I’m enjoying the hell out of the dispute between Sony and
Kim Il jong. On the one hand, you have a
megalomaniac dictator, on the other, a clueless corporation that got its start
distributing propaganda films for the Japanese army in WWII. The movie sounds
like a gross out version of Rambo, with
American secret agents hilariously shattering the skull of the evil dictator –
cause America can! A great movie to show in the torture season. Throw in Obama’s
impassioned plea for freedom of speech (which of course doesn’t include
Wikileaks or Edward Snowden, and doesn’t address the fact that we haven’t had a
Presidency that so aggressively pursued leakers and journalists since Richard
Nixon) and the exposed emails revealing that the head honchos are as stupid as
you think they are, and it is a Christmas gift that keeps on giving! It isn’t
the best Christmas gift from Hollywood – that’s Kim’s butt – but it will do.
“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
Friday, December 19, 2014
Wednesday, December 17, 2014
two forms of evil in the movies
I just watched the beginning of Fargo, the tv series.
The evil character in Fargo, played by Billy Bob Thornton,
is signalled as evil not so much by stabbing people or shooting them – no, his
evil is established when it seems that the usual matrix of cause and effect
fades when he is around. Normally, when a man goes into a basement with no
other access than the stairs, that man will have to go out using the stairs.
But, in a crucial scene in Fargo, the killer goes into the basement and
disappears, reappearing in a getaway car later on.
I think there are roughly two forms of evil in film. The one
is cosmological, and the sure sign of it is this fading of cause and effect.
When Scorcese redid Cape Fear with Robert DeNiro playing the bad guy, the
crucial moments in the film were all the result of this fading. This can, of
course, create startling effects: evil is in the room and is about to slice
somebody’s throat! The spectator’s visceral reaction is stimulated – hell, it is
shot through with a thousand volts.
But the first Cape Fear did evil differently. Robert Mitchum
played the evil man in terms of his slouch, his look, his accent – in terms, in
other words, of signs. Evil here is semiotic, not cosmic. There’s no fading of
cause and effect. When Mitchum lets his sleazy gaze travel over the daughter of
the lawyer he has marked out as his enemy (played by Gregory Peck in all his
iconic righteousness), that was the evil . If he murdered, raped, or
terrorized, it was all on the earthly plane. There was no fading of cause and
effect.
My preference is for semiotic evil – cosmic evil leaves me
feeling a little ripped off. Of course, sometimes the payload of visceral jolts
is nothing to sneeze at. But I am attached, like a peasant, to my cause and
effect.
Monday, December 15, 2014
conceptual zippers
Guilty reading
Lets face it: the innocent reader who spots the blue pants on the boy holding the balloon in the picture and associates the “C” with cookie monster was filed away long ago. It exists, thinly, in the brain's filing system, although to dive in an find it is a task that would make Proust blanch. We guilty readers come, now, with a certain hodgepodge sophistication to the fragment or the treatise, or even to the letter “C” – which may remind us more of Wallace Stevens than Sesame Street. We take our theories to our books, and are eager to apply readings, now “political”, now “hermeneutic”, now “neo-darwinian”, and so on.
Myself, I’ve always like the promise of dialectical materialism, although not often its results. The idea of looking at texts not in the idea-system, head talking to head, but in terms of both historical conditions and of the text’s own long interiority – that’s the ticket. Oh that interiority! To be a writer, I think, means that one exists like a bat in a dark cave that is slowly filling up with the echos of the signals one has emitted, revealing surfaces that must eventually and imperfectly be translated into data subserviant to the detailing eye – although the writer, in his heart, always remains a creature of radar, of the sonogram.
What’s dialectical about all of this? What, except the continual stomping back and forth and the interminable difference. One can trick oneself, here, easily, into thinking that the difference can be reduced to two sides, two tracks, like the two tracks of a zipper – and that with a little conceptual zipper and a little force the two tracks will fit tightly together as one. Conceptual zippers are the most tempting things in the world, and the trick with them is not to believe them too much. The dialectical, here, for me, is ideally stripped of the absolute and has learned the humility of stripped things, naked things. The world is not all zippers, or even mostly zippers. The zipper is not all the case is.
Myself, I’ve always like the promise of dialectical materialism, although not often its results. The idea of looking at texts not in the idea-system, head talking to head, but in terms of both historical conditions and of the text’s own long interiority – that’s the ticket. Oh that interiority! To be a writer, I think, means that one exists like a bat in a dark cave that is slowly filling up with the echos of the signals one has emitted, revealing surfaces that must eventually and imperfectly be translated into data subserviant to the detailing eye – although the writer, in his heart, always remains a creature of radar, of the sonogram.
What’s dialectical about all of this? What, except the continual stomping back and forth and the interminable difference. One can trick oneself, here, easily, into thinking that the difference can be reduced to two sides, two tracks, like the two tracks of a zipper – and that with a little conceptual zipper and a little force the two tracks will fit tightly together as one. Conceptual zippers are the most tempting things in the world, and the trick with them is not to believe them too much. The dialectical, here, for me, is ideally stripped of the absolute and has learned the humility of stripped things, naked things. The world is not all zippers, or even mostly zippers. The zipper is not all the case is.
Sunday, December 14, 2014
More reflections on what Nietzsche was up to
To the second edition of
The Gay Science, published in 1887, Nietzsche added a fifth book entitled, with
that mock boastfulness to which he was prone (and which has added that
bellicose aura to his posthumous reputation – beloved by post-structuralist and
white supremicist prison gangs alike!), We fearless ones. The end, sort of, of We
fearless ones comes with a dreamy little
number 342, entitled “The great health”.
Healthiness as a concept that encompasses every part of the self, instead of
describing a state of bodily equilibrium, a healthiness that becomes a means to
an end instead of an assumption about the everyday – this is what the perpetually
sick author dreams of. His dream, though, is of a likeminded community – this we is, as all we’s
are, political. Here Nietzsche is both a child of the century, which was
discovering health not as a sort of balance among animal spirits but as a
fragile norm that few were able to achieve – and a sign of the coming century,
when health really does get interpreted as an intention, so that our sicknesses
are somehow, unconsciously, willed.
The great health,
however, while has its roots not in physiology, or at least not in physiology
alone, but in experience. This is an immense and interesting shift. To be
fearless, in Nietzsche’s terminology, is to be an adventuerer – and the first
adventure is through one’s own experience. In that instance, experience is
transformed into something adventure-worthy. This connection leads Nietzsche through one of the
dithyrambic, labyrinthine arguments in which he specializes, where association
and implication become interjoined, and all the rabbits are pulled from all the
magician’s hats. The adventurers - the “we”, here – catch a glimpse, due to our
health, of an as yet “unexplored land” which overflows with the “beautiful, the
alien, the the questionable, the fearful and the divine” - a glimpse that creates total existential
discontent, since it seems that this is the place we are seeking. This place is
also an ideal, but not an ideal of the sacred or the good or the just, but an
ideal of play, - and here we go back to the great health, for this health
belongs to the naïve and curiously innocent spirit who plays with the values that
the people have erected, who enjoys a well-being and well-willing that appears
inhuman in contemporary terms. These terms seal what is good, true, and real into
a package with what is serious – the serious being defined by being
‘unplayable’. But the spirit that Nietzsche evokes isn’t impressed by this
“earth-seriousness”, and unconsciously and involuntarily parodies it. Out of
that parody, Nietzsche imagines a new seriousness springing forth, setting up
its own question marks. And thus “the hour hand moves” and “the tragedy begins”.
So it would seem that
the chords of the fifth book, and the book as a whole, crash to a conclusion.
But the little numbers don’t stop - Nietzsche moves on to an epilogue –
something that is not exactly part of the book, but is in the no man’s land of
prefaces and after words. The epilogue begins like a parody of a Wagner opera –
or like an episode in Disney’s Fantasia. Nietzsche takes up the “I” as the author of the book , and depicts himself, like
Poe’s poet in The Raven, feeling the
effect of the dark and dreary task of erecting question marks.
“But
when I in conclusion this gloomy question mark slowly, slowly painted, still wanting to recall into the memory of my
readers the virtues of correct reading – o these forgotten and unknown virtues!
– it happened, that around me the most evil, spirited, gnome-like laughter
broke out: the spirits of my book themselves fell upon me, pulled me by the
ear, and called me to order.”
It
is passages like this that bother those who want to tell us Nietzsche’s
esoteric message, or who feel like, as a proper philosopher, Nietzsche’s texts should
be easily reducible to thesis and
antithesis in the good old monographic manner. Hegel’s terminology might be
obscure, but the form of his book is very clear; and if we are to take
Nietzsche seriously, we have to correct his tendency to mix things up and put
them all in their proper place. Otherwise, of course, one would have to
multiply question mark by question mark, and finally be reduced to reading
Derrida’s note on Nietzsche’s misplaced umbrella – the kind of jape that got
Derrida into royal trouble when Oxford was about to grant him, horrors, an
honorary degree in philosophy. Here, at
the moment when a Hegelian philosopher would be at the end and have argued to a
conclusion – here, suddenly, the spirits of the book treat the author like a
erring school child. Who, after all, are pulled by the ear and called to order?
As Nietzsche well knew from the time he’d invested in German educational
institutions, being pulled by the ear was a not uncommon scene. That allusion
to a schoolroom scene comes right after a lament for old fashioned reading –
another pedagogical theme. But if this is a schoolroom scene, it is a reversed
one – for certainly it is the bad students who make gnome like laughter their
sabateur’s weapon of choice.
Viewing
Nietzsche as an author, this conclusion is not completely bizarre. In fact, as
an author who is a philologist and who has written on Greek tragedy, this scene
conforms pretty well to the kind of satyr play that always came after the
tragic cycle. In fact, we are never far from the satyr play whenever
seriousness becomes an issue in Nietzsche’s texts.
Of
course, all of this, for the decrypter of the esoteric message, is simply
denial and disguise. Of course, as soon as Nietzsche has revealed his real
intentions – dreaming of an order of masters killing and enslaving the weak –
he feels that he has gone too far, and engages in this little diversion.
However,
if we engage in reading the text, which is what the text literally suggests we
do, we find an artistic structure that does not look like denial or diversion,
especially as the spirits of the book itself are called into play. Play,
parody, and seriousness are the keywords here. The spirits of the book object,
evidently, to the last word being given to tragedy. And they also mock
Nietzsche’s future fetishism, the sentimentality he has invested in “solitude”,
in being a great thinker alone. The jibes are put in terms of music, and
Nietzsche accepts the jibes of his “friends” – the spirits of the book, the “we
fearless ones” – while at the same time
accepting that the music of the book and the sense of it might be two different
things, of which the first is primary. Instead of tragedy, then, the book ends
on dance, and on a peasant’s dance at that. Remember that this is the Nietzsche
who had no liking or sentiment for the stinking people, and presumably also
their tavern instruments, among which the hurdy gurdy would be preeminent.
If
we follow up the notion that we should be reading, here, and perhaps even
reaading Nietzsche’s other texts, than the hint – the non-esoteric hint – comes
in the phrase “involuntary” parody, which he has used once before in his
polemic against David Strauss, the liberal theologian. It is peculiar to
authors that the phrases they have used years before still float about in their
memory. It is perhaps their characterizing peculiarity. In the case of the
polemic against Strauss – well, I would guess that this part of the Thoughts
our of Season is the least read, since who among us, friends and droogs, is
interested, even a little bit, in 19th century liberal theology? Strauss
is probably best known, now, for being translated into English by George Eliot
(who thus became the target for some of Nietzsche’s most misogynistic taunts –
Nietzsche was quite the troll at times). In attacking Strauss, Nietzsche also
attacks the positivist Hegel, and a certain form of apologetic for God that
wills the unity of the universe, the eventual conjoining of the subjective and
the objective in one coherent work. Interestingly, in his attack, Nietzsche
seems to mock a certain rhetoric he later plays with in The Gay science. Here’s
a long quotation to finish with – it is left as an exercise to the reader to
pick up the resonances:
he [Strauss] assumes without
question that all events possess the highest
intellectual value and are thus absolutely
rational and purposwful, and then that they contain a revelation of eternal
goodness itself. He is thus in need of a complete cosmodicy and at a disadvantage
compared with those who are only concerned with a theodicy, who
conceive the entire existence of man
as, for example, a punsihment or a process of purification. At this point and
thus embarrased, Strauss goes so far as to venture for once a metaphysical
hypothesisn – the driest and most palsied there has ever been and at bottom no
more than an unconscious parody of a saying of Lessing’s. “That other saying of
Lessing’s, he says on page 219, that, if God held all truth in his right hand
and in his left the never sleeping quest for truth with the condition of
contiually erring in this quest, and offered him a choice between them, he
would humbly fall upon God’s left hand and beg for the contents of it – this
saying has always been regarded as among the finest he left to us. There has
been found in it an expression of his restless desire for action and
investigation. This saying has always made so powerful an impression upon me
because behind its subjective significance I have heard resounding an objective
one of immense range. For does it not contain the best reply to Schopenhauer’s
crude conception of an ill-advised God who knows of nothing better to do than
to enter into such a wretched a world as this is? May it not be that the
Creator himself shares Lessing’s opinion and prefers continual striving to
peacceful possession.” A God, that is to say, who reserves to himself continual
error at at the same time a striving for truth, and who perhaps humbly falls
upon Strauss’s left hand and says to him: all truth is for you. If ever a God
or a man were ill advised it is this Straussian God, with his pariality for
error and failure, and the Straussian man, who has to pay for this partiality –
here indeed one can ‘hear resounding a significance of immense range’, here
there flows Strauss’s universal soothing oil, and here one senses something of
the rationality of all evolution and natural law! Does one really? Or would our
world not be, rather, as Lichtenberg once called it, the work of a subordinate
being who as yet lacked a full understanding of his task, and thus an
experiment? A novice’s test-piece which was still being worked on? So that
Strauss himself would have to concede that our world is an arena, not of
rationality, but of error, and that its laws and purposefulness are no source
of consolation, since they proceed from a God who is not merely in error but
takes pleasure from being in error. It is a truly delicious spectacle to behold
Strauss as a metaphysical architect building up into the clouds. But for whom
is this spectacle mounted? Or the noble and contented “we”, so as to preserve
their contentment: perhaps they were overcome by fear in the midst of those
merciless wheels of the universal machine and tremblingly begged their leader
for help.”
Thursday, December 11, 2014
The secret messages of authors: Nietzsche again
How does one use the papers of an author?
Some authors, like GS Lichtenberg, are famous mainly for the
notebooks that they left to posterity. Others, like Emerson and Nietzsche, are
famous firstly for their books – even as those books are trailed by the vast
haul of their Nachlass, their jounals, their scratch books. Both Emerson and
Nietzsche, as well, worked in an essay form that centered on the phrase, or
paragraph – or perhaps it would be better to say, using Nietzsche’s dynamite
metaphor, that the essay or the number is a sort of photograph of the ruin
caused by the explosion of these phrases, sentences, slogans at the center. The
center, supremely, does not hold.
I’m thinking about this while reading and gritting my teeth through, Geoff Waite’s book
on Nietzsche. Waite, who positions himself as a true, Nietzsche-defying leftist
(an authorial figuration that takes many turns – sometimes he casts himself as
a man heading Nietzsche off at the pass,
as though FN wore a black hat and rustled cattle and GW was Wyatt Earp), still
turns to Leo Strauss’ notion of esoteric and exoteric to find Nietzsche’s true
message. This message is in the notes.
I must admit that I find
a certain amount of humor in this. Nietzsche, as is well known, was a sick man
with bad eyes, who for most of his life made little money from his books and
had to depend on the pension he’d been granted when he quit the University of
Basel. This pension was around 800 thaler. Which, in today’s terms, would be
about 23 thousand per year. Waite, however, refers to him as a rentier – which is
exactly what he wasn’t – and comments about certain illegible notes in
Nietzsche’s papers: “Exactiy
here Nietzsche's text stutters, becomes unintelligible.91 Whenever one's handwriting breaks
down completely—becomes illegible to others or to oneself— this is not
necessarily by chance, nor necessarily unconsciously motivated.” The ‘not
necessarilys” here are supposed to look like arguments, and certainly they are
indisputable – but they also indisputably get us nowhere. Was Nietzsche such a
sneek that he couldn’t even write in his notebooks without looling over his
shoulder to make sure that nobody read what he really wrote about Plato? I
would say, not necessarily, and not even probably, given what we know about the
material conditions of his production. In another place – this struck even
sympathetic reviewers – Waite pushes towards an image of Nietzsche dreaming of
concentration camps to come, when in a notebook entry from the time of the
composition of Zarathustra, Nietzsche writes “Der Entschluss. Unzaehlige Opfer
muss es geben.” Waite translates this as "There will have to be countless dead
bodies [Opfer: offerings or sacrifices]."57 The parenthetical translation choices
are there, apparently, to save his scholarly integrity – for of course “The
decision: there must be countless sacrifices” could mean just what it seems to
mean – that there will have to be countless sacrifices. Since Nietzsche’s
public works often speak of Opfer, with the meaning being a sacrificed living
thing, or a sacrificed desire, etc., it would seem more, well, hermeneutically
just to compare uses and decide just what is going on here, if anything.
However, if one is armed with an
esoteric reading kit, things become a lot clearer, forensically clearer in
fact.
If Waite’s style of reading
Nietzsche seems to go off the track at times, he still presents us with an
interesting question, one that is particularly pertinent to Nietzsche. After
all, famously, many of Nietzsche’s jottings were put into a book and the book
was attributed to Nietzsche: “The Will to Power.” The history of that book is a
sort of philological crime, and like so many crimes, it was committed by a
family member of the victim – Nietzsche’s sister made the book, employing
Nietzsche’s friend, Peter Gast, to read the notes.
Gast – guest – what a perfect
name for the intruder in the notebooks! And yet, we, who read those jottings,
soon make ourselves at home. After all, it is from these notebooks that the
books were quarried, and so we are tempted to think of them as the raw
material, or key to the mysteries.
Waite himself seems to move
between thinking that the notebooks are where the exoteric reveals its esoteric
content, and thinking that even the notebook jottings conceal some ultimately
even more horrible fascoid thought. Myself, I think that the exoteric/esoteric
dichotomy is disturbed, and made less ‘forensically’ useful, by Nietzsche’s perspectivism.
Tuesday, December 09, 2014
Leftist attacks on Nietzsche, or why I am a pseudo-leftist
Domenico Lusordo’s attack on Nietzsche is one that I am
weirdly eager to read, or at least some of it – I don’t think I’m in it for
1300 pages. I haven’t yet read Geoffry Waite’s massive attack on Nietzsche, or,
really, Nietzschian leftism – pseudo-leftism, Waite claims. Pseudo-leftism is a
pretty good description of my own politics, and the fall of communism is not
something I mourn (except when listening to Leonard Cohen’s The Future) so
there is that. Marx and Nietzsche were
allied in at least this: they weren’t mourners.
However, from the reviews I have read of the Lusordo, and
the bits I have read of Waite, my impression is that they are operating within
the Nietzschian dance – a politics of the text, if you will. Interestingly,
though, they seem to deny Nietzsche any humor or wit. Rather, his is a corpus
to be driven through with a plow. If there is humor or wit, this is mere
deception, mere encrypting. What it is not, what it can never be, is
enjoyment. For instance, Waite interprets
Nietzsche’s subtitle of Zarathustra (a book for everyone and no one) as
dividing neatly into a book for the masses and another for the elite. This
division leaps over the fact that it is an odd elite, indeed, that is no one.
No one, on the contrary, seems to be where the social breaks down, not where
the social is ruled. Now, one could argue that rule is all the more efficient
when it is incorporated by every one and enforced by no one – but this argument
seems to go against Nietzsche’s own fierce anti-democratic bias, and make
Nietzsche more like a liberal nudger, a la Cass Sunstein: we’ll just use clever
prospective theory to make the masses make the right choices.
No one seems to me to be more hermeneutically approachable
by way of a politics of (psychological) depression – the feeling that one’s
loneliness has erased one’s social self entirely.
This isn’t the only interpretation of that Niemand – but it
does, at least, treat with the letter of the word. Waite seems to have
impatiently decided that the opposite of mass being elite, Nietzsche’s text
will just have to be nailed here and we can discard as moping or
disingenuousness any question about how we get from no one to elite.
This is what I mean by the bulldozing tendencies of
Nietzsche’s new lefty critics. From what I have read in the review of Lusordo’s
book, a similar impatience with Nietzsche’s playfulness gives us the truth
about his “politics”. Lusordo shows that the rhetoric of anti-semitism – most
of all, the notion of the rootless Jew – is heavily borrowed from in The Birth
of Tragedy to contextualize Socrates. Voila, the book has a hidden anti-semitic
subtext that is its key. Now, this is all very well – Nietzsche was prone to
anti-Jewish bigotry (a nineteenth century malady that crops up in the
correspondence of Marx and Engels as well), and he was very much in Wagner’s
circle at the time he wrote his first book. But we seemed to have skipped over
a rather crucial moment in the book – this anti-Jewish rhetoric is used to
describe Socrates. Doesn’t this rather collapse, or at least damage, the idea
around which the anti-Jewish rhetoric was built in the first place – the division
between Christian Europe and the Jew? Doesn’t it even, retrospectively, cast
into doubt Schopenhauer’s worship of Kant, who the anti-semitic Schopenhauer
compared to… Socrates?
What I like about pseudo-leftism is that it
deprograms the old lefty urge to conclude.
I don’t ever conclude … this is a principle in which life intersects
with theory, for me.
Monday, December 08, 2014
Water pistol juntas
Lately, I've been thinking of this post, which I wrote in 2011
When looking at the story of capitalism and the rise of the European powers, it is striking to see forms of organization appear on the periphery before they migrate to the center. For instance, the work discipline of the factory in 19th century England seems to replicate forms of work discipline created for the sugar 'factories' in the West Indies of the 17th century. In 19th century England, the work discipline was imposed on 'free labor', and in Jamaica, it was imposed on slaves. Yet, if we look away from the changes implied by this transformation of the working agent, we see a continuity of form, or at least the production of an organizational form that can be transposed. And, unlike serf labor in Central Europe, for instance, this slave labor is relatively free of the codes that define its rights and hedge in the transmission of property and title by the owners.
A similar movement from the periphery to the center seems to be happening in the counter-revolution that is now occuring in all developed countries. What happened to the LDCs in the 80s - the less developed countries - is now being served up to the Developed Countries. It is an interesting mix of fiction and terror.
The eighties are the 'lost decade' in Latin America because they are the decade in which the program of the Washington Consensus, as it came to be know, were imposed on Latin American counties. The weapon by which they were lashed into this madness was debt - combined of course with the military regimes that had been put in place in the sixties and seventies as part of the U.S.'s cold war strategy. And the result of the WC was a major drop in the living standards of the majority of the population, and an end, almost, to growth. While the 50s and the 60s saw tremendous growth in Latin America, and an uneven but perceptible distribution of more wealth to the wage and working class, in the 80s this stopped dead. What emerged in the nineties were 'good countries', like Mexico, that devoted the government to obeying the banks, notably IMF. The IMF model, however, suffered a severe blow when Argentina refused to go along with the usual medicine in 2000, and the U.S. grip on the region began to loosen.
Well, the Washington consensus has migrated, at last, to the developed world. The whole world is now being held up by bankers holding waterpistols to our head. And this threat without a real weapon - for no developed state really needs to obey the bankers, who after all have no police force to arrest it (unlike the Latin American states, where the U.S. could whip up a junta in a heartbeat) - is, to the general amazement of the non-numb among us, being obeyed to the last tittle and jot.
In the 80s, the police were, in effect, the developed nations. However, beginning, perhaps, with Bush in 2000, the Developed Nations have given birth to the smokeless coup. This coup does not involved armed might - it involves merely taken unelected institutions, such as a court of a central bank, and making them the center of a completely undemocratic seizure of political power, on behalf of the wealthiest people on earth. There aren't, we should remind ourselves, too many wealthy people. And yet the police of every Developed country on earth have been toiling away for wealthy people and locking up demonstrators, cracking down on any demonstration of discontent, and raiding any leaks of information inconvenient to the establishment. The resistence to all of this has been tame beyond reckoning. The self-policing extends all the way up through the discourse - nobody who writes for a major paper or magazine, or who broadcasts, ever couches the new Washington Consensus junta society in terms that would offend your average civics class teacher.
What would such terms be? Well, for instance, we would start saying: who is all this money owed to? And: can't we simply upset those bankers by taking away their money, one two three, without a by your leave. If sovereign debt is such a problem, we could easily raise the money to pay it by slapping, say, one hundred percent taxes on all bond transactions, and we can use that money to buy the bonds. And absurd solution to an absurd political situation - not an economic one. The question of debt is a question of class. The political class and the financial elite are one, united, and they drive our politics in ways that advantage the financial elite, who use money loaned them, by the governments, to loan money back to the governments. Oh, not directly - rather, by propping up the financial service sector's enterprises, we prop up the places where the bodn dealers work and trade.
The debt issue is, then, one of those fictions that bear such weight because they serve the interest of a certain power. It isn't that the establishment doesn't believe in its fiction - much as the Aztec priest definitely believed that it was necessary to cut out the heart of a prisoner to appease the gods and continue the course of the world, the elite believe it is necessary to cut out the heart of the middle class to appease the abstract God of Debt, to whom we owe so much. My solution is the radical one of the Lord's prayer - in which we have prettified and made metaphoric the common sense suggestion that we forgive debt every day. Debt. Which is as material as the feeling of the edge of a coin. Forgiving debt is the heart of civilization. And - in this age of the internet, where all that is money has become bytes - it is divinely easy to do it. It is always the sovereign who actually enforces laws to force debters to pay creditors. When the power of the sovereign is calmly and cooly taken from the hands of the people and invested in the hands of ex employees of Goldman Sachs, they switch sides - from being the borrowers for the people, they become the creditors for the banks.
This is, obviously, going to be a lost decade for the Developed countries. But I'm hopeful that the new Junta order will be, at best, short lived. The arithmatic that counts is not how much debt is owed, but the ratio of the creditor population to the debtor population. I'd keep my eye on the latter, for, given the logic of the counterrevolution we are seeing, the time is approaching when the the banker's water pistol will be jerked out of his hand and turned upon him. And, magically, in that moment it will become a real pistol, with a heft and insistance that will change the power relationship all, all at once.
A similar movement from the periphery to the center seems to be happening in the counter-revolution that is now occuring in all developed countries. What happened to the LDCs in the 80s - the less developed countries - is now being served up to the Developed Countries. It is an interesting mix of fiction and terror.
The eighties are the 'lost decade' in Latin America because they are the decade in which the program of the Washington Consensus, as it came to be know, were imposed on Latin American counties. The weapon by which they were lashed into this madness was debt - combined of course with the military regimes that had been put in place in the sixties and seventies as part of the U.S.'s cold war strategy. And the result of the WC was a major drop in the living standards of the majority of the population, and an end, almost, to growth. While the 50s and the 60s saw tremendous growth in Latin America, and an uneven but perceptible distribution of more wealth to the wage and working class, in the 80s this stopped dead. What emerged in the nineties were 'good countries', like Mexico, that devoted the government to obeying the banks, notably IMF. The IMF model, however, suffered a severe blow when Argentina refused to go along with the usual medicine in 2000, and the U.S. grip on the region began to loosen.
Well, the Washington consensus has migrated, at last, to the developed world. The whole world is now being held up by bankers holding waterpistols to our head. And this threat without a real weapon - for no developed state really needs to obey the bankers, who after all have no police force to arrest it (unlike the Latin American states, where the U.S. could whip up a junta in a heartbeat) - is, to the general amazement of the non-numb among us, being obeyed to the last tittle and jot.
In the 80s, the police were, in effect, the developed nations. However, beginning, perhaps, with Bush in 2000, the Developed Nations have given birth to the smokeless coup. This coup does not involved armed might - it involves merely taken unelected institutions, such as a court of a central bank, and making them the center of a completely undemocratic seizure of political power, on behalf of the wealthiest people on earth. There aren't, we should remind ourselves, too many wealthy people. And yet the police of every Developed country on earth have been toiling away for wealthy people and locking up demonstrators, cracking down on any demonstration of discontent, and raiding any leaks of information inconvenient to the establishment. The resistence to all of this has been tame beyond reckoning. The self-policing extends all the way up through the discourse - nobody who writes for a major paper or magazine, or who broadcasts, ever couches the new Washington Consensus junta society in terms that would offend your average civics class teacher.
What would such terms be? Well, for instance, we would start saying: who is all this money owed to? And: can't we simply upset those bankers by taking away their money, one two three, without a by your leave. If sovereign debt is such a problem, we could easily raise the money to pay it by slapping, say, one hundred percent taxes on all bond transactions, and we can use that money to buy the bonds. And absurd solution to an absurd political situation - not an economic one. The question of debt is a question of class. The political class and the financial elite are one, united, and they drive our politics in ways that advantage the financial elite, who use money loaned them, by the governments, to loan money back to the governments. Oh, not directly - rather, by propping up the financial service sector's enterprises, we prop up the places where the bodn dealers work and trade.
The debt issue is, then, one of those fictions that bear such weight because they serve the interest of a certain power. It isn't that the establishment doesn't believe in its fiction - much as the Aztec priest definitely believed that it was necessary to cut out the heart of a prisoner to appease the gods and continue the course of the world, the elite believe it is necessary to cut out the heart of the middle class to appease the abstract God of Debt, to whom we owe so much. My solution is the radical one of the Lord's prayer - in which we have prettified and made metaphoric the common sense suggestion that we forgive debt every day. Debt. Which is as material as the feeling of the edge of a coin. Forgiving debt is the heart of civilization. And - in this age of the internet, where all that is money has become bytes - it is divinely easy to do it. It is always the sovereign who actually enforces laws to force debters to pay creditors. When the power of the sovereign is calmly and cooly taken from the hands of the people and invested in the hands of ex employees of Goldman Sachs, they switch sides - from being the borrowers for the people, they become the creditors for the banks.
This is, obviously, going to be a lost decade for the Developed countries. But I'm hopeful that the new Junta order will be, at best, short lived. The arithmatic that counts is not how much debt is owed, but the ratio of the creditor population to the debtor population. I'd keep my eye on the latter, for, given the logic of the counterrevolution we are seeing, the time is approaching when the the banker's water pistol will be jerked out of his hand and turned upon him. And, magically, in that moment it will become a real pistol, with a heft and insistance that will change the power relationship all, all at once.
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