July 14 2023 A Legacy of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity for All Humankind: Bastille Day

     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 the current 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 Robespierre 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  embodied violence as Church and State, 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 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 this Bastille Day protestors have 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.

     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. 

    Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité, ou la Mort!

French

14 juillet 2023 Un héritage de liberté, d’égalité et de fraternité pour toute l’humanité : 14 juillet 2023

      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 Robespierre 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

Javert, I mean Emmanuel Macron, booed during Bastille Day parade in Paris

https://www.theguardian.com/world/video/2023/jul/14/emmanuel-macron-is-booed-bastille-day-parade-paris-video

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.  

https://www.theguardian.com/world/video/2023/apr/06/france-protesters-set-fire-restaurant-macron-clash-police-paris-video

Fireworks at the Eiffel Tower tonight, beautiful but not so beautiful as the fires of liberty which continue to burn throughout France

The Wretched of the Earth, by Frantz Fanon, Jean-Paul Sartre (Preface)

      The French Revolution, a reading list

https://jacobin.com/2015/07/french-revolution-bastille-day-guide-jacobins-terror-bonaparte/

Citizens, by Simon Schama

The Days of the French Revolution, by Christopher Hibbert

A Place of Greater Safety, by Hilary Mantel

City of Darkness, City of Light, by Marge Piercy

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/862108.City_of_Darkness_City_of_Light

A New World Begins: The History of the French Revolution, by Jeremy D. Popkin

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/45031867-a-new-world-begins

The Coming of the French Revolution, by Georges Lefebvre, R.R. Palmer (Translator), Timothy Tackett (Introduction)

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/189555.The_Coming_of_the_French_Revolution

Liberty or Death: The French Revolution, by Peter McPhee

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/26876327-liberty-or-death

A People’s History of the French Revolution, by Eric Hazan

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/20177066-a-people-s-history-of-the-french-revolution

Politics, Culture, and Class in the French Revolution, by Lynn Hunt

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/381792.Politics_Culture_and_Class_in_the_French_Revolution

Revolutionary Ideas: An Intellectual History of the French Revolution from The Rights of Man to Robespierre, by Jonathan I. Israel

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18118675-revolutionary-ideas

Twelve Who Ruled: The Year of the Terror in the French Revolution, by R.R. Palmer

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/196977.Twelve_Who_Ruled

Liberty: The Lives and Times of Six Women in Revolutionary France,

by Lucy Moore

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/135019.Liberty

Virtue and Terror, by Maximilien Robespierre, Slavoj Žižek (Introduction)

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/90565.Virtue_and_Terror

Fatal Purity: Robespierre and the French Revolution, by Ruth Scurr

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/626414.Fatal_Purity

Choosing Terror: Virtue, Friendship, and Authenticity in the French Revolution,

by Marisa Linton

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18263288-choosing-terror

Les Misérables, by Victor Hugo, Norman Denny (Translator)

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/33175.Les_Mis_rables

          de Sade, a reading list

The Fan-Maker’s Inquisition: A Novel of the Marquis de Sade, by Rikki Ducornet

The Marquis de Sade: A Life, by Neil Schaeffer

The Sadeian Woman: And the Ideology of Pornography, by Angela Carter

The Marquis de Sade and the Avant-Garde, by Alyce Mahon

Literature and Evil, by Georges Bataille

Pasolini on de Sade: An Interview during the Filming of ‘Salò or the 120 Days of Sodom’, by Gideon Bachmann

The Origins of Totalitarianism, by Hannah Arendt

The Marquis de Sade: An Essay by Simone de Beauvoir

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/141422.The_Marquis_de_Sade

July 14 2022 A Legacy of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity for All Humankind: Bastille Day

     We celebrate today a legacy of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity for all humankind, bequeathed to us by the Revolution on this day in 1789 by the storming of the Bastille.

      I find it immensely hopeful for the future of humankind that France, a nation where protest is seen as a patriotic act, 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.

     During his time in the Bastille he wrote one of the most brilliant and transgressive interrogations of the origins of evil in unequal power as Church and State, 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 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 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 Sri Lanka, Brazil, Hong Kong, Palestine, Kazakhstan, and Ukraine, among those places to which I have traveled in solidarity 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.

Marat/Sade film

The Wretched of the Earth, by Frantz Fanon, Jean-Paul Sartre (Preface)

      The French Revolution, a reading list

Citizens, by Simon Schama

The Days of the French Revolution, by Christopher Hibbert

A Place of Greater Safety, by Hilary Mantel

City of Darkness, City of Light, by Marge Piercy

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/862108.City_of_Darkness_City_of_Light

A New World Begins: The History of the French Revolution, by Jeremy D. Popkin

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/45031867-a-new-world-begins

The Coming of the French Revolution, by Georges Lefebvre, R.R. Palmer (Translator), Timothy Tackett (Introduction)

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/189555.The_Coming_of_the_French_Revolution

Liberty or Death: The French Revolution, by Peter McPhee

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/26876327-liberty-or-death

A People’s History of the French Revolution, by Eric Hazan

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/20177066-a-people-s-history-of-the-french-revolution

Politics, Culture, and Class in the French Revolution, by Lynn Hunt

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/381792.Politics_Culture_and_Class_in_the_French_Revolution

Revolutionary Ideas: An Intellectual History of the French Revolution from The Rights of Man to Robespierre, by Jonathan I. Israel

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18118675-revolutionary-ideas

Twelve Who Ruled: The Year of the Terror in the French Revolution, by R.R. Palmer

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/196977.Twelve_Who_Ruled

Liberty: The Lives and Times of Six Women in Revolutionary France,

by Lucy Moore

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/135019.Liberty

Virtue and Terror, by Maximilien Robespierre, Slavoj Žižek (Introduction)

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/90565.Virtue_and_Terror

Fatal Purity: Robespierre and the French Revolution, by Ruth Scurr

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/626414.Fatal_Purity

Choosing Terror: Virtue, Friendship, and Authenticity in the French Revolution,

by Marisa Linton

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18263288-choosing-terror

Les Misérables, by Victor Hugo, Norman Denny (Translator)

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/33175.Les_Mis_rables

          de Sade, a reading list

The Fan-Maker’s Inquisition: A Novel of the Marquis de Sade, by Rikki Ducornet

The Marquis de Sade: A Life, by Neil Schaeffer

The Sadeian Woman: And the Ideology of Pornography, by Angela Carter

The Marquis de Sade and the Avant-Garde, by Alyce Mahon

Literature and Evil, by Georges Bataille

Pasolini on de Sade: An Interview during the Filming of ‘Salò or the 120 Days of Sodom’, by Gideon Bachmann

The Origins of Totalitarianism, by Hannah Arendt

The Marquis de Sade: An Essay by Simone de Beauvoir

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/141422.The_Marquis_de_Sade

July 14 2021 A Legacy of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity for All Humankind: Bastille Day

     We celebrate today a legacy of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity for all humankind, bequeathed to us by the Revolution on this day in 1789 by the storming of the Bastille.

      I find it immensely hopeful for the future of humankind that France, a nation where protest is seen as a patriotic act, 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.

     During his time in the Bastille he wrote one of the most brilliant and transgressive interrogations of the origins of evil in unequal power as Church and State, 120 Days of Sodom. Every word of it is still true, as proof of which I offer the churches burning across Canada this past week as indigenous peoples resist their predators and the legacies of genocide, sexual terror, and imperial conquest, 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.

     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, all of whose books are lyrical and incandescent with unholy fire, 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 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 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 in Port au Rrince, Belarus, Kolkata, Belfast, Hong Kong, Barcelona, Cali, Yangon, Rio de Janeiro, and in al Quds, among those places I have traveled this year in solidarity with the struggles of their peoples, those whom Frantz 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.

https://www.optionstheedge.com/sites/default/files/styles/banner/public/field/featured-image/2020/bastille_day_france.jpg?itok=CrvPIhk

https://www.jacobinmag.com/2015/07/french-revolution-bastille-day-guide-jacobins-terror-bonaparte/

https://www.brainpickings.org/2015/07/22/the-book-of-memory-gaps-cecilia-ruiz/?fbclid=IwAR2yggVgCnxhGGN-Wgy67ULonS7cIg60Cf-LEiKn6yPAGnmsn64i5noGO58

http://www.rikkiducornet.com/

June 14 2021 A Legacy of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity for All Humankind: Bastille Day

     We celebrate today a legacy of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity for all humankind, bequeathed to us by the Revolution on this day in 1789 by the storming of the Bastille.

      I find it immensely hopeful for the future of humankind that France, a nation where protest is seen as a patriotic act, 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.

     During his time in the Bastille he wrote one of the most brilliant and transgressive interrogations of the origins of evil in unequal power as Church and State, 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.

     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 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 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 in Jerusalem, Belarus, Kolkata, Belfast, Hong Kong, Barcelona, Yangon, and Rio de Janeiro, among those places I have traveled this year in solidarity 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.

https://www.optionstheedge.com/sites/default/files/styles/banner/public/field/featured-image/2020/bastille_day_france.jpg?itok=CrvPIhk_

https://www.brainpickings.org/2015/07/22/the-book-of-memory-gaps-cecilia-ruiz/?fbclid=IwAR2yggVgCnxhGGN-Wgy67ULonS7cIg60Cf-LEiKn6yPAGnmsn64i5noGO58

December 23 2019 America rediscovers its soul: Trump’s evangelicals are splintering and abandoning him

Trump forged the alliance of fundamentalist social conservatives, plutocrats, and white supremacists on whose resources he rose to power; and it is the religious arm of the tripod from which he, and the Republican Party, derive their legitimacy. Without the united support of the evangelicals, especially the Pentecostals, and their enormous tax-free church wealth and the uses of a weaponized pulpit for propaganda and shaping political opinion, the whole tower of lies and force begins to collapse.

    A tripod is an inherently unstable structure; to survive all three of these supports must hold firm; the gun-voting base and deniable militias and terrorists of the white supremacists, the abortion-voting base of the fundamentalist patriarchs, and the campaign money of the plutocrats. Should any of these categories of Republicans begin to question and disavow the tyranny they have enabled, or to awaken to the legacy of American patriotism and our values of liberty, equality, truth, and justice, it will mean the end of the fascism of blood and faith which has ensnared us in its monstrous grasp.

     As Emma Green writes in The Atlantic newsletter of her interview with  editor Mark Galli of Christianity Today, whose bold renunciation of Trump has electrified the nation as many evangelicals splinter and abandon support of our despicable and vile President; “How can a group that for decades—and especially during the Bill Clinton presidency—insisted that character counts and that personal integrity is an essential component of presidential leadership not only turn a blind eye to the ethical and moral transgressions of Donald Trump, but also constantly defend him?”

    “The answer, it now seems, is that some of them can’t.”

September 24 2019 America rediscovers its values: the impeachment of Pennywise

Jubilation in the streets as America rediscovers its values and begins the impeachment of Pennywise, clown and cannibalistic monster who dwells beneath the human face of Trump, a mask of flesh stolen from the abducted and enslaved women in the brothels his grandfather built the Trump family fortune on during the Alaska Gold Rush, and who today carries forward the legacy of terror and misogyny he was raised with, whose election should be de-certified as the coup of a foreign power and whose Presidency has no legitimacy.

     History will remember Trump as the standard bearer of the global Fourth Reich and its assault on democracy, stealer of children for his vile and twisted purposes, author of genocidal ethnic cleansing and builder of concentration camps, pathological liar and ignorant fool, whose alliance of xenophobic racists and white supremacists,  Christian Identity fanatics and other fundamentalists who dream of the restoration of the Patriarchy and a quasi-Confederacy under medieval Biblical law as a tyranny of the Elect, and amoral Plutocrats out to loot America for all the wealth they can send offshore while sabotaging our economy and driving our nations into collapse, thereby removing the major guarantor of freedom and human rights in the world and opening everything to exploitation.

     A full accounting of the treasons and crimes of Trump and his Republican conspirators would fill a thousand pages and more, would roll on like the endless night litany of the death of God during an Orthodox Easter service; but this is the moment of its end, wherein the chanting turns to rapture and joy at the break of dawn, for Nancy Pelosi and the power brokers of the Democratic Party have rummaged around in Pandora’s Box and found at last our hope, calling for impeachment and the restoration of the rule of law just at the point of no return, before the legitimacy of our government and the values on which it is built, freedom, equality, truth, and justice, are forever lost and America falls to fascism and tyranny, and with it the world descends into a Dark Age.

     It took a millennia to emerge from the last one; civilization may not be recoverable again, should it fall under conditions of fascism and totalitarian regimes of absolute state power and surveillance, war, ethnostates and genocides, and unbridled extractive plunder of the earth. And this we must resist.

     Therefore celebrate with me the call for impeachment, and prepare ourselves for the great struggle ahead to make it real, to reawaken America’s values and to save democracy and universal human rights throughout the world.  

August 20 2019 on becoming human

     This morning I was rereading my favorite stories by H.P. Lovecraft on his birthday and writing some thoughts about his work in my literary blog, sister site to this one, when I realized that his surreal mythology illuminates the existential crisis of meaning and values which confronts us in America today and in the world at large in what is rapidly becoming a post-democracy global civilization under the Fourth Reich, and that we have faced similar peril after both World Wars as western civilization destroyed and recreated itself; how can we go on when the values of the Enlightenment, freedom, equality, truth, and justice, have failed us? It is as if we looked to the heavens for signs and portents of guidance, only to find writ large the words, “I do not exist.”

     One’s interpretation of a universe empty of meaning and value except for that which we ourselves create, a Nietzschean cosmos of dethroned gods as explored by Sartre and Marx or a Lovecraftian one of Absurdist faith, referential to classical sources, of mad, idiot gods who are also malign, tyrannical, and hostile to humanity, ideal figures of Trump and his presidency of Absurdist-Nihilist theatre and lunacy, rests with our solution to the riddle of Pandora’s Box; is hope a gift, or the most terrible of evils?

     Hope is a two- edged sword; it frees us and opens limitless possibilities, but in severing the bonds of history also steals from us our anchorages and disempowers the treasures of our past as shaping forces. Hope directs us toward a conservative project of finding new gods to replace the fallen, of gathering up and reconstructing our traditions as a precondition of faith. This is why the abandonment of hope, is vital to Sartrean authenticity and to the rebellion of Camus; we must have no gods and no masters before we are free to own ourselves. The gates of Dante’s Hell, which bear the legend “Abandon hope, all ye who enter here,” lead to ourselves and to our own liberation.

    True freedom requires disbelief. Freedom means self-ownership and the smashing of the idols.   

      Freedom can be terrible as well as wonderful. Among the most impactful stories I ever heard from my mother was how she went to the grocery store after my father died and experienced a full stop lightningbolt awakening, thinking, “What do I want? I know what my husband wanted, what my children want, but I don’t know what I want.”

     It is in this moment in which we claim our nothingness that we free ourselves of all claims upon us, a transformative rebirth in which we become self-created beings.

         Now imagine humanity after civilization destroyed itself twice in the last century’s world wars facing that same awakening to freedom and to loss, wherein our old values have betrayed us and must be forged anew, and we are bereft of signposts in an undiscovered country, exactly the same as a widow on her first trip shopping for dinner for no one but herself.

     Our responses to this awakening to possibilities tend to correspond with one of the primary shaping forces of historical civilization; the conserving force as exemplified by T.S. Eliot, Thomas Mann, Vladimir Nabokov, and Flannery O’Connor, and the revolutionary force as exemplified by Gertrude Stein, James Joyce, Jean Paul Sartre, and Samuel Beckett.

     Everyone possesses and uses both forces just as all organisms do in terms of their evolution. 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, or ruptures to our prochronism, the history of our successful adaptations and strategies of survival as expressed in our 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 both nations and persons, the process of identity formation is the same. We all have one problem in common as we grow up; each of us must reinvent how to be human. This individuation is controlled by a second or historical principle; humans create themselves over time, and a third or social principle; humans create each other through their connections. And this tertiary principle, which concerns our interconnectedness and social frames, can produce conflicts with the secondary principle of memory and history.

     This is the first revolution in which we all must fight; the struggle for ownership and control of identity or persona, a term derived from the masks of Greek theatre, between the masks that others make for us and the ones we make for ourselves.

May 23 2019 fascist Proud Boys conspiracy of violence exposed

    Anonymous source exposes fascist Proud Boys conspiracy of violence as described in an insightful Huffpost article entitled, “The extremist gang claims it’s just a pro-Trump “drinking club.” But chat logs leaked to HuffPost reveal they plan weaponry and tactics months ahead”.

     The work of outing white supremacists and other enemies of America is a vital public service and a key line of defense against their rhetoric of hate and the erosion of democracy, freedom, equality, truth, justice, and the American Way. 

    As Andy Campbell says in his article, “The Proud Boys want the public to believe that they’re a “drinking club” who only resort to violence to defend themselves from anti-fascist protesters during political rallies. But in private, these extremists have discussed injuring and even killing their adversaries, plotting tactics and optics for months in order to assert a claim of self-defense should they face charges.”

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/proud-boys-chat-logs-premeditate-rally-violence-in-leaked-chats_n_5ce1e231e4b00e035b928683

May 6 2019 let us stand united in resistance

In a courageous stand on principles and the rule of law, hundreds of former federal prosecutors and 20 former US attorneys representing a broad spectrum of both Republican and Democrat legal experts issue an open challenge to Traitor Trump and his collaborators.

    Who will save us from this mad tyrant and his subversion of our government?

     Not the government of subversion itself, who sup at the trough of plutocrats and are content to drive their fascist, racist, misogynist, and Gideonite fundamentalist assets and supporters in dismantling America as the realization of the Enlightenment and its ideals of liberty, equality, truth, justice, and a secular nation.

     Not a Republican party which refuses to honor the true mission of conservativism and secure our core values and founding ideals from destruction.

     Not a Democratic party which refuses to challenge and disobey authority when it is unjust and inhumane, and to champion and defend free individuals and our right to create ourselves as we will, regardless of our differences from others.

     Only we can do this, and only if we motivate and direct the ultimate power in any democracy; our vote, our voice, and our Resistance to tyranny.

     Let us stand united and refuse to let our enemies divide us against each other, for we are stronger together and cannot be defeated so long as we remember and hold fast to the idea of America as a free society of equals.

     We must have both a conserving force and a force of revolution and innovation, working together and in concert to shape our adaptation and ability to meet new threats and change over time, without forgetting who we are.  This is true for the survival of all living systems, both in the natural environment and in human societies including those of nations.

      Civilization is a game best played by partners who each play their side of the board in good faith and by the same rules, to create rather than destroy. Conservatives must buffer the shock of the new and preserve continuity of identity and of form as the memory of humanity; revolutionaries must envision and create new forms and possibilities of being human acting as the imagination of humanity, both to solve unknown and unforeseen problems of  survival and to drive onward the project of bettering ourselves and our conditions.

     How can we begin, when we have no Churchill or F.D.R. to rally around? We must each find within ourselves our own Churchill and F.D.R., and rally to one another.

      Let us stand united in Resistance to tyranny, authoritarian state terror, global fascism and foreign infiltration and destabilization, assaults on democracy and our core American values of freedom and equality, and the criminal cabal which has seized our government through treason, subversion, and obstruction of justice.      

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/donald-trump-obstruction-charge-former-prosecutors_n_5cd07055e4b04e275d4e4ee5?ncid=newsltushpmgnews__Politics__050619

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