Back in 2006 and 2007, Israel, with Bush’s blessing, was doing its usual razrez in Lebanon (as Alex in Clockwork Orange might put it), I wrote a bit about that affair in the long perspective of Israel’s’ malign policy of perpetual war.
Limited, Inc.
“I’m so bored. I hate my life.” - Britney Spears
Das Langweilige ist interessant geworden, weil das Interessante angefangen hat langweilig zu werden. – Thomas Mann
"Never for money/always for love" - The Talking Heads
Thursday, April 16, 2026
We've been doing this forever: U.S., Israel and Iran, 2007
Tuesday, April 14, 2026
Assassination blues
1.The Headline in the New York Sun, April 15, 1865 was:
HORRIBLE! THE PRESIDENT ASSASSINATED! MR. SEWARD’S THROAT CUT AND HIS SON ASSAULTED.
“The theatre was densely crowded, and everybody seemed delighted
with the scene before them. During the third act and while there was a
temporary pause for one of the actors to enter, a sharp report of a pistol was
heard which merely attracted attention, but suggested nothing serious, until a
man rushed to the front of the President’s box, waving a long dagger in his
right hand, and exclaiming “sic semper tyrannis” and immediately leaped from
the box, which was in the second tier, to the stage beneath, and ran across to
the opposite side, making his escape amid the bewilderment of the audience,
from the roar of the theatre, and mounting a horse, fled.”
The Sun’s reporter was in such a stupor that his report is a
mess of confusions of both grammar and sense – where was the horse, anyway?
2. Some addresses:
Dealy Plaza, Dallas Texas
The Lorraine Hotel, Memphis Tennessee
146, rue Montmartre, Paris
11, rue de la
Ferronerie, Paris
4, Rue Rollin,
Paris
20, Rue de la
Cordellerie, Paris.
3. I have been to Dealy Plaza and paid homage to Smiling
Jack. Hell, when I was a 5 year old I saw it on tv, the black and white tv
downstairs, in York, Pennsylvania. I’ve not been to the Ford’s theatre. I had a
crush on Abe Lincoln when I was a schoolboy, and still wish he had not gone to see
My American Cousin, much as I respect
the fact that he needed a break from stress.
My list of addresses is a list of assassinations. Do the
places where the shot was fired, the knife was thrust, remember? The spirits of
the place – Lares – kept a memory, it was once thought. Some trace, some
mnemonic vibration. We have now moved those vibrations to other crossroads in
the brain, crossroads of neurons. There, somehow, they exist. But we still
retain, in popular culture, a certain dread of certain places. The haunted
house. The slasher is killed and maniacally, in sequel after sequel, reassembles
and reattacks. The spirit remains – or the box office and the laws of gender
make their fated demands.
4. I did not go to the book depository in Dealy Plaza. All
respect, though: JFK’s assassination continues its underground existence in the
nether side of this country. A world within a world, Lee thinks in Don Delillo’s
Libra.
I’ve never been to the Lorraine Hotel, never gone out of my
way to go to Memphis, though I have been to the MLK memorial in Atlanta. Nor to
the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, where Bobbie Kennedy was, astonishingly,
shot and killed. It is a rare thing that two rich and powerful men are gunned
down in America. That is usually reserved for the mean and the lowly.
In French, assassination is often used to mean murder, but
in the English speaking world, that term is usually reserved for high fliers.
Myself, if I was so unfortunate as to meet a bullet, a knife, a hatchet, and so
on, would be reported as murdered. Killed. But the president, or king, or
leader of the revolution, or other highly placed individuals get assassinated
when the projectile ends their dreamtime on this earth.
5. The French assassinations on my list: Jaures, on July 31,
1914; Henri IV, May 14, 1610; Henri Curiel, 4 Rue Rollin, May 4, 1978; and
Jean-Paul Marat, July 13, 1793.
Paris is the capital city of assassinations. I have merely
listed a small number from among the hosts of spies, White Russians, Presidents,
Ambassadors, and others who have been put down in this beautiful city.
Fourmillante
cité, cité pleine de rêves,
Où le spectre en plein jour raccroche le passant !
6. Assassinations are the center of little worlds, and upset
the standard intellectual belief in uniformian historiography, one that does
away with “great men” and puts social forces or production or the progress of
knowledge in its place. Ah, history as, essentially, a movement like the wind
or water – all very interesting mathematically, but with no part essentially
different than any other part.
And yet, who can believe that the ghost futures that die
with the assassinated are not notable! One thinks of JFK serving two terms
(which would have probably meant that his brother would never have been in the
Ambassador Hotel that night); one thinks of Martin Luther King’s middle age –
he died at 39 – and the danger he would have posed to the racist order; one
thinks of Henry IV surviving, once again, and perhaps preventing Frondes to
come, changing the entire culture of the l’age Classique.
Oddly, the burden of assassination is borne, especially, by
the left. From Rosa Luxemberg to Fred Hampton, the list of the assassinated is
heavy with promises arrested. The river is deep and the river is wide, and
there are times when you need to nurse your drink, your wine or your gin and
tonic, and weep a little bit. My idea is that to be a lefty is an enormously
tiring thing anyway – there’s no clubs, no rich man’s money behind it all. And
you are always facing a wall of cops. To go against the grain in societies where
the grain is very very hard costs and costs. And thus, the cast of prophets
unarmed or, like Che, badly armed, follows us all. It has followed me, at least
in my thoughts, for a long long time. Lost time, indeed.
Saturday, April 11, 2026
The pawned guillotine
It is said that the last of the “sombre dynastie” of Sansons to be the chief executioner in Paris, Henri-Clement, was a well known gambler and epicure, a great favorer of masked balls and card games. Now, in the 1840s, the chief executioner kept that great, terrible machine, the guillotine, in his home on Rue de Marais, which was approximately where Rue Faubourg San Martin in the 10th arrondissement is today. He would sometimes display the machine to guests, just as his father had – at the same house, his father had once eaten dinner with Balzac in which he discussed the chopping off of the King and Queens head in 1793 with the ever curious novelist.
As a gambler, Henri-Clement Sanson was sometimes plunged into debt. To raise money to pay his debts, he did an unusual thing: he put his guillotine in hock. One night, in 1847, he was called on by the messengers from the court to get everything ready for an execution of two prisoners. He confessed that he needed to go to the pawn shop to get his instrument. I don’t know if the messenger loaned him the money to do so. In any case, the court was not pleased, and demanded his resignation.
This is, to my mind, a kind of allegory of Critique, that activity infinitely perfected by Leftists (under which rubric I include myself). Like the pawned instrument of a supreme violence forever associated with Revolution, in time of crisis, when critique should turn into revolution, it finds it has lost its instrument, its connection to any real social force. It has been, as it were, put into hock.
I think a lot about that the instant in which critique fails to turn into revolution, because I often feel that it structures the 21st century Left - it normalizes disappointment. A Leftism of dis-appointment - that seems more of a hindrance than a help, doesn't it?
Thursday, April 09, 2026
QUITTING: A VICTORY OF THE ENLIGHTENMENT
Philosophy got its start in slave and serf societies, so it is no wonder that it is structured, systematically, around the master – slave (or serf) encounter. All of modernity is summed up in the simple phrase: I quit. The slave or serf can escape – which is at the root of adventure – but they cannot simply quit.
Friday, April 03, 2026
It’s just that demon life has got you in its sway…
In Fathers and Sons, Bazarov, the nihilist hero and the son of an old army doctor, makes a remark to his friend and disciple, Arkhady, son of Nikolai Kursanov, an aristocrat and landowner, about the latter: “The day before yesterday I saw him reading Pushkin,” Bazarov continued… “Do explain to him that that will never do any good. After all, he’s not a boy: it’s time he threw that he threw aside that nonsense: wanting to be a romantic in these days!”
I recently re-read Fathers and Sons. It was in this remark,
and others of that type, that I recognized something, that a grand thesis suddenly
presented itself in my mind.
But I have to preface the grand thesis riff with a little
autobiographical remark.
In 1970, I was 12. In 1980, I was 22. That decade marks me –
though I have ranged pretty far to be sitting here in Paris, with a wife and a
boy and my life, such as it is, entering the retirement twilight, it is most
likely the case that I am of the 70s generation.
In Russian intellectual history, the members of the “1830”
generation, like Herzen, self-identified as such. So did the “youth” – the generation
of the 1860s, the shestidesiatniki. These identifications are, of course, fluid
and non-binding – and yet they evoke something like different moods and modes
that are actually experienced. In the 1830s, Herzen and Turgenev, among other
intellectuals, took it as their task to propound, or to pound out, what it
meant to be a member of the Russian civilization. An important word, for this
cohort – to be a member of a civilization was, above all, an existential task.
Were they to be real subjects, like the Europeans (the idea of a European
subject, here, meant basically a thing composed of bits of the French
Enlightenment, bits of Hegel, and bits of the English economists, but it meant,
as well, to dress in a certain way, feel in a certain way, love in a certain
way – above all it meant freeing the serfs), or were they condemned to be
Russians under Nicholas – a sort of slough composed of Dead Souls, samovars and
flies. And yet, wasn’t that slough a warm and live thing, unlike the mere
surface of the Europeans?
For the sons, however, the shestidesiatniki: this generation
of the 1830s, which rose up and were put down in 1848, was full of the most
pathetic dreamers. Reading Pushkin! What rubbish.
The struggle between the heirs of these decades was fought
out, most openly, in Russian literature – in poems and novels. Novels such as
Fathers and Sons.
Now: here’s my grand thesis. If I think of the generation of
the sixties, and the generation of the seventies, in America, and so on, it is
striking to me that the terrain in which our generational mood, so to speak,
was fought out – our Russian novel – was popular music. Instead of Herzen and
Turgenev, instead of Chernyshensky and Pisarev, instead of Doestoevsky and
Tolstoy, the terrain was the British invasion, Bob Dylan, Motown, R & B, Disco,
and Punk.
This is not about the aesthetic quality of these cultural
products, but rather their existential, identifying effects. What Bazarov says
about poor Nikolai Kursanov and his affection for Pushkin could easily have
been said by some late seventies punk about some aging hippie child’s affection
for the Beatles. It is not just a comment about the Beatles as a group, it is a
comment about the whole little world in which you would listen to the Beatles,
you would know their songs, you would quote them occasionally, you would care
for them in a certain way.
It is a sociological fact that I don’t quite understand
about my own growing up that it was not novels, or movies, or television –
which were all massively consumed, of course – but popular music, albums and
concerts, that provided the terrain upon which was fought out a certain mood
and a certain existential identification that gets harked back to, that still can
suddenly start up in the brain. A sound, lyrics.
Myself, I read enormously between 12 and 22, and would not
have thought of myself as a “fan” – but I know, now, that even though I did
read the Russian novels then and thought I was Ivan Karamazov, my lodestar was
really Bobby Dylan. Like everybody else I knew, my little bit of this history was enacted more
through music than anything else. This was true for the back of the class, the
fans of Freebird and Southern Rock, as well as the front of the class, the fans
of David Bowie and Patti Smith.
I don’t think that popular music plays this role for, say,
my son’s generation. Rap is very important, but it doesn’t set the communal
mood. I’m sure that mood is set by Internet genres that we don’t really have
genre knowledge of – social media, for instance. What is Tik Tok or Instagram? I’m
not sure they bear the burden of the Russian novel. Perhaps, in fact, the task
of existential identification comes and goes – is there any need of it, or
desire for it, at the moment?
In the creche, the nursery located behind our apartment, the
three year olds are chasing each other around and screaming at the top of their
lungs at this moment. I can’t tell you what their communal mood will be. Out of
those screams, what art, what tragic love, what happy or sad life arrangements are
to come I can’t divine. I can only look backwards, it seems.
But Fuck it. Lot’s wife has always seemed much saner to me than
her husband, with his bizarre methods of childrearing. Three cheers for the
backward’s glance.
Monday, March 30, 2026
Breaks
Breaks on a bus, brakes on a car Breaks
to make you a superstar
Breaks to win and breaks to lose
But these here breaks will rock your shoes
According to Robert Craven’s 1980 article on Pool slang in
American speech, breaks – as in good break, bad break, those are the breaks –
derives from the American lingo of pool, which is distinct from British
billiard terms. The difference in terminology emerged in the 19th century,
but he dates the popular use of break (lucky break, bad break, the
breaks) to the 20s. I love the idea that this is true, that the Jazz age, the
age of American modernity and spectacle, saw the birth of the breaks. If the
word indeed evolved from the first shot in pool – when you “break” the pyramid
of balls, a usage that seems to have been coined in America in the 19th century,
as against the British term – then its evolution nicely intersects one of
the favored examples in the philosophy of causation, as presented by Hume.
Hume’s work, from the Treatise to the Enquiry, is so
punctuated by billiard balls that it might as well have been the metaphysical
dream of Minnesota Fats – excuse the anachronism – and it has been assumed, in
a rather jolly way in the philosophy literature, that this represents a piece
of Hume’s own life, a preference for billiards. However, as some have noted,
Hume might have borrowed the billiard ball example from Malebranche – whose
work he might have read while composing the Treatise at La Fleche. But even if
Hume was struck by Malebranche’s example and borrowed it, the stickiness of the
example, the way billiard balls keep appearing in Hume’s texts, feels to
the reader like tacit testimony to Hume’s own enjoyment or interest in
the game. Unfortunately, this detail has not been taken up by his
biographers. When we trace the itinerary of Hume as he moved from Scotland to
Bristol to London to France, we have to reconstruct ourselves how this journey
in the 1730s might have intersected with billiard rooms in spas and public
houses. In a schedule of coaches from London to Bristol published in the early
1800s, we read that there is a coach stop at the Swan in St. Clements street,
London, on the line that goes to Bristol, and from other sources we know that
the Swan was famed for its billiard room. Whether this information applies to a
journey made 70 years before, when the game was being banned in public houses
by the authorities, is uncertain. One should also remember that in Hume’s
time, billiards was not played as we now play American pool or snooker.
The table and the pockets and the banks were different. So was the cue stick
– , it wasn’t until 1807 that the cue stick was given its felt or india
rubber tip, which made it a much more accurate instrument. And of course the
balls were hand crafted, and thus not honed to a mechanically precise
roundness.
If, however, Hume was a billiard’s man, one wonders what
kind he was. His biographer Hunter speaks of the “even flight” of Hume’s prose
– he never soars too much. But is this the feint of a hustler? According to one
memoirist, Kant, too, was a billiards player – in fact the memoirist,
Heilsberg, claimed it was his “only recreation” – and he obviously thought
there was something of a hustle about Hume’s analysis of cause and effect,
which is where the breaks come in.
There’s a rather celebrated passage in the abstract of the
Treatise in which Hume even conjoins the first man, Adam, and the billiard
ball. The passage begins: “Here is a billiard ball lying on the table, and
another ball moving towards it with rapidity. They strike; and the ball which
was formerly at rest now acquires a motion.” Hume goes on to describe the
reasons we would have for speaking of one ball’s contact causing the other ball
to acquire a motion. The question is, does this description get to something
naturally inherent in the event?
“Were a man, such as Adam, created in the full vigour of
understanding, without experience, he would never be able to infer motion in
the second ball from the motion and impulse of the first. It is not anything
that reason sees in the cause which makes us infer the
effect.”
This new man, striding into the billiard room, Hume thinks,
would not see as we see, even if he sees what we see. Only when he has seen
such things thousands of times will he see as we see: then, “His understanding
would anticipate his sight and form a conclusion suitable to his past
experience.” Adam, in this example, is the gull that any hustler dreams of.
And as in a dream, Hume’ Adam is an overdetermined figure.
On the one hand, in his reference to Adam’s “science”, there is a hint of the
Adam construed by the humanists. Martin Luther claimed that Adam’s vision was
perfect, meaning he could see objects hundreds of miles away. Joseph Glanvill,
that curiously in-between scholar – defender of the ghost belief and founder of
the Royal Society – wrote in the seventeenth century:
“Adam needed no Spectacles. The acuteness of his natural
Opticks (if conjecture may have credit) shew'd him much of the Coelestial
magnificence and bravery without a Galilaeo's tube: And 'tis most probable that
his naked eyes could reach near as much of the upper World, as we with all the
advantages of art. It may be 'twas as absurd even in the judgement of his
senses, that the Sun and Stars should be so very much, less then this Globe, as
the contrary seems in ours; and 'tis not unlikely that he had as clear a
perception of the earths motion, as we think we have of its quiescence.”
However, this is not the line that Hume develops. His Adam
has our human all too human sensorium, and is no marvel of sensitivity. Rather,
he belongs to another line of figures beloved by the Enlightenment philosophes:
Condillac’s almost senseles statue, Locke’s Molyneaux, Diderot’s aveugle-né.
Here, the human is stripped down to the basics. The gull is fleeced – he comes,
in fact, pre-fleeced. Adam’s conjunction
with the billiard ball, then, gives us a situation like Diderot’s combination
of the blind man and the mirror – it’s an event of illuminating estrangement.
It is important that these figures were certainly not
invented in the eighteenth century. Rather, they come out of a longer lineage:
that of the sage and the fool. Bruno and his ass, Socrates and Diogenes the
cynic, Don Quixote and Sancho Panza – it is from this family that all these
deprived souls in the texts of the philosophes are appropriated and turned into
epistemological clockworks.
Hume’s point is to lift the breaks from off our necks, to
break the bonds of necessity – or rather to relocate those bonds. In doing so,
he and his billiard balls are reversing the older tendency of atomistic
philosophy, which was revived by Gassendi in the 17th century.
Lucretian atoms fall in necessary and pre-determined courses, the only
exception being that slight inexplicable swerve when the atoms contact the
human – hence our free will. Hume, who had a hard enough time with
Christian miracles, did not, so far as I know, discuss the Lucretian version of
things even to the extent of dismissing it. Lucretius’s clinamen is, for the
philosophical hustler, the original break.
To be a little over the top, we could say that the
eighteenth century thinkers disarmed necessity, exiled Nemesis, and the
heavyweight heads of the nineteenth century brought it back with a vengeance,
locating it – in a bow to Hume, or the Humean moment – in history. Custom. From
this point of view, Hume was part of a project that saw the transfer of power
from God and Nature back to Man – although we are now all justly suspicious of
such capitalizable terms.
But the breaks survived and flourished. There is a way of
telling intellectual history – the way I’ve been doing it – that makes it go on
above our heads, instead of in them. It neglects the general populace, the
great unwashed. Book speaks to book. To my mind, intellectual history has to
embrace and understand folk belief in order to understand the book to book P.A.
system. The problem, of course, is that the great unwashed didn’t often write
down their thoughts, so that we have to depend on those thinkers that did, using
them to angle backwards like surveyors do.
Still, we can
approach the breaks in another way.
In 1980, I was going to college in Shreveport, Louisiana. I
went to classes in the morning, then worked at a general remodeling store from
3 to 10. I worked in the paint department, mostly. At seven, the manager would
leave for home, and Henry, the assistant manager, would let us pipe in whatever
music we wanted to - which is how I first heard Kurtis Blow’s These are
the Breaks. I also first heard the Sugarhill Gang’s Rappers delight this way,
and I still mix them up. I heard both, as well as La Donna and Rick James, at
the Florentine, a disco/gay bar that I went to a lot with friends – it was the
best place to dance in town. Being a gay bar, it was always receiving bomb
threats and such, which made it a bit daring to go there. We went, however,
because we could be pretty sure that the music they played would include no
country or rock. It was continuously danceable until, inevitably, The Last
Dance played.
At the time, I was dabbling a bit in Marx, and thought that
I was on the left side of history. At the same time, 1980 was a confusing year
for Americans. The ‘malaise’ was everywhere, and nothing seemed to be going
right – from the price of oil to the international order. There were supposedly
communists in Central America, African countries were turning to the Soviet
Union, and of course there was the hangover from the Vietnam War – the fantasy
that we could have won that war had not yet achieved mass circulation, so it
felt like what it was, a plain defeat.
I imagined, then, that the breaks were falling against a
certain capitalist order. In actuality, the left – in its old and new varieties
– was vanishing. Or you could say transforming. The long marches were underway
– in feminism, from overthrowing patriarchy to today’s “leaning in”; in civil
rights, from the riots in Miami to the re-Jim Crowization of America through
the clever use of the drug war; and in labor organization, from the union power
to strike to the impotence and acceptance that things will really never get
better, and all battles are now rearguard.
My horizons were not vast back then – I didn’t keep up with
the news that much, but pondered a buncha books and the words of popular songs.
But I knew something was in the air. As it turned out, Kurtis Blow’s
breaks were not going to be kind to my type, the Nowhere people, stranded
socially with their eccentric and unconvincing visions. However, after decades
of it, I have finally learned to accept what Blow was telling me: these are
just the breaks. That is all they are.
You’ll live.
Sunday, March 29, 2026
On the death of Leonard Bast
E.M. Foster is an admirable writer, who can be read simply for his technical perfections. Here’s how he does that most difficult thing, letting time, blank time, pass, in Howard’s End.
“And the conversation drifted away and away, and Helen’s cigarette turned to a spot in the darkness, and the great flats opposite were sown with lighted windows, which vanished and were relit again, and vanished incessantly.”
This is superb on every level. The great flats opposite will soon be figuring in the story, for one thing, so their place as a sort of chronometer is appropriate - and yet, since the reader, at this point, doesn’t know that, their insertion here is one of those ways a writer insinuates his facts into the reader’s unconsciousness, becoming a sort of fate in the process, something that presses, however mildly, upon the reader, as we know that those lights will press upon Helen Schlegel - whose cigarette is (in a bit of a cheat) lit for an awful long time. The perfection of this kind of writing extends to the freedom it gives Forster with regards to his characters. Forster, again and again, will come out of his seemingly neutral role and make blatant and manipulative comments that he means to be read as blatant and manipulative. The reader, who is already caught up in the artificial fate spun by the text, has the sense, in these passages, that luck itself is speaking - that here at last privilege, the unfairness in things, is disclosing itself, becoming palpable.
We've been doing this forever: U.S., Israel and Iran, 2007
Back in 2006 and 2007, Israel, with Bush’s blessing, was doing its usual razrez in Lebanon (as Alex in Clockwork Orange m ight put it), I ...
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You can skip this boring part ... LI has not been able to keep up with Chabert in her multi-entry assault on Derrida. As in a proper duel, t...
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Ladies and Gentlemen... the moment you have all been waiting for! An adventure beyond your wildest dreams! An adrenaline rush from start to...
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