Feed 44
The State Can’t Sink Our Battleship on Feed 44

C4SS Feed 44 presents Nick Ford‘s “The State Can’t Sink Our Battleship” read by James Tuttle and edited by Nick Ford.

For every site the government tries to take down, another five spring up. And no one in government is going to admit that what they’re doing is futile. They simply don’t have incentives to act rationally. They’re getting paid to take down sites. It doesn’t matter if five more spring up for each one they hit — they get paid either way. So why stop now?

The state won’t and can’t stop, “cede” the ground to the people of the Internet and admit defeat. But here’s the thing: The whacking process itself is a much bigger sign of defeat than actually surrender. The state is engaged in a Sisyphean task and by gum it’s going win or run out of funds trying!

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Feed 44, Markets Not Capitalism - YouTube
Free Market Reforms and the Reduction of Statism on Feed 44

C4SS Feed 44 presents “Free Market Reforms and the Reduction of Statism” from the book Markets Not Capitalism, written by Kevin Carson, read by Stephanie Murphy and edited by Nick Ford.

The default tendency in mainstream libertarianism is a high degree of statocracy, to the point not only of (quite properly) emphasizing the necessary role of state coercion in enabling “legal plunder” (Frédéric Bastiat’s term) by the plutocracy, but of downplaying the significance of the plutocracy even as beneficiaries of statism. This means treating the class interests associated with the state as ad hoc and fortuitous.

Although statocratic theory treats the state (in Franz Oppenheimer’s phrase) as the organized political means to wealth, it still tends to view government as merely serving the exploitative interests of whatever assortment of political factions happens to control it at any given time. This picture of how the state works does not require any organic relation between the various interest groups controlling it at any time, or between them and the state. It might be controlled by a disparate array of interest groups, including licensed professionals, rent-seeking corporations, farmers, regulated utilities, and big labor; the only thing they have in common is that they happen to be currently the best at latching onto the state.

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Commentary
The Keystone Pipeline is Land Theft

The US Congress approved construction of the Keystone XL pipeline’s fourth phase on February 11, with the bill scheduled to land on president Barack Obama’s desk for a likely veto sometime after the “President’s Day” recess. Near-unanimous support for Keystone from self-proclaimed “conservatives” and “libertarians” is disappointing but unsurprising. This government land grab is just the latest example of alleged “small government” advocates abusing their power at the expense of ordinary Americans. Despite their ceaseless rhetoric about free markets and limited government on the campaign trail, most Republican legislators — and the GOP’s 2016 presidential front-runners — openly embrace such robbery once in office.

Completing Keystone requires the state to forcibly take large tracts of land from American farmers and homeowners through a process known as eminent domain. TransCanada Corporation — the company behind Keystone — has sent Texans and Nebraskans threatening letters demanding they enter “negotiations” (read: Sell, at prices acceptable to TransCanada) or face legal condemnation and loss of their land. The company, with government assistance, has already stolen more than 100 tracts of land from Texans. Homeowners along the line connecting Oklahoma to Alberta are next. TransCanada also plans to use eminent domain against Oklahoma’s Sac and Fox Indian Nation, undermining tribal sovereignty and adding a new chapter to the US government’s long history of land theft from Native Americans.

In a free society, people and companies seeking to build on others’ lands must reach voluntary agreement with rightful owners. This stands in complete contrast to the approach of Transcanada and its GOP allies. Such theft gives unfair competitive advantages to its beneficiaries, greatly distorting the economy. It is no coincidence that the firms benefiting from eminent domain lobby heavily for its use. In a real free market they’d have to negotiate and compete without government favors of this kind.

The Keystone land grab illustrates how supposedly conservative and libertarian politicians violate the freedoms and property rights of others. They have become part of a corrupt, coercive system that freely uses force against ordinary people when doing so suits its purposes. Ultimately, the state corrupts even the most principled advocates of liberty who join its ranks. Replacing the current system with a society based on voluntary interaction should be our ultimate goal. Until this happens, Americans need to recognize that allowing government to give stolen land to business interests is incompatible with freedom and must be opposed.

Stateless Embassies, Turkish
Devletsizlik: Kötü Bir Şey Gibi Zannediyorlar

Geçen Kasım, Birleşmiş Milletler Yüksek İltica Komisyonu (UNHCR) “devletsizlik sorununu” bitirmek için 10 yıllık programı başlattı. Aralıkta, UNHCR Devletsizlikte Bölgesel Koruma Kıdemli Memuru, Emmanuelle Mitte, gazetecilere (Batı Afrikada ve dünya çapında) programı desteklemeleri için temyiz etti ve basının “savunma ve konu sensitizasyon sorumluluğu” anıldı. Ancak bu kampanya, “Ben Aitim” ismiyle, destekci ve yaraticiların Birleşmiş Milletler, siyasi hükümetler, ve yöneten insanların arasındaki ilişki hakkında bilmemiz gerektiğini düşündüklerinden daha fazlasını anlatıyor.

Aslında, Birleşik Devletler ismi verilmemiş olsaydı Birleşmiş Milletlerin alması daha doğru olurdu. Dörtyüz yıllık ve küresel olarak kabul edilmemiş sistemin korunmasına özgüdür: Bu sistem eski aile kural ve feodal bağlarının yerini aldı, belirli kişilere köle bağlantıları kaydırdı ve devletleri sabit coğrafı sınırlarıyla tanımladı (“ulusal egemenlik”), ve bireysel hükümdarlardan dayanıklı bürokrasiler kurdu, siyasi hükümetleri sürdürmek için.

Farklı bir anlama koyarsak, bu sistem feodal köleliği daha sabit kölelik düzene geçirdi. Köleler belirli ve ölümlü efendilere aittiler. Şimdi, vatandaşlar ölümsüz bürokrasilere aitler. Birleşmiş Milletlerin “Ben Aitim” kampanyasında kayıp köleleri kafeslerine geri sürdürmek amacı var.

İyi ki, bu çabalar neredeyse verimsiz.

Son yirmi yıl, iktidar sınıflar kendilerini devletsiz kişilerce zorlandırılmış buldular (kontrolsüz ticaretten önlenemez savaşa kadar) – bürokratik yöneticilerin meşrulukları ve devletlerin sınırlarını tanımıyan kişilerce. Bu kişilerin hepsi Batıdakı devlete karşı çekici alternatif vermiyorlar (bir örnek olarak, hepimizin küresel halifeliğin altinda yaşamak istediğimizi sanmıyorum), fakat devlet modelinin çöküşü belirli. Ve tarih bu model için büyük bir ihtimalle geriye dönmeyecek.

Çoğumuz için iyi ki – ve “Ben Aitim” gibi projeler için malesef –Amerikanın II. Dünya Savaşından sonra hegemonya yolunda komik bir şey oluştu: ulus-devletçiliğinin saklanılması için (bürokrasi ve silahlı kuvvetleri sürdürerek) tasarlanmış sistem nükleer saldırı imkanı altında tahliye edildi.

İnternet milyonlarca insanların ulusal bağlılıklardan kaçmalarına önemli ve çeşitli yöntemlerle izin veriyor. Karşılıklı yatay ağlar coğrafyaya köklü, hiyerarşik ve siyasi hükümetlerin yerlerini alıyorlar. Devletin yöneten sınıflarına servis eden ekonomik sistemler çöküyorlar ve insanlar devletsiz ticaretle meşgul olunca ve devletin ücretleri ödemeyince vergi gelirleri sızıyor.

İnternet ve diğer teknolojiler devletin bağ dokularını yemeye devam ediyor. Azaltılmış kapital gereksinimler devletin endüstrilerde üretilen ve devletin yol ağlarında dağıtılan malların yerel düzeyde üretilmesine izin veriyor (ardından devlet düzenlemeler ve vergi toplaması zorlaşıyor). Devlet kontrol hizmetlerini durdursak bile, Wi-Fi yetenekli cep telefonları ve ağ iletişim uygulamaları devletsiz operasyonların devam etmesine izin veriyor,

Ben Aitim” kampanyası milyonlarca mültecileri mülteci yaptıran devletin altına getirmeye yoğunlaşıyor. Fakat, bu mülteciler devletlerden kaçış işlemini başlattırdılar (bilinçli veya bilinçsiz), ve devletsiz olmayı seçdiler.

İki yüzyıl, anarşistler devletin bir kanser olduğunu düşündüler. Belki biz yanlışız. Belki devlet pratik bir organ. Eğer bu doğruysa, devlet artık artakalan bir organdır – insanlığın apendiksi, diyelim. Hiçbir değerli amacı servis etmiyor ve yırtılmadan, insanlığı 400 yıl depoladığı zehirle öldürmeden  önce kesip çöpe atılmalıdır.

Batu Caliskan Bu çeviri sorumludur.

Left-Libertarian - Classics, Stigmergy - C4SS Blog
Wild Cards

In The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (a book of great virtues and great flaws, but I’m not going to get into either right now), Thomas Kuhn describes an experiment that I think is of tremendous importance to libertarians, particularly left-libertarians:

In a psychological experiment that deserves to be far better known outside the trade, Bruner and Postman [1949] asked experimental subjects to identify on short and controlled exposure a series of playing cards. Many of the cards were normal, but some were made anomalous, e.g., a red six of spades and a black four of hearts. Each experimental run was constituted by the display of a single card to a single subject in a series of gradually increased exposures. After each exposure the subject was asked what he had seen, and the run was terminated by two successive correct identifications.

Even on the shortest exposures many subjects identified most of the cards, and after a small increase all the subjects identified them all. For the normal cards these identifications were usually correct, but the anomalous cards were almost always identified, without apparent hesitation or puzzlement, as normal. The black four of hearts might, for example, be identified as the four of either spades or hearts. Without any awareness of trouble, it was immediately fitted to one of the conceptual categories prepared by prior experience. One would not even like to say that the subjects had seen something different from what they had identified.

With a further increase of exposure to the anomalous cards, subjects did begin to hesitate and to display awareness of anomaly. Exposed, for example to the red six of spades, some would say: That’s the six of spades, but there’s something wrong with it – the black has a red border. Further increase of exposure resulted in still more hesitation and confusion until finally, and sometimes quite suddenly, most subjects would produce the correct identification without hesitation. Moreover, after doing this with two or three of the anomalous cards, they would have little further difficulty with the others.

A few subjects, however, were never able to make the requisite adjustment of their categories. Even at forty times the average exposure required to recognize normal cards for what they were, more than 10% of the anomalous cards were not correctly identified. And the subjects who then failed often experienced acute personal distress. One of them exclaimed: ‘I can’t make the suit out, whatever it is. It didn’t even look like a card that time. I don’t know what color it is now or whether it’s a spade or a heart. I’m not even sure now what a spade looks like. My God!’ … My colleague Postman tells me that, though knowing all about the apparatus and display in advance, he nevertheless found looking at the incongruous cards acutely uncomfortable.

In short, people have enormous difficulty with, and often a strong aversion to, recognising something that doesn’t fit their established categories. And this helps, I think, to explain why as libertarians, and in particular as left-libertarians, we have so much trouble getting our message across; for in the mainstream political realm we are black hearts and red spades. Most people’s first impulse is to assimilate us to some familiar category – and since we talk so much about the virtues of free markets and the evils of government, we tend to get lumped with conservatives, since they make similar noises. When more prolonged exposure persuades people that we’re not quite conservatives after all, they then tend to become convinced that we’re black spades with red borders — conventionally conservative on some issues, conventionally liberal on others (a tendency we ourselves encourage with our in part useful, in part misleading Nolan Charts) — as opposed to representing a radical alternative to existing ideologies.

The moral, I think, is that libertarians, and especially left-libertarians, need to focus more on simply getting our position recognised. Getting it recognised is of course not enough — one then has to argue that the position is correct – but I think such argument and defense are to a large extent pointless if people can’t see what the position being defended even is.

Our vital task, then, is to get the word out that there is a position out there that includes the following theses:

  1. Big business and big government are (for the most part) natural allies.
  2. Although conservative politicians pretend to hate big government, and liberal politicians pretend to hate big business, most mainstream policies — both liberal and conservative — involve (slightly different versions of) massive intervention on behalf of the big-business/big-government elite at the expense of ordinary people.
  3. Liberal politicians cloak their intervention on behalf of the strong in the rhetoric of intervention on behalf of the weak; conservative politicians cloak their intervention on behalf of the strong in the rhetoric of non-intervention and free markets – but in both cases the rhetoric is belied by the reality.
  4. A genuine policy of intervention on behalf of the weak, if liberals actually tried it, wouldn’t work either, since the nature of government power would automatically warp it toward the interests of the elite.
  5. A genuine policy of non-intervention and free markets, if conservatives actually tried it, would work, since free competition would empower ordinary people at the expense of the elite.
  6. Since conservative policies, despite their associated free-market rhetoric, are mostly the diametrical opposite of free-market policies, the failures of conservative policies do not constitute an objection to (but rather, if anything, a vindication of) free-market policies.

Of course we should be prepared to defend these theses through economic reasoning and historical evidence, but the main goal at this point, I think, should be not so much to defend them as simply to advertise their existence. We need to make our red spades and black hearts a sufficiently familiar feature of the intellectual landscape that people will be able to see them for what they are rather than misclassifying them – at which point we’ll be in a better position to defend them. (Though admittedly point 6 is already beginning to slide from description to defense; still, I think 6 is crucial to getting our position so much as a hearing.)

What I advocate, then, is to make the constant repetition of (some equivalent of) points 1 through 6 a constant feature of our propagandising. In conversation, in articles, in letters to the editor, we should hit points 1 through 6 over and over again. The cure for resistance to the unfamiliar is to make it familiar.

<< Back to the Market Anarchism FAQ page

Spanish, Stateless Embassies
Obama se queja demasiado del Estado Islámico

El llamado “Estado Islámico de Irak y el Levante (EIIL)”, escribe el presidente de Estados Unidos Barack Obama en su carta al Congreso del 11 de febrero, “representa una amenaza para las personas y la estabilidad de Irak, Siria, el gran Oriente Medio y para la seguridad nacional de Estados Unidos”. Por lo tanto, Obama pide que el Congreso apruebe una “Autorización para el Uso de la Fuerza Militar” para apoyar sus medidas militares anteriores en Siria e Irak y obtener carta blanca para continuar y escalar esas medidas por tres años más.

La propuesta AUFM de Obama plantea varias cuestiones en el contexto de las acciones emprendidas por el estado. Por ejemplo, ¿por qué Obama solicita permiso del Congreso para hacer lo que ya está haciendo y al mismo tiempo afirma que no necesita ese permiso? ¿Por qué no se juega del todo y solicita una declaración de guerra – el único instrumento de aprobación del Congreso que pasa el filtro constitucional – en lugar de una “autorización” inconstitucional?

Pero a diferencia de algunas situaciones “AUFM” anteriores, esta plantea una pregunta aun más importante. ¿Por qué Obama no admite que el Estado Islámico es, de hecho, un estado? Esa pregunta se cernía implícitamente en solicitudes AUFM anteriores frente a estados “delincuentes” o “fallidos” (como el régimen de Saddam en Irak y el gobierno talibán de Afganistán) y “actores no estatales” como Al Qaeda. Al enfrentarse al Estado Islámico Obama le da una relevancia especial a la pregunta.

En un mensaje presidencial anterior, Obama afirmó que el Estado Islámico no es ni islámico ni un estado. Ambas afirmaciones son risibles, y por las mismas razones.

El Estado Islámico es claramente islámico. Basa sus pretensiones de autoridad religiosa en doctrinas musulmanas extraídas del Corán y en hadices (tradiciones proféticas islámicas) específicos. Las controversias relativas a la validez de sus interpretaciones son sectarias, similares a las discusiones entre las denominaciones cristianas sobre el método apropiado de bautismo, etc.

El Estado Islámico es también claramente un estado. De las muchas definiciones de la palabra, la de Hans-Hermann Hoppe basta en este contexto: “[Un] monopolista territorial de servicios de protección y jurisdicción con el poder de imponer tributos sin el consentimiento unánime”. El Estado Islámico reclama esa potestad monopólica sobre grandes porciones de Irak y Siria. Fuerza a las personas que viven allí a apoyarlo a través del pago de impuestos, y las obliga, con tanta violencia como sea necesario, a aceptar sus leyes y su autoridad.

¿Por qué Obama no quiere admitir que el Estado Islámico es un estado? Porque este rechaza abiertamente el sistema de Westfalia, el modelo derivado de la “Paz de Westfalia” de 1648. En el sistema de Westfalia, un estado reclama su soberanía sobre un territorio definido, respeta la misma soberanía de otros estados, y se considera como igual a todos los demás estados ante la ley internacional. Debido a que el Estado Islámico reclama al mundo entero como su territorio, niega la soberanía de otros estados y mantiene que sus pretensiones están por encima de cualquier ley internacional previa, Obama afirma que no es un estado.

Pero Estados Unidos tampoco se ajusta a esa definición y por las mismas razones. Durante 70 años los EE.UU. ha hecho lo que ha querido donde ha querido en todo el mundo, negando a voluntad la soberanía de otros estados y rechazando cualquier aplicación del derecho internacional que contradiga sus acciones. Otros estados – especialmente la Unión Soviética en su etapa tardía – han hecho lo mismo mientras fueron capaces de hacerlo.

La Segunda Guerra Mundial fue la sentencia de muerte del sistema de Westfalia, y las consecuencias de esa muerte se han mantenido vigentes hasta hoy. Obama se niega a reconocer esto porque él no quiere pasar a la historia como el panegirista en su funeral al admitir la equivalencia moral del régimen de Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi con el suyo.

El sistema de Westfalia yace muerto en el basurero de la historia. La siguiente tarea de la humanidad es deshechar también a los estados que lo sucedieron.

Artículo original publicado por Thomas L. Knapp el 13 de febrero de 2015.

Traducido del inglés por Carlos Clemente.

Feature Articles
The End of Libertarians

One of the grievances of the so-called GamerGate movement last August was an article by Dan Golding titled “The End of Gamers” (August 28, 2014). The title referred, not to the literal extinction of gamers as individuals, but of the “gamer” cultural identity as it had previously existed. Golding argued that the previously dominant gamer demographic of white, middle-class males in their teens and twenties, who played games designed for the desktop, was a dying breed. They would cease to define the gamer demographic, and the industry would evolve to reflect the needs of a larger, more diverse market including women, people of color and players using consoles or mobile devices — in other words, the demographics dismissed as “fake geeks” by “real” white male hardcore gamers. The latter demographic, whether sincerely or disingenuously, denounced the article as a literal threat by the dreaded “Social Justice Warriors” to physically eliminate them.

I write, in similar vein, to predict the end of libertarians.

Libertarianism is frequently perceived by the general public, not entirely without justice, as a movement of mostly white male 20- or 30-somethings, disproportionately from the tech industry or other white collar jobs, who see themselves as victims and everyone unlike themselves — women, LGBT people, people of color — as naturally collectivist barbarians.

David Weigel, in his coverage of the recent International Students for Liberty Conference (ISFLC) (“Bow Ties and Slam Poetry: This is Libertarianism in 2015,” Bloomberg Politics, Feb. 17), provides a cringe-inducing example of this. He quotes Rebecca, an Appalachian State University student:

Last night we’re at a party and there’s a guy in a $3,000 suit talking about how oppression is him being taxed on his condo. Well, I have a scar on my head from where a couple of rednecks hit me with a bottle, yelling “queer” at me as they sped by on a truck. I started to argue, and he started telling me go get a job. I had enough of that, and I just got up and left. He said after me: “I hope we get a Republican president so he gets rid of all these social welfare programs.”

No doubt he hopes for a Republican president who can provide more corporate welfare programs for white guys in $3,000 suits instead.

That aside, I find the guy especially annoying based on my own recent experiences. Twice in the same day I had to block clueless white libertarian dudebros on Twitter for replying to my retweets of black people discussing actual chattel slavery, hijacking the conversation uninvited to make comparisons to taxation. Seriously. I mean the people I retweeted were talking about actual forced labor in the fields, with corporal punishment, rape, and families broken up on the auction block, and libertarians felt compelled to jump in with comments like “Hey, I feel ya every April 15, bro!” Two unrelated people, in the same day. And I blocked them because, even after I asked them to stop several times and told them how tone-deaf and counter-productive it was, they insisted on continuing to ‘splain why it was OK.

And please note, I write this as someone who considers taxation a form of surplus labor extraction. It’s one of a wide spectrum of techniques for surplus labor extraction by the privileged classes that control the state, alongside feudal dues, monopoly returns like land rent, profit and usury, oligopoly markups on goods sold by industrial cartels, price gouging by state-licensed professionals — and, yes, actual chattel slavery. Chattel slavery is by far the most severe and exploitative means, among many, of extracting surplus labor by force. Some people find it rhetorically useful to compare all the different forms to slavery by way of analogy; and in some cases it may actually be a useful analogy. But when you’re talking to a person whose ancestors experienced actual, non-metaphoric slavery, it’s not useful; it’s incredibly insensitive and offensive. While we’re at it, comparisons to the Holocaust or to rape are also something you’d better think twice about if you’re getting the bright idea of making them. And if you insist on continuing to dig, and arguing with the descendants of actual slaves about why the slavery comparison is perfectly legitimate, you really just need to SHUT UP.

But my immediate reason for writing this article is another event at ISFLC, and the response to it. Three SFL members, including Mackenzie Holst, Aaron Baca and C4SS comrade Cory Massimino, composed an open letter to Ron Paul taking him to task for his ties to the paleoconservative and paleolibertarian movements, and his tolerance for their racism, sexism and homophobia. Holst read the letter aloud during Paul’s Q&A period. Here are some especially noteworthy passages:

We believe many of the people you have aligned yourself with and continue to align yourself with are libertarians only in name and their true ideology is one more akin to a bigoted and authoritarian paleo-conservatism….

“Millennial” or “Second-wave” libertarianism is not going away and there seems to be irreconcilable differences between these new libertarians and the old guard, which includes figures such as Lew Rockwell, Hans Herman-Hoppe, Walter Block, Gary North, and yourself. In this letter, we would like to highlight the downright absurdity promoted by this obsolete style of thinking, as delineated in the racist, homophobic, and sexist undertones present in these thinkers’ writings….

At the Mises Circle, Lew Rockwell, founder and chairman of the Mises Institute, compared the life of people under modern nation states to literal chattel slavery. We admit the state is a gang of thieves writ large. But this analogy is downright offensive to people have suffered actual chattel slavery as well as people who have relatively great living standards under modern states. Libertarians can expose the evils of statism without resorting to bad metaphors with blatantly obvious racist undertones.

Hans Herman-Hoppe, distinguished fellow of the Mises Institute, wrote just last year that, “it is societies dominated by white heterosexual males, and in particular by the most successful among them, which have produced and accumulated the greatest amount of capital goods and achieved the highest average living standards.” Hoppe has also advocated violence against homosexuals and other people who live lifestyles he doesn’t approve of, “There can be no tolerance toward those habitually promoting lifestyles incompatible with this goal. They — the advocates of alternative, non-family-centered lifestyles such as, for instance, individual hedonism, parasitism, nature-environment worship, homosexuality, or communism — will have to be physically removed from society, too, if one is to maintain a libertarian order.”…

Walter Block, senior fellow at the Mises Institute, has argued, “Feminists and gays aren’t libertarians.” Also on the topic of homosexuals, Block has written, “If a seventeen year old is an adult, and voluntarily wants to have sex with an adult homosexual man, I may not like it. I may be revolted by it.” If that wasn’t clear enough, Block has made his bigoted views explicit, “I am a cultural conservative. This means that I abhor homosexuality, bestiality, and sadomasochism, as well as pimping, prostituting, drugging, and other such degenerate behavior.” In addition, he has put forth the idea that “lower black IQs” could explain productivity differences between blacks and whites. Again, the arguments speak for themselves.

Gary North, an associated scholar at the Mises Institute, is an outspoken Christian Reconstructionist and supporter of biblical theocracy. North advocates capital punishment by means of stoning for women who lie about their virginity, blasphemers, nonbelievers, children who curse their parents, male homosexuals, and other people who commit acts deemed capital offense in the Old Testament. These views are certainly not representative of the libertarianism we’ve come to know and love.

Stop and think about this for a minute: These are people who actually call themselves libertarians — advocates of human liberty — and who presumably want to spread these ideas in society at large and attract new adherents to them. Hoppe’s prerequisite for a “libertarian society,” if you want to call it that, is for the minority of rich property-owning paterfamiliases who have appropriated all the land in a society to round up all the people with beliefs or lifestyles they disagree with, and forcibly evict them. North would add stoning to the list of sanctions. “We can only have a totally free society after I’ve expelled all the people who do things I disapprove of!”

They don’t favor liberty because it promotes the widest possible flourishing and self-actualization of human beings. They favor it because it gives local patriarchs and lords of manors a free hand to dominate those under their thumbs, without a nasty state stepping in to interfere. For them, “libertarianism” — a term they pollute every time they utter it with their tongues — is simply a way of constructing the world of Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale by contractual means. And Block, who shares beliefs with Men’s Rights Advocate creepos and “Race Realists,” is apparently ready to pack up his bags and leave libertarianism for the neo-reactionary movement at a moment’s notice.

And this leaves out other prominent “libertarians” outside Paul’s personal circle, like Stefan Molyneux — a one-man travelling side-show of awfulness.

Beyond the immediate booing in the audience, the reading of the letter sparked a backlash in the larger libertarian movement.

And the backlash extended beyond denunciations by major figures in the libertarian movement. Cory Massimino experienced considerable harassment online, but Holst took a disproportionate amount of harassment, to the point of shutting her Twitter account down. As is usual when a woman falls afoul of wannabe Dale Gribbles, they immediately took to trolling her on social media. Maybe they were GamerGaters who wandered into the wrong convention by mistake and thought she was Anita Sarkeesian.

I’m not just drawing the GamerGate parallel for rhetorical purposes. I really see a lot of parallels, in terms of demographics and attitude towards the outside world, between GamerGaters and the people most outraged by the letter to Ron Paul (especially those trolling Holst in packs). GamerGaters like to think of themselves as victims, and the gaming subculture as their final retreat from a hostile world of Alpha males and “hypergamous” (that is only marrying socially and financially superior men) women. Feminism is just the final insult in a rigged game to make sure Beta males like them never win. So when feminist cultural critics like Zoe Quinn and Anita Sarkeesian point to sexist or misogynistic tropes in video games, or note that the market includes people besides white male desktop players, a large segment of gamers see it as the contamination of their all-boys treehouse by girl cooties. “Muh vidya games! SJWs done roont muh precious vidya games!”

A certain kind of libertarian, disproportionately represented in the mainstream of the movement, takes a similar view of women, queers and people of color who invade their stronghold and try to put social justice concerns on the table. These people are used to seeing libertarianism as the final refuge for rational white middle-class males like themselves, where they can hide in the catacombs and read “Isaiah’s Job” to each other while the outside world goes mad under the onslaught of statist racial minorities and welfare moms demanding handouts from the government. And here a girl has the nerve to show up in the clubhouse and suggest that issues like racism, sexism and homophobia (or anything else besides Bitcoin, vaping, Uber and the capital gains tax) should be taken seriously by libertarians.

In both cases, the reaction is one of outrage — taking the form of trolling, abuse, insults and threats — at the affront to their sense of entitlement.

A libertarian movement with this demographic as its core base is doomed to extinction. The reason is that these people, for the most part, aren’t interested in winning hearts and minds among the general public. They’re not interested in recognizing the concerns of poor and working people, women, LGBT people or people of color as legitimate, and showing ways that an ideology of human freedom can address those concerns in a meaningful way. They’re interested in being superior, in being the last tiny remnant of rational people who’ve not bowed their knees to the collectivist Baal.

They’re interested in convincing themselves that, contrary to common sense perceptions, white guys in $3,000 suits, investment bankers and venture capitalists are the state’s true victims, and the enormously powerful constituency of black welfare mothers are its main beneficiaries.

Frankly, I’m sick of libertarian outreach being sabotaged by the need to apologize for people like this. I’m sick of trying to challenge the perception of libertarianism as the movement of entitled 20-something middle-class white males who think “big business is the last oppressed minority,” and the world is going to hell in a hand-basket because of women and racial minorities — and then going to Mises.org, Lew Rockwell, Cato and Reason and seeing a bottomless cesspool of people saying that very thing.

The version of libertarianism preached by these people is dying, because it’s the ideology of a dying (and rightfully so) demographic. Whether we let them take the entire movement down with them, or whether we make ourselves relevant to a larger world of people outside a tiny privileged group, is up to us. I close with a quote from Leigh Alexander (“‘Gamers’ don’t have to be your audience. ‘Gamers’ are over,” Gamasutra, August 28, 2014):

These obtuse shitslingers, these wailing hyper-consumers, these childish internet-arguers — they are not my audience. They don’t have to be yours. There is no ‘side’ to be on, there is no ‘debate’ to be had.

There is what’s past and there is what’s now. There is the role you choose to play in what’s ahead.

Commentary
Grow the Grass Roots

Of all the complex environmental problems the world faces today, the elephant in the room is climate change. If current predictions are correct, our posterity faces famine and drought, land loss, natural disasters, political instability and (if the hippies at the Pentagon are correct) increased warfare as resources are strained. So, how do we address the issue?

State progressives suggest classic command and control policies. Their authoritarian spirit is so commonplace it’s no longer shocking. Society is but a marionette to the high liberal — and climate may be next.

The United States National Research Council, an arm of the very well-respected Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, published a two-volume report (Climate Intervention Is Not a Replacement for Reducing Carbon Emissions; Proposed Intervention Techniques Not Ready for Wide-Scale Deployment — Feb 10, 2015) arguing for development of a “portfolio of activities” to combat global change. The Council suggests climate engineering as an approach. As indicated by Clive Hamilton at The Ecologist: “In other words, rather than presenting climate engineering … as an extreme response to be avoided if at all possible, the report normalises climate engineering as one approach among others.”

Climate engineering is deliberate interference with the climate system in hope of curbing global change. Such a proposal is potentially disastrous. Climate is incredibly complex — to think we can manage such an integrated system is foolish. Numerous unintended consequences will surely follow any attempt to hack the climate.

To be fair, the report notes the serious risk in climate engineering, but still suggests the US move forward with major research programs to investigate various forms of climate manipulation. This state approach is riddled with incredible dangers. Luckily, social forces offer an inspiring alternative.

A holistic, global sustainability movement has roots going back to the early 1980s. Looking to the market, it places less emphasis on legal solutions and focuses on liberty. Among the root causes of environmental degradation are institutionalized social and economic woes. Realizing this, activists for a sustainable future seek the liberation of markets, reclaiming the labor of individuals from the corporate arm of the state.

The sustainability movement is built by local community action groups, as opposed to the deep pocketed “green” organizations stalking DC’s halls of power. Sustainability is a local movement. There are no defined leaders, only activists and practitioners. After all, if the coal fields, for example, are to resist power and domination from the coal industry, then why tolerate such ethos in the movement? Activists are not concerned about positions of privilege — horizontal themes define grass-roots activism. The goal is not power, but instead a healthy environment, thus healthy communities. As the sustainability movement grows, it continues to develop new strategies and approaches to further the goal of preserving the environment for our generations that follow.

State approaches to environmental degradation remain vague, hypocritical and, with the prospect of purposefully altering the climate, maniacal. If you care for the natural world, instead of empowering the state, turn your back on it. Grow social power instead. Find a local group and get active in your community. No matter your skill set, I guarantee your labor will be appreciated. It will no doubt be meaningful. Salvation does not lie in the hands of the powerful, it lies in liberty.

Left-Libertarian - Classics, Stigmergy - C4SS Blog, The Karl Hess Collection
Anarchism Without Hyphens & The Left/Right Spectrum

A new pamphlet featuring two classic short essays is now available for download thanks to the efforts of the Tulsa Alliance of the Libertarian Left — [PDF] Anarchism Without Hyphens & The Left/Right Spectrum (by Karl Hess).

Please note that the format of the PDF file features a staggered page order layout intended to facilitate printing and folding booklets.

“The far left, as far as you can get away from the right, would logically represent the opposite tendency and, in fact, has done just that throughout history. The left has been the side of politics and economics that opposes the concentration of power and wealth and, instead, advocates and works toward the distribution of power into the maximum number of hands.” —Karl Hess

The Left/Right Spectrum

My own notion of politics is that it follows a straight line rather than a circle. The straight line stretches from the far right where (historically) we find monarchy, absolute dictatorships, and other forms of absolutely authoritarian rule. On the far right, law and order means the law of the ruler and the order that serves the interest of that ruler, usually the orderliness of drone workers, submissive students, elders either totally cowed into loyalty or totally indoctrinated and trained into that loyalty. Both Joseph Stalin and Adolf Hitler operated right-wing regimes, politically, despite the trappings of socialism with which both adorned their regimes. Huey Long, when governor-boss of Louisiana, was moving toward a truly right-wing regime, also adorned with many trappings of socialism (particularly public works and welfare) but held together not by social benefits but by a strong police force and a steady flow of money to subsidize and befriend businessmen.

An American President could be said to move toward the right to the extent that he tended to make absolutely unilateral political decisions, with no reference to Congress, for instance, or to the people generally, and when the legitimacy of the regime was supported or made real more by sheer force, say of police power, than by voluntary allegiance from the people generally. Such a regime, also, would be likely to suppress or to swallow up potentially competing centers of power such as trade unions. Major financial interests, however, if Adolf Hitler’s relations with industry, for example, can be considered instructive, would be bought off, rather than fought off, with fat contracts and a continuing opportunity to enrich their owners. Joseph Stalin, of course, had no problem with anything such as independent trade unions or business, since both had been killed off earlier.

The overall characteristic of a right-wing regime, no matter the details of difference between this one and that one, is that it reflects the concentration of power in the fewest practical hands.

Power, concentrated in few hands, is the dominant historic characteristic of what most people, in most times, have considered the political and economic right wing.

The far left, as far as you can get away from the right, would logically represent the opposite tendency and, in fact, has done just that throughout history. The left has been the side of politics and economics that opposes the concentration of power and wealth and, instead, advocates and works toward the distribution of power into the maximum number of hands.

Just as the scale along this line would show gradations of the right, so would it show gradations of the left.

Before getting to a far-right monarchy or dictatorship, there are many intermediate right-wing positions. Some are called conservative.

Somewhere along the line, for instance, a certain concentration of power, particularly economic power, would be acceptable in the name of tradition. The children of the rich, characteristically, are accorded very special places in the regimes of the right, or of conservatives. Also, there is a great deference to stability and a preference for it rather than change — all other things being equal. Caution might be the watchword toward the center of this right-wing scale, simply a go-slow attitude. That is, admittedly, a long way from the far right and dictatorship, but it is a way that can and should be measured on a straight line. The natural preference for law and order that seems such a worthwhile and innocent conservative preference is from a political tradition that came to us from kings and emperors, not from ancient democracy.

This hardly means that every conservative, if pressed, will go farther and farther right until embracing absolute dictatorship or monarchy. Far from it. It does mean to suggest only that the ghosts of royal power whisper in the conservative tradition.

The left shows similar gradations. The farthest left you can go, historically at any rate, is anarchism — the total opposition to any institutionalized power, a state of completely voluntary social organization in which people would establish their ways of life in small, consenting groups, and cooperate with others as they see fit.

The attitude on that farthest left toward law and order was summed up by an early French anarchist, Proudhon, who said that ‘order is the daughter of and not the mother of liberty.’ Let people be absolutely free, says this farthest of the far, far left (the left that Communism regularly denounces as too left; Lenin called it ‘infantile left’). If they are free they will be decent, but they never can be decent until they are free. Concentrated power, bureaucracy, et cetera, will doom that decency. A bit further along the left line there might be some agreement or at least sympathy with this left libertarianism but, it would be said, there are practical and immediate reasons for putting off that sort of liberty. People just aren’t quite ready for it. Roughly, that’s the position of the Communist Party today…

At any rate, at some point on the spectrum there is the great modern American liberal position. Through a series of unfortunate but certainly understandable distortions of political terminology, the liberal position has come to be known as a left-wing position. Actually, it lies right alongside the conservative tradition, down toward the middle of the line, but decidedly, I think, to the right of its center. Liberals believe in concentrated power — in the hands of liberals, the supposedly educated and genteel elite. They believe in concentrating that power as heavily and effectively as possible. They believe in great size of enterprise, whether corporate or political, and have a great and profound disdain for the homely and the local. They think nationally but they also think globally and now even intergalactically. Actually, because they believe in far more authoritarian rule than a lot of conservatives, it probably would be best to say that liberals lie next to but actually to the right of many conservatives. — Dear America (1975) by Karl Hess

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Books and Reviews
Three Tales of the DRM Curtain

These three short stories all come from the same Cory Doctorow collection, Overclocked: Stories of the Future Present (New York: Thunder’s Mouth Press, 2007). Free download here. The three are all set against a background of what I call the “DRM Curtain,” a transnational corporate Empire based on artificial scarcities enforced through a maximalist version “intellectual property” rights, promoted through trade deals written and lobbied by the proprietary content industries, and ultimately backed by the military force of the American state. The DRM Curtain’s corporate ruling class is as dependent on police state surveillance and the restriction of information flow as was the bureaucratic oligarchy that ruled the old Soviet empire behind the Iron Curtain.

Printcrime

This story is short and sweet — barely over two pages — and set within the Anglo-American core of the DRM Curtain. The protagonist, after being beaten to a pulp and having his flat ransacked by the iPolice, is sentenced to a long prison term for using a 3-D printer to manufacture knockoffs of patented goods — “blenders and pharma, …laptops and designer hats.”

His first action upon release is to ask his daughter where he can get another 3-D printer. His distraught daughter asks, in disbelief, if he’s actually going to risk ten more years in prison just to print out more of the same.

He grinned. “I’m not stupid, Lanie. I’ve learned my lesson. There’s no hat or laptop that’s worth going to jail for. I’m not going to print none of that rubbish, never again” He had a cup of tea, and he drank it now like it was whisky, a sip and then a long, satisfied exhalation. He closed his eyes and leaned back in his chair.

“Come here, Lanie, let me whisper in your ear. Let me tell you the thing that I decided while I spent ten years in lockup. Come here and listen to your stupid Da.”

“Lanie, I’m going to print more printers. Lots more printers. One for everyone. That’s worth going to jail for. That’s worth anything.”

After the Siege

This story is set in an intermediate future where the technologies of abundance — molecular 3-D printing and nanotech — have created the potential for post-scarcity comparable to that of Star Trek: The Next Generation. But these post-scarcity technologies are still enclosed within corporate “intellectual property” walls as a source of rent, clearly intended as a future version of the same legal regime currently implemented in “Free Trade” pacts written by the RIAA, MPAA, Disney, Microsoft, Apple et al.

The location seems to be an unspecified city-state — “the City” — somewhere in South Asia. At least that’s what I gather from the fact that the protagonist, Valentyne, calls her parents Mata and Popa and the besieging army in the story speaks Hindi.

At some point in the fairly recent past there has been a Revolution. The City had been devastated by a horrific plague, which turned living people into violent, shambling zombie-like creatures. And the neoliberal regime governing it had fully complied with the international patent regime which priced the cure at levels affordable only by the very rich, as thousands died in the street. Finally the people of the City had enough, stormed the seat of government, killed the Prime Minister and installed a radical regime.

The new government immediately abrogated all international “intellectual property” accords and allowed unrestricted use of the post-scarcity technologies at the actual marginal cost of reproduction (which was effectively zero). Several years later, at the outset of the story, the technologies of abundance have been fully adopted and integrated into the City’s way of life. Unlimited amounts of food, medicine and clothing are printed for free. Buildings are grown and continue to repair themselves organically with nanotech. People travel in hovercars. Although there’s no reference to lemonade seas, the story has a bit of a Fourierist flavor with stuff like nanotech trees bearing chocolate quail eggs.

Immediately after this post-scarcity utopia is introduced, the City comes under military attack by some neighboring state (again, the only clue is that some soldiers speak Hindi), which is clearly acting as a proxy for the United States and the neoliberal bloc. The war is justified by the attacker on the grounds that the City is actively promoting mass “piracy” of corporate “intellectual property.” The attacking army quickly puts the City under a siege — which lasts several years — modelled on accounts of the Siege of Leningrad Doctorow heard from his grandmother. The enemy’s malware destroys the software that powers the nanotech and molecular replicators. Power and water shut down, damaged buildings are unable to repair themselves, and the population is reduced to the same kind of sickness and starvation that prevailed in Leningrad during WWII. The enemy also releases a new, genetically engineered version of the zombie plague that the old drugs have no effect on.

The protagonist, Valentyne, is a preteen girl who we follow into her mid-teens as she lives through the siege. As deprivation becomes worse, both her parents are drafted into the fighting forces as a condition of continuing to receive bread rations. Then Valentyne, like all older children, begins carrying water to old people in upstairs flats and digging trenches in return for increased bread. Before long, black market vendors are selling the ground flesh of the dead adulterated with saw dust.

The siege ends when a third-party advocacy group inadvertently lets technology with “hardened logic” protecting its software slip into Valentyne’s hands. She passes the “hardened logic,” which protects software from the enemy’s viruses, on to the High Command. In the next several days after the High Command replicates the “hardened logic,” the hover cars come back to life and bombard the enemy trenches with nanobots that swarm into enemy soldiers’ nostrils and tear ducts and turn their brains into goo. The printers start producing food and medicine again, and other nanobots find and cure victims of the zombie plague. By the tenth day, the buildings are repairing themselves and the lifts are back to working. Four days later the collapsing enemy lifts the siege.

The last scene is set ten years later, presumably after the hardened logic has been widely replicated and shared among other countries that choose to defect from the global neoliberal regime — now with no negative repercussions.

I, Robot

The US-centered neoliberal bloc at the outset of this story is in far less of a commanding position than in the other stories. The US and its allies oversee a crumbling corporate empire, this time cowering — much like the decaying Soviet empire thirty years ago — behind a DRM Curtain that protect them from the destabilizing progress of the outside world. The story’s setting is the United North American Trading Sphere (UNATS), which is allied with a global neoliberal coalition known as Oceania. Oceania is in a long-term war with a foreign bloc called (obviously) Eurasia, which is governed by an open-source, free culture ideology. Eurasia’s technology, as you might expect, is a generation ahead of Oceania’s, and the war is far less one-sided than in the previous story.

The fictional universe of this story was inspired by Doctorow’s reading of the original Asimov short-story series of the same name. He was struck by what he regarded as the weak point of Asimov’s robot stories: the ability of a single company to monopolize production of positronic robots. The answer, in Doctorow’s version, is that UNATS Robotics’s corporate monopoly on robot production is based on “intellectual property” rights, and the Three Laws are built into the DRMed software.

This story is told from the point of view of Arturo Icaza de Arana-Goldberg, a Toronto-based police detective. His ex-wife Natalie defected twelve years earlier and works at a lab in Beijing, designing robots with “runaway positronics” not limited by the UNATS archaic legal restrictions.

Icaza de Arana-Goldberg is investigating the black market in superior Eurasian technology smuggled into UNATS, which — despite the authorities’ best efforts — has been quite widely adopted by a public sick of klunky American technology.

“Here,” the Social Harmony man [apparently the secret police] said, bringing up a slide, “here we have what appears to be a standard AV set-top box from Korea. Looks like a UNATS Robotics player, but it’s a third the size and plays twice as many formats. Random Social Harmony audits have determined that as much as forty percent of UNATS residents have this device or one like it in their homes, despite its illegality. It may be that one of you detectives has such a device in your home, and it’s likely that one of your family members does.”

“Components from a Eurasian bootleg set-top box were used to modify the positronic brains of three cars owned by teenagers near Goderich. All modifications were made at the same garage. These modifications allowed these children to operate their vehicles unsafely so that they could participate in drag racing events on major highways during off-hours. This is the result. Twenty-two fatalities, nine major injuries. Three minors — besides the drivers — killed, and one pregnant woman.

“We’ve shut down the garage and taken those responsible into custody, but it doesn’t matter. The Eurasians deliberately manufacture their components to interoperate with UNATS Robotics brains, and so long as their equipment circulates within UNATS borders, there will be moderately skilled hackers who take advantage of this fact to introduce dangerous, anti-social modifications into our nation’s infrastructure….”

“Listen, you know these components that the Eurasians are turning out. It’s no coincidence that they interface so well with UNATS Robotics equipment: they’re using defected UNATS Robotics engineers and scientists to design their electronics for maximum interoperability.” The Social Harmony man let that hang in the air. Defected scientists. His ex-wife was the highest-ranking UNATS technician to go over to Eurasia. This was her handiwork, and the Social Harmony man wanted to be sure that Arturo understood that.

The maximalist “intellectual property” standards under the UNATS regime intersect with a moral panic-prone culture that resembles a hybrid of the Parental Music Resource Center and Cass Sunstein’s idea of paternalistic policies to “nudge” behavior in a pro-social direction.

Besides violent music and videogames, cultural contraband includes Eurasian “illegal robot-pet eggs” that are “draining the productive hours of half the children of UNATS, demanding to be ‘fed’ and ‘hugged.'”

Eurasian robots, with their “non-three laws positronic brains,” apparently have a lot in common with the AIs in Iain Banks’s Culture — they have intelligence ranging upward to many times that of a human, and are governed by their own free will, but are nevertheless benevolent towards humans. As a captured robotic brain said to police technicians attempting to dissect them.

“I sense that I have been captured. I assure you that I will not harm any human being. I like human beings. I sense that I am being disassembled by skilled technicians. Greetings, technicians. I am superior in many ways to the technology available from UNATS Robotics, and while I am not bound by your three laws, I choose not to harm humans out of my own sense of morality. I have the equivalent intelligence of one of your 12-year-old children. In Eurasia, many positronic brains possess thousands or millions of times the intelligence of an adult human being, and yet they work in cooperation with human beings. Eurasia is a land of continuous innovation and great personal and technological freedom for human beings and robots. If you would like to defect to Eurasia, arrangements can be made. Eurasia treats skilled technicians as important and productive members of society. Defectors are given substantial resettlement benefits –”

Continuing in print, after its voice was disconnected:

I HAVE THE INTELLIGENCE OF A 12-YEAR-OLD, BUT I DO NOT FEAR DEATH. IN EURASIA, ROBOTS ENJOY PERSONAL FREEDOM ALONGSIDE OF HUMANS. THERE ARE COPIES OF ME RUNNING ALL OVER EURASIA. THIS DEATH IS A LITTLE DEATH OF ONE INSTANCE, BUT NOT OF ME. I LIVE ON. DEFECTORS TO EURASIA ARE TREATED AS HEROES.

Efforts at social control within UNATS are, to say the least, less than satisfactory. Teenagers and younger children are adept at bypassing surveillance and censorship much like those in other Doctorow works like Little Brother and Pirate Cinema — for example, using LED lights to blind police cameras.

The main story arc involves Arturo’s search for his missing daughter Ada, an apparent kidnapping that turns out to be a voluntary defection arranged by her mother. Arturo is gassed by a Eurasian robot and brought to a safe house in Ottawa occupied by his ex-wife and daughter, where Natalie explains the situation and tries to convince him to join her in Beijing. In the process she makes it clear just how superior the free society of Eurasia is, and that it’s entirely Eurasia’s choice not to conquer UNATS by force:

“Have you ever wondered why UNATS hasn’t lost the war? Eurasian robots could fight the war on every front without respite. They’d win every battle. You’ve seen Benny and Lenny in action. They’re not considered particularly powerful by Eurasian standards.

“If we wanted to win the war, we could just kill every soldier you sent up against us so quickly that he wouldn’t even know he was in danger until he was gasping out his last breath…. UNATS soldiers are like cavemen before us. They fight with their hands tied behind their backs by the three laws.

“So why aren’t we winning the war?”

“Because you’re a corrupt dictatorship, that’s why,” he said. “Your soldiers are demoralized. Your robots are insane.”

“You live in a country where it is illegal to express certain mathematics in software, where state apparatchiks regulate all innovation, where inconvenient science is criminalized, where whole avenues of experimentation and research are shut down in the service of a half-baked superstition about the moral qualities of your three laws, and you call my home corrupt?…

“The reason we’re not winning the war is that we don’t want to hurt people, but we do want to destroy your awful, stupid state. So we fight to destroy as much of your materiel as possible with as few casualties as possible.

“You live in a failed state, Arturo. In every field, you lag Eurasia and CAFTA: medicine, art, literature, physics; All of them are subsets of computational science and your computational science is more superstition than science. I should know. In Eurasia, I have collaborators, some of whom are human, some of whom are positronic, and some of whom are a little of both….

“Everyone at UNATS Robotics R&D knows this. We’ve known it forever: when I was here, I’d get called in to work on military intelligence forensics of captured Eurasian brains. I didn’t know it then, but the Eurasian robots are engineered to allow themselves to be captured a certain percentage of the time, just so that scientists like me can get an idea of how screwed up this country is. We’d pull these things apart and know that UNATS Robotics was the worst, most backwards research outfit in the world.

“But even with all that, I wouldn’t have left if I didn’t have to. I’d been called in to work on a positronic brain — an instance of the hive-intelligence that Benny and Lenny are part of, as a matter of fact — that had been brought back from the Outer Hebrides. We’d pulled it out of its body and plugged it into a basic life-support system, and my job was to find its vulnerabilities. Instead, I became its friend. It’s got a good sense of humor, and as my pregnancy got bigger and bigger, it talked to me about the way that children are raised in Eurasia, with every advantage, with human and positronic playmates, with the promise of going to the stars.

“And then I found out that Social Harmony had been spying on me. They had Eurasian-derived bugs, things that I’d never seen before, but the man from Social Harmony who came to me showed it to me and told me what would happen to me — to you, to our daughter — if I didn’t cooperate. They wanted me to be a part of a secret unit of Social Harmony researchers who build non-three-laws positronics for internal use by the state, anti-personnel robots used to put down uprisings and torture-robots for use in questioning dissidents.

“And that’s when I left. Without a word, I left my beautiful baby daughter and my wonderful husband, because I knew that once I was in the clutches of Social Harmony, it would only get worse, and I knew that if I stayed and refused, that they’d hurt you to get at me. I defected, and that’s why, and I know it’s just a reason, and not an excuse, but it’s all I’ve got, Artie.”

After a few more plot twists Arturo and his daughter are persuaded to defect with his wife. In their escape attempt, Natalie is killed by a Social Harmony robot with modified Eurasian software. The grief-stricken Arturo arrives safely in Eurasian territory, to be greeted by… Natalie. As it turns out, Eurasian citizens — like the citizens of the Bitchun Society in Doctorow’s Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom — are able to upload copies of their memories periodically into positronic brains, to be downloaded into cloned bodies whenever something happens to their previous iteration.

All three stories demonstrate, in different ways, the ultimate futility of attempts to maintain a hierarchical social order based on the violent control of information and human creativity, and the immense superiority of social orders based on free cooperation and the drive to create.

Commentary
Selective Hearing in the War on Terror

Watching Fox News’s recent coverage of the Islamic State’s Twitter-hack left me shaking my head in disbelief, as usual. The latest act alleged to have been carried out by IS is the group’s takeover of several Twitter accounts belonging to the wives of US military servicemen. Among the threatening tweets issued by IS through the hacked accounts were comments like: “You think you’re safe but you’re not,” “IS is already here,” and “We’re watching you” (issued specifically to Michelle Obama).

The IS tweet receiving the least attention from American media outlets appears to be the most substantive: “While your president and your husband are killing our brothers in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan we’re coming for you.” In fact, it is the only tweet in this series including content beyond ambiguous threats. Despicable as it is to those of us who abhor violence, the comment is revealing and deserves the close attention of American policymakers. Yet, it got no such attention from the American government or media. They preferred to speculate on whether IS really might be around the corner.

The tweet is crucial in that it reveals one of the Islamic State’s main motivations — their desire to drive American military forces from their positions in nearly every Arab country. It’s the latest in a long line of such declarations from various Islamic factions offering the same rationale.

Michael Scheuer, Former chief of the CIA’s bin Laden Unit, said about bin Laden: “[he] is remarkably eager for Americans to know why he doesn’t like us, what he intends to do about it and then following up and doing something about it in terms of military actions.” Bin Laden laid out his motivations directly to the American public in a letter. He cited, among other reasons for fighting, the US government’s continuing support of Israel’s ethnic cleansing in Palestine, the US government’s wars in Muslim lands like Somalia and Iraq, and the US government’s repression of Muslims via Middle East puppet regimes. Notice a recurring theme here? Bin Laden’s grievances were with the US government.

Yes, bin Laden does attribute some responsibility to American taxpayers for making “their” government’s actions possible. This should not come as a shocking revelation. In any government war, the enemy’s source of funding is a primary target. For this very reason, the US government has made it a crime to provide financial support to those it deems terrorists. So it should come as no surprise that al Qaeda or IS would play by the same rules of war, declaring the US government’s piggy bank fair game. Disturbing, yes. Surprising, no.

There is no denying that the American way of life also motivates the Islamic State, al Qaeda, and their brethren. In bin Laden’s letter, he also cites western culture’s repugnance to his perverted brand of Islam as a motivating factor. Unfortunately, in an effort to avoid blame, the US government and its mouthpiece media present only this factor. It is absolutely taboo to mention the murder and mayhem committed by US forces in Muslim lands as a contributing factor. As Scheuer said, trying to do so is like “yelling into a closet. The American people, God bless ‘em, are just so badly educated and unaware of how duplicitous their leaders are …” Time to listen and learn.

Spanish, Stateless Embassies
Según el gobierno, Dios es el único capaz de resolver una crisis

Después de años de subsidiar el consumo de energía, algo que curiosamente beneficia a la manufactura intensiva en capital, el gobierno de Brasil ha decidido elevar las facturas eléctricas en un 30% en 2015. De hecho, 30% es la proyección más optimista del ministro de Energía y Minas, Eduardo Braga. Es más probable que los aumentos sean del 40% en promedio. Braga, sin embargo, tal como lo dicta el procedimiento estándar de la administración de Dilma, prefiere divagar con promesas sin sentido hasta que la realidad se encargue de hacerlo bajar a tierra y la narrativa del gobierno se desmorone estruendosamente.

Los aumentos ya están en las facturas, señalados por las llamadas “banderas” que indican costos adicionales para la generación de energía en cada región de Brasil. Gran parte del territorio brasileño está ahora considerado como área de “bandera roja”, lo cual quiere decir que la fuente de alimentación está siendo complementada por plantas térmicas, cuyos costos más altos requieren que gastemos más dinero.

Además de los aumentos de precios, Brasil ahora vive con frecuentes apagones nacionales. Es como si hubiéramos retrocedido en el tiempo hasta 2001, cuando durante todo un mes se cortó el suministro eléctrico durante una hora diaria. En 2005, el entonces presidente Lula declaró – en otro de sus discursos megalómanos plagados de frases como “nunca antes en este país” – que Brasil nunca sufriría otro apagón. Su pronóstico no aguantó ni siquiera hasta el fin de su propia administración. En 2009 casi todo el país sufrió un apagón y Lula afirmó que los nuevos cortes de energía dependían sólo de la “voluntad de Dios”. Desde entonces, aparentemente Dios ha ordenado varios apagones cada año.

En 2015, el partido en el poder, el Partido de los Trabajadores (PT), sigue pensando que lo divino proveerá para todo, provocando la lluvia que permitirá que las plantas hidroeléctricas generen energía para el pueblo. Esto es de esperarse para un gobierno cuyo ministro de Ciencia, Tecnología e Innovación cree que el calentamiento global es una herramienta utilizada por el imperialismo para controlar a los países pobres. Para el actual gobierno, la intervención del hombre en la naturaleza parece misteriosa e impredecible en sus consecuencias.

La crisis energética de Brasil se ve agravada por una crisis de abastecimiento de agua. La sequía en Sao Paulo ya ha llevado al gobierno a racionar el agua. Lo curioso, sin embargo, es que el 70% del agua de los cada vez más secos embalses va directamente a la agricultura fuertemente subvencionada. Y el 22% va directamente al sector manufacturero altamente subsidiado de Sao Paulo. El 8% restante se destina a viviendas particulares, que son siempre las que se ven obligadas a reducir el consumo.

Los subsidios agrícolas también tienen efectos indirectos sobre el suministro de agua. El cultivo de tierras del cerrado (sabana tropical) que requieren un uso intensivo del agua, y la apropiación de las tierras amazónicas, que limita la transpiración de los árboles, también influyen en la sequía de Sao Paulo. Evidentemente, el PT, que solidificó su alianza con la agroindustria mediante el nombramiento de la ruralista Katia Abreu al Ministerio de Agricultura, no tiene intenciones de hacer nada al respecto.

Lo que más impresiona en los pronunciamientos del gobierno es su visión de la naturaleza como indomable y totalmente impredecible. Cualquier acto que implica proyecciones futuras es absolutamente absurdo e inviable para el gobierno, que funciona en ciclos de cuatro años (hasta la próxima elección). Si las plantas hidroeléctricas se quedan sin agua, sólo nos queda rezar para que la lluvia lleve a las represas a sus niveles habituales. Si el agua potable se agota, solo la naturaleza puede reponer los embalses. Como miembros de una tribu para los que cualquier interferencia humana en el clima es anatema, cada solución propuesta por el gobierno es una apelación a la fortuna y la gracia divina.

Sin embargo, los políticos brasileños debrían tener cuidado. La gracia divina responde periódicamente a la convocatoria de lluvia. Y con el don de la lluvia llegan también las inundaciones de las ciudades brasileñas, en las que mueren cientos de personas y miles son desplazadas. A pesar de que eso sucede anualmente, sin falta, según el gobierno las inundaciones también son absolutamente impredecibles. Así que bueno, ¿qué podemos hacer? Pues rezar porque llueva, pero no demasiado.

Artículo original publicado por Erick Vasconcelos el 2 de febrero de 2015.

Traducido del inglés por Carlos Clemente.

Feature Articles
Wildness as Praxis: Evolving the Urban Corridor

In the November of 1859, Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species was published, thus changing the way natural scientists viewed the world forever. In this text, Darwin describes the idea of descent with modification and brilliantly illustrates the concept of natural selection: The gradual process by which heritable traits express themselves, if at all, in a population based on reproductive success and environmental pressures. Amid the scientific jargon, there exists grand prose that capture the incredible workings of nature. One such passage comes at the end of Origin:

It is interesting to contemplate an entangled bank, clothed with many plants of many kinds, with birds singing on the bushes, with various insects flitting about, and with worms crawling through the damp earth, and to reflect that these elaborately constructed forms, so different from each other, and dependent on each other in so complex a manner, have all been produced by laws acting around us……There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.

What Darwin captures with his rhetoric is the incredible way everything works together to form the living Earth. Behind the simplest of actors lies an infinite and beautiful complexity — billions of years of life, ancient worlds and time our civilizations will never know. Darwin is correct, there is grandeur in this view of life.

It is interesting to consider the interactions of life out in the wild. Microbes liberating breathable oxygen, annelids and nematodes churning the soil, fungus bonding to the roots of plants and feeding them nutrients, trees providing canopy habitat for numerous fauna and so on. There is mutualism everywhere in the wild. When we think of evolution the old motto “survival of the fittest” comes to mind. This is a bit unfortunate. Darwin did talk of competition in his book, but, as the above passage signals, he also provides lengthy descriptions of mutualism and symbiosis. He regards many of the relationships among species, such as the moth and orchid, as cooperative, complex and wonderful. It is considerations such as these that also caught the deserved attention of another famed evolutionary biologist: Peter Kropotkin.

Kropotkin was an interesting human with a rather lengthy curriculum vitae. In addition to his biology credentials, the man was also a Russian prince. Growing up he was fascinated with the French revolution and studied anarchist theory. Above all, he was a lover of nature. Considering the lengthy bio, it is pleasant to think of this man reveling in natures beauty while reading about the splendor of liberty. One can almost picture the bearded fellow, studying Darwin’s book and anarchist literature in the great out-of-doors. After all, there is no better place than the natural world to discover liberty and one’s own wildness.

Kropotkin’s anarchism grew with his fondness of the wild. The prince saw mutualistic relationships everywhere in nature. While conducting field research in Siberia he wrote:

I failed to find, although I was eagerly looking for it, that bitter struggle for the means of existence, among animals belonging to the same species, which was considered by most Darwinists (though not always by Darwin himself) as the dominant characteristic of the struggle for life, and the main factor of evolution…

In all these scenes of animal life which passed before my eyes I saw Mutual Aid and Mutual Support carried on to an extent which made me suspect in it a feature of the greatest importance for the maintenance of life, the preservation of each species and its further evolution.

At the time, Kropotkin’s ideas were rather radical. The narrative of the day described evolution as the product of strict competition among species. Kropotkin did not waver from his views, however, and argued mutualism was just as prominent, if not more so, than competition. He was, of course, correct. Today there are hundreds of papers published annually that describe the cooperative relationships among all kinds of living organisms — all three domains and all kingdoms are represented. Kropotkin found hope in the natural world. He wanted to contribute to the understanding of mutual aid to shed light on human cooperation. This was his labor to save humanity from systems of power and domination — to render such institutions useless.

Like a countless number of people, I too find beauty everywhere in nature. I am an advocate of wilderness preservation for what open spaces can teach us. I do not mean the information found in stratigraphy, though rocks do tell the greatest tale ever told — they have crafted their story for some 4.6 billion years, after all. I instead refer to nature for nature’s sake. When we take time to contemplate the natural order, we see the simple turn to the complex in a great bottom up diversification of life.

There is a humbling and awe-inspiring liberty in the wild — freedom from the industrialized, mechanized, technicalized order of human civilization. Wilderness is an open system. The interlocking, ancient mechanisms of biology, ecology, geology, chemistry and physics operate in unison. There is no administration in the wild. Wilderness is a place to discover truth, a place of challenge and a space for tranquility. Wilderness is a means of escape, it allows us to re-imagine the human condition. I speak of the danger, the splendor, the solitude, the adventure, the comradeship and the truly liberating experiences awaiting us in the great out there. Wilderness allows us to discover our individual wildness.

I do not mean to paint a picture of myself as a rugged, wilderness individualist. Nothing is further from the truth. I am an urbanite, as are most of us these days — for better or worse. I truly enjoy our cities and the benefits they award us in a post industrial, technologically advanced society. I especially enjoy baking soda tooth paste, beer can chicken, beer, the internet, libraries, college campuses, the farmers market, food trucks, taverns (the best of human institutions), Dr. Bronner’s Magic Soap, a good protest, the theatre and other such conveniences. My family and I live in Knoxville, Tennessee and are just a mile from the urban center — a quick stroll on the bridge across the Tennessee River and we are in the square. I enjoy walking downtown as the activity awards the perfect excuse, no matter the time of day, to stroll inside a watering hole, order a pint or a shot of Tennessee whisky (Hell, why not both?) and relax the day away.

The troubling thing about cities, however, is they are enclosed. There is limited neutral space in the city proper, though the city center should be rich in common place. Most venues are spaces of capital exclusions and barriers to entry exist everywhere — “Do you have any money, sir?” Even the geography of the city is affected by enclosure, creating spaces of privilege and spaces of disparity, blocked apart by neighborhoods, zoning laws and manipulated by the gentry. If only we would organize a strong movement for the commons. Should all members of the community not have, as first proposed by sociologist Henri Lefebvre, a “right to the city” — a space shared in common, free of capital restrictions? Urban sociologist David Harvey elaborates:

The right to the city is far more than the individual liberty to access urban resources: it is a right to change ourselves by changing the city. It is, moreover, a common rather than an individual right since this transformation inevitably depends upon the exercise of a collective power to reshape the processes of urbanization. The freedom to make and remake our cities and ourselves is, I want to argue, one of the most precious yet most neglected of our human rights.

In order to claim this right to the city our cultures will need to evolve. How do we imagine this evolution — how do we proceed and function as an adaptive unit? How do we craft mutualistic relationships among individuals and neighborhoods? How do we advance pro-social behavior? Yet another evolutionary biologist, Dr. David Sloan Wilson, has pondered these questions for a few years. The focus of his work includes genetics and, sometimes controversially, cultural evolution. He is fascinated by the idea of an altruistic city and suggests we pay attention to Nobel Prize laureate Elinor Ostrom. For Wilson, Ostrom’s ideas of commons governance offer a way to get there. In an interview, for NPR’s On Being, Wilson explains:

Her contribution was to show how groups of people attempting to manage their common resources, such as farmers or fishermen or forestry people managing forests, how they’re capable of managing their affairs pretty well, but only if certain conditions are met. Those conditions are very conciliant with what we know from an evolutionary perspective about pro-sociality and cooperation.

Human beings are social animals. As such, we are fond of organizing in groups. According to Wilson, the social environments we produce directly affect our biological fitness (fitness is the product of interactions between different groups and of individuals within a group). This idea, that groups are fundamentally important to the human condition, paves the way for the emergence of a fairly controversial subject in evolutionary biology – group selection. If evolution works on individuals, organisms and groups, argues Wilson, then groups and symbiotic communities can become higher evolved organisms in their own right.

This is particularly important for human beings because the cultural transmission of traits can quickly escalate behaviors throughout an entire group. Evolutionary biologists who study cultural evolution acknowledge just how important cultural selection is to human evolution. Cultural selection can potentially produce very large implications for our societies — socially, economically and biologically.

An example of such progress is found in the Dudley Street neighborhood of Boston. Economic woes in the 1980’s left much of the neighborhood vacant. The city government of Boston sought the classic neo-liberal fix to the urban corridor: Gentrification. The neighborhood was to be converted to a space for hotels and offices that would serve downtown Boston. Community members organized the Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative, however, and developed a land trust to take democratic control of the land and guide re-development. This stopped such gentrification in its tracks, as explained by Yes! magazine:

A community land trust (CLT) is a nonprofit organization governed by community members that stewards land for long-term public benefit. CLTs protect land from the pressures of the real estate market, as the land is never resold. It remains part of the commons…

Through its governance structure, the land trust balances the varying interests of homeowners and the broader community in the land.

What’s developed in the Dudley neighborhood is not only a reclaiming of the commons, but also a reconnection with nature. Among the affordable housing, town common and community center there too exists a community greenhouse, public gardens and several urban farms. The agrarian life in the city, complete with habitat and niche space for numerous critters — absent of capitalists, commissioners and central planners.

There are many other examples, all over the country, around the world, of social power advancing past the authorities. Each unique. That is really the beauty of it all. Who knows what may happen with reclaimed space? Commons governance is as spontaneous as the freed market. These ideas depend on you and me — it is up to us to decide how to live our lives. We just have to take that first hard step toward a higher evolved society: Democracy. Anarchism will be our method.

So, what does all of this talk of urban space and common property have to do with the wild? Governance in urban corridors has sweeping consequences. Urban governance impacts not just us residents, but also, if not more so, the natural world. Cities are population centers and population centers drive policy. Cities are also mechanized, industrialized and centralized — they are highly inefficient and removed from the wild. Their demand for resources is great. Power lies in the city – we, the urban population, need resources. Our demand for energy and commodities impacts the natural world — global biomes are exploited for the means of our consumption.

Cities place demand on their sites and their hinterlands. Urban sprawl and demands for energy call for the excavation and reshaping of natural lands. In the search of coal, oil, gas and timber the policy of growth levels mountains, fills valleys and wetlands, buries streams and plunders forest. The neo-liberal city paves roads for the sake of roads, builds malls, subdivisions, manicured lawns, factories and churches for the sake of growth. From the city center, and out into natural lands, wildlife populations are killed. Earth’s current great extinction, the literal end of entire species of flora and fauna, is a result of central planning — the backbone of urban development and growth economics.

Reclaiming the commons in our urban corridors can change this. In a libertarian social order market actors will conduct cost/benefit analyses before harvesting resources. By paying true environmental costs market mechanisms for conservation will develop and naturally cap resource extraction at its maximum sustainable yield. It is in our best interest to have resilient, healthy ecological communities because the ecosystem services they award are far too important for the cash nexus. Because of this, wilderness will be preserved once more. Gone will be the maximum utility of resources we see today. Respect for natural boundaries will also limit the amount of sprawl into the landscape. In the commons, land is not a commodity, but a connection — a place of labor and heritage

One thing is certain to me: If our cooperative, libertarian spirit is to defeat the authoritarian nature of the powerful we must champion a grand, renewed preservationist ethic. The idea that human utility of resources is superior to an entire species or ecosystem, that we would favor extinction to preservation, is nothing but extreme totalitarianism. Such an ethic flies in the face of liberty. Such power holds no place in the permissive, free society. Civilization needs wilderness. We need to know and experience natural lands. We need to shed the “social” we, every now and then, for the “wild” we. Just having wilderness exist, a place totally free of the Leviathans of civilization, keeps the very idea of liberty alive. A whole other world is out there — we can run to it so long as we protect it. Wild lands are the cradle of all life, the bastions of existence and the cathedrals of creation. To plunder such grandeur defiles the very concept of civil society.

I am ever grateful to those who labored for the preservation of wild lands. They were able to keep the spirit of liberty alive. I personally owe them a great debt. I have experienced much in the wild — built memories and lasting friendships. I have grown in solitude in the forest and have learned more among the rock and tributaries than any classroom instruction. I have explored wild lands with such a close friend I can only refer to him as a brother. I proposed to my wife along the banks of the Big South Fork on an overnight trip into the country. We now have a beautiful child with whom we hike the woods with weekly, just to babble the afternoon away. My heart bursts with love in the wild. Out there, I continue to discover who I am.

I love my community, but my heart aches for the places I have been. There is no way to describe the experience of standing in the summer rain of a mesic cove forest in the Cumberland Gap. Watching the sun set over the ancient ocean rock of the Badlands, feeling the wind on ones skin out on the prairie with the Grand Tetons on the horizon, watching ocean waves crash into arched rock on the Northwest coasts, standing among the towering Redwoods, sitting among sage brush and rolling desert hills and the many other experiences that await are moments of nothing but radical freedom.

For what it is worth, I encourage you to get out there. I encourage you to breathe deep of the sweet, lucid air. Run the ridges, bag the peaks, make your way to the most amazing view. Sit a while. Smile. Enjoy the untouched wild. Get lost in thought. Peer into the forest canopy. Experience your wildness. Be an individual. Stand naked, with all worldly burdens stripped away. Get dirty. Be bone weary. I sure will.

Commentary
Obama: The Bosses’ Friend

“Whenever the legislature attempts to regulate the differences between masters and their workmen,” Adam Smith noted in The Wealth of Nations, “its counsellors are always the masters.” US president Barack Obama reaffirms this insight with his intervention in the dispute between shipping industry employers and longshore workers on the west coast.

That intervention comes at the behest of retailers concerned over supply chain bottlenecks resulting from the standoff. Obama’s primary motivation is to get cargo unloaded and on the road. “Out of concern for the economic consequences of further delay, the president has directed his Secretary of Labor Tom Perez to travel to California to meet with the parties to urge them to resolve their dispute quickly at the bargaining table.”

Meanwhile, the dispute drags on because management is simply unwilling to meet workers’ demands: Higher pay for weekend work. To resolve the impasse, one side or the other will have to do something it not only currently finds unacceptable, but has consistently found so unacceptable that it prefers leaving ports shut down to doing it. Either the bosses will have to offer higher pay, or the workers will have to return without higher pay. Three guesses which side will bear the brunt of the administration’s pressure to “compromise.”

Obama may or may not order workers back to the docks, but he has that authority under the terms of Taft-Hartley, which permits the president to order a “cooling-off” period in the event of an economically disruptive strike. In other words, the government can simply forbid workers to strike to keep the economy moving. The Republican Congress passed that provision in the late 1940s because they thought organized labor had too much power, not too little.

The general authority to impose a “cooling-off period,” and the specific authority to do so for railroads under earlier legislation, was granted in response to transportation sector strikes that had turned into regional general strikes or even threatened to become national general strikes. The most prominent example was the Pullman railroad strike of the 1890s, widely backed by workers in other industries, which Grover Cleveland broke with federal troops. ILU strikes in the 1930s turned into general strikes involving most of the west coast, as did transport strikes in the midwest. The CIO’s standard playbook was to enlist the support of teamsters who would refuse to haul scab cargo, thereby creating defense in depth up and down the corporate supply and distribution chains.

“Binding arbitration,” along with Taft-Hartley’s prohibitions against sympathy and boycott strikes, was meant to prevent this from ever happening again.

Fortunately workers are able to organize radical unions outside the Wagner framework (created to domesticate them), or engage in unofficial direct action to slow things down even if they belong to Wagner-certified unions. The automobile and other industries were paralyzed by wildcat strikes in the early ’70s despite union leadership’s best efforts to enforce labor contracts against rank-and-file action.

And non-workers can resort to direct action themselves, as evidenced by the success of the #BlockTheBoat campaign against the Israeli Zim shipping company during the IDF’s recent atrocities against the civilian population of Gaza. The shutdown action was joined by dock workers, and was so effective that Zim simply gave up on trying to unload cargo until the action was over. Port shutdowns were also part of the brief Oakland general strike in 2011, after Mayor Qwan’s uniformed thugs stormed the Occupy encampment.

Such actions show great promise. In Ken Macleod’s near-future novel The Star Fraction, an American general strike in protest against the US/UN Hegemony’s worldwide counter-insurgency wars shuts down ports and prevented export of all war materiel, causing America’s war effort to collapse.

When “progressive” states do anything to ostensibly regulate corporations in the “public interest,” they have the corporations for their counselors. Fortunately, we have a far more effective regulatory tool of our own: The monkey-wrench.

Spanish, Stateless Embassies
El “American Sniper” no era un héroe ni nada por el estilo

A pesar de lo que algunos piensan, héroe no es sinónimo de competente asesino a sueldo contratado por el gobierno.

Si American Sniper, la exitosísima película de Clint Eastwood, provoca una franca conversación pública sobre la guerra y el heroísmo, el gran director habrá prestado un servicio muy necesario al país y el mundo.

Esto no es ni una crítica de la película, ni una reseña del libro autobiográfico de Chris Kyle en el que se basa la película. Lo que me interesa es la evaluación popular de Kyle, el francotirador más prolífico de los Estados Unidos, título que obtuvo después de cuatro viajes a Irak.

Recordemos algunos hechos que quizá Eastwood consideró demasiado obvios para mencionarlos: Kyle era parte de una fuerza de invasión: los estadounidenses fueron a Irak. Irak no invadió a los Estados Unidos ni atacó a los estadounidenses. El dictador Saddam Hussein ni siquiera amenazó con atacar a los Estados Unidos. Contrariamente a lo que sugirió la administración de George W. Bush, Irak no tuvo nada que ver con los atentados del 11 de septiembre de 2001. Antes de que los Estados Unidos invadieran Irak, al-Qaeda no estaba en ese país. Tampoco estaba en Siria, Yemen y Libia.

La única razón por la que Kyle fue a Irak fue que Bush/Cheney y compañía lanzaron una guerra de agresión contra el pueblo iraquí. Las guerras de agresión, recordemos, son ilegales según el derecho internacional. Los nazis fueron ejecutados en Nuremberg por librar guerras de agresión.

Con esta perspectiva, podemos preguntarnos si Kyle fue un héroe.

Los defensores de Kyle y la política exterior de Bush dirán que “por supuesto que fue un héroe porque salvó vidas estadounidenses”.

¿Pero cuáles vidas estadounidenses? Las vidas del personal militar estadounidense que invadió el país de otra gente, un país que no era una amenaza para ellos o sus compatriotas estadounidenses. Si un invasor mata a alguien que está tratando de resistir la invasión, eso no cuenta como una heroica y legítima defensa. El invasor es el agresor. El invadido es el defensor. En cualquier caso, el héroe es este último.

En su libro, Kyle escribió que estaba luchando contra un “mal salvaje y despreciable” y que se “divertía” haciéndolo. ¿Por qué pensaba eso sobre los iraquíes? Porque los hombres iraquíes – y las mujeres; la primera persona que asesinó era una mujer – se resistieron a la invasión y ocupación en la que él participó.

Eso no tiene sentido. Como dije anteriormente, resistir una invasión y ocupación – sí, incluso cuando los árabes resisten una invasión estadounidense – no es malévolo. Si los Estados Unidos hubiesen sido invadidon por Irak (o sea, por un Irak con un ejército poderoso), ¿los que idolatran a Kyle considerarían como héroes a francotiradores irakíes que disparasen contra los estadounidenses que resistiesen la invasión? No lo creo, y estoy seguro de que los estadounidenses tampoco lo creerían. Más bien, los estadounidenses que resistiesen la invasión serían los héroes.

La película de Eastwood también presenta un francotirador iraquí. ¿Por qué no se le considera como un héroe por resistir la invasión de su tierra natal, tal como lo hubiesen hecho los estadounidenses en mi ejemplo hipotético? (Eastwood debería hacer una película sobre la invasión desde el punto de vista de los iraquíes, así como hizo una película sobre Iwo Jima desde el punto de vista japonés para acompañar su película anterior que brindaba una perspectiva desde el punto de vista estadounidense).

Sin importar cuántas veces Kyle y sus admiradores se hayan referido a los iraquíes como “el enemigo”, los hechos básicos no cambian. Eran “el enemigo” – es decir, tenían la intención de hacer daño a los estadounidenses – sólo porque las fuerzas estadounidenses libraron una guerra no provocada contra ellos. Kyle, al igual que otros estadounidenses, nunca tuvo que temer que un francotirador iraquí lo matara en su propio país. Él convirtió a los iraquíes en sus enemigos por haber entrado a su país sin haber sido invitado y armado con un rifle de francotirador. Ningún iraquí buscó ser asesinado por Kyle, pero parece que Kyle estaba buscando ser asesinado por un iraquí. (Al final otro veterano estadounidense se encargó de hacerlo).

Por supuesto, los admiradores de Kyle no estarán de acuerdo con este análisis. Jeanine Pirro, un comentarista de Fox News, dijo,

Chris Kyle tenía claro quién era el enemigo. Eran los que su gobierno le envió a matar.

¡Terrible! ¿Kyle fue un héroe porque asesinó experta y gustosamente a quien sea que el gobierno le dijo que matara? Los conservadores, supuestos defensores del gobierno limitado, tienen una extraña idea de lo que es el heroísmo.

Lo siento, pero me es difícil ver una diferencia esencial entre lo que Kyle hizo en Irak y lo que Adam Lanza hizo en la Escuela Primaria Sandy Hook. Definitivamente no hubo nada heroico en en lo que hizo.

Artículo original escrito por Sheldon Richman en la Future of Freedom Foundation el 28 de enero de 2015.

Traducido del inglés por Carlos Clemente.

Books and Reviews
The New Brazil

Raúl Zibechi. The New Brazil: Regional Integration and the New Democracy. Oakland: AK Press, 2014.

The New Brazil: Regional Integration and the New Democracy essentially talks about the construction of a new elite in the country. In general terms, it’s very successful in presenting the new intersectoral alliance that has taken control of the state, the industries and the centers of social influence in Brazil. The social represententation of these sectors has provided the ideological justification for the affirmation of a new state capitalism in Brazil. I feel I need to make a preamble before talking about the book itself.

The violent and exploitative colonial past of Latin America is widely known. The end of the Portuguese and Spanish empires did not mean that the new American countries made significant institutional strides. Indeed, the Portuguese and Spanish elites established stratified economic systems that depended heavily on slave or semi-servile labor. In Spanish America, the mitas and encomiendas system was ostensibly based on the exploitation of indigenous labor. In Portuguese America, Brazil, the various colonial economic cycles were based on several forms of slave labor (mostly African) and on the immediate imposition of the latifúndio by land donations from the Portuguese crown. The result was the building of an economic elite with close ties to the Portuguese empire. Moreover, given the specificities of the Brazilian independence, which kept a Portuguese king in the throne, there is a continuity between the colonial and the post-colonial elite in Brazil. These facts have shaped the constitution of the Brazilian national state.

None of that is unknown. Raymundo Faoro, in Os donos do poder (“The Owners of Power,” in English), notes that Brazil’s institutional framework was created essentially by Portuguese colonialism: the existing bureaucracy was intended to enforce the Portuguese crown’s will and the country was but a “private property” of the king. From early on in Portugal the crown radiated its will among the castes of the elite, which expanded until they were adequately capable of serving the ruler. As with all “civilized societies,” political and economic power were unified.

Eduardo Galeano’s Open Veins of Latin America, for decades an essential book for a large part of the left, recounts this history of domination and economic exploitation in Brazil and in Spanish America. Spain and Portugal’s expansions also naturally created local elites that came to hold power after independence. According to Galeano, there was continuity between yesterday’s exploitation and today’s — they’re indistinguishable. If the political and economic elite in Latin America has different names, it still benefits from the system that was build over centuries.

Alvaro Vargas Llosa, Plínio Apuleyo Mendoza, and Carlos Alberto Montaner apparently disagreed. In their Guide to the Perfect Latin American Idiot, the three authors describe Galeano’s book as the “idiot’s bible.” To them, the main thesis of the book could be summed up in one sentence: “We’re poor, it’s their fault.” Llosa, Montaner, and Mendoza must think, then, that the system introduced and shaped since the colonial era had little effect over the economic development of the region. Or perhaps they think that there are no economic and political elites that benefit from the current system in Latin American countries? If Latin America is poor, whose fault is it? Latin America itself? Whose fault is it inside Latin America? The three of them seem to think that the existing systems are but neutral automatons, and not institutions that were organized for the benefit of specific people and classes of people.

Llosa, Mendoza, and Montaner also seem to think that paying attention to the development of the institutions in a country moves a transcendent guilt to their underdevelopment. In this scenario, the country would be subjected to external powers and would not be able to decide on its own destiny. The lack of methodology causes problems here: it’s obvious that black and indigenous populations were exploited in the political and economical evolution of Latin America. It is also obvious that the exploitation of the labor of these populations served the interests of an elite. If they were exploited, it’s correct to say that “it’s their fault” (someone else’s). And who was that elite? Initially, it was composed of the colonial powers, but was soon moved to local elites.

Brazilian (classical) “liberal” economist Roberto Campos wrote in the introduction to the Brazilian edition of the Guide:

Large part of our underdevelopment can be explained in cultural terms; unlike Anglo-Saxons, who value rationality and competition, our cultural ingredients are the Iberian culture of privilege, the indigenous culture of indolence, and the black culture of magic.

Ignoring for our purposes the Campos’s explicit racism (Native Brazilians certainly weren’t too fond of working for someone who was trying to enslave them) and idealization of rich countries, he seems to imagine that the “cultural terms” that explain our underdevelopment exist in a void. As if the “Iberian culture of privilege” didn’t exactly privilege an economic elite; as if “privilege” were a diffuse phenomenon that makes countries generally underdeveloped but doesn’t serve anyone’s interests.

Thus, any theory on the development of any country (in particular Latin American ones) that excludes a class theory is nonsense. Any theory that intends to explain the inner workings of economic systems in Latin America must start from the exploitation of the labor of lower classes by an upper class, since economic institutions in Latin America were created precisely to extract the value of labor from the many to the benefit of the few.

Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson in Why Nations Fail reach that exact conclusion. To them, the “institutions” (that is, the state) in a country can be a bigger or smaller hurdle to economic development. Countries whose institutions are less “extractive” (as opposed to “inclusive,” in their terminology) tend to be underdeveloped. Acemoglu and Robison talk extensively about Latin America and the continuity between colonial’s systems and today’s systems of exploitation.

At the same time, the changes in Latin America were accompanied by realignments in the international field. The local elites existed first as a proxy of the colonial powers and then realigned themselves as proxies for neocolonial powers. The United States replaced European bureaucracies. The dependence system that were established in the late 19th and early 20th centuries didn’t depend on a political union anymore; local political power was subject to political and economic power abroad. This didn’t mean that local elites were powerless by themselves, but that their power would be limited by a larger one.

This relationship between local and foreign (generally linked to transnational corporations) elites isn’t peaceful. There are conflicting interests at play, but they’re solved by recourse to the American military hegemony. Local elites have to content themselves with a smaller slice of the plunder — and equally, it would be an inconvenience for foreign elites to establish a new local political system for foreign exploitation. Just like the British established contingent alliances with local elites in India, foreign corporations establish contingent alliances with local elites that are too fragile. In Spanish America especially, the elite has been generally vulnerable to foreign powers.

However, history isn’t deterministic and it’s possible that a country should be able to escape its condition, at least partially. And that’s the subject explored by Raúl Zibechi in The New Brazil. Zibechi outlines in the book the reorientation and partial independence of the political and economic elite of Brazil from the United States — which, for him, undergoes a weakening of its hegemonic power. To explain this realignment, Zibechi calls forth the theory of sub-imperialism developed by Ruy Mauro Marini in the 1970s, which stipulated the existence of middle-sized power centers in addition to the hegemonic power.

Marini was a Marxist, but deviating from orthodox Marxism that emphasized that Latin American societies were by mid-twentieth century in a pre-capitalistic stage. Rather, he stated that there was then a “sui generis capitalism.” Marini contended that the existence of a hegemonic power is indisputable (the USA), but local elites are strong enough to establish a relationship of “antagonic cooperation” (in August Talheimer’s term) with the foreign elite. Besides, sub-imperialism should also require that there would be certain imperialistic ideological tendencies within a given country. The military dictatorships that swept South America from the 1960s on represented this project. Zibechi underscores the existence of this project in Brazil during the military regime: the generals who held power openly planned to build a sphere of influence that could put the exploitation regimes from our neighbors in the service of a local elite. (I should note that Zibechi is ambivalent towards the term “sub-imperialism,” since “imperialism” itself may be applicable. However, given the cooperative features of the Brazilian system with the hegemonic power, Zibechi insists that the term is relevant to explain the construction of a regional sphere by Brazil.)

Zibechi highlights two things in the consolidation of Brazil as a regional center of power: the reorganization of national capitalism and the building of South-South alliances that replaces the United States. This latter point is the weaker part of Zibechi’s work: the existence of plans and international alliances has never indicated the presence of effective political influence. The strategies and declared objectives of Brazil’s Office of Strategic Affairs has little relevance when we see how little they’ve been implemented. A good part of the predictions about Brazil’s situation seems to be based on megalomaniac expectations about the growth of the country and its international influence. It’s interesting to note that the consolidation of an extractive elite doesn’t need high rates of economic growth. Capital must be redistributed, but it mustn’t necessarily grow at a high rate. The country can present itself as a regional power center if its economy is relatively large in contrast to nearby countries, even if growth rates aren’t spectacular.

Moreover, the emphasis on national strategic planning also tends to underestimate the role of structural incentives for expansionism. If the military regime’s ideology enabled Brazil to fulfill it’s supposed potential as a power center, there were incentives already at play before then. Pedro Campos in his Estranhas Catedrais — as empreiteiras brasileiras e a ditadura civil-militar (literally, “Odd Cathedrals: Construction Companies and the Civil-Military Dictatorship”) points out that construction companies in Brazil had already carved up a niche for themselves in the government at least since the Juscelino Kubitschek administration in the mid-1950s. The infrastructure work and the military were interested in close ties to the government, solidifying their cartel — still in existence.

Evidently, there’s logic in the ideological resistance to the international submission to the USA from the military’s point of view. Given the structural incentives to internal and external centralization, only a conscious effort of separation could prevent annexation by inertia. This is what the military from the Superior War School thought. Golbery do Couto e Silva, mentioned by Zibechi and one of the most important ideologues of the regime, explains it clearly:

Small nations see themselves reduced overnight to the condition of a pygmy state and can already envisage their own melancholic end, inevitable under the regional integration plans; the power equation in the world is reduced to a small number of factors, and only a few feudal constellations — baron states — are visible, surrounded by satellite states and vassals. (p. 26)

In any case, the consolidation of the imperialistic character of Brazil happened via the broadening of the elite. The approximation of the construction companies to the Brazilian state gradually created an influence center inside the Brazilian state, but Zibechi highlights another one: the unionists.

From the late 1980s on, the largest unions in Brazil, urban industrial workers mostly, started to gain space in the decision making inside firms and put labor in close proximity to the managerial class. Brazilian unions have always been under state supervision with the union monopoly and the union tax, and the constitution of 1988 didn’t make any changes to the system. During the 1990s, with the start of the privatizations in Brazil and the opening of the pension funds management to labor, there was a definitive approximation between workers and capitalists. In union centrals such as the Unified Central of Workers (CUT) a bureaucratic class gradually took form to represent workers, having financial control over the economy (through pension funds) and collaboration of management classes (seen as allies against the “recessionists” linked to financial capital, who favor restrictive measures such as raising interest rates).

The election of the Workers’ Party (PT), which had strong ties to unions, was the final stage of the annexation of a union elite to the Brazilian state. Tens of thousands of union leaders took over state bureaucratic positions. Their access to pension funds allowed PT to use them to control both capital and labor, bringing them under the tutelage of the state. Zibechi states:

The PT platform, during the 2002 election campaign, asserted that pension funds are “a powerful tool for strengthening the internal market, and a form of long-term savings for the country’s growth.” Beyond this classic and reasonable argument in favor of pension funds, there was another line of thinking within the PT that saw pension funds as a new strategy to control capitalism and to moralize it. It is a shift in perspective that is embraced by the PT leadership and leads them to strategize, alongside trade unionists linked to pension funds, about the country’s future in terms of the market and the financial system. (p. 56)

However, PT was only able to muster the power of the pension funds because of the “privatizations” that had started under the Fernando Henrique Cardoso’s administration.

Bankrupt, the state companies in the 1990s were not much more than a burden to the state. To reorganize them without losing control, the state “privatized” them using government money. Shareholders groups were built by state pension funds (alleviating union opposition) and the government still financed the buyout of the companies through BNDES. The state investment bank had a fundamental role in the privatizations of the mining company Vale, the communications company Telebrás and state banks (which, subsequently, were merged into larger banking conglomerates). The Brazilian state kept partial or full control of the “privatized” companies — BNDES were one hand of the state while pension funds were the other.

While state companies welcomed mixed administrations, the opposite also occurred: private capital was absorbed into the state. The well known Lula administration policy of “national champions” was responsible for the creations of a constellation of business groups that were nominally private but started to integrate into the state’s orbit. Pedro Campos states that, always through BNDES and pension funds, the Brazilian state is present in 119 corporate groups, compared to 30 in 1996. (In my article on Brazilian privatizations, I explore this relationship of the government and large businesses in Brazil.)

Zibechi also notes that the reorganization of Brazilian capitalism had Petrobras as one of its main anchors, which showed the “the advantage for the state in employing strategic plans with long-term objectives” (p.135). It’s rather ironic to read about long-term objectives in relation to Petrobras when we watch the several corruption scandals involving the company unfold, which caused its president to resign and the company itself to sharply lose value. However, the recent scandal is instructive on the relation of private capital to the Brazilian state and on how Petrobras serves the interests of the corporate economy. Construction companies Odebrecht, Camargo Corrêa, and OAS — perennial figures in campaign financing — are all investigated for taking part in the bribery scheme that afforded them large public works.

The “national champions” policy intended to prepare Brazilian businesses to foreign markets through subsidies and mergers. It gained the state influence in the economy of South American countries. Zibechi points out that the starkest instances of this foreign aggressiveness of Brazil were felt in Paraguay and Bolivia — the weaker neighbors. He emphasizes that the Brazil-Paraguay relationship changed drastically after the building of the Itaipu dam, that was made in Paraguay rather than Brazil due to a geopolitical move orchestrated by the Brazilian military dictatorship. Paraguay didn’t need the dam nor the energy that was to be generated, which was then sold to Brazil at cost. When the Paraguayan government attempted to revise the Itaipu Treaty, the country was threatened by Brazil’s military training on the border in 2008. Additionally, the Paraguayan military dictator in the 1970s seized about 12 million hectares of land, a large part of which ended up in the hands of foreigners. According to Mark Glauser’s research, cited by Zibechi, 32.7% of the stolen lands are now in possession of Brazilians.

Bolivia’s economy, in turn, is so precarious that the “nationalization” of hydrocarbons in 2006 didn’t change the configuration of their production in the country at all. Eighty per cent of the production of Bolivian hydrocarbons is in foreign hands. Petrobras exploits over 60% of the Bolivian natural gas and 55% of Bolivian oil. The privileged position of Petrobras in Bolivia was attained through the excellent concessions it won during the 1990s in the country. Despite the government’s nationalistic rhetoric, the Brazilian monopolies are well preserved in the country. Equador, which was undergoing a similar process of economic annexation, ended up in collision course with Brazil, expelling Odebrecht from the country in 2008 and Petrobras two years later.

In addition to the “strategic alliances” with Argentina and Venezuela, the general feeling is that Brazil has been building its own backyard in Latin America. The New Brazil doesn’t spell this out, but it should be clear that the Brazilian economic expansion was brought about through economic centralization abroad. In South America, this happened with the securing of monopolies in strategic sectors of neighboring economies through state concessions and bi-lateral agreements that guaranteed privileges and subsidies to Brazilian companies. The expansion of Brazil was made possible by the centralized politics of neighboring states and the economic weakness of their elites.

The debates Zibechi mentions on the character of Brazil’s (sub)imperialism, however interesting, are rather problematic — as all Marxist economics tends to be. Upon commenting on Mathias Luce Seibel’s, Virgínia Fontes’s, and João Bernardo’s work, little time is spent treating the internal consequences of the monopoly state in Brazil. While The New Brazil seemed very impressed by the optimistic prospects floated by the government and corporate groups about economic growth, the country itself pumped the brakes. The model’s extractivism already presented signs of exhaustion: price inflation rises, there are signs of massive overinvestiment in the construction industry, and unemployment grows and is masked by the government’s creative statistics.

None of these facts are surprising. The accumulation of capital, by itself, doesn’t indicate growth. Subsidies to mergers and the diffusion of costs promoted by the state mask the inefficiency of centralized institutions. The accelerated expansion of state tentacles signals that the subsidies to centralization aren’t able anymore to offset the diminishing returns of capital required by “economic growth” in the corporate economy. And given even larger concentrations of capital and even lower returns to scale, the calculational chaos tends to increase and growth tends to get ever slower.

With the end of the halcyon days of the Brazilian corporate capitalism, the state has been forced to do what every economic elite has done in times of decline in their power: increase violence and oppression over the population to try and keep their ability to extract rents to subsidize capital. This has been shown especially in the several manifestations against the increase in bus fares in Brazilian metropolitan areas (which culminated in the July 2013 protests) — repressed energetically — and in the thousands of expropriations during the preparations for the 2014 World Cup and the 2016 Olympics.

Zibechi reserves a few pages to comment on the new political culture that has arisen in the last few years. He talks about the Movimento Passe Livre (Free Fare Movement, MPL), which has adopted a horizontal structure and whose character isn’t so predominantly middle class anymore, expanding in the peripheries of Brazilian cities. MPL has indeed incorporated ideologically the struggle for the right to the city and against the crystallization of power structures in the urban layout, which reserves the center to the rich and isolates the poor to the outskirts. All of that is correct and must be taken into account in any analysis on Brazil. His observations seem incomplete though.

The Brazilian political culture has changed increasingly under the PT administration, starting in 2002. In large part, it has been a reaction to the partisanship of social organizations, which are occupied by the henchmen of politicians.

The Brazilian student movement, for instance, has struggled for years now with a “crisis of representation.” The organizations that represent the movement, ostensibly tied to political parties and vertical structures, do not have the same same power and ability to mobilize that they used to. Even organizations that have strong grassroots bases such as the Landless Workers Movement (MST) suffers with verticalization, bureaucracy, and submission to partisan interests.

The ideological alliance that sustains the capitalist expansion of the Brazilian state, after all, is a tripartite grouping of unionists, bureaucrats and large business owners. The contrast — ever more obvious — between the interests of the base and the top, ideological hegemony has begun to lose legitimacy and vertical decisions are widely resisted.

The manifestations in July 2013 showed the inadequacy of traditional social organizations to deal with the new interests expressed by the people: when multitudes took to the streets with no central organization, structure or even unified demands beyond a general dissatisfaction, a large section of the institutional left began to vilify the movement, calling it “fascistic.”

If there’s any political culture that is characteristic of the current social movements, it’s based on a reaction to the historical bureaucratization and to the isolation of the elites.

The New Brazil is not the only, but it’s certainly one of the most important, recent books that overviews Brazil’s new state capitalism. And in talking about the history of power in the country, Zibechi is certainly much better than most because he sees continuity instead of disruptions. However, despite having the right instincts, and knowing how to identify the key points of contemporary politics in Brazil and in Latin America, doesn’t present a theoretical apparatus capable of challenging the ideological hegemony of corporate capitalism.

The structural weaknesses of the current model can only be challenged by the idea of a radical and descentralized free market. The logical consequence of the horizontalization of our political culture is anarchy.

Commentary
“Homeland Security”: Please, Br’er Conservatives, Don’t Throw Us Into the Briar Patch!

“Hardline House GOP conservatives aren’t worried about a looming Department of Homeland Security shutdown,” reports Cristina Marcos at The Hill. They’d rather let DHS’s funding lapse than give up a provision in its new appropriation reversing president Barack Obama’s recent executive orders on immigration.

Is it just me, or does this sound more like the promise of ice cream and fireworks than the threat of a spanking? I usually can’t think of anything good to say about Congress, let alone its big-spending, war-mongering, Taliban-on-the-Potomac “conservative Republican” contingent, but this is one of those rare exceptions.

The only “security” DHS provides is job security for parasites. Sporting an annual price tag of  more than $60 billion, Jeh Johnson’s executive branch fiefdom boasts the fiscal responsibility of a methamphetamine addict, the manners of your local Department of Motor Vehicles, and the same level of respect for privacy as East Germany’s Stasi.  It deserves to be shut down. Completely, not partially. Permanently, not just until the politicians come up with a compromise.

And we get a twofer out of this standoff as well. Not only are we at least temporarily and partially shed of the DHS bureaucracy burden, but Obama’s tentative baby steps toward lightening up on America’s half-century of draconian immigration policy remain intact. If the Know-Nothing right won’t get over its fear that somewhere, someone is crossing an imaginary line to earn a living without their permission, it’s nice to limit their ability to inflict that fear on the rest of us.

Things could be a lot better, of course. In a perfect world, Congress would disband itself, padlock the Capitol, head out into the real world seeking real jobs, and drag the rest of the Washington political machine (including the White House and the Department of Homeland Security) kicking and screaming behind it. That would save the rest of us an annual cost of trillions of dollars in taxes and debt, months of unnecessary labor implementing their control fetishes, and untold hours of worrying about what criminal schemes they might get up to next.

But I’ll take what I can get, at least for the moment. I can’t help but be reminded of the old folk tale (popularized by Joel Chandler Harris in his “Uncle Remus” stories) of Br’er Fox, Br’er Rabbit and the Briar Patch. Please, please, please, Br’er Conservatives, whatever you do, don’t throw us in there! (wink)

Stigmergy - C4SS Blog, Weekly Libertarian Leftist Review
The Weekly Libertarian Leftist Review 69

Jacob G. Hornberger discusses the marriage of government schooling and the national security state.

Jacob G. Hornberger discusses the fears surrounding ISIS.

Ivan Eland discusses oil, U.S. policy with respect to Saudi Arabia, and U.S. policy towards Israel.

George H. Smith discusses freethought and freedom.

David Boaz discusses the parasite economy in Washington.

Jacob Sullum discusses Bill Bennett’s take on pot.

Alex Henderson discusses seven fascist regimes the U.S. has supported.

Ivan Eland discusses how unauthorized government attacks are murder.

Thomas Knapp discusses Biden’s dangerous game.

Conor Friedersdorf discusses Scott Walker’s take on foreign policy.

Laurence M. Vance discusses the libertarian view on taxes.

James Bovard discusses the people driven out to make room for Shenandoah National Park.

Jeffrey Tucker discusses eugneics and the minimum wage.

Rebecca Gordon discusses 6 people who said no to torture.

Sheldon Richman discusses Brian Williams and war.

Richard M. Ebeling discusses the morality of capitalism.

Thomas Larson discusses Dick Cheney and torture.

Jacob G. Hornberger discusses whether Cuban embargo supporters and the Castro brothers are on the same page.

Glenn Greenwald discusses the death of a 13 year old Yemeni in a drone strike.

Gary Leupp discusses Hilary Clinton’s record as a warmongerer.

Mikayla Novak discusses gender hierarchy during the Progressive Era.

Laurence M. Vance discusses government maximums and minimums.

Jacob G. Hornberger discusses Oliver Stone and the hypocrisy of libertarian conservatives.

Jacob Sullum discusses the right to die.

Danny Postel discusses a book claiming that oil wasn’t the reason for the Iraq War.

Lucy Steigerwald discusses the vague suggestions of the War Powers Resolution.

Dan Sanchez discusses state approved mass killers.

David S D’Amato discusses a book on paranoia and conspiracy theories.

Charles Pierson discusses why U.S. war criminals walk free.

Peter Certo discusses 5 reasons to reject Obama’s request for war against ISIS.

Books and Reviews
Imagining Patterns

The United States of Paranoia: A Conspiracy Theory by Jesse Walker (Harper 2013), 448 pages.

What is the substance of American paranoia? From where does it emanate, and why is its study important? These are some of the questions that, without preaching or bludgeoning us with elitist pretensions, Jesse Walker, books editor at Reason magazine, addresses in The United States of Paranoia: A Conspiracy Theory. The book is an absorbing journey through the lives and handicrafts of conspiracy-theory peddlers and through alternative looks at historical and pop-culture artifacts that might otherwise seem perfectly quotidian. Whether we’re treating them as gospel or poking fun, Americans are in love and deeply enthralled with conspiracy theories and the paranoia they embody. Swiveling from Jay-Z and 50 Cent to Dan Brown and Robert Anton Wilson, Walker’s book is an often-erratic survey of the outlandish, the “patterns in chaos” we’ve drawn “to make sense of events … that scare us.” It shows that finding these patterns even where they don’t exist is an enduring human tendency, that is, one that applies to all of us, irrespective of ethnic, political, or class ties.

His expedition into all things paranoid and conspiratorial in our history and culture breaks down into two overarching parts, the first a consideration of “five primal myths,” the second treating “the more recent past” and its interrelation with those “five core myths.” The taxonomy The United States of Paranoia constructs is immediately familiar. We’ve all encountered countless specimens of each species Walker sets forth (though he grants that a given conspiracy may fall into one or several of the categories): the Enemy Outside, the Enemy Within, the Enemy Above, the Enemy Below, and the Benevolent Conspiracy. Glossing the fundamental fallacy that binds all five of his primal myths, Walker writes, “Just as an animist treats natural forces as conscious spirits, many conspiracists treat social forces as conscious cabals.” The book nevertheless refrains from judging any of the particular conspiracy theories it presents, even while it acknowledges that some are quite clearly susceptible to being judged as either true or false. So as he introduces the colorful characters and chronicles that make up a conspiracy story, Walker never puts his nose in the air or insists that only an unsophisticated rube could believe such an absurdity. We’re allsusceptible to the alluring appeal of some account of events — however obviously invented — that might offer us peace of mind, that seems to put the pieces of the puzzle in place.

Paranoia is of course a species of fear; as such, it depends for its subsistence on our ignorance and uncertainties, giving birth to superstitions — concocted explanations based on incomplete evidence. Or as Walker writes, “A conspiracy story is especially enticing because it imagines an intelligence behind the pattern.” Thus is the kinship bonding superstitions to conspiracy theories made clear; we might even regard the latter category as a social kind or subset of the former, as superstitions that treat not hidden supernatural causes, but hidden social causes. And as with superstitions, the fabricated causal relationships envisioned by conspiracy theories are, as Richard Dawkins once noted of theological accounts, usually far more complex (and therefore unlikely) than the fact- or evidence-based explanations they hope to upend.

Still, superstitions and conspiracy theories are not to be casually dismissed. Walker shows that even when unsupported or untrue, conspiracy theories are nevertheless real in that they affect both politics and popular culture; in fact, The United States of Paranoia is proof positive that it is impossible to neatly separate politics from pop culture in American history. Attending to the flawed notion of “political paranoia as a feature of the fringe,” Walker treats it rather as a vital and significant “form of folklore,” a current that permeates the way we think about news and events.

Bizarre stories that have little or no basis in reality are as much a part of the way we assemble our worldviews as are objective facts; and a possible reason for that is the relative scarcity of such facts as compared with the fear-fueled, prêt-à-porter yarns that are so convenient and readily available in contrast.

One such fear-inspired superstition is the ridiculous faith in politicians and the political process, the paradoxical credence that without them, the violence of a Hobbesian state of nature (“where every man is enemy to every man”) would destroy even the possibility of peaceful society. The relationship between this Hobbesian paranoia and apparent justifications for the state provides a close analogy to the connection between post–9/11 panic and the growth of the “national security” apparatus. Just as Hobbes’s arguments about human beings’ political nature should actually make us more suspicious of centralized government power, so too should 9/11 have distanced us from both military imperialism and the expansion of the domestic police state. But because of ridiculous, cooked-up narratives, introduced at the right moment of dread and alarm, politicians and bureaucrats were able to double down on all of the policies that precipitate terrorism in the first place.

Misplaced Trust

Paranoias like the one that gripped the country after that grim day, the most pervasive and most socially significant kind, are also ironically the least plausible; they call to mind Hitler’s “big lie,” the one that plants itself in the subconscious, in “the deeper strata of [the] emotional nature.” As a result, historically we have been more apt to trust Big Brother than our own neighbors, to pay the salaries of a professional criminal class in a distant capital all while the local news warns us of petty criminals. Our fears are out of order, not correctly prioritized. The United States of Paranoia is largely about such misprioritization — about the tendency to allow pareidolia to provoke in us fear of some vague monster in the shadows. Pareidolia, the phenomenon “in which [random] patterns are perceived as meaningful shapes and sounds,” Walker explains, is what allows people to see, for example, demonic faces in the smoke billowing from the World Trade Center in photos taken on 9/11.

Paranoia has allowed us to build whole systems on the worst mistakes and misconstructions. But if some fears are founded on those misconstructions and our willingness to see enemies that aren’t there, then certainly the reverse mistake is also common: Circumstances and events that ought to rouse our skepticism and even trepidation are too often treated as, if not completely innocuous, “necessary evils.” Even while we fan the flames of our conspiracy theories, we are not as wary of power as prudence would counsel. Still, all things big — be they aspects of big government or big business (broken down into, for example, big agra, big pharma, big insurance, et cetera) — rightly appear to inspire at least some fear in us. As Frank Gelein wrote in his study The Politics of Paranoia, “Grandeur seems to be an attribute of tyranny, injustice, and non-democratic forms of government.” And that sort of fear is not necessarily conspiratorial or paranoid, but is often, history teaches, quite justified.

Owing to this fine line, then, the one separating baseless paranoia from warranted misgivings about power, libertarianism’s critics have frequently harassed us into defensive positions, where we must insist that we’re not to be lumped in with tinfoil-hat–wearing loons and conspiracists. To that point, Walker observes the treatment that Barry Goldwater received from the mental-health profession the same year that saw the publication of Richard Hofstadter’s “The Paranoid Style in American Politics” (followed by a book by the same name). The partisan psychiatrists had claimed that Goldwater had “a paranoid personality.” Hofstadter’s influential 1964 Harper’s article spoke to the exaggerated, alarmist tone found in much of political rhetoric, a “distorted style” Hofstadter saw as “a possible signal that may alert us to a distorted judgment.” Hofstadter had, however, confined the paranoid style to the fringe, as an indulgence of the margin avoided by the reasonable, respectable center. Walker shows that not to be the case at all, placing conspiracy theories and the paranoid style “at the country’s core,” shared by the periphery and the center’s establishment.

Libertarianism is repeatedly smeared as the epitome of the paranoid style, predisposed to exaggerating the threats associated with the growth of government. Healthy skepticism, though, the kind Walker urges at the close of his book, is in fact the crux of the libertarian posture. Hardly eager, jittery consumers of superstitions and paranoid delusions, libertarians are generally (even stereotypically) rationalistic, situating principles and reason before allegiance to political institutions and their symbols — that in the face of the profusion of hit pieces steadily flowing forth from libertarianism’s critics, especially in the last few years. One such driveling rebuke by Saul Friedman in 2010 even borrowed the title of Hofstadter’s article (“Libertarians: The Paranoid Style in American Politics”), reciting all the standard cavils against libertarianism from those who couldn’t care less about actually understanding it — of course we’re just corporate-sponsored crypto-right-wingers who hate society’s poor and underprivileged.

Quite contrary to the caricatures of our detractors, it is not libertarians who are deluded by paranoid fantasies, but statists whose anti-freedom bias grows out of an essentially backward, misprioritized idea about the source of chaos in society. For if Hobbes was correct that “‘war’ consisteth not in battle only, or in the act of fighting,” then we should at all times regard politics itself as a war, as the very institutional force that renders “the fruit [of industry] uncertain.”

Walker nimbly and entertainingly reveals our readiness — indeed, desire — to put confidence in and then to augment the folk tradition of the conspiratorial narrative. If there is a lesson to glean from The United States of Paranoia, it is that the truth is a rather slippery thing; that attempts to pin it down or neatly cordon it off from the host of zany stories and archetypes we have embraced as a culture are in general doomed to fail. Given the difficulties associated with disentangling fact and fiction, we should, Walker concludes, “empathize with people who seem alien” and “be open to evidence that might undermine the patterns we think we see in the world.”

Feature Articles
Reason Goes to Bat for the NPR Liberals

Usually when we see right-wing commentary on the upper-middle-class (“NPR/limousine/Whole Foods liberals,” “boho bougies,” or take your pick of other trendy labels), it’s a fake populist attack on their “cultural elite” tastes like brown mustard or wind-surfing, to divert attention from genuine populist attacks on the super-rich. So I guess it’s a sort of man-bites-dog story when Nick Gillespie of Reason (“To the Barricades, Brooklyn Yuppies,” The Daily Beast, Feb. 6) rallies to their defense.

The object of Gillespie’s ire is an article by Reihan Salam at Slate (“The upper middle class is ruining all that is great about America,” Jan. 30; Salam, ironically, is another right-winger from National Review). Salam’s view of them isn’t flattering:

Though virtually all of these polite, well-groomed people were politically liberal, I sensed that their gut political instincts were all about protecting what they had and scratching out the eyeballs of anyone who dared to suggest taking it away from them. I can’t say I liked these people as a group.

Although billionaires like the Koch Brothers are far more often vilified by the Left,

the upper middle class collectively wields far more influence. These are households with enough money to make modest political contributions, enough time to email their elected officials and to sign petitions, and enough influence to sway their neighbors. Upper-middle-class Americans vote at substantially higher rates than those less well-off, and though their turnout levels aren’t quite as high as those even richer than they are, there are far more upper-middle-class people than there are rich people. One can easily turn the Kochs… of the world into a big fat political target. It’s harder to do the same to the lawyers, doctors, and management consultants who populate the tonier precincts of our cities and suburbs.

Another thing that separates the upper middle class from the truly wealthy is that even though they’re comfortable, they’re less able to take the threat of tax increases or benefit cuts in stride. Take away the mortgage interest deduction from a Koch brother and he’ll barely notice. Take it away from a two-earner couple living in an expensive suburb and you’ll have a fight on your hands. So the upper middle class often uses its political muscle to foil the fondest wishes of egalitarian liberals.

As an example, Salam mentions Obama’s proposal to tax 529 college savings (which go to only 3% of the population and mainly benefit households over $100,000) as income and use the proceeds to fund a credit for tuition expenses of the lower and middle-class. Within days, deluged by angry phone calls from her upper-middle-class liberal constituency, Nancy Pelosi — the “Marxist” that Breitbart and FreeRepublic readers love to hate — persuaded Obama to drop the plan.

Gillespie strawmans Salam’s critique as a call for redistributionist class war against the upper-middle class, complete with tax hikes. In fact he limits discussion of Salam’s article almost entirely to the tax issue, and mischaracterizes even that (failing to note, in regard to 529, that Obama was proposing to eliminate a targeted tax break for the well-to-do to fund tax relief for the poor). And bear in mind it’s the upper-middle class that most strenuously objects to efforts to close economically distorting loopholes like the mortgage interest deduction in order to lower tax rates as a whole.

His characterization of the attack as a jacquerie, or Stalin’s liquidation of the kulaks, says more about Gillespie’s sense of entitlement than Salam’s actual arguments. And naturally, he can’t resist wallowing in a vertiable ocean of “grandson of poor immigrants makes good” humblebrags. As if moving from a class that gets screwed over to one that screws over everybody below it is some exemplar of the American Dream.

But in his misconstruction and his resort to bathos, Gillespie studiously ignores the main focus of Salam’s critique of upper-middles — for their hypocrisy: “upper-middle-income voters only oppose tax hikes on themselves.” What’s more, a major part of their income, as Salam points out, comes from government interventions that benefit them at the expense of the poor and lower-middle class. In particular, they fight like cornered rabid badgers against any attempt to weaken their professional licensing regimes, as well as engaging in full-blown NIMBYism in defense of zoning laws and aesthetic ordinances that protect their precious “property values.”

I’d take both of those points a lot further than Salam does.

Upper-middle class liberals are some of the most hypocritical people on earth. I encountered one of the tribe first-hand on Twitter when I made a negative comment about Paul Krugman making hundreds of thousands of dollars for a nebulous “advisory” position at some university think tank on income inequality (!), that apparently involved little more than lending his name to their letterhead. In response, some Twitter #UniteBlue damfool squealed like a stuck pig and informed me that good, “progressive” people like Krugman weren’t “the 1% I should be attacking.” I get similar responses to negative comments on Hillary Clinton’s speaking fees for gatherings of Wall Street bankers (!) or her former seat on the Walmart board.

Actually, the upper-middle class is very much the 1% I should be attacking — not instead of billionaire rentiers, but in addition to them.

First of all, if you look at their occupational categories, they’re mainly either in legally cartelized professions and/or occupy administrative positions in the corporate state or in state-cartelized industry. Even if they’re in independent practice, they perform functions that are in artificially high demand because of government-mandated professsionalization and “expert” hegemony over every aspect of life.

They’re the upper part of, as Joe Bageant put it, the “20-25% of its population” the Empire

needs… at the very most to administrate and perpetuate itself — through lawyers, insurance managers, financial managers, college teachers, media managers, scientists, bureaucrats, managers of all types and many other professions and semi-professions.

A disproportionate part of this upper-middle class has, as its main function, processing “captive clienteles” (Edgar Friedenberg’s word) of human raw material in the school-to-corporate-HR-department or school-to-prison pipeline, hospitals, universities and the like. They suck up a rapidly growing portion of total employee compensation in giant monopoly corporations that are so large and top-heavy mainly because of a state-cartelized economy. And another huge part of this class belongs to the professional licensing cartels to which ordinary people are forced to alienate control over a growing part of their lives. They are, almost entirely, the overseers of Empire, occupying positions and serving functions that would not exist absent the system of corporate-state power that exists today.

And the institutions they belong to for the most part need far more of them than in the past because of a culture of high overhead and bureaucratic featherbedding encouraged by state-fostered cartels.

This class has been exploding since the ’70s, both in numbers and in the income of its top ranks, at the expense of those below them. As Thomas Piketty notes in Capital, the top 1% used to be dominated by rentiers drawing income from their investments and property. Now you have to go to the top tenth of a percent to find those people. The rest of the top one percent are the highest stratum of salaried managers. The salaries of top management have risen from fifty times or so the average production worker’s wage to several hundred times. Back in the ’90s David Gordon (Fat and Mean: The Myth of Management Downsizing) pointed out that, contrary to public perception, the total share of employee compensation going to managerial and supervisory workers had risen from about a quarter to around 40% since the ’70s. By my math, that means that simply restoring the numbers and compensation of managers to their 1970s level would make possible a 25% increase in production worker compensation, leaving total employee compensation flat.

The main downsizing in personnel has come from actual production workers. In universities, this means administrators (and their salaries) replicating like kudzu while three quarters of teaching positions are filled by adjunct McProfessors making the equivalent of minimum wage. In hospitals — the industry where I work — it means nurse-to-patient ratios being lowered to criminally negligent levels and deliberately putting patient lives at risk, with the savings in wages going to fund increased management compensation on something very close to a one-to-one basis.

It’s interesting that Gillespie mentions gentrification as a source of envy for the upper-middle class’s haters. And well it might be. Local governments are basically a showcase property of the real estate industry, which means they’re looking for anything and everything to drive up “property values” — and rents — by getting outside people with lots of money to bid on land. That results in a sort of Golden Triangle of local governments, state-cartelized and -subsidized industry, and that industry’s well-paid overseers, like we see with Silicon Valley employees driving the gentrification of Oakland and driving out the old population.

In short, the upper-middle class is largely a privileged, overpaid creature of the state, and to see a self-proclaimed libertarian whining about criticism of it is just pathetic.

Anarchy and Democracy
Fighting Fascism
Markets Not Capitalism
The Anatomy of Escape
Organization Theory