dagNotes: Colorblindness as a plea to excuse white leadership

There is a distinction between rhetoric implemented in anti-racist and anti-fascist action in the US and in UK & Europe, but especially in the UK. From my experience, when discussing racism with non anti-fascist bloggers from the UK, you should always remember that most whites there practice colorblindness as a rule. And the more liberal, the more left-wing, they fancy themselves, the more they wear colorblindness with pride, as a badge of honor. I’ve often been told to not be colorblind is racist. It’s paternalistic, to be sure, but it’s a matter of fact within discourse and social action.

American anti-racist and anti-fascist action is quite clear about colorblindness being a form of racism. We have our liberally colorblind leftists that we deal with everyday, but the debate rages on. In the UK (and around Europe, for that matter,) a lot of white anarchists, socialists, liberals, get really peeved when you call them out on colorblindness. It’s easy to test the water, though, should you think the conversation is, in fact, turning racist. Should you want to see if your suspicions are warranted or not, bring up “whiteness” and/or “white supremacist capitalism”—insist on using those words—and watch what happens. From my experience, it doesn’t pay to argue about this because they’ll end up flaming pissed, but at least you’ll know what’s up and can figure out how to better bring up how colorblind rhetoric is white supremacist in capitalist culture. After considering your options, you can continue the discussion.

I’m not trying to stereotype here, but colorblindness is a real problem. It’s one thing I do believe Americans (I’m not just talking North America) understand a little bit better, one thing we’re willing to confront with a bit more honesty. Historically speaking, it’s clear why. (I’m not giving white Americans a break here, so don’t even go there. I’m talking about general discourse and cultural expression.)

Quite frankly, this is a problem because white people like to lead and so an excuse for their leadership, in spite of all the racist baggage they carry, must be created. Colorblindness is that excuse.

It’s infuriating, that thing you do.

Oh, Liberals. The problem isn’t that upward mobility and equal opportunity is a myth. The problem is that you’re all more concerned about the image the US is projecting to The World than doing anything about inequality.

You’re not waking up to material conditions of existence that are strikingly different from how you have composed them and seeking transformation. You’re worrying about how to maintain a grip on the myths about opportunity as a function of a reality and its projections; in other words, you’re seeking a way to maintain the oppressive status quo.

dagNotes: On Freedom; Or, Why I don’t trust most white people.

dagseoul:

They believe they have a freedom that, factually and historically, no person of color has, the freedom (to pretend) to be ignorant of difference. The performance of this ignorance to others—white and not-white—is one of the most pervasive and irritating aspects of everyday whiteness. This freedom is a distinctly white privilege. I’d say, this freedom is the most recognizable marker for whiteness as it’s the most ordinary in appearance. People who can be free from knowing about others who are not white are fully composed white individuals. The others-to-be-ignorant-of are composed white subjects. The relation is inherently oppressive. One group is liberated while the others are bound. 

In the US, the social interpellation process is one of becoming white, living with whiteness, bargaining with white power, coping with white supremacy. It’s violent, interpellative social action. It occurs where all social action is organized, within the free market. Thus, it is both passively and actively consumed. It’s both affliction and consolation. Those who are afflicted are passively composed white subjects who endure composition regardless; those who are consoled are actively composed white individuals who answer an invitation to composition without endurance. It’s from this interpellation the supremacist conception of the individual and its western philosophical tradition springs. Capitalism has embraced this conception from its beginnings and has sublimated the concept in its contemporary state. Hence, white individuals are often aggressively recalcitrant participants in anti-racist action; obstinate and uncooperative toward the authority in any discourse that confronts white supremacy, yet passively obeisant to the authority in white power. For example, we’re asked to embrace an equality and social justice discourse that ignores oppressive power relationships in exchange for attention to singular issues that fail to significantly confront white supremacy and its power structure. We must talk about distribution of goods and services; we must address all individuals as consumers and employees. In other words, we are always already encouraged to see others without difference, to see others as if we all are equally born, that we are, in a significant manner, equivalencies.

It’s a rare occurrence to find a white person unconditionally willing to betray the authority in whiteness. And it’s why I’m dutifully mean about it with white tumblr bloggers; as mean as I am about it IRL. I won’t permit the passive violence in white power between social liberals to sit unexamined and have made a promise to return any and all forms of violence with like violence. I’m especially mean to tepid social justice discourse that pushes for the degraded equality I discussed just above. I expect the libertarian white boys to deny all of this outright. I expect more from people who claim enlightenment and progressivism.

I will do this until we reside in societies that have overcome white power. Don’t see that happening any time soon. So, fucking deal is my attitude. I can’t trust white people who aren’t willing to betray their permissive whiteness, their unexamined possessive-whiteness, their unearned ambition.

(via dagseoul)

dagNotes: On Freedom; Or, Why I don’t trust most white people.

dagseoul:

They believe they have a freedom that, factually and historically, no person of color has, the freedom (to pretend) to be ignorant of difference. The performance of this ignorance to others—white and not-white—is one of the most pervasive and irritating aspects of everyday whiteness. This freedom is a distinctly white privilege. I’d say, this freedom is the most recognizable marker for whiteness as it’s the most ordinary in appearance. People who can be free from knowing about others who are not white are fully composed white individuals. The others-to-be-ignorant-of are composed white subjects. The relation is inherently oppressive. One group is liberated while the others are bound. 

In the US, the social interpellation process is one of becoming white, living with whiteness, bargaining with white power, coping with white supremacy. It’s violent, interpellative social action. It occurs where all social action is organized, within the free market. Thus, it is both passively and actively consumed. It’s both affliction and consolation. Those who are afflicted are passively composed white subjects who endure composition regardless; those who are consoled are actively composed white individuals who answer an invitation to composition without endurance. It’s from this interpellation the supremacist conception of the individual and its western philosophical tradition springs. Capitalism has embraced this conception from its beginnings and has sublimated the concept in its contemporary state. Hence, white individuals are often aggressively recalcitrant participants in anti-racist action; obstinate and uncooperative toward the authority in any discourse that confronts white supremacy, yet passively obeisant to the authority in white power. For example, we’re asked to embrace an equality and social justice discourse that ignores oppressive power relationships in exchange for attention to singular issues that fail to significantly confront white supremacy and its power structure. We must talk about distribution of goods and services; we must address all individuals as consumers and employees. In other words, we are always already encouraged to see others without difference, to see others as if we all are equally born, that we are, in a significant manner, equivalencies.

It’s a rare occurrence to find a white person unconditionally willing to betray the authority in whiteness. And it’s why I’m dutifully mean about it with white tumblr bloggers; as mean as I am about it IRL. I won’t permit the passive violence in white power between social liberals to sit unexamined and have made a promise to return any and all forms of violence with like violence. I’m especially mean to tepid social justice discourse that pushes for the degraded equality I discussed just above. I expect the libertarian white boys to deny all of this outright. I expect more from people who claim enlightenment and progressivism.

I will do this until we reside in societies that have overcome white power. Don’t see that happening any time soon. So, fucking deal is my attitude. I can’t trust white people who aren’t willing to betray their permissive whiteness, their unexamined possessive-whiteness, their unearned ambition.

dagNotes: On Freedom; Or, Why I don’t trust most white people.

They believe they have a freedom that, factually and historically, no person of color has,  the freedom (to pretend) to be ignorant of difference. The performance of this ignorance to others—white and not-white—is one of the most pervasive and irritating aspects of everyday whiteness. This freedom is a distinctly white privilege. I’d say, this freedom is the most recognizable marker for whiteness as it’s the most ordinary in appearance. People who can be free from knowing about others who are not white are fully composed white individuals. The others-to-be-ignorant-of are composed white subjects. The relation is inherently oppressive. One group is liberated while the others are bound. 

In the US, the social interpellation process is one of becoming white, living with whiteness, bargaining with white power, coping with white supremacy. It’s violent, interpellative social action. It occurs where all social action is organized, within the free market. Thus, it is both passively and actively consumed. It’s both affliction and consolation. Those who are afflicted are passively composed white subjects who endure composition regardless; those who are consoled are actively composed white individuals who answer an invitation to composition without endurance. It’s from this interpellation the supremacist conception of the individual and its western philosophical tradition springs. Capitalism has embraced this conception from its beginnings and has sublimated the concept in its contemporary state. Hence, white individuals are often aggressively recalcitrant participants in anti-racist action; obstinate and uncooperative toward the authority in any discourse that confronts white supremacy, yet passively obeisant to the authority in white power. For example, we’re asked to embrace an equality and social justice discourse that ignores oppressive power relationships in exchange for attention to singular issues that fail to significantly confront white supremacy and its power structure. We must talk about distribution of goods and services; we must address all individuals as consumers and employees. In other words, we are always already encouraged to see others without difference, to see others as if we all are equally born, that we are, in a significant manner, equivalencies.

It’s a rare occurrence to find a white person unconditionally willing to betray the authority in whiteness. And it’s why I’m dutifully mean about it with white tumblr bloggers; as mean as I am about it IRL. I won’t permit the passive violence in white power between social liberals to sit unexamined and have made a promise to return any and all forms of violence with like violence. I’m especially mean to tepid social justice discourse that pushes for the degraded equality I discussed just above. I expect the libertarian white boys to deny all of this outright. I expect more from people who claim enlightenment and progressivism.

I will do this until we reside in societies that have overcome white power. Don’t see that happening any time soon. So, fucking deal is my attitude. I can’t trust white people who aren’t willing to betray their permissive whiteness, their unexamined possessive-whiteness, their unearned ambition.

dagNotes: Why Intersectionality Matters

dagseoul:

First, you have to do a little homework. Here’s recent research illustrating how, over the last 40 years, the US legislative process has favored the affluent classes. It’s not a matter of speculation; it’s simply The Case that our electorate and its elected officials and their actions consistently favor the rich. You’d think common sense would be enough to know this to be the case, but common sense is about denying paradox and simplifying complex discourse. It’s not simple because the problem is a result of The Bargain with White Power. It’s a result with how such a bargain works.

We can argue about this from a bicameral tradition that pits Democrats against Republicans and Liberals against Conservatives, but that would be a waste of time. Libertarians? They can’t hack this debate either because they don’t understand class; they choose to fetishize individualism vs (a) collectivism (that has never existed). And this stupid debate about the direction value can trickle is just awful. From above or from below, ain’t nothing going to change until we change the paradigm.

The fact is if we were to only examine this problem as a class problem, we’d have to bracket and ignore that it’s poor whites and their middle-class cousins who daily invest in the bargain to fund capitalist interests via legislation that maintains our free market. They have a stake in the game in spite of their lack of privilege relative to the excesses of privilege the wealthy possess. Not-white citizens also participate in the bargain, but for a variety of reasons and not with the same interests. They always already have less at stake.

Affluent Americans have nothing to lose in elections and the legislative process. They have amassed the kind of capital that no longer calls for participation in the market in any meaningful manner. To focus on the rich is a liberal ploy to cultivate a kind of capitalism that permits more people to become unjustly wealthy, unjustly ambitious. The ploy is not to alter traditional, capitalist class structure. Worse, Libertarian pleas for more liberty and more voluntarism are part of the same wish, just more grotesque. Libertarians wish we could live in a market permitting them what they want, when they want it, without having to worry about anybody else’s interests, and without ethics, and without a state, and without aggression (which means, and without being able to do something about it). The fleeting and fantastic to be free from others is a really a demand to be free from economy. All that anti-state crap is a liberalism moving to voluntarism. It’s still problematic.

We need instersectionality when examining class because it permits us to see that poor whites who want to be “self-reliant” and “upwardly mobile” “individuals” have accepted their stake in a white supremacist bargain. They may only presently own the “to be white” gift they receive for purchasing the bargain, but they want to own the “to be free” part next.

Intersectionality is not problematic. It’s a matter of welcoming something into traditional dialectics that has only been excluded because most of the white men who historically shaped the discourse were racist and sexist pigs.

Intersectionality or bust.

dagNotes: Why Intersectionality Matters

First, you have to do a little homework. Here’s recent research illustrating how, over the last 40 years, the US legislative process has favored the affluent classes. It’s not a matter of speculation; it’s simply The Case that our electorate and its elected officials and their actions consistently favor the rich. You’d think common sense would be enough to know this to be the case, but common sense is about denying paradox and simplifying complex discourse. It’s not simple because the problem is a result of The Bargain with White Power. It’s a result with how such a bargain works.

We can argue about this from a bicameral tradition that pits Democrats against Republicans and Liberals against Conservatives, but that would be a waste of time. Libertarians? They can’t hack this debate either because they don’t understand class; they choose to fetishize individualism vs (a) collectivism (that has never existed). And this stupid debate about the direction value can trickle is just awful. From above or from below, ain’t nothing going to change until we change the paradigm.

The fact is if we were to only examine this problem as a class problem, we’d have to bracket and ignore that it’s poor whites and their middle-class cousins who daily invest in the bargain to fund capitalist interests via legislation that maintains our free market. They have a stake in the game in spite of their lack of privilege relative to the excesses of privilege the wealthy possess. Not-white citizens also participate in the bargain, but for a variety of reasons and not with the same interests. They always already have less at stake.

Affluent Americans have nothing to lose in elections and the legislative process. They have amassed the kind of capital that no longer calls for participation in the market in any meaningful manner. To focus on the rich is a liberal ploy to cultivate a kind of capitalism that permits more people to become unjustly wealthy, unjustly ambitious. The ploy is not to alter traditional, capitalist class structure. Worse, Libertarian pleas for more liberty and more voluntarism are part of the same wish, just more grotesque. Libertarians wish we could live in a market permitting them what they want, when they want it, without having to worry about anybody else’s interests, and without ethics, and without a state, and without aggression (which means, and without being able to do something about it). The fleeting and fantastic to be free from others is a really a demand to be free from economy. All that anti-state crap is a liberalism moving to voluntarism. It’s still problematic.

We need instersectionality when examining class because it permits us to see that poor whites who want to be “self-reliant” and “upwardly mobile” “individuals” have accepted their stake in a white supremacist bargain. They may only presently own the “to be white” gift they receive for purchasing the bargain, but they want to own the “to be free” part next.

Intersectionality is not problematic. It’s a matter of welcoming something into traditional dialectics that has only been excluded because most of the white men who historically shaped the discourse were racist and sexist pigs.

Intersectionality or bust.

How Todd Akin And Paul Ryan Partnered To Redefine Rape

Incredibly misogynist shit-heels. Not once have Republican men crafted legislation that imposes further bondage for male bodies and their internal organs, legislation that limits their movement in the market or proscribes their speech. Moreover, it’s clear we can observe a direct proportion between the legislative activity to lower taxes for the capitalist class(es) and end regulation of business activity to the vociferous, often stridently so, calls to legislate the activity of female bodies and their movement in private and public spaces. Consequently, male consciousness is treated as the primary motivation for legislative activity while female consciousness is that thing male consciousness must regulate. As the legislative activity of the former increases so does the activity of the latter increase.

In fact, these men tirelessly work to free body, mind, and money for Judeao-Christian White Men. This isn’t a GOP thing. Libertarians are also all about bondage for women, immigrants, and people of color, while super-focused on ridding the market of coercive forces effecting a white and male-dominated capitalist class. Ron Paul is actually not a libertarian. ***We shouldn’t forget intersectionality here. This legislative activity is always both racist and sexist.***

And don’t get me started on liberals. Not one social justice cause that liberals won’t champion with half-assed gestures and counter-revolutionary and boring propaganda. Liberals are great at snitching and advertising and not much else. What have liberal politicians in either traditional party done to counter the misogyny in everyday legislative activity? NOTHING. Look to history. Liberals only act when they are forced to protect their political careers.

dagNotes: The Regressives (Saying What We Mean)

In everyday politics, we like to implement a problematic binary that has a left and a right, that improperly imagines a central, moderating axis upon which a balance can be managed or else all tilts towards partiality and inequality. It’s a comforting fantasy for millions of people. It’s a product of populist common-sense that works to rid discourse of complexity and paradox. It’s a-philosophical.

As a teacher, I hear the rhetoric of left and right all the time. Students always want to find The Other Side in an argument because they have been taught that a balance must be sought. As if there are only ever two sides worth considering and that society and its culture are monolithic. On the other hand, this searching for a center upon which to moderate disagreement doesn’t occur when a student visits my office to discuss writing or class. It happens when the students are in discourse within the classroom. This implicates me, their teacher. This implicates their parents, their friends, in other words, society. At least, it illustrates how two people discussing significant problems can talk freely only when isolated from the public discourse community, that, once we are engaged with it, will slowly locate our claims within a pre-designed social space that seeks a fantastic mean as a solution to our complex problems. In another post, I would be able to illustrate that the center in political discourse is similar to the grotesque representation of an ideal American—that racist Middle-Class, White, Christian Male, himself one who has never existed.

Liberals are certainly not left of an imagined center. They are not progressive. I argue, they cannot be progressive. Populist conservatives are little more than proud authoritarians. We can see their lack of progressivity through simple observation. They simply cannot look forward. They choose not to look forward while liberals claim to choose to look forward. However, this disposition to look back should not be used to oppose liberals to conservatives as progressives. Liberals are entirely backward looking. It’s just that liberals look back to an imagined complex of ideals to find peace and harmony whereas conservatives look back to find authority and stability. To be sure, both want to bolster the same corrupt capitalist culture.

Let’s drop the popular “progressives” tag, shall we? Let’s take liberals, “moderates” (whatever they are,) and conservatives, strip away their precious Binary, and replace it with something that will cause a critical stir. Insist on bringing conflict into the placid pond of popular American political discourse. These folks do, after all, have something in common. They are not-progressive; they are regressive. Within the popular social regressive movement, liberals and conservatives attempt to reach consensus about how to reconstruct a society that has yet to exist. They like to think the attempt to reach consensus enacts Democracy and celebrates a Liberty to do so. They believe this illustrates their superiority to an imagined other. It’s a matter of fact, that this is not the case.

Key to my claim: Social regressives project their disorder onto others, but projection of disorder is not enough to justify a stupid binary.

Not that we need to throw stupid titles around to talk about politics. I need not know or accept individual sentiment in every participant in a discourse community in order to participate in a political discussion. However, identity is important and we should be able to be honest about the form of rhetoric and space within social movements. Liberals and Conservatives are not members of wings of US politics. They not only share but actively cultivate the same regressive social space(s) in which they speak the same language and seek to fulfill similar if not the same objectives. They are already in consensus about the status quo. In addition, they are incapable of looking ahead. In other words, they share similar if not the same morality.

Liberalism and Conservativism may sound different because we have a recent past in which philosophers and theorists worked to construct distinct traditions. We have left those projects behind. Pointing to them does not make them relevant. 

dagCynic: You can’t trust a liberal.

The only thing worse than conservatives is liberals. Want to talk about a group of people who will do everything possible to not do anything possible to change the status quo. I can understand people wanting to preserve tradition whether or not I agree with them. I will never understand people wanting to enshrine tradition but for everyone and equally so and within the current social and economic paradigms.

13 notes

moping around chicago. misanthropy. outside of society.

I was ready for a nice, six weeks back in the USA and am already excited about leaving in late June. Not at all what I wanted, believe me.

Why upon returning home can’t I have a month’s respite from my cracker hate? It’s a troubling contempt to confront. (See my archives.) I’m not talking about my active hate, but a general, passive and white contempt: a general contempt white liberals most often embrace that authorizes their ignorance of their passively embraced bargain with white power. After all, contempt is that thing that permits a disregard for something that should be considered. 

Let me give an example of this kind of contempt. Back to teaching for only one day and Praise has had to endure a white woman in authority explaining to her what’s wrong with Praise’s difference (the classic Asians-are-passive stereotype) while claiming the wonders of being able to be color blind. And not because of any mistake was this cultural scolding encouraged, but because Praise didn’t seek permission to leave work at her scheduled time. Nothing like liberal white women explaining life to women of color to welcome us back to the states in a way that manually and actively cultivates useless white hierarchies. It’s cultural gentrification. White Expertise. Racist feminism and its cultural anthropology might not be the first kind of white supremacy we’d expect to experience on return to the US after four years, but liberal whites are often used to indoctrinate people of color into the bargain with white power.

It’s also no coincidence that rejecting the bargain with white power alienates me (and some of you, too,) from much social participation in activist communities. It’s institutionalized social misanthropy. Having rejected liberalism’s desire to work within white supremacist traditions, I’m undesirable to most white activist communities. Try to explain this at a General Assembly and see how far you get. And pardon my cynicism, but I’m not about to use this misanthropy as an excuse to hang with teens in black running around the outskirts of most liberal activist action. I’m not interested in throwing bricks through windows and playing tough within a protected white protest.

It’s not the worst thing for a writer to be left alone, I guess. It’s just that it makes a return home a sad confrontation with the liberal status quo that has long ago embraced the worst aspects of moderation and cooperation in democratic capitalist culture.

Looking forward to locking myself in the studio I rented and writing.

dagNotes: Possessive Whiteness

dagseoul:

What is it about white people that makes them take talking about whiteness and white supremacy so personally that whenever I write a post about either, I get a note about how mean I am to white people?

This is what I call possessive whiteness. I witness it most often in social justice circles, in communities where white people believe their association with others absolves them from benefiting from and profiting from their whiteness. Not merely asbolves them, but prevents them, as if their poc friends form some sort of shield that makes them no longer white. (Reminds me of that scene in Invisible Man where we consider how a little black is added to the paint to make it white.) It’s a possessive whiteness because when whiteness becomes the issue, it’s the one thing about themselves they won’t betray. (See tumblr feminist community where it happens all the fucking time.)

I’m talking about ideology, power structures and racists. Not you, but about you.

Fact is, if you’re white and unwilling to betray your privileged whiteness, you need to wake up and think about what it means to passively accept a bargain with white power. “Not identifying as white” is being a white supremacist. If you’re white and refuse to admit and deny your privilege altogether, then you’re part of the problem. It’s that simple.

I’ll just leave this here. It’s relevant given what I’m seeing on my dash. And I’ll add:

White liberals (and libertarians, for that matter,) will always insist, “We’re all oppressed,” which is a way to say, no one is oppressed. After all, white power insists on personal responsibility and individuality. Whiteness is the reliance on community while denying its existence.

dagSPIN: What will they say about it all now?

1. Right Wing: “Torture works”; “Support the Troops”; “Protect the Homeland”. Jingoism, Jingoism, Jingoism. Several bills on the legislative agenda that, if passed, will expand the powers afforded the government in the P.A.T.R.I.O.T. Act. The right wing will use the renewed interest in Osama bin Laden and push for further exceptionalist protectionism.  It’s that simple.  This will include more fervent pro-corporatist, anti-left behavior in the long-term.

2. Conservative Pundits: Rendition, secret prisons and torture works and the left wing is responsible for politicizing war on terror. As the links show, Michelle Malkin is already all over this.They will push a little to rehabilitate Bush’s presidency, but not much and not for long.

3. Liberal Pundits: “Bush didn’t care, Obama did”. Obama is super-popular and kicking ass.

4. Left Wing: “John Kerry was right.” Basically, we do not need to invade countries to engage terrorists with our military. We need good intelligence, to arrest the leaders of terrorist organizations and to try them in our courts.

5. Libertarians: Libertarians will use this to try to promote their newest cause, a possible strong Ron-Paul-for-President campaign.  Events like this permit American libertarians to promote an anti-war stance that offers good cover for its unpopular, pro-corporate agenda. They’ll use a Ron Paul campaign to recruit young people who love to hate the state.

The Week In Horrible Writing: The New Republic’s Jonathan Chait

When I find an essay that appears to be intelligent political criticism yet turns out to be anti-intellectual crap with weird appeals to common sense you’d likely find in pseudo-intellectual conservative discourse in something like The Weekly Standard or The National Review, I’d bet I’m reading The New Republic.

I want to quickly define a concept I use below to address an aspect of the author’s style. Jonathan Chait uses something I like to call hip wit. Hip wit is comfortable, lazy intellectualism that you find in cafe culture, dorm rooms, department meetings, writing workshops, seminars. Sitting around a table with your smart friends, hip wit colors debates about topical topics only tolerating amusing and sometimes seemingly enigmatic zingers that make your friends and colleagues chuckle. It’s smartypants riffing, verbal jamming. Hip Wit is hollow nonsense in opposition to the riffing, playful dialogue that an intelligent autodidact creates. In other words, it’s rehearsed. Hip Wit is stylized bullshit.

On Jonathan Chait’s “Liberalism’s Bumper Sticker Problem”:

The New Republic readers will nod their heads at this title. The author desperately needs that nodding affirmation because his essay won’t attempt to explain the complex implicatures in its messy logic.The problem isn’t necessarily liberalism, is it? The problem is a rank, American anti-intellectual tradition that insists turning complex discourse about serious problems into nonsensical phrases we distribute via cars and culture—automobile bumpers and invisible binaries. This bumper sticker problem is both a liberal and conservative problem. Certainly, we can admit both the hippy and the gun-toting hick—the bleeding-heart liberal and the apple-pie conservative—use their bumpers to communicate to friends and enemies alike.

“Liberalism’s Bumper Sticker Problem” might suggest to a reader the author’s going to address liberalism’s stupid attempt to compete with conservative propaganda via absurd bumper sticker discourse. A reader would be wrong. The title is a bit deceptive. As we’ll see, Chait’s conclusion merely refers once again to the assumed problem.  And this is weird because his first point is about writing that resists advancing its narrative.

Chait opens with a note about narrative:

Ryan Lizza’s latest must-read New Yorker piece is framed as the story of President Obama’s abandonment of the doctrine of foreign policy realism and adoption of “consequentialism.” It’s filled with a lot of reporting that doesn’t really advance that narrative but is really interesting anyway.

 It’s a critique of “the reporting”: it’s interesting reporting but fails to advance the narrative. I don’t really get it and it sounds a little insider-y to me. Anway, what’s his beef? Chait’s essay is nothing more than a digression about an interesting idea. He also writes, “I was amused by one advisor’s attempt to boil this doctrine down to a bumper sticker”. He then cites one of Obama’s national security advisors boiling something down to a bumper sticker and failing to do so.  Of course, the advisor’s statement is supposed to be funny in an inside baseball sort of way. I think that’s clear: the speaker counted on his audience inferring that he believes we should resist bumper sticker messaging.

Chait’s first paragraph confesses one of two things to an intelligent and focused audience: 1) I like what I have to say so much that I’m going to share my trifles with you, the lucky readers; or, 2) I didn’t really work out all the complexities of this idea I had the other day, so I’m offering you an excuse for why you might disagree with me. The first is arrogant, the second lazy. My conclusion is that Chait is both arrogant and imprecise.

Imprecise? Sure. Liberals are not doing a good job distilling their messages into bumper sticker simplicity, correct? Isn’t that a problem with liberalism? Haven’t I heard this somewhere? Well, sure I have. It’s only one of the most popular conservative critiques of liberalism that isn’t necessarily true. It goes like this: Conservatives are good at messaging while Liberals are not. It’s not amusing. It’s not accurate. It’s not precise. If a simple trope (Liberalism is antithetical to Conservativism) is used well in public discourse, Chait seems to believe that’s good enough reason to rely on it in his argument. His essay appears to accept that our cultural and political discourse is only as good as the design of its slogans is precise.

I’m getting off-topic. Chait continues:

The bumper sticker problem is endemic for American liberalism. On foreign policy, it’s actually a murky split, with ideologies cutting across both party coalitions. But on economics, there’s a persistent phenomenon of conservatives having clear bumper-sticker answers and liberals lacking them. That’s because, as I’ve argued before, conservatism is philosophically anti-government in a way that liberalism is not philosophically pro-government. “Market good, government bad” fits on a bumper sticker. So does “Government good, market bad.” The problem is that the former pretty well describes the Republican philosophy, while the latter describes the philosophy only of a tiny socialist fringe operating mainly outside the two-party system.

As with his stupid assertion about how “the reporting” reports “without advancing the narrative,” he stupidly asserts something about a “tiny socialist fringe” and its viable bumper sticker, “Government good, market bad”. Chait never has claimed, to my knowledge, that he’s a well-read historian, theorist and/or economist, but his binary for a conservative v liberal as pro-market v anti-market or anti-government v pro-market is horseshit. He may not be an expert, but he’s smart enough to resist making insipid claims.

I hate to break it to Chait, but the binary his assumptions are anchored within are a conservative construction representing the reality (realities, possibly,) of American discourse and culture as it is used to represent other complex political realities. It’s at least two steps removed from the issue he’s trying to address. The representation itself is anti-intellectual because its construction depends upon traditional representations of Americans that no longer (and never did) accurately imagine Americans. I want to say two things about the bumper-sticker binary: 1) Conservatives do not actually believe government is bad as their deregulation efforts actually amount to subtle regulations that aggressively redistribute wealth and 2) Socialists don’t think the market is bad.

All social actions in the United States take place in “the market”. I put the phrase in quotes because I think we should use “a market”. Conservative Americans like to believe that there is only our market, the market, as if it’s an actual place where we live. But it’s not a place, is it? And everything we do in the market creates a greater, ever-increasing social order that regulates our lives. We can choose to regulate this order or not regulate it.  But that’s not the same as passing or not passing legislation.

Republicans and Libertarians, and some progressive conservatives and liberals, would argue that these are the same things. It serves a purpose to do so. Taxing is seen, then, as redistributing wealth while not-taxing is seen as freeing people and businesses from regulation.  But that’s a stupid and mistaken way to see the action Republicans take in Congress when legislating tax reform to reduce corporate and wealthy citizens taxes. In this case, Republicans actually love the shit out of government, as do Libertarians, the liars that they are.

I’m also uncomfortable with Chait’s lazy shifting from conservative to Republican and liberal to Democrat. We should insist on consistency and focus in our writing. If we want to write about Liberalism’s Problems we might want to insist we are adressing Liberalism itself rather than the conservative movement’s widely distributed representation of Liberalism.

Moving on, Chait insists:

Liberalism is forever in search of a philosophy that can fit on a bumper sticker. It’s always failing, because a philosophy of leaving the free market to work except in cases of market failure, and then attempting to determine which intervention best passes the cost-benefit test is never going to be simple.

Well, I don’t know what to say about this. The Liberalism Is Always Failing claim is trite. Liberalism has actually been extremely successful over the last 112 years. Chait’s is a libertarian’s critique of popular liberalism from the left and is a rank oversimplification of reality that rather strangely fits his musing about Liberalism’s Bumper Sticker Problem.

At this point, it’s clear that Chait constructs his argument not so that he learns something about a complex idea he wants to explore, an engaging idea that he had while reading Rizza in The New Yorker. He’s not writing in search of meaning at all. This is hip wit at work. He’s had an idea already and has been looking for a place to put it, for a time to share it. And while reading The New Yorker, he saw an opportunity to make it fit in the wider discourse about problems liberals have with creating bumper-sticker messages.

It’s unfortunate, because if he’d spent some time thinking about the actual problem rather than the rhetoric about the problem, he’d have a wonderful piece about the strikingly stupid and aggressively anti-intellectual approach we use to distribute important cultural messages to one another via media outlets. Journalists and Pundits unthinkingly transmit these messages and then, like Chait does in this essay, say amusing things about them.  Yet, even the musing never actually approaches useful work. It’s not even meta.

I’m going to skip Chait’s reference to Dana Milbank’s discussion about Obama’s strengths and weaknesses. I’d have to get started on Milbank, who almost never is a useful source for information. Chait concludes:

There’s a psychological equivalence between the certainty of left and right, but the midpoint of the mirror image does not happen to run right between the split between two parties. American politics today is a kind of one-and-a-half ideology system, with a Republican Party acting as the arm of a coherent conservative movement staunchly opposed to government, and a Democratic Party acting as a kind of catch-all for everybody who doesn’t accept the conservative agenda. It’s no coincidence that one party keeps producing leaders who think in simple ways, while the other keeps producing leaders who think in complicated ways.

The first sentence is worthless. It’s the most contrived way to say something simple: the left and the right may be more similar than different. DER DUH DUDE. Pseudo-intellectuals love public masturbation and it almost never produces engaging writing. If you’re a writer, the important thing to remember is rather practical: after that silly, artificial, complicated, contrived sentence you can often find one that directly states a useful and meaningful idea. Cut the bullshit and keep the useful sentence. Chait doesn’t fail to illustrate my point. After his ridiculous psycho-babble, he claims, “American politics today is a kind of one-and-a-half ideology system”. I like that. I want to know more about this.

Unfortunately, Chait doesn’t do a good job of explaining himself. On the other hand, he continues to promote the improper and insidious assumption that the Republican Party is a coherent community representing a coherent conservative movement while the Democratic Party exists as an poorly defined area where people who don’t like Republicans, who disagree with conservatives, mingle. I don’t think it would take much for me to illustrate how Republicans use, without admitting to it, many of the principles of liberalism in capitalism that most self-identifying liberals in the Democratic Party support.

At each step along the way, Jonathan Chait resists critical thought and exploration of engaging complex ideas about his musings in order to arrive at his conclusion. He concludes, “It’s no coincidence that one party keeps producing leaders who think in simple ways, while the other keeps producing leaders who think in complicated ways.” We began with Chait implying that he was going to address a problem that might, he hinted, advance the narrative. We learned that whatever the problem was, Chait was not going to address it because he wanted to dwell on the anti-intellectual, common sense notion that Republicans successfully use simple messages to discuss complex issues to their constituents while Democrats consistently fail to say something most of us can understand without effort.

I don’t know what we’re supposed to make of this conclusion. It’s both a compliment and an insult for both Republicans and Democrats. It’s a cheeky statement. It’s supposed to be amusing, I guess, because Chait says he was amused when it occurred to him. Again, when a writer narrates his own thinking about the issue he’s addressing, he’s often constructing an excuse for its acceptance in lieu of actual work.

This is the worst political writing I’ve seen all week.

The Corporate State Wins Again

Check out Chris Hedge’s new essay on Truthout. Excellent critique.

The Cold War also bequeathed to us the species of the neoliberal. The neoliberal enthusiastically embraces “national security” as the highest good. The neoliberal—composed of the gullible and cynical careerists—parrots back the mantra of endless war and corporate capitalism as an inevitable form of human progress. Globalization, the neoliberal assures us, is the route to a worldwide utopia. Empire and war are vehicles for lofty human values. Greg Mortenson, the disgraced author of “Three Cups of Tea,” tapped into this formula. The deaths of hundreds of thousands of innocents in Iraq or Afghanistan are ignored or dismissed as the cost of progress. We are bringing democracy to Iraq, liberating and educating the women of Afghanistan, defying the evil clerics in Iran, ridding the world of terrorists and protecting Israel. Those who oppose us do not have legitimate grievances. They need to be educated. It is a fantasy. But to name our own evil is to be banished.

***

The rhetoric of the Democratic Party and the neoliberals sustains the illusion of participatory democracy. The Democrats and their liberal apologists offer minor palliatives and a feel-your-pain language to mask the cruelty and goals of the corporate state. The reconfiguration of American society into a form of neofeudalism will be cemented into place whether it is delivered by Democrats, who are pushing us there at 60 miles an hour, or Republicans, who are barreling toward it at 100 miles an hour. Wolin writes, “By fostering an illusion among the powerless classes” that it can make their interests a priority, the Democratic Party “pacifies and thereby defines the style of an opposition party in an inverted totalitarian system.” The Democrats are always able to offer up a least-worst alternative while, in fact, doing little or nothing to thwart the march toward corporate collectivism.

***

We live in a fragmented society. We are ignorant of what is being done to us. We are diverted by the absurd and political theater. We are afraid of terrorism, of losing our job and of carrying out acts of dissent. We are politically demobilized and paralyzed. We do not question the state religion of patriotic virtue, the war on terror or the military and security state. We are herded like sheep through airports by Homeland Security and, once we get through the metal detectors and body scanners, spontaneously applaud our men and women in uniform. As we become more insecure and afraid, we become more anxious. We are driven by fiercer and fiercer competition. We yearn for stability and protection. This is the genius of all systems of totalitarianism. The citizen’s highest hope finally becomes to be secure and left alone.