On 09/23/2015 11:38 AM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
As long as they can be held in solitary confinement, and prevented  from organizing, they 
can have all of the "moderation" they want!  But if as they have organized, 
then those who have seen the consequences of that organization and don't much like it, 
must also organize.  Such is the way of power and politics.

Several groups are organizing in response: the moderation management groups 
(http://www.moderation.org/), an apparent minority of addiction researchers working to 
overturn the "disease model", Sam Harris and fans clustering around the 
horrible concept of spirituality without religion, methodological ritualists (e.g. yoga 
or meditation), etc.

And as much as I agree with your dialectical position of opposite organizing, I maintain 
that the deeper problem is the inherent commitment involved.  Power and politics are not 
really about organizing opposites.  It's about steadily punching (small) holes in the 
convictions of the arlready organized.  We see this practically in someone like Bernie 
Sanders, a career politician if there ever was such a thing.  But he can 
self-consistently deny that he's a "career politician" by citing his 
anti-authoritarian hole-punching.  Another example might be the hidden powerful in the 
beltway... the people who would rule us completely if we installed term limits on all 
elected offices.  Those people don't organize, at least not dialectically, so much as 
they navigate whatever constellation of agents and objects exist at any given time ... 
the skill is to flip-flop (abandon commitments) when the landscape suggests it's right to 
flip-flop.  That skill is power ... and so few of us have it (thank Ct
hulhu).

--
⇔ glen

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