Dear Dan

Your posting is so damn brilliant I hardly know where to start praising it.
Yes yes yes, this is the summary of the amazing achievements made by a
politics of identity. But is also came out of an ideological conviction
that there was class as superior category (including all people, globally)
under which we then find the sub-categories which this politics rightfully
built as proper subcultures that were encouraged to speak and be seen and
heard. And this was indeed a massive achievement that worked. Precisely
because of its firm roots in Marxism.

However there is always a point where those who are being seen and heard
must also be held responsible for what they say and give voice to. Is what
you're saying actually factually true? And is it relevant to the priorities
that we must make going forward in the class struggle proper? And also,
what in all this is "left" or "right"? Maybe what you say is relevant but
isn't necessarily a Marxist priority but rather a universal priority where
we can find liberal and even conservative allies (say principles like "rule
of law", "free speech", "gender, race and sexual orientation equality" or
say even "cannabis legalization"), then let's find those allies while we
still emphatically address the class issue which liberals and conservatives
will always ignore. Where we instead may even have to go to war for justice
to be made. Just like Lenin said.

Because that's how a society works. The politics of identity also did
succeed in this department. The end of apartheid in South Africa proved it.
Any damn pride parade proves it. However the question now is whether those
pride parades still address say gender, race and sexual orientation issues,
and attract allies, or have just become stations for what we should refer
to as a "politics of trauma" rather than as a "politics of identity".
Rousseauian cults and sects. An infantilized version of leftist discourse,
where a narcissistic call for "look at me, look at me, look at me" has
replaced the Marxist class struggle proper for equal opportunity for all in
any given society through empowerment and a demand for adulthood from all
involved. Where what is said is properly challenged and not just accounted
for depending on who speaks. As for Scandinavia, the LGBT people proper are
now leaving the pride parades as these have been taken over by heterosexual
gender scientists who merely use the parades for their own benefit as
professional state bureaucrats. Need I add that the latter all use
"identity politics" as their excuse for even being there in the first place?

And this is my possibly only disagreement with you, Dan. You say that the
previous generation should have taught the new generation on what it
achieved and how it got there. But has the new generation, fostered by
social media, the welfare state and consumer society to always seek The
Great Tit rather than empowering iitself toward adulthood, even bothered to
study history? Do they even know who Marx is? Do they even know who Hegel,
Nietzsche and Freud are? I believe the responsibility for this The Great
Generational Gap lies with both generations. And it is fundamentally
ideologically a huge step away from Marx into the arms of Rousseau.
Marxists can handle what triggers them, anything that does not kill them
makes them stronger and not weaker.

The college trigger warnings and safe zones today have absolutely nothing
to do with Marxism. But they have everything to do with a Rousseauian
middle class petit-bourgeois anti-ideology that is obsessed with tonality
and etiquette (of others, mind you, not their own venomous tonality, since
they always refer to the excuse of "suffering from trauma"), an attitude
toward political struggle that is obscenely infantile and ironically way
more Versailles than Paris. Watch out for anybody and everybody who
constantly "takes offense". You will see nothing but Rousseauian self-pity
behind such (a lack of proper) arguments. You simply can not mix Marx with
smelling salts with impunity. Instead the Rousseuians must be called out on
their game. Is this struggle about you being seen and heard only for the
reason that you want to be seen and heard (media-driven narcissism), or is
this struggle about the genuine unfairness of class divisions, the
genuinely unfair distribution of the resources that society has
accumulated, the genuinely unfair distribution of the costs for that
accumulation (ecology etc), the equal distribution of both rights and
duties among adults in a society of adults?

And do we then have the visionary and strategic tools for such a proper
Marxist class struggle? Because it is precisely when vision and strategy is
lacking, when the outer circuit is weak and the inner circuit expands at
the cost of the outer circuit, that Rousseau makes his ugly return in our
midst. We lost Marx, still benefited from the Marxist heritage for another
30-40 years. What we now see is the total disappeareance of Marx replaced
with Lacalau and Mouffe's hegemonic nightmare, Rousseauian identitarianism.
Leftist discourse as childish demands for attention, what Söderqvist and I
call "internarcissism" in our books (I pretend to like you, you pretend to
like me, so that discourse becomes totally preoccupied with a race for me
me me likes while class struggle is completely hidden and ignored). I
honestly could not even tell the difference between the two camps at
Charlottesville. All I know is that none of them points the way forward.
Just like South Africa risks going the disastrous way of Zimbabwe by
replacing a class struggle, which can be properly won, with infinite
accusations of racism that can never be solved (whenever you hear of "an
infinite demand", check its bitchy and passive-aggressive Rousseauian
roots).

Since Rousseauianism is the shared ideology of "The Identity Left" and "The
Extreme Right", I see dark times ahead indeed. And the responses must as
always be a Marxist Left, on and off allied with a Nietzschean Right, just
like Deleuze and Foucault insisted in their merger of the two great
thinkers. So good luck with your identity fight, with throwing your
constructed trauma after everybody else in public, but as long as this
fight is about nothing but your craving for medal attention in particular
and not about society's welfare in general, why even pretend that you
belong with The Left? We heard you, we saw you, but what weight did your
argument actually have? Did it add value to discourse? Or was it all just
about you getting The Great Tit back into your mouth to enjoy your traumas
without ever having to grow up for the greater good of class struggle?

Best intentions
Alexander


Den fre 2 nov. 2018 kl 21:43 skrev Dan S. Wang <danw...@mindspring.com>:

> Greetings Nettimers,
>
> For me, the question of identity politics–--what it is, where it comes
> from, what problems it creates or exacerbates, its political efficacy and
> purchase?cannot be addressed in any useful way without putting primary
> significance on what both Brian and Keith, in their different ways,
> emphasized. Which is to say, the concrete labor of organizing political
> formations.
>
> Modern identity politics--?for convenient periodization, let's say
> post-1968?--did not come out of abstract debates. Rather, it was the
> growing realization, happening in many parts of the mass movements then
> mobilized with the wind at their backs, that the movement work was itself
> undemocratic in so many ways. One of the originary myths of second wave
> feminism, for example, is the coming to consciousness among the women of
> early SDS (long before '68), who noticed that the female cadres always
> ended up serving the coffee while the male members went straightaway to
> the debates about strategy. Casey Hayden’s story of coming to feminist
> consciousness basically begins with this very story. She was already a vet
> of SNCC organizing, already had thought through the systemic issues vis
> racial segregation and Jim Crow. But the language for the rather more
> informal politics of interpersonal behaviors?--which basically governed the
> so-called private domain of the household, especially--?was yet to be
> invented.
>
> So, in that moment, with the fresh (but familiar) irritation of a tableful
> of dishes left by a bunch of white male so-called radicals hashing out
> movement plans, is it a debate about Marx vs Rousseau? Or is it a group of
> women looking at each other and thinking, what the hell is wrong with
> these dudes?? And then...hey, maybe WE should have our OWN meeting?!
> Identity politics? Why, Yes, I do mind dying!
>
> Asad Haider takes as his inspirational templates the Combahee River
> Collective and the late communism of Amiri Baraka. Keith writes of the
> pre-'68 masses in political motion in young African nations. Brian writes
> of the resistance in Chicago today. For my part, I’ve been taking memory
> trips to that poorly understood political interregnum we call the United
> States of the 1980s, the campus cauldrons from which identity politics
> grew teeth. This was the coming of political age for my cohort, Gen X.
> Identity politics was our achievement, but also, in the way that those
> politics were transmitted to the current youth without a context, our
> generational failure.
>
> And what was that context? It was a period in which the youth-driven
> Sixties and Seventies mass movements conclusively disintegrated, for a
> host of reasons both internal and external. Also, the decade advanced a
> parallel retrenchment of capital, at all scales. Examples– Macro: Volcker
> putting the stranglehold on inflation, with punishing interest rates,
> forcing austerity and massive industrial restructuring. Micro: elite
> institutions reclaiming authority eroded in the 60s, each in their own way,
> such as Stanford University deliberately reducing the admissions of
> humanities-oriented applicants and increasing their engineering
> enrollments as way to manage campus activism. Molecular: the individual
> who moves into responsible “straight" life, disawowing their youthful
> ideals?--a narrative much reinforced in the mass media products of the time
> (The Big Chill, thirtysomething, the Ballads of Rubin/Horowitz/Cleaver,
> etc).
>
> In the Reagan-Bush-Thatcher era, with wars fought by proxy, an obviously
> sclerotic Soviet bloc, and a total rollback agenda targeting every
> progressive achievement of the previous two decades?and no mass movements
> producing pressure for new initiatives?--battles over new terms and
> concepts like "sexual harassment" (the term itself hardly existed up until
> then) and LGB recognition (no wide use of T or even Q yet) came to the
> fore as
> productive grounds for organizing--?a process that of course further
> exposed the inherited dysfunctions of the activists themselves. In that
> time, as I recall, activist work meant a good deal of introspection and
> application
> of care to one's ways of speaking. So, for example, in addition to getting
> up to speed on the pros and cons of the Sullivan principles and the
> various tactics of disruption and escalation in the campus divestment
> movement, we took care to think through what, exactly, were our stakes
> (being privileged college students of the day) in the anti-apartheid
> struggle of black South Africa, and how to engage without patronizing
> those with whom we felt called to stand in allegiance. The latter being an
> identity politics problem, one that made the movement stronger.
>
> The one thing is, those struggles created space for real power, for making
> real changes. Until the campus activism of the 80s, colleges and
> universities, not to mention corporations and government, were almost
> wholly without sexual harassment policies. Ethnic Studies was born in the
> late 60s but Ethnic Studies *requirements* did not take hold until students
> demanded them a generation later. Apart from the two fresh but narrowly
> defined social movements of the day, ACT UP and the deep ecology/ancient
> forest preservation movement (in both of which identity fissures
> manifested as internal secondary struggles), the campaigns that
> foregrounded identity concerns were basically the only spaces in which new
> radicalism exercised consequential power. In short, I now regard the rise
> of identity politics in the 1980s as a rearguard politics, a zone of power
> left by the retreat of the mass movements of the 70s. What power there is
> in the #metoo phenomenon owes a debt to this history.
>
> This history has not been transmitted to the post-Millennials. Hence the
> ahistorical, moralistic version of today's identity politics--?a
> pseudo-politics, if you ask me. One that invests itself in a supreme claim
> to trauma (too easily appropriated by the hard right) rather than to an
> unfolding and contingent history. I'll say it again: this failure to pass
> along the history is the fault of my generation.
>
> As to the question of class, well, yes, of course class is the political
> answer. On that much, I agree with Alexander's return to Marx. But what is
> a class? As Brian says, it is not an unchanging thing. Clearly. More so
> than any other identity, class is a construction?--created in tandem and in
> tension by both capital and labor...and when I say labor in a grand way, I
> mean it in the way Alice may mean it: a universe of the marginalized,
> racialized and gendered, who are doing the shit work of capital--?even if
> that work is "only" passing time in a prison cell).
>
> This post is already long, so I will leave my thoughts on class as
> questions. If an agenda pushing for socialism and climate justice (maybe
> the same thing, ultimately?) can only be class-driven (and I believe that
> to be true), then what is the constitution of that class to be? And, given
> our tools and what we can control, how is that class to made? The full
> answers are long--?EP Thompson gave us eight hundred pages on just the
> English working class, covering really just its first thirty years. But
> the short answer is what Brian already said, which I put into Thompson's
> turn of phrase: it's not the class that matters, but the making of it. So
> let's get out there and make it. After all, Marx was no armchair Marxist.
>
> From sunny, catastrophic LA,
>
> Dan W.
>
>
> --
> http://prop-press.typepad.com/
> http://www.prop-press.net/
> http://www.madmutualdrift.org/
> http://midwestcompass.org/ss #ANON is in Subject:
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