#81

blinkandwheeze posted:

when they need it, and i fundamentally believe that the communist hypothesis will be needed by any emancipatory movement, lest they fall short of liberation, the proletariat will find it themselves



not to necessarily quibble with your overall point but there are confounding factors. perhaps the focus of any aspiring vanguard should be to remove them? fucked up and liberal, but maybe true

http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2012/10/solitary-confinement-shane-bauer

To validate an inmate as a gang member , the state requires at least three pieces of evidence, which must be "indicative of actual membership" or association with a prison gang in the last six years. At least one item must show a "direct link," like a note or other communication, to a validated gang member or associate. Once the prison's gang investigator has gathered this evidence, it is reviewed in an administrative hearing and then sent to CDCR headquarters in Sacramento.

There is no evidence that Pennington has ever communicated with a member of a gang in his life. His validation as a gang "associate" relies on items such as a newspaper article and a coffee mug.
In Pennington's file, the "direct link" is his possession of an article published in the San Francisco Bay View, an African American newspaper with a circulation of around 15,000. The paper is approved for distribution in California prisons, and Pennington's right to receive it is protected under state law. In the op-ed style article he had in his cell, titled "Guards confiscate 'revolutionary' materials at Pelican Bay," a validated member of the Black Guerilla Family prison gang complains about the seizure of literature and pictures from his cell and accuses the prison of pursuing "racist policy." In Pennington's validation documents, the gang investigator contends that, by naming the confiscated materials, the author "communicates to associates of the BGF…as to which material needs to be studied." No one alleges that Pennington ever attempted to contact the author. It is enough that he possessed the article.

The second piece of evidence was a cup Pennington had in his cell bearing a picture of a dragon, an image CDCR considers an "identifying symbol" of the Black Guerilla Family. The third was a notebook he kept, which the gang investigator alleges "shows his beliefs in the ideals of the BGF." Its pages are filled with references to black history—Nat Turner, the Scottsboro 9, the number of blacks executed between 1930 and 1969, and quotes from figures like W.E.B. Du Bois and Malcolm X. There are also passages in which Pennington ruminates at length on what he calls "the oppression and violence inflicted upon us here in maximum security," referencing a Time exposé.

Pennington never mentions gangs or unlawful activity in his writing. But in his validation documents, the gang investigator points out that the notebook contains quotes by Fleeta Drumgo and George Jackson, two former Black Panthers who are revered by members of the BGF and politicized African American prisoners generally. The single Jackson quote Pennington wrote down reads, "The text books on criminology like to advance the idea that the prisoners are mentally defective. There is only the merest suggestion that the system itself is at fault."

California officials frequently cite possession of black literature, left-wing materials, and writing about prisoner rights as evidence of gang affiliation. In the dozens of cases I reviewed, gang investigators have used the term " training material" to refer to publications by California Prison Focus, a group that advocates the abolition of the SHUs; Jackson's once best-selling Soledad Brother; a pamphlet said to reference "Revolutionary Black Nationalism, The Black Internationalist Party, Marx, and Lenin"; and a pamphlet titled "The Black People's Prison Survival Guide." This last one advises inmates to read books, keep a dictionary handy, practice yoga, avoid watching too much television, and stay away from "leaders of gangs."

The list goes on. Other materials considered evidence of gang involvement have included writings by Mumia Abu-Jamal; The Black Panther Party: Reconsidered, a collection of academic essays by University of Cincinnati professor Charles Jones; pictures of Assata Shakur, Malcolm X, George Jackson, and Nat Turner; and virtually anything using the term "New Afrikan." At least one validation besides Pennington's referenced handwritten pages of "Afro centric ideology."

As warden of San Quentin Prison in the 1980s, Daniel Vasquez oversaw what was then the country's largest SHU. He's now a corrections consultant and has testified on behalf of inmates seeking to reverse their validations. As we sat in his suburban Bay Area home, he told me it is "very common" for African American prisoners who display leadership qualities or radical political views to end up in the SHU. Similarly, he recalls, "we were told that when an African American inmate identified as being Muslim, we were supposed to watch them carefully and get their names."

#82

blinkandwheeze posted:

so i ask you back, why not nihilism? why participate in a narrative when we could surrender ourselves to truth? what this position offers us is the liberatory potential of violence, the ability to reject everything, the affirmation that in the face of acceleration we are completely capable of applying the breaks

your post is fine but kind of off the mark. bonclay's post didnt seem to me to be about, okay forgive me, because i always thought this was the dumbest shorthand, ever since i first encountered it doing undergraduate discussion of the Republic back when i was in the third grade having just been born, but anyway, it didnt seem to be about capital N Nihilism, but rather lower case n nihilism. Nihilism, the philosophy of the scab picker. we know existence doesnt spring from meaning or truth - meaning and truth are pathetic defense mechanisms like a rudimentary amoeba tooth or something. and that can hurt and feel weird, and Nihilists obsess over that weird feel. i get that Nihilism can change from a cold lonely void to a warm comforting void, that philosophy can make gold from lead for all us cerebral internet drug users, but is that what bonclay was squealing about? No, and more specifically, i thought the point was about nihilism, where the Futility of Life, Hopelessness of Actions, Insignificance of Jazz, Ludicrous Dearth of Meaning, are all set aside, and we just are restricting ourselves to worries about agency and truth on the human scale. (i think how much longer and more abstract the words are in your post versus bonclays.) This is a difficult but human scaled problem, the problem of social organization / achieving social impact. We dont need to use special relativity when newtonian mechanics will do okay, and most people wont ever fully understand special relativity anyway. Thanks for reading

#83

thirdplace posted:

blinkandwheeze posted:

when they need it, and i fundamentally believe that the communist hypothesis will be needed by any emancipatory movement, lest they fall short of liberation, the proletariat will find it themselves

not to necessarily quibble with your overall point but there are confounding factors. perhaps the focus of any aspiring vanguard should be to remove them? fucked up and liberal, but maybe true


yeah, this is a totally valid point - what i'm saying isn't intended, at least, to be a call to just sit back and let things unfold themselves, or to take any stress away from the importance of a vanguard formation. the sentiment that the proletariat can grasp and incorporate these materials is pretty meaningless if, you know, these materials aren't actually publicly accessible or otherwise in circulation (altho this brings up another problem, this continuous melting and decontextualization of radical thought into the field of capital flows - no matter how attractive they might be, verso publishing a new set in the radical thinkers series isn't exactly a transgressive practice. at worst, it's just an excuse for the petit-bourgeois intelligentsia to pat themselves on the back for having the audacity to consider these ideas, all the while contributing to the machinations of capital flow)

i think you're absolutely right that the role of a vanguard should be removing these obstacles, burrowing holes and inconsistencies ... the mechanisms that keep the bourgeois in power are increasingly complex fields of striation, the deepening of apartheid, building walls to maintain exclusion, to refuse the movement and thought of the part-of-no-part ... for the proletariat to realize consciousness and engage with militancy they need the freedom and space to be able to. we absolutely need to defend the sites, like the prison as school for revolutionary thought or public housing as proletarian citadels, that have allowed that autonomy in the past

swampman posted:

your post is fine but kind of off the mark. bonclay's post didnt seem to me to be about, okay forgive me, because i always thought this was the dumbest shorthand, ever since i first encountered it doing undergraduate discussion of the Republic back when i was in the third grade having just been born, but anyway, it didnt seem to be about capital N Nihilism, but rather lower case n nihilism. Nihilism, the philosophy of the scab picker. we know existence doesnt spring from meaning or truth - meaning and truth are pathetic defense mechanisms like a rudimentary amoeba tooth or something. and that can hurt and feel weird, and Nihilists obsess over that weird feel. i get that Nihilism can change from a cold lonely void to a warm comforting void, that philosophy can make gold from lead for all us cerebral internet drug users, but is that what bonclay was squealing about? No, and more specifically, i thought the point was about nihilism, where the Futility of Life, Hopelessness of Actions, Insignificance of Jazz, Ludicrous Dearth of Meaning, are all set aside, and we just are restricting ourselves to worries about agency and truth on the human scale. (i think how much longer and more abstract the words are in your post versus bonclays.) This is a difficult but human scaled problem, the problem of social organization / achieving social impact. We dont need to use special relativity when newtonian mechanics will do okay, and most people wont ever fully understand special relativity anyway. Thanks for reading



i think what i'm trying to suggest is that there is this distinction between nihilism and capital N Nihilism, the latter embodying an embrace and acceptance of truth as a determining factor of existence while the former rejects truth in the same breath as meaning, as if these are both the products of human artifice. that kindof nihilism is totally groundless and is really just oscillating between existential malaise (brought on by a useless grappling around this absence of meaning) and i suppose a more nietzschean positively charged void (which is admirable in some ways but problematic, revolutionary but without a subject, i guess as likely to drift towards bourgeois individualism as it is collective action)

so bonclay does something which i think is very cynical and troubled which is basically accepting this nihilism as a starting point (maybe in the same way that post suggests we take the exiled rapesquad as a starting point for economic concerns?) but asserts that there is a place for the artifice of narrative in this void because ... it's better than nothing? it gives us something to cling to, easy to believe in? in bonclay's post, marxism is only really present as a suggestion of a teleology, it's reduced to a narrative rather than a collection and investigation of truth claims. that reduction to a simple narrative, i claim, is one of the biggest flaws of 20th century actually existing socialism, this messianic supremacy of the state, dedicated to bringing about the end of history by purging our story of villains. it just seems totally arbitrary to me, picking one fiction over another, just because it's useful for the realization of a narrative that is basically a fiction itself, and i don't see it leading to much more than an easily digestible story of the white suprematist knights driving the jewish snakes out of the world and showing the ignorant masses the light of our dead prophets. and believing in something like that just because it's better than nihilism is just as selfindulgent and useless as individual malaise about our insignificance is in the first play. i mean, that and i think it's basically the complete foundation of the fascist impulse

and then what i think is being missed here is the alternative, what is the radical kernel of nihilism, taking the form of this Nihilism, this assertion that there is a truth beyond human artifice, in the face of which narrative is only broken idealism. the idea that the proletariat are not a force to imbue our lives with meaning and goodness and the promise of a better world but a force that are Right, that the value of marxism lies not in a teleology, not a set of positive propositions for a new ontology of being, but as a hyperawareness and total rejection of present conditions facilitated by the dedication to truth

#84
BUt what does this mean in practice??????
#85
some bad thoughts from dumb person (mods namechange etc):

1. im convinced by taibbis analysis of the situation and im not sure it matters if hes a nihilist (which as a matter of fact hes not, and neither are his buddies at the exiled, one-dimensionally obsessed as they all are with journalistic morality), this is pretty much whats happening and people are starving as a direct result

2. nihilism is useful as a default pre-revolutionary state bc lifes stressful enough w/o having to worry about the police state on one hand, social degeneracy on the other, and my boss sitting on my shoulders. when the call rings out for the people to rise up i want to feel strong and optimistic rather than weighed down by the failures of history. im not saying you should burn your red flag and start reading zero hedge, but just that its a good time to concentrate on trying to live well and feeling like a human being sometimes

3. the amount of recoverable oil in the ground is a fraction of the assumptions built into the forecasts of the worlds major oil producers, product manufacturers, nation states and so forth. im not sure what will happen but im white and well educated so naturally im fantasising about roaming the wasteland using only my wits and my sick karate skills. rhizzone meet in neo london 2022 yall
#86

The reduction and identification of the peculiar history of science to the history of organic ideology and politico-economic history ultimately reduces science to history as its ‘essence’. The collapse of science into history here is no more than the index of a theoretical collapse: a collapse that precipitates the theory of history into real history; reduces the (theoretical) object of the science of history to real history; and therefore confuses the object of knowledge with the real object. This collapse is nothing but a collapse into empiricist ideology, with the roles in this presentation played by philosophy and real history. As we have seen, for him , a philosopher is, in the last instance, a ‘politician’; for him, philosophy is the direct product (assuming all the ‘necessary mediations’) of the activity and experience of the masses, of politico-economic praxis: professional philosophers merely lend their voices and the forms of their discourse to this ‘common-sense’ philosophy, which is already complete without them and speaks in historical praxis – they cannot change it substantially.

.... This interpretation can itself only be thought on condition of a whole series of reductions which are the effect of the empiricist character of its project on the order of the production of concepts. For example, only on condition that it reduces all practice to experimental practice, or to ‘praxis’ in general, and then assimilates this mother-practice to political practice, can all practices be thought as arising from ‘real’ historical practice, can philosophy, even science, and hence Marxism, too, be thought as the ‘expression’ of real history. The result is to flatten even scientific knowledge or philosophy, and at any rate Marxist theory, down to the unity of politico-economic practice, to the heart of ‘historical’ practice, to ‘real’ history. In this way one reaches the result required by all historicist interpretations of Marxism as their theoretical precondition: the transformation of the Marxist totality into a variant of the Hegelian totality.



-Althusser, Reading Capital, Part 2, Ch. 5

You make the fundamental mistake of rejecting Nietzsche's insight (and Spinoza's as well) that there is no relation between truth and our interpretation of truth. The truth of Marxism is completely separate from the role of the vanguard as philosophers. In the last 30 years, the left has suffered massive defeats and Marxist theory has retreated into obscurity, and this has resulted in a word-historical crisis, a renewal of proletarian movements around the world, and the redemption of Marxist theory for the masses. The rightist deviation of Stalin and the third international was the devotion to truth (the truth of economism) removed from practice, however the opposite ultra-left mistake is to assume that practice is truth, reducing scientific Marxist concepts to nonsense like 'the-part-of-no-part', 'precariat', 'immaterial labor' and other concepts that show nothing more than the intellectual retreat of Marxism.

As Althusser points out, this eventually leads to Hegelianism. Some are explicit about this, like Zizek, though I think any 'fidelity' to truth is a form of Hegelianism. By conflating practice (or our interpretation of truth) with truth itself (the contradictions of capitalism as they develop), we develop a 'spirit' of Marxism we can practice, and as you say the proletariat will find on their own because that's where our belief takes us. This is a nice thought, I reject nihilism just as you do and as Nietzsche does, but a Hegelian fidelity to history and science is no better imo.

The real answer, as Mao showed us in 1968, is that both because of the real development of history (the worldwide anti-imperialist movements creating radical space for emancipation) and despite them (the development of the revisionist party cadre creating the seeds for the restoration of capitalism) a communist movement is possible. The cultural revolution was a creation of human truth, a philosophy entirely separate from the truth of history, through propaganda, philosophy, and revolutionary upheaval.

Isn't this the essence of Maoism, the creation of revolution when the world historical conditions are not right for it (I'm referring to that other thread we had about the founding of Maoism in the 80s during the defeat of Marxism to neo-liberalism)? We have yet to fully process the consequences of the Cultural Revolution, but to me it shows at a minimum the rightist deviation of the trots of fidelity to truth in absence of practice and real history and the leftist deviation you're making, which is the conflation of practice and truth and the fidelity to 'truth' as a Weltgeist removed from science and philosophy.

Edited by babyhueypnewton ()

#87
I should also add another great insight of Nietzsche's: that every interpretation is in fact an interpretation of an interpretation. Badiou and Zizek uncritically accept this interpretation of socialism as a "failure" which I have seen parroted here in the past, rather than see this characterization as the result of class struggle and bourgeois interpretation. This is where the relationship between philosophy and history lies, not in a direct philosophy of action deriving from historical experience nor a faith in history leading ideology down the progressive path, but rather over the fundamental interpretations of ideas which are determined through the class struggle. The failure to defend the experiences of socialism is the greatest failure of the 1st world left, this is not an attempt to seek truth but simply a capitulation to the interpretation of history by the bourgeoisie. Ironically, this is strongest from the so called "post-modern" left, who think they reject truth but in fact capitulate to bourgeois truth.

Crow posted a while ago that Badiou is the inheritor of Althusser, and that really bothered me but I couldn't articulate why. Now I'm starting to understand my own instincts, as well as my instinct of distaste for those who dismiss Nietzsche (or pretend to surpass him) or conflate him with the apes who mimic him in our modern day.
#88
I on't remember making that statement, and I'm not sure what you mean about failure, as if its something we should avoid? Failure is the mother of success, as Mao said, and truth is revealed through error, not arrived-at, but always-approaching. Not sure how these signal a retreat from Marxism! Ludicrous! Speaking of part-of-no-part, Ranciere started as an Althusserist, and if you're not attentive and flexible you'll be signaling a retreat from Marxism in no time, leaving me as the sole unrepentive marxist, which I already am
#89

blinkandwheeze posted:

thirdplace posted:

blinkandwheeze posted:

when they need it, and i fundamentally believe that the communist hypothesis will be needed by any emancipatory movement, lest they fall short of liberation, the proletariat will find it themselves

not to necessarily quibble with your overall point but there are confounding factors. perhaps the focus of any aspiring vanguard should be to remove them? fucked up and liberal, but maybe true

yeah, this is a totally valid point - what i'm saying isn't intended, at least, to be a call to just sit back and let things unfold themselves, or to take any stress away from the importance of a vanguard formation. the sentiment that the proletariat can grasp and incorporate these materials is pretty meaningless if, you know, these materials aren't actually publicly accessible or otherwise in circulation (altho this brings up another problem, this continuous melting and decontextualization of radical thought into the field of capital flows - no matter how attractive they might be, verso publishing a new set in the radical thinkers series isn't exactly a transgressive practice. at worst, it's just an excuse for the petit-bourgeois intelligentsia to pat themselves on the back for having the audacity to consider these ideas, all the while contributing to the machinations of capital flow)

i think you're absolutely right that the role of a vanguard should be removing these obstacles, burrowing holes and inconsistencies ... the mechanisms that keep the bourgeois in power are increasingly complex fields of striation, the deepening of apartheid, building walls to maintain exclusion, to refuse the movement and thought of the part-of-no-part ... for the proletariat to realize consciousness and engage with militancy they need the freedom and space to be able to. we absolutely need to defend the sites, like the prison as school for revolutionary thought or public housing as proletarian citadels, that have allowed that autonomy in the past

swampman posted:

your post is fine but kind of off the mark. bonclay's post didnt seem to me to be about, okay forgive me, because i always thought this was the dumbest shorthand, ever since i first encountered it doing undergraduate discussion of the Republic back when i was in the third grade having just been born, but anyway, it didnt seem to be about capital N Nihilism, but rather lower case n nihilism. Nihilism, the philosophy of the scab picker. we know existence doesnt spring from meaning or truth - meaning and truth are pathetic defense mechanisms like a rudimentary amoeba tooth or something. and that can hurt and feel weird, and Nihilists obsess over that weird feel. i get that Nihilism can change from a cold lonely void to a warm comforting void, that philosophy can make gold from lead for all us cerebral internet drug users, but is that what bonclay was squealing about? No, and more specifically, i thought the point was about nihilism, where the Futility of Life, Hopelessness of Actions, Insignificance of Jazz, Ludicrous Dearth of Meaning, are all set aside, and we just are restricting ourselves to worries about agency and truth on the human scale. (i think how much longer and more abstract the words are in your post versus bonclays.) This is a difficult but human scaled problem, the problem of social organization / achieving social impact. We dont need to use special relativity when newtonian mechanics will do okay, and most people wont ever fully understand special relativity anyway. Thanks for reading



i think what i'm trying to suggest is that there is this distinction between nihilism and capital N Nihilism, the latter embodying an embrace and acceptance of truth as a determining factor of existence while the former rejects truth in the same breath as meaning, as if these are both the products of human artifice. that kindof nihilism is totally groundless and is really just oscillating between existential malaise (brought on by a useless grappling around this absence of meaning) and i suppose a more nietzschean positively charged void (which is admirable in some ways but problematic, revolutionary but without a subject, i guess as likely to drift towards bourgeois individualism as it is collective action)

so bonclay does something which i think is very cynical and troubled which is basically accepting this nihilism as a starting point (maybe in the same way that post suggests we take the exiled rapesquad as a starting point for economic concerns?) but asserts that there is a place for the artifice of narrative in this void because ... it's better than nothing? it gives us something to cling to, easy to believe in? in bonclay's post, marxism is only really present as a suggestion of a teleology, it's reduced to a narrative rather than a collection and investigation of truth claims. that reduction to a simple narrative, i claim, is one of the biggest flaws of 20th century actually existing socialism, this messianic supremacy of the state, dedicated to bringing about the end of history by purging our story of villains. it just seems totally arbitrary to me, picking one fiction over another, just because it's useful for the realization of a narrative that is basically a fiction itself, and i don't see it leading to much more than an easily digestible story of the white suprematist knights driving the jewish snakes out of the world and showing the ignorant masses the light of our dead prophets. and believing in something like that just because it's better than nihilism is just as selfindulgent and useless as individual malaise about our insignificance is in the first play. i mean, that and i think it's basically the complete foundation of the fascist impulse

and then what i think is being missed here is the alternative, what is the radical kernel of nihilism, taking the form of this Nihilism, this assertion that there is a truth beyond human artifice, in the face of which narrative is only broken idealism. the idea that the proletariat are not a force to imbue our lives with meaning and goodness and the promise of a better world but a force that are Right, that the value of marxism lies not in a teleology, not a set of positive propositions for a new ontology of being, but as a hyperawareness and total rejection of present conditions facilitated by the dedication to truth



I don't really know what you mean by the truth. What is the truth of reality that I have mistaken for a void? Tell me more about it. I don't want to write the long, thoughtful responses that your posts deserve and suddenly have them be irrelevant because I have argued with a different conception of truth than the one you're using.

I would also note that I believe in truth, and my entire argument is a vindication of Marxism against small-n nihilism, petty skepticism, and the various forms of surrender to futility they entail.

#90

Here I shall discuss particularly an idea which, as far as I know, has never
occurred to anyone else - we must have a new mythology, but this mythology
must be in the service of the Ideas, it must be a mythology of Reason.

Until we express the Ideas aesthetically, i.e. mythologically, they have no
interest for the people, and conversely until mythology is rational the philosopher
must be ashamed of it. Thus in the end enlightened and unenlightened
must clasp hands, mythology must become philosophical in order to make
the people rational, and philosophy must become mythological in order to
make the philosophers sensible (sinnlich). Then reigns eternal unity among
us. No more the look of scorn (of the enlightened philosopher looking down
on the mob), no more the blind trembling of the people before its wise men
and priests. Then first awaits us equal development of all powers, of what is
peculiar to each and what is common to all. No power shall any longer be
suppressed for universal freedom and equality of spirits will reign! - A
higher spirit sent from heaven must found this new religion among us, it
will be the last and greatest work of mankind.

#91
#92

babyhueypnewton posted:

jewish menace.


blinkandwheeze posted:

jewish


gyrofry posted:

Jewish


jools posted:

jewish


blinkandwheeze posted:

jewish snakes

#93

Crow posted:

babyhueypnewton posted:

jewish menace.

blinkandwheeze posted:

jewish


gyrofry posted:

Jewish


jools posted:

jewish


blinkandwheeze posted:

jewish snakes



yep, matt taibbi really hates jews

#94
Wrap it up hebrewailures
#95
[account deactivated]
#96
#97
[account deactivated]
#98
is there some way i could poison diana krall so that elvis costello marries me
#99
[account deactivated]
#100
so have we figured out what happened?
#101
"ooooo what's so funny about diana dying and me marrying getfiscal"
#102

jeffery posted:

so have we figured out what happened?

#103
[account deactivated]
#104
[account deactivated]
#105
#106
#107
my mom is going on a plantation tour in the american south. imagine how white i am. so white.
#108

jeffery posted:

so have we figured out what happened?

late capitalism

#109
[account deactivated]
#110
bandana cat is watching you explicate
#111
i should try to hitch a ride with my mom and then go to florida and hang out with tpaine wherein we will punch eachother as hard as we can while weeping and cursing god
#112
[account deactivated]
#113
my mom said she wanted to see slave cabin remnants.
#114
[account deactivated]
#115
that's pretty fucked up thomas paine
#116
[account deactivated]
#117

getfiscal posted:

my mom said she wanted to see slave cabin remnants.



i saw one of these places in louisiana, and apparently the slave quarters were still occupied by black families up until the 1970's, except they had to pay rent for the privilege. in the 70's, they were forced into a trailer park across the highway so the plantation grounds could be designated a state historic place.

#118
change my name to Malcolm X in the Middle
#119


You're not the white boss of me now and I'm not your slave!
#120
[account deactivated]