Dear Justin

Was Karl Marx an idealist or a materialist? I'm perfectly happy to leave
that for you and others to decide. Because I'm a pragmatist and my ideas
are pragmatist and the rest is just wordplay to me. I'm interested in
factual truth and in whether something works or does not work. I'm also
interested in opinion being challenged on its own merit. Therefore I
radically separate person and opinion. The whole idea that who speaks
affects the value of what is being said is just value relativism of the
worst kind. I know this is a popular kindergarden game among identitarians
of both the extreme right and the extreme left (as if "being seen and
heard" must be divided equally among some five-year-olds). Because I can
see no other value in this habit than infantile attention-seeking. Which
means it is in itself victim-seeking and therefore victimhood-encouraging
and certainly not heroic and empowering for anybody. And I can't think of
anything less Marxist than that. As I said, identitarianism is Rousseau
through and through. How it even sneaked into "The Left" beats me.

Everybody should radically be allowed to speak and each argument should be
judged on its own merits, not according to who forwards it. That
strengthens the overall the debate the most. That is if you're interested
in debates having successful and productive outcomes. At least I am.
Anything else is just a waste of valuable time. So does race exist? Yes, it
does, undeniably, but only as a social ghost. My brother and I had no idea
one of us was black and of us was white until we where 14. We had no idea
we ought to have cared. Now we can spend our entire lives going on and on
about social ghosts and, like David pointed out, end up being the very
people who defend and keep the social ghosts the most and the longest.
However I find that tragic. I want to move on. And class being firmly tied
to capital and power is therefore the factual overarching category under
which we can then deal with minor issues like race and gender. Effectively.
Now if that is not a materialist argument as much as an activist one, then
I don't know what is. If anything is idealist and not materialist it must
certainly be the obsession with social ghosts. But sure, the I and the M
labels are yours to decide. I could not care less.

Best intentions
Alexander

Den fre 2 nov. 2018 kl 04:00 skrev Justin Charles <
[email protected]>:

> Coming in late to this thread but the anti-identity current that's growing
> more and more prevalent on the left lately seems to be somewhat in
> opposition to contrary to materialism. To say that "class is class and
> only class has universal validity" strikes me as pretty idealist, not
> materialist. OneWhile race may not exist to Alexander Bard and Candace
> Owens, I'd argue that maybe it doesn't exist for them because materially it
> need not. Alexander is a white man. Candace Owens, while a black woman, has
> a class position that allows her to skip some over much of what it looks
> like to be black for most black people, who aren't well-compensated
> conservative (or liberal) commentators. Most black people's class position
> is deeply intertwined with the color of their skin. I don't think I need to
> go into the historical reasons for this. I'd also say that Asad Haider's
> book was in no way championing victimhood. If that's what one takes away
> from it then they've read an entirely different book than I did.
>
> On Sun, Oct 28, 2018 at 12:05 PM tbyfield <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Ian, this idea of 'civility' should be unpacked a bit, because the ~word
>> lumps together a disparate range of concerns. At its worst, a lot of
>> babble about civility boils down to is tone-policing, which relies on
>> etiquette as an all-purpose tool for micromanaging rhetoric — and in
>> doing so, limiting and even delegitimizing positions of every type
>> (subjective, relational, political, whatever). In other contexts —
>> notably, in 'centrist' politics in the US — it serves as a rationale
>> for institutionalist pliability: 'bipartisan' cooperation, etc. But
>> those two uses are very different from its function as a foil for the
>> frightening prospect of outright political violence. These different
>> strands, or layers if you like, are hopelessly tangled, and that
>> confusion in itself has serious consequences — hence the culturalist
>> use of the word 'strategy,' which often is used to get at the nebulous
>> realm in which individual behavior aligns with (or 'is constitutive of')
>> abstract, impersonal forces. That's a very roundabout way to get at the
>> obvious problem, which is the direct way that increasingly uncivil
>> political discourse foments violence. And, in a way, that's the problem:
>> the left's path for translating ideals into political practices is
>> hobbled and misdirected at every stage, whereas for the right it's
>> becoming all too direct.
>>
>> My gut sense is that Land is symptomatic of the left's repudiation of
>> force — violence — as a legitimate form of politics. Some, like him,
>> sense that and embark a theoretical trajectory that tacitly accepts or
>> even actively embraces violence. I'll leave that there, because I don't
>> want to debate it or even to see a debate about it on this list. Nettime
>> is fragile, and decades of accumulated effort could be poisoned with a
>> few, um, 'uncivil' messages. There was a time when the solution was
>> widely said to be more speech, but at a time when 'more speech' means
>> trollbot networks that systematically and strategically subvert civil
>> contexts I think that rule is more problematic than ever.
>>
>> As for Bard, whenever his mail appears in inbox my first reaction is
>> "When's the new book coming out?" But that's a rhetorical question —
>> no answer needed, thanks.
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Ted
>>
>>
>> On 28 Oct 2018, at 10:48, Ian Alan Paul wrote:
>>
>> > Brett - I don't think that the problem of the Left is that we don't
>> > spend
>> > enough time with people who think it's worthwhile to discuss the
>> > potential
>> > virtues of "Candace Owens, Nick Land and/or Adolf Hitler." If
>> > anything, the
>> > Left needs to thoroughly rid itself of the liberal and depoliticizing
>> > notion that we should all simply get along in the name of preserving
>> > civility, esp. in a historical moment while fascist gangs are
>> > literally
>> > roaming the streets beating up migrants, synagogues are being shot up,
>> > and
>> > pipe bombs are being mailed to politicians.
>> >
>> > I don't think Alexander's ideas are worth engaging with or even
>> > refuting to
>> > be entirely honest, as I hope is obvious to most people on Nettime by
>> > this
>> > point. We live in times that are too extreme and urgent to expend any
>> > attention or energy dialoguing with disingenuous apologists for the
>> > Right .
>>   <...>
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>
>
> --
> Justin Charles
> 862.216.2467
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