendencies under the leadership of a self-proclaimed ‘liberal’ oligarchy.
These general considerations enable us to revert to the concrete characteristics of the yellow vest movement. Its spontaneous characteristics so to speak – those not attributable to interventions external to the main current of the uprising – are indeed ‘reactionary’ as Marx puts it, but in a more modern sense: we might term the movement’s subjectivity a popular individualism mobilizing personal anger at the new forms of servitude imposed by the dictatorship of Capital today.
As written by Andre Kapsas in Jacobin; “When the gilets jaunes revolt began on November 17, 2018, with hundreds of thousands of people taking to barricades and roundabouts across France, police had initially seemed overwhelmed. “I thought it was the revolution,” says Youri, sitting with a group of fellow leftist activists from Montreuil, eastern Paris. His comrade Julien remembers a Paris deserted by the police: “There was no more state, the street was ours, not a cop in sight; we could roam through the whole city, we thought we were hallucinating.”
But if in the very first days of the movement the authorities vacillated, before long they turned to crude repression. Week after week over the next year and more, the gilets jaunes took to the streets — and the police met them with increasing brutality. “Only” one person was killed, but hundreds were left with serious, even permanent, injuries; over eleven thousand people were arrested; and at least several hundred are still in jail. Through their response, French authorities introduced new norms of judicial repression — both dramatically and permanently restricting the room for democratic protest.”
The police forces’ violent reaction was completely disproportionate,” lawyer Arié Alimi tells me over the phone — emphasizing that the gilets jaunes mostly attacked objects, while the police attacked people. For seventeen years an ardent defender of victims of police brutality, he talks with indignation about the “thousands and thousands of people injured, with considerable physical and psychological traumas.” Advocacy officer on civil liberties at Amnesty International, Anne-Sophie Simpere agrees, describing the police reaction as “illegitimate, unnecessary, and completely disproportionate.” She calls the events in December 2018 a rapid “intensification of previously existing, worrying trends in the policing of demonstrations” — citing the use of weapons and a switch from crowd control to aggressive arrests that cause serious injuries.
According to the “Désarmons-les” (“Let’s Disarm Them”) collective, French police maimed almost as many people in the first six months of the gilets jaunes movement as they had in the last twenty years. The main serious injuries were eyes being put out (twenty-four) and hands torn off (five), mostly because of the massive use of weapons classified as war weapons, such as flash-balls and sting-ball grenades. Zineb Redouane, an eighty-year-old woman, was also killed by the police, as a tear gas grenade exploded during a protest in Marseille; in her final hours, she claimed that she had been targeted on purpose. Another 284 head injuries were reported among protesters as well as journalists, who were also often attacked by police.
Another major urban center of the movement was Toulouse, southwest France, where Pascal Gassiot took part in almost all demonstrations as a member of the independent “Observatory of Police Practices.” He tells me that “the level of violence was extremely high, with a striking asymmetry in the police response.” Despite wearing recognizable clothing and standing to one side, observers were attacked twenty-seven times by police in Toulouse; four of them ended up in the hospital, including Gassiot himself. “There is absolutely no doubt that they were doing it on purpose,” he tells me: “I was filming a protester being charged over nothing, and I didn’t see the [Brigade anti-criminalité] coming in, with one of them tackling me to the ground.” With his head cracked open and two broken ribs, Gassiot had to be taken to the emergency room. He nonetheless soon returned to his work.
For Gassiot, the police violence obeyed the political strategy of a government full of “class contempt” for rural, lower-middle-class, and poor protesters. “They thought they’d strike a good blow on their mug, and these plebs would go back in their hole,” he sarcastically notes. A veteran radical left activist, the sixty-five-year-old has no doubt that “police violence is on a level unseen since the 1970s, worse than May ’68″ when France was on the brink of revolution. “It was like the war in Algeria, but without the dead,” he says — drawing parallels with the state violence of sixty years ago, when police killed dozens, if not hundreds, of Algerians and French communists on the streets of Paris during the colonial war in Algeria.
Bringing the War Home
The infamous Brigade anti-criminalité (BAC) best illustrates this gradual importation of methods of colonial policing into the French mainland, moving first into the banlieues — the working-class suburbs heavily populated by people with a migrant background — and finally extending them across the whole population. As Alimi stresses, it was a former senior civil servant in the colonies who set up these brigades in Paris and its suburbs in the early 1970s. “The BAC were brigades created specifically for Algerian migrant populations,” he explains.
In addition to police brutality, the state moved in to curtail the movement with mass arrests of thousands, judicial harassment, and illegal tactics.
Alimi invokes the long history of police violence against the workers’ movement, saying that we should properly speak of “contemporary police violence, with new methods.” For him, “the working-class suburbs were a laboratory for new practices of police repression introduced by the BAC, with new arrest techniques, permanent control, racial profiling, and new weapons like the flash-balls and grenades. . . . The poor migrant populations were guinea pigs for those methods, that then spread to political activists, social movements, and now to protesters in city centers.” The main architect of this shift was Nicolas Sarkozy, interior minister when he replaced neighborhood police with intervention units like the BAC in 2003, before becoming president in 2007.
In addition to police brutality, the state moved in to curtail the movement with mass arrests of thousands, judicial harassment, and illegal tactics. Simpere speaks of “very repressive laws that allow almost anyone, including peaceful demonstrators, to be arrested, often ‘preventatively.’” More specifically, she points out the use of two vaguely defined laws that she considers contrary to international law: one punishing the “preparation of group violence,” under which many people with protective gear like goggles have faced judicial persecution; and one forbidding “contempt toward police forces,” used more than twenty thousand times in 2019 alone. She cites the case of protesters in Narbonne prosecuted for this offense, simply because they had a banner denouncing the severe injuries caused by flash-balls.
In early December 2018, the authorities started to widely disregard their own laws. Alimi calls it “state illegality,” a concept he plans to elaborate in an upcoming book: “The state itself becomes criminal,” he explains, “as its representatives decide to deliberately violate the law to prevent the expression of civil liberties.” In addition to mass preventive arrests and illegal searches, he names the case of a state prosecutor calling on his substitutes to keep people in custody for the maximum length in order to prevent them from demonstrating, despite having no evidence against them. “France shifted from a justice system that punishes actions to a justice system that punishes intentions,” he says.
This judicial repression has led to unprecedented numbers of arrests, with more than eleven thousand detained and more than three thousand convicted. “The courts were working like a production line,” recalls Gassiot, “with speedy trials on Mondays for those arrested on Saturdays.” Alimi counts about seven hundred to eight hundred gilets jaunes currently in jail — and he has himself defended many of those arrested. “They have been victims of an incomparable judicial violence and discrimination; they’ve been treated like animals,” he says. Unusually for France, even people with no criminal records were sentenced to jail time. “They were lower-middle-class people endangered by poverty; they were simply trying to keep their head above water, but they were pushed down — and drowned.”
Police Impunity
This swift and merciless justice against the gilets jaunes contrasted with the lack of judicial reaction to police brutality. Despite the thousands of acts of violence against protesters — many of them proven by solid video evidence — the available information reveals that only seven police officers have been convicted. All of them received suspended sentences, with no discharge. Simpere describes the cases as “largely symbolic,” expressing her “serious doubt that there will be sentences corresponding to the seriousness of injuries.” Alimi is less diplomatic, calling the few convictions “crumbs thrown to the people to calm popular anger.”
Alimi goes further, stressing the whole systemic structure enabling police impunity in France. He says it starts with police officers and their hierarchy “who never acknowledge any act of violence and put into place a set of dissimulation measures every time there is any violence, including the systematic faking of official reports.” He then goes on to point out the lack of judicial independence in France, where “prosecutors are under the authority of the Justice Ministry, and see themselves as protecting public order, which leads them to protect the police.” This translates into prosecutors lying and blocking inquiries, among other things, by reacting more than thirty days after events, once footage from public cameras has already been erased.
Despite facing this “judicial wall,” Alimi says that amateur videos are changing the game. His team has imported techniques from groups like Black Lives Matter, making online calls for videos and witnesses. “Those videos have shattered the administration’s lies and have revealed dissimulation techniques.” As for judges, Alimi also points out that some are starting to recognize the need for real investigations into police work, but he says that it is too early to make an honest appraisal of investigations into police violence against the gilets jaunes. “We will know in two to three years,” he says, “then we can make a final assessment of those investigations, and maybe even talk about a transformation of the approach to police violence.”
Yet hope remains, and has a champion in Jean-Luc Mélenchon. As written by Marlon Ettinger in Jacobin in his article entitled Jean-Luc Mélenchon Is Fighting to Be France’s Last President; “Emmanuel Macron claimed that France was missing a “king figure” — then spent five years ruling it like a monarch. His record has fueled Jean-Luc Mélenchon’s pledge to get rid of the presidency entirely and rebuild French democracy from the bottom up.
In Toulouse on April 3, in Jean Luc Mélenchon’s last open-air rally of the campaign, a man held an enormous colorful sign that read, “For the Sixth Republic.” The existing republican order, the fifth in France’s postrevolutionary history, had come to its natural end, schoolteacher Damien told me. It is “way too monarchical, way too autocratic,” he said. “We might as well proclaim a Third Empire!”
Flore, who brought a sign made by her nine-year-old daughter, said that part of Mélenchon’s appeal was that he knew how to take good influences from wherever they came. The Référendum d’initiative citoyenne proposal — allowing citizens to propose legislation if they can collect enough signatures for a referendum — was inspired by the Revolución Ciudadano in Ecuador, she explained.
Mélenchon had first formally elaborated what the Sixth Republic could mean in 2010, when he wrote a short book whose titled could be translated as Get them all out! Quick, the Citizens’ Revolution. “The Citizens’ Revolution,” Mélenchon wrote, “is the concept proposed in Ecuador by Rafael Correa during the 2006 presidential election, which he won. This revolution was first of all constitutional. It gave by referendum full powers to the National Constituent Assembly.” This meant, Mélenchon explains, a citizens’ revolution in “institutions, social relations, and the dominant culture.”
The concept of citizenship is essential to this strategy — and is something that Mélenchon sees has been undermined in France. “I use the intellectual definition of citizenship,” he emphasizes. “Being capable of enunciating not what’s good for yourself but what’s good for all.”
“What I’ve observed in revolutionary countries is that most people don’t enter into a movement for ideological motives, or to realize a particular [political] program,” he insists. Rather, movements emerge to sort out “concrete problems that the great and powerful have definitively proven incapable of settling.”
“The revolutions of our time,” he concludes, “have a social fuel and a democratic motor.”
A Wartime Constitution
But in France’s Fifth Republic, the people are not the sovereign. In 1958, Charles de Gaulle came to power in the context of the Algerian Civil War. His supporters, among them a group of military officers in French-colonized Algeria, believed he was the only one who could keep Algeria French. He was swept to power under the threat of a coup d’état, spearheaded by a putsch involving officers in Algiers. At one point, plans were made to land paratroopers in Paris and overthrow the government. Instead, parliament stood aside and invested de Gaulle with the power to govern by decree for six months before he produced his new constitution. The text of the new constitution was written hurriedly, then presented to the public to vote on its ratification just one month later. Worried by what they believed to be the democratic instability and excesses of the Fourth Republic, the drafters of the 1958 constitution sought to limit the power of the legislature. To accomplish this, they made the president the supreme sovereign of the country, with the power not just to approve and enforce laws but also to draft them. The only crime he could be charged with under the constitution was high treason.
I spoke with Raquel Garrido, a close advisor to Mélenchon and mainstay of the popular television show Balance ton post! A lawyer by profession, she’s also a regional councilor in the Île-de-France region that includes Paris.
“In constitutional law we talk about ‘responsibility’ when the person who holds the executive power is responsible for the exercise of their power before another power, most often a legislative power,” Garrido told me.
“In France, there’s criminal immunity for the president of the republic for the acts he executes while president. It’s this which explains, for example, why Nicolas Sarkozy can’t be tried or still less convicted for, for example, cheating in [his presidential election campaigns].” This is different from the “political immunity” that the president has. “In France,” says Garrido, “the president isn’t accountable before any authority, [nor] before the parliament, as in all other parliamentary models.”
Does there exist an impeachment process in the constitution of the Fifth Republic?
“The answer is no. But there exists one article, in theory. It’s called destitution, but it’s for very serious cases . . . and it’s never [been used], it’s impossible to implement.”
This wasn’t the case during the Fourth Republic. “It was an invention of the Fifth [Republic],” Garrido explained. “France’s history, since the departure of the monarchy, has seen moments of democratic advancements, and then moments of retreat.”
“Today there is a current of the extreme-right in France that is very hostile to the idea of popular sovereignty. . . . When you look at the supporters of Zemmour, for example, it’s all the royalist camp.”
The End of the Presidential Monarchy
The conflict between monarchy and democracy is a hallmark of Mélenchon’s rhetoric. The past five years of Emmanuel Macron’s presidency have only provided more fodder for this theme.
In 2015, Macron, then economy minister in François Hollande’s government, gave an interview where he talked about an “absence” in French politics. This was, said Macron, “the figure of the king, which I fundamentally don’t think the French people wanted dead. . . . Since then, we’ve tried to refill this void by placing other figures: these were the Napoleonic and Gaullist moments. The rest of the time, French democracy doesn’t fill this space.”
As president, Macron has pursued what Mélenchon calls an “authoritarian drift.” In 2020, when the French government ordered a lockdown for a second time in the face of rising COVID-19 infections, Mélenchon wrote a blog post denouncing “the addiction of our society to permanent states of exception,” highlighting the specter of terrorism and public health emergencies. This was particularly offensive given potential democratic alternatives like massive investments in rebuilding the capacity of French hospitals, as well as using the power of the state to organize methods of containing the pandemic like case tracking and financial support for sick people being isolated.
The past three years under Macron, Mélenchon charged, had seen the fastest reduction of liberties in a long time. This was not just the product of Macron’s actions, Mélenchon concluded — though he was a particularly adept practitioner at it — but the “heart of economic liberalism,” a system that sees human beings like pig, cows, and chickens, nothing but “batteries, exclusively occupied with producing and consuming.”
When Mélenchon spoke in the northern city of Lille on April 5, he called for an end to the “presidential monarchy.” The crowd roared in approval. “There is no democracy without democrats. There is no Republic without republicans,” Mélenchon declared.
The Constituent Assembly
The Union Populaire, the movement launched out of Mélenchon’s France Insoumise vehicle for the 2022 election, has a very similar program to his 2017 campaign. It even shares the same name — l’Avenir en Commun, or “our common future” — though it has been expanded. In the most recent edition, the first section explores the Sixth Republic and proposes sweeping changes to, and the replacement of, the country’s institutions.
The solution, then, is a constituent assembly — a democratic process where the people write a new constitution. Mélenchon’s plan is to establish this assembly by calling a referendum under Article 11 of the current constitution.
That referendum will decide how the process is set up, including the constituent assembly’s own deliberative process. After two years, the constitution it produces will be submitted to the people again for a referendum. If the people reject the constitution, the assembly will continue its work. The assembly would also bar any legislator from the two old legislative bodies (the National Assembly and the Senate) from any involvement. Then, after the new constitution is settled, members of the constituent assembly would also be barred from running as candidates in any subsequent election.
“The Fifth Republic has had its time. Abstention has become the majority in most elections. A democracy without the people isn’t one at all,” proclaims the program.
The fight for the Sixth Republic, and the new constitution that will come with it, is a fight for a re-democratization of France. Today polls predict record-high levels of abstention — almost a third of voters say they won’t cast a ballot.
I talked with Mathis, originally from Rennes, who was selling programs in the lobby outside of the hall in Lille. He’d been in Chile in 2019, when a powerful social movement opposed the conservative president Sebastián Piñera in the streets. One of the outcomes of that campaign was the calling of a constituent assembly around the time of the 2021 presidential election. This was despite the hostility the constituent assembly faced from the president, who had only granted its existence under intense pressure, and the media, which questioned its legitimacy. For Mathis, the point of the Sixth Republic is that people become “democratic actors every day,” opposing today’s “sclerotic public life.”
Garrido, who visited Chile during the development of that country’s constituent assembly, said that the difference with an assembly under a Mélenchon presidency would be that it would have the government’s full support. In Chile, “they had a president hostile to the constituent assembly,” she said. “The main difference is, we’d have an ally in the [presidency.]”
One of the centerpieces of the new constitution that Mélenchon would champion is the right to recall elected officials if they fail to follow through on their mandate. On April 6, Mélenchon’s spokesman, MP Alexis Corbière, spoke to about two hundred people in a meeting hall in Bobigny, a suburb north of Paris. “The Fifth Republic fabricates a system where you can govern without the people,” he said. The reason abstention is so high, he said, was because the people have no right to recall their representatives when they betray them. “During the French Revolution, this right existed!”
The National Assembly, he said, was not a place where the people really had a role in governing. Instead, deputies like him used the forum to be tribunes for another system. “If we don’t change these institutions . . . the worst is to come,” he said.
François Hollande, the Socialist president from 2012 to 2017, came to power promising to be the “enemy of finance.” Instead, he pushed through the notorious “El Khomri law” supported by the employers’ association MEDEF, which rewrote France’s labor code to the detriment and anger of many workers. In 2015, he perfectly encapsulated the reality of the French Fifth Republic: “An unpopular president can operate with great capacity, with great liberty . . . it’s that which is the difference between our institutions and those of our neighboring countries.”
That is the fruit of the institutions of the Fifth Republic. As Mélenchon faces the polls for likely the last time today, France has a chance to completely sweep those institutions away and replace them with new ones
“Mélenchon,” Garrido, who has been by his side for over a decade, told me confidently, “wants to be the next and the final president of the Fifth Republic.”
This day we celebrate the victory of the people of France over fascism; tomorrow we must begin to build a new humankind with France as Liberty leading the Revolution as she was always meant to be, for there are just a few things to be fixed before we truly realize a free society of equals wherein each of us acts in solidarity as a guarantor of the Rights of Man.
As I wrote in my post of July 1 2023, In Marseille and Throughout France, a Test of Competing Futures and Ideas of Human Being, Meaning, and Value; A Free Society of Equals Versus Fascisms of Blood, Faith, and Soil and Liberty Versus a Carceral State of Force and Control; Revolt against racist police terror is met with brutal repression of dissent and becomes a gateway to Revolution in France in an echo and reflection of America’s Black Lives Matter protests of 2020, in the wake of the French police murders of nonwhite boys so very like the murder of George Floyd and countless others in America.
In the streets of Marseille and throughout France tonight, we fight for a nation which has forgotten its heart.
And if France cannot reclaim her heart as a bastion of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity and a guarantor of democracy and our universal human rights throughout the world and for all humankind, we are all truly lost.
Here as in many theatres of liberation struggle and across vast chasms of time I have answered the question of who I am with the words; I am the Revolution. Among the things I mean by this is that I think of myself as a Jacobin in terms of political identity, and an inheritor and steward revolutionary struggle. Here in Marseille, the legacies of this history and the questions of who is human and who a citizen, of unequal power in a free society of equals divided against itself by race, gender, faith, and class as nationalist identity politics in serve to the wealth, power, and privilege of hegemonic elites bears special and unique meanings and existential threats to our future and our humanity.
I cannot imagine this but in terms of the great film Casablanca and the iconic song La Marseillaise, the national anthem of France first proposed by Robespierre in 1790 as the battle hymn of the revolutionaries of Marseille had become that of the Revolution itself.
I wonder now, what would those revolutionaries think of France today, as vilified and destitute underclasses protest for their universal human rights of liberty and equality under the law of the nation which established them as a new world order and centuries ago seized power from that of kings and priests?
In Marseille, where the Marseillaise was born as a hope for the future of humankind, and where now that hope is reborn in streets of fire with the glorious resistance of the reviled others of a fallen empire whose ghettos rise to defy the carceral state and systems of dehumanization, and make claim to the promise of liberty, equality, and fraternity.
I believe the revolutionaries of 1790 who created La Marseillaise would recognize themselves in those of Marseille today. The question which remains is, is France still the nation which they founded and dreamed?
How would Humphrey Bogart’s antifascist character Rick Blaine in Casablanca regard the protests? How would Camus and the heroes of the Resistance of the Second World War judge their counterparts today?
Who now are the Occupation, with guns and badges to enforce an imagined racial superiority and the caste privilege of hegemonic elites? And who now the Resistance, who place their lives in the balance with all those whom Frantz Fanon called The Wretched of the Earth, the powerless and the dispossessed, the silenced and the erased?
We who identify ourselves as Antifa and the Resistance on the one hand and as the Revolution on the other and claim membership in this history will be judged by these two interdependent and parallel sets of motivating, informing, and shaping forces; the legacies of the American and French revolutions which birthed democracy and human rights, and of the civilizational struggle against the Nazis and fascisms of blood, faith, and soil which aspires to realize our ideals as a free society of equals.
In this Defining Moment and Rashomon Gate Event, we each of us must choose; who do we want to become, we humans? What futures shall we win for our possibilities of becoming human? A world of masters and slaves, or a free society of equals?
Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite!
La Marseillaise, scene in Casablanca
France election: surprise win for leftwing alliance keeps Le Pen’s far right from power
Alors que des célébrations de masse éclatent dans toute la France, l’euphorie s’empare de la nation et du monde alors que les élections sont déclenchées pour la gauche, et les revivalistes nazis de Le Pen se voient une fois de plus refuser la capture de l’État, car le cours de l’histoire s’est inversé et nos chances d’éviter une L’ère de la tyrannie et les siècles de guerre mondiale se terminant par notre extinction sont un peu meilleurs aujourd’hui qu’ils ne l’étaient hier.
Premièrement, les Britanniques choisissent les travaillistes plutôt que les conservateurs, et ce renversement de fortune stupéfiant lors d’une élection où tous les sondages disaient que LePen était imbattable ; cela me donne de l’espoir pour notre propre élection en novembre et le vain espoir de renvoyer Trump sur son terrain de golf.
La façon dont cette victoire a été remportée mérite précisément une attention particulière de la part de l’Amérique et de toute nation menacée de capture électorale de l’État par l’ennemi, car le vote tactique est une forme de fraternité que j’appelle souvent solidarité et qui s’applique dans toutes les nations avec un électorat citoyen qui sont copropriétaires de l’État.
Rien n’est au-delà des possibilités d’action de masse et du refus de se soumettre à la force et au contrôle de l’autorité et de ceux qui voudraient nous asservir.
Aujourd’hui, la France s’est libérée et a ouvert pour nous tous un chemin de résistance.
25 Avril 2022 Victoire de la Démocratie Contre le Fascisme en France
Célébrez avec nous la victoire de la démocratie sur le fascisme lors de l’élection de Macron sur Le Pen lors des élections en France.
Nous partageons beaucoup d’histoire, d’idéologie, de valeurs et d’institutions gouvernementales en tant que partenaires et champions d’une civilisation unificatrice fondée sur la démocratie et les droits de l’homme, l’Amérique et la France, et bon nombre des mêmes défis également.
Une présidence impériale et monarchique peut être comptée parmi ces défis à la démocratie, car le pouvoir incontrôlé du bureau et l’extraordinaire richesse nécessaire pour le gagner en font un prix dans les jeux des élites, et sa capture par des forces subversives fascistes menace notre liberté d’une manière pas comme les autres.
Capturez la présidence de la France comme le Quatrième Reich l’a fait en Amérique avec Notre clown de la terreur, traître Trump, lors de l’élection volée de 2016, et toutes les institutions de l’État, ses branches judiciaire et législative, et toutes les valeurs et idéaux de la nation, la Liberté, l’Égalité, la Solidarité, la Vérité vérifiable et transparente et la Justice impartiale, un État laïc qui ne s’interpose entre personne et sa relation personnelle avec l’Infini, tout cela devient déstabilisé et discutable, et vulnérable à l’infiltration et à la subversion de la Haut.
La présidence impériale et monarchique doit être rétablie pour équilibrer les branches législative et judiciaire du gouvernement, car c’est une condition préalable à la subversion fasciste et à la tyrannie.
Pour de tels systèmes déjà déséquilibrés de manière désastreuse, dans lesquels le pouvoir devient centralisé à une autorité unique et l’État carcéral qui fonctionne comme son exosquelette et étend sa volonté à travers une nation devient une prison et un instrument de tyrannie, seul le prédateur suprême a le pouvoir. Et personne, pas même le tyran, n’est vraiment humain dans des tyrannies de pouvoir inégal. C’est pourquoi la démocratie est importante; l’enjeu est la liberté et l’égalité contre la déshumanisation et l’esclavage.
La France a évité ce sort, pour l’instant. Et pour tous nos lendemains ? Tel est le pouvoir que nous détenons entre nos mains, de choisir qui nous deviendrons parmi les possibilités illimitées de devenir humain.
Rêvons et forgeons de meilleurs Braves Nouveaux Mondes.
11 Avril 2022 La France choisit un avenir
La France choisit un avenir lors des élections d’avril, et comme en Amérique et dans une grande partie du monde, c’est un avenir dans lequel les forces de la démocratie et la révolution fondatrice de la liberté, de l’égalité et de la solidarité sont de plus en plus éclipsées par les fascismes du sang, de la foi et du sol et par un ordre néolibéral centriste dont le cri de ralliement est le retour à la normale ; une normalité dont les contradictions internes du pouvoir inégal systémique et structurel se dénouant depuis longtemps nous menacent maintenant d’effondrement et d’extinction de la civilisation.
Comme je l’ai écrit à propos de nos propres élections dans mon article du 2 novembre 2021, parallèle à celles de la France en avril, intitulé Ce jour des élections générales, saisissons notre pouvoir dans la réimagination et la transformation de l’Amérique et de l’humanité ; Nous sommes confrontés à une grande menace de tyrannie fasciste à un point d’équilibre de l’histoire à travers l’Amérique et le monde, et la façon dont nous choisissons de répondre décidera à la fois du cours de nos vies et de celles des générations futures pour les siècles à venir, peut-être pour toujours jusqu’à ce que la fin de l’humanité si nos choix entraînent l’extinction.
Aujourd’hui, nous avons la possibilité de nous choisir les uns les autres et non la richesse, le pouvoir et les privilèges des élites hégémoniques, l’égalité, la diversité et l’inclusion et non les divisions et les hiérarchies de l’altérité d’exclusion, la liberté et non la centralisation du pouvoir et de l’autorité dans un système carcéral. État appartenant aux riches, démocratie et non tyrannie, espoir et non peur, amour et non haine.
Utilisez le pouvoir de votre voix et de votre vote tant que ces droits vous appartiennent encore, et refusez de vous soumettre à ceux qui voudraient nous asservir. Car l’enjeu de nos élections est notre pouvoir de choisir notre propre identité et notre propre destin, et une fois perdue par la tyrannie et la terreur d’État, une société libre d’égaux ne peut être reconquise que par des prises de pouvoir et la lutte révolutionnaire.
Comme écrit par Sigmund Freud en 1893; “Le premier être humain qui a lancé une insulte au lieu d’une pierre a été le fondateur de la civilisation.” Voter vaut mieux que se battre. Jetons des mots et non des pierres.
Comme je l’écrivais dans mon article du 22 novembre 2020, Normal Doesn’t Live Here Anymore; L’une des choses qui me préoccupent dans l’utilisation du terme normal dans le moment politique actuel est sa confusion et son ambiguïté inhérentes, en particulier par l’aile collaborationniste du Parti démocrate en tant qu’apologie pour récupérer leur hégémonie du pouvoir qui a été brisée et saisie par les trois vagues successives de manifestations de masse qui ont régné dans les rues des villes américaines depuis environ un an maintenant et ont confié la présidence aux champions erronés de la révolution et du socialisme Biden et Harris ; les protestations de Black Lives Matter pour la justice raciale et l’égalité, un nouveau mouvement vert conduit par la grève scolaire mondiale de masse de Greta Thunberg et le théâtre de guérilla d’Extinction Rebellion appelant à la justice économique et écologique et défendant le Green New Deal comme le dernier et meilleur espoir pour l’humanité , et le mouvement #metoo qui les a précédés en tant que transformation sociale et prise en compte du patriarcat.
Si nous gaspillons notre chance de mettre en œuvre un véritable changement avec le contrôle de l’exécutif, si Biden et les structures fossiles d’un système défaillant qu’il représente nous ramènent aux conditions qui ont conduit à la montée du fascisme, de la tyrannie et de la terreur d’État, si nous ne parvenons pas à saisir notre jour et reforger le contrat social d’une société libre d’égaux comme la pratique ou l’action de nos valeurs de liberté, d’égalité, de vérité et de justice, nous n’aurons peut-être plus jamais l’occasion de le faire.
L’heure est au changement, et nous devons en être les champions et les porteurs.
Nous devons être le Parti qui mène de front les trois mouvements de masse qui nous ont amenés à la Maison Blanche, et laisser les Républicains être le Parti qui se recroqueville sur son peuple dans des bunkers et derrière des murs. L’histoire nous a donné un marteau avec lequel briser l’ancien et construire le nouveau ; et pour la saisir, nous devons abandonner la normalité comme l’illusion qu’elle est, derrière laquelle le pouvoir des élites nous asservit et escroque la richesse publique. Faites toujours attention à l’homme derrière le rideau.
Normal ne vit plus ici.
David Walsh lève l’ambiguïté sur les types d’écriture de la normalité dans la Boston Review ; L’année dernière, Joe Biden a commencé sa campagne présidentielle avec une prémisse simple: “Je crois que l’histoire reviendra sur les quatre années de ce président et tout ce qu’il embrasse comme un moment aberrant dans le temps.” La question de savoir si Donald Trump a vraiment été une aberration dans l’histoire des États-Unis a dominé le discours politique pendant des années, et face à la fois aux bouffonneries incessantes de Trump et aux bouleversements de la pandémie, Biden s’est positionné comme le candidat du “retour à la normale”. (Avant 2020, cette rhétorique politique était peut-être le plus étroitement associée à la campagne présidentielle de Warren G. Harding il y a un siècle.) Même si Biden lui-même a reculé une partie de ce langage sur la campagne électorale, il a servi de fondement à son message. Et cela a fonctionné : cela a renversé un président sortant pour la première fois en près de trois décennies, même si avec des marges très minces dans certains États.
Que signifient réellement ces affirmations d’aberration et de normalité ? La simplicité des messages cache une multiplicité d’interprétations, chacune avec ses propres implications pour la politique.
» Ce glissement vers le fascisme et la centralisation de l’autorité et du pouvoir vers un état carcéral de force et de contrôle n’est pas non plus un événement soudain et imprévu ; il a pris de l’ampleur en tant que contre-révolution et subversion de la démocratie depuis un certain temps.
Historiquement, je relierais les origines du revivalisme fasciste en France à l’immigration massive et à l’infiltration des anciens nazis qui avaient rejoint la Légion étrangère et dirigé la colonie d’Algérie en tant qu’ethno-État blanc jusqu’à sa chute, qui forment maintenant le noyau du parti de Le Pen. qui menace de capturer le gouvernement français, avec l’importation antérieure d’élites et de scientifiques nazis par les services de renseignement américains pendant l’ère Red Scare de la liste noire de McCarthy, non seulement Werner von Braun et d’autres recrutés pour la course à l’espace, mais aussi des criminels de guerre enrôlés dans notre les services de renseignement et militaires, y compris dans certains cas les bérets verts et le service central de renseignement, des unités militaires nazies entières et des réseaux d’espionnage conservant leur ancien rang dans de nouveaux uniformes.
Le fascisme reste une bête avec de nombreuses têtes et cinquièmes colonnes au sein de ces services de sécurité à travers le monde ; et doit être combattu à l’échelle mondiale chaque fois qu’il sort de l’obscurité pour nous tendre une embuscade.
Comment y résister au mieux ? Exposition et poursuite incessante jusqu’à la destruction lorsqu’elle est identifiée ; mais il faut aussi lancer des contre-feux et l’affamer de la peur dont il se nourrit. Car c’est une conséquence de la peur écrasante et généralisée militarisée au service du pouvoir par la division et façonnée comme la peur de l’altérité par la falsification, les mensonges, la propagande, les histoires réécrites et les réalités alternatives.
Nous devons parler directement de la peur de ceux que l’autorité cherche à subjuguer en prétendant agir en leur nom ; la peur est une base essentielle de l’échange humain en tant que politique, et celui qui parle le mieux de cette peur gagne, en particulier lorsque la peur est basée sur des menaces existentielles très réelles et des systèmes injustes et inégaux.
Comme je l’ai écrit dans mon article du 17 novembre 2021, The Revolution Goes Ever Onward: France’s Gilets Jaunes; Ce mois-ci marque l’anniversaire de trois ans de révolution et des manifestations des gilets jaunes en France ; une situation qui s’est heurtée à la répression et à un changement dans le gouvernement de la France non pas vers la libération, mais vers un état policier brutal de force et de contrôle.
Le mouvement Yellow Vest a émergé avec un nouveau précariat en réponse à la mondialisation, à la privatisation, à la détérioration des conditions économiques et à la complicité du gouvernement dans les échecs mécaniques systémiques de notre civilisation à partir de ses contradictions internes alors que nous entrons dans la phase terminale du capitalisme. Les forces historiques balayent tout avant comme une marée inarrêtable, mais comme la chute des civilisations précédentes, la nôtre est en train de mourir parce que les causes finales sont souvent des décisions politiques.
Cela signifie qu’il y a encore de l’espoir ; nous pouvons encore transformer notre avenir d’une ère de tyrannie en une ère de liberté et d’une société libre d’égaux.
Comme pour toutes les tyrannies, la dissidence et la résistance deviennent des prétextes à la militarisation de la police à travers le modèle anti-insurrectionnel du maintien de l’ordre et l’escalade de la force et de la terreur d’État, l’universalisation de la surveillance et la centralisation du pouvoir vers l’autorité et un État carcéral au service de la la richesse, le pouvoir et les privilèges des élites hégémoniques.
Nous voyons ici la mondialisation de la tyrannie qui utilise la stratégie des nombreuses tentatives de coup d’État de Trump en 2020 pour fournir un causus belli à l’occupation fédérale des villes démocrates en faisant en sorte que des provocateurs de la police et des forces déniables de la terreur suprémaciste blanche perturbent les manifestations de Black Lives Matter avec violence et pillage. Les parallèles entre l’Amérique sous Trump et la France sont alarmants, mais aussi éclairants.
Une telle progression historique de la liberté à la tyrannie n’est pas unique mais universelle ; la nature des États est au service des élites, la loi sert le pouvoir, la peur devient réaction et la centralisation du pouvoir vers l’autorité crée la tyrannie. Voici l’origine du mal dans l’anneau wagnérien de la peur, du pouvoir et de la force ; pas dans le péché personnel, l’inaptitude ou la dépravation innée de l’homme en l’absence de force et de contrôle restrictifs, mais dans l’inégalité systémique.
La tyrannie est née d’une peur écrasante et généralisée militarisée par l’autorité au service du pouvoir, utilisant les mensonges et les illusions de la propagande, les fausses histoires et les réalités alternatives pour diviser et conquérir ses citoyens en rendant certains d’entre nous complices de l’assujettissement des autres à travers des hiérarchies d’appartenance et d’altérité d’exclusion, créant ainsi des fascismes de sang, de foi et de terre.
D’autres nations se sont montrées moins résistantes à cette subversion de la démocratie ; dont la France, ce que j’aurais cru impossible. Considérez le changement culturel nécessaire pour transformer une nation dans laquelle la protestation est inscrite et valorisée dans l’identité nationale comme un devoir patriotique envers une nation dans laquelle la police brutalise les manifestants plutôt que de les embrasser comme des camarades dans la cause de la liberté, de l’égalité et de la fraternité, et de l’universalité. Les droits de l’homme sont devenus subordonnés à leur service à l’autorité. J’aurais dit la même chose de nous, une fois.
La France est tombée, mais comme l’Amérique avec notre répudiation électorale de Trump et du fascisme, peut encore se relever.
Comme l’écrit le philosophe Alain Badiou dans son blog Verso Books ; « Qu’il y ait de nombreuses raisons à cette révolte, et que le mouvement puisse donc être considéré comme légitime, je l’accorde sans hésitation. Je suis conscient du dépeuplement des zones rurales, du triste silence des rues abandonnées dans les villes petites et même moyennes ; la suppression continue pour des masses de personnes des services publics, progressivement privatisés : centres de santé, hôpitaux, écoles, postes, gares, téléphones. Je sais que la paupérisation, d’abord rampante puis accélérée, touche des couches de la population qui, il y a quarante ans, jouissaient encore d’un pouvoir d’achat en augmentation quasi continue. Je suis bien consciente que l’existence matérielle devient un casse-tête pour des familles entières, notamment pour de nombreuses femmes, très actives dans le mouvement des gilets jaunes.
Bref, il y a en France un très haut niveau de mécontentement de la part de ce qu’on pourrait appeler la partie ouvrière de la classe moyenne, majoritairement provinciale et aux revenus modestes. Le mouvement des gilets jaunes est une représentation significative de ce mécontentement sous forme de révolte active et véhémente.
Pour ceux qui veulent y assister, les raisons historico-économiques de ce soulèvement sont parfaitement claires. Ils expliquent d’ailleurs pourquoi les gilets jaunes datent le début de leurs déboires d’il y a quarante ans : grosso modo, les années 1980, qui ont marqué le début d’une longue contre-révolution capitaliste-oligarchique, improprement qualifiée de « néolibérale » alors qu’elle est libérale pleine arrêt. Ce qui veut dire : un retour à la sauvagerie du capitalisme du XIXe siècle. Cette contre-révolution s’est produite en réponse aux dix « années rouges » – environ 1965-1975 – dont l’épi centre était Mai 68 et dont l’épicentre mondial était la Révolution culturelle en Chine. Mais elle a été considérablement accélérée par l’effondrement de l’entreprise mondiale du communisme en URSS puis en Chine : plus rien à l’échelle mondiale ne s’opposait désormais au capitalisme et à ses profiteurs, en particulier l’oligarchie transnationale des milliardaires, au pouvoir illimité.
Entre-temps, des années 1980 à aujourd’hui, la situation de la France s’est progressivement détériorée. Ce pays n’est plus ce qu’il était pendant les trente glorieuses de la reconstruction d’après-guerre. La France n’est plus une puissance mondiale forte, un impérialisme conquérant. Aujourd’hui, elle est souvent comparée à l’Italie ou même à la Grèce. La concurrence le fait reculer partout ; sa rente coloniale est à bout de souffle et nécessite d’innombrables opérations militaires en Afrique, coûteuses et incertaines, pour la maintenir. De plus, comme le coût de la main-d’œuvre ouvrière est beaucoup plus faible en Asie, par exemple, les grandes usines sont progressivement délocalisées à l’étranger. Cette désindustrialisation massive entraîne une sorte de dégradation sociale qui s’étend de régions entières, comme la Lorraine et sa sidérurgie ou le Nord des usines textiles et des mines de charbon, à la banlieue parisienne, livrée à la spéculation immobilière sur les innombrables friches laissées par les industries ruinées.
La conséquence de tout cela est que la bourgeoisie française – son oligarchie dominante, les actionnaires du CAC 40 – ne peut plus maintenir une classe moyenne politiquement servile sur le même pied qu’avant, notamment avant la crise de 2008. Cette classe moyenne a été un soutien historique presque constant de la prééminence électorale des différentes droites – une prééminence dirigée contre les travailleurs organisés des grandes concentrations industrielles, tentées par le communisme entre les années 1920 et les années 1980 et 1990. D’où l’insurrection actuelle d’une partie importante de cette classe moyenne, qui se sent abandonnée, contre Macron, qui est l’agent de la “modernisation” capitaliste locale – c’est-à-dire : serrer la vis partout, économiser, imposer l’austérité, privatiser sans aucune de la considération qui existait encore il y a trente ans pour le confort des classes moyennes en échange de leur consentement au système dominant.
Les gilets jaunes, plaidant leur trop réelle paupérisation, veulent une fois de plus se faire payer au prix fort ce consentement. Mais c’est absurde précisément parce que le macronisme résulte du fait que l’oligarchie, d’une part, a eu moins besoin du soutien bourgeois, coûteux à financer, depuis que le danger communiste a disparu ; et d’autre part, n’a plus les moyens de se payer un personnel de maison électoral au même barème. Et elle doit donc basculer, sous couvert de « réformes indispensables », vers une politique autoritaire : une nouvelle forme de pouvoir d’État servira de support à une « austérité » lucrative, étendue de la classe populaire des chômeurs et des ouvriers aux couches inférieures de la classe moyenne. Et cela au profit des vrais maîtres de ce monde, à savoir les principaux actionnaires des grands groupes de l’industrie, du commerce, des matières premières, des transports et des communications.
Dans le Manifeste communiste, écrit en 1848, Marx avait déjà examiné ce genre de conjoncture et fait référence, pour l’essentiel avec justesse, à ce que sont les gilets jaunes d’aujourd’hui. Il écrit ceci : « La petite bourgeoisie, le petit manufacturier, le boutiquier, l’artisan, le paysan, tous luttent contre la bourgeoisie, pour sauver de l’extinction leur existence de fractions de la bourgeoisie. Ils ne sont donc pas révolutionnaires, mais conservateurs. Bien plus, ils sont réactionnaires, car ils essaient de faire reculer la roue de l’histoire.
Ils luttent d’autant plus âprement aujourd’hui que la bourgeoisie française n’est plus en mesure, compte tenu de la tournure prise par le capitalisme mondialisé, de maintenir, voire d’augmenter, son pouvoir d’achat. Il est vrai que les gilets jaunes « se battent contre la bourgeoisie », comme le dit Marx. Mais ils le font pour restaurer un ordre ancien, dépassé, non pour inventer un nouvel ordre social et politique, dont les noms sont « socialisme » ou, surtout, « communisme » depuis le XIXe siècle. Pendant près de deux siècles, tout ce qui n’était pas plus ou moins défini selon une orientation révolutionnaire a été à juste titre considéré comme relevant de la réaction capitaliste. En politique, il n’y a que deux routes principales. Il faut absolument revenir à cette conviction : deux voies en politique, seulement deux, et jamais un saupoudrage « démocratique » de pseudo-tendances sous la houlette d’une oligarchie « libérale » autoproclamée.
Ces considérations générales permettent de revenir sur les caractéristiques concrètes du mouvement des gilets jaunes. Ses caractéristiques spontanées pour ainsi dire – celles qui ne sont pas imputables à des interventions extérieures au courant principal du soulèvement – sont bien « réactionnaires » comme le dit Marx, mais dans un sens plus moderne : on pourrait appeler la subjectivité du mouvement un individualisme populaire mobilisant colère personnelle face aux nouvelles formes de servitude imposées par la dictature du Capital aujourd’hui.”
1 Juillet 2023 A Marseille et dans toute la France, une épreuve de devenirs et d’idées concurrentes de l’être humain, du sens et de la valeur ; Une société libre d’égaux contre les fascismes du sang, de la foi et du sol et la liberté contre un état carcéral de force et de contrôle
La révolte contre la terreur policière raciste se heurte à une répression brutale de la dissidence et devient une porte d’entrée vers la Révolution en France dans un écho et un reflet des manifestations américaines Black Lives Matter de 2020, à la suite des meurtres par la police française de garçons non blancs si similaires au meurtre de George Floyd et d’innombrables autres en Amérique.
Dans les rues de Marseille et de toute la France ce soir, nous nous battons pour une nation qui a oublié son cœur.
Et si la France ne peut pas reprendre son cœur de bastion de la Liberté, de l’Egalité et de la Fraternité et garante de la démocratie et de nos droits humains universels dans le monde et pour toute l’humanité, nous sommes tous vraiment perdus.
Ici, comme dans de nombreux théâtres de lutte de libération et à travers de vastes abîmes de temps, j’ai répondu à la question de savoir qui je suis avec les mots ; Je suis la Révolution. Parmi les choses que je veux dire par là, c’est que je me considère comme un jacobin en termes d’identité politique, et un héritier et intendant de la lutte révolutionnaire. Ici à Marseille, les héritages de cette histoire et les questions de qui est humain et qui est citoyen, de pouvoir inégal dans une société libre d’égaux divisée contre elle-même par la race, le sexe, la foi et la classe comme politique identitaire nationaliste au service de la la richesse, le pouvoir et les privilèges des élites hégémoniques ont des significations spéciales et uniques et des menaces existentielles pour notre avenir et notre humanité.
Je ne peux pas l’imaginer mais en termes du grand film Casablanca et de la chanson emblématique La Marseillaise, l’hymne national de la France proposé pour la première fois par Robespierre en 1790 alors que l’hymne de guerre des révolutionnaires de Marseille était devenu celui de la Révolution elle-même.
Je me demande maintenant, que penseraient ces révolutionnaires de la France aujourd’hui, alors que des sous-classes vilipendées et démunies protestent pour leurs droits humains universels de liberté et d’égalité en vertu de la loi de la nation qui les a établis en tant que nouvel ordre mondial et qui, il y a des siècles, ont pris le pouvoir de celui de rois et prêtres?
À Marseille, où la Marseillaise est née comme un espoir pour l’avenir de l’humanité, et où maintenant cet espoir renaît dans les rues de feu avec la glorieuse résistance des autres vilipendés d’un empire déchu dont les ghettos se dressent pour défier l’État et les systèmes carcéraux de déshumanisation et revendiquer la promesse de liberté, d’égalité et de fraternité.
Je crois que les révolutionnaires de 1790 qui ont créé La Marseillaise se reconnaîtraient dans ceux de Marseille aujourd’hui. La question qui demeure est la suivante : la France est-elle toujours la nation qu’ils ont fondée et rêvée ?
Comment le personnage antifasciste de Humphrey Bogart, Rick Blaine à Casablanca, considérerait-il les manifestations ? Comment Camus et les héros de la Résistance de la Seconde Guerre mondiale jugeraient-ils aujourd’hui leurs homologues ?
Qui sont maintenant l’Occupation, avec des fusils et des badges pour imposer une supériorité raciale imaginaire et le privilège de caste des élites hégémoniques ? Et qui maintenant la Résistance, qui mettent leur vie en balance avec tous ceux que Frantz Fanon appelait Les Misérables de la Terre, les impuissants et les dépossédés, les réduits au silence et les effacés ?
Nous qui nous identifions comme Antifa et la Résistance d’une part et comme la Révolution d’autre part et revendiquons notre appartenance à cette histoire serons jugés par ces deux ensembles interdépendants et parallèles de forces motivantes, informatrices et façonnantes ; l’héritage des révolutions américaine et française qui ont donné naissance à la démocratie et aux droits de l’homme, et de la lutte civilisationnelle contre les nazis et les fascismes du sang, de la foi et du sol qui aspirent à réaliser nos idéaux en tant que société libre d’égaux.
Dans ce moment déterminant et l’événement Rashomon Gate, chacun de nous doit choisir; qui voulons-nous devenir, nous les humains ? Quels avenirs allons-nous gagner pour nos possibilités de devenir humains ? Un monde de maîtres et d’esclaves ou une société libre d’égaux ?