576 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
576 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
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Anarchy: a journal of desire armed. #38, Fall 1993
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LETTERS part five
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REPLY TO SIMONS ON PLAY
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Dear Readers and Editors,
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So Paul Z. Simons wants a paste made of my liver and brain
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("Letters," Anarchy, Spring '93). If he were nicer, I'd offer to
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send him some homemade chopped liver. On a less playful note,
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Simons has done me an injustice in his letter, though he obviously
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feels I wronged him in my pamphlet, Anarchy and Civilization.
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Simons takes umbrage at a section of my pamphlet that quotes a
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paragraph from his article, "Seven Theses on Play," and that then
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has the audacity to criticize his and others' romanticization of
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play and of the primitive. My quote from Simons was not
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out-of-context, nor, to be fair, does Simons criticize me for
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distorting his view. Instead (between smears of pat=82), he takes
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very personal offense at my characterizing his view as "silly,
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fatuous, and unoriginal." He responds by presenting a distorted
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account of my discourse, selectively ignoring major points that
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might inconvenience his rebuttal=FEall the while vacillating between
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denials that he's a primitivist, and defenses of what he himself
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characterizes as primitive virtues.
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He says "MH demands a return to the Enlightenment project of the
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rational search for the "perfect society"=FEdisregarding utterly that
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the current dominant culture is part and parcel of the realization
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of this very project." I don't disregard that "fact"; I dispute it!
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One of my central arguments is that the current dominant society
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represents a betrayal of the hopes of the Enlightenment, a cruel
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parody of its vision by a ruling class that's never grasped=FEand
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never could grasp=FE"the vision thing." As I emphasize, if Thomas
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Jefferson could see the life-constricting industrial monstrosity
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we've built, he=FEalong with Simons and me=FEwould choke on his pat=82=FEif
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the smog didn't get him first. Incidentally, I don't demand in my
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pamphlet; I advocate=FEand I believe that the absolutism of those
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who'd demand conformity to their blueprint for some "perfect soci-
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ety" is another cruel hoax that perverts the aspirations of the En-
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lightenment.
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Yes, I've lumped Simons with Zerzan and the Fifth Estate crowd,
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but not inadvertently, nor on every issue (as he evidently
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presumes, and therefore needlessly rebuts). What I've done is to
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criticize some of the notions, particularly certain characteriza-
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tions and terminologies, that his essay, "Seven Theses on Play,"
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shares with the work and thinking of other(?) "primitivists" when
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addressing the subjects of work and play, and of the civilized and
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the primitive.
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Perhaps Simons simply thinks he owes me a smear, but I'm no more
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a huckster for "cyberspace" than Simons is a flack for the "leisure
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industry." Interesting, though: much "primitivist" criticism of my
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work=FEand here I do again include Simons=FEpointedly disregards my
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calls for the rediscovery of a pastoral physical and cultural
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landscape, for a reassertion of classically civilized values=FE
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especially dialogue and balance=FEamong a population of autonomous
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individuals=FEand my fervent denunciation of domination and hierarchy
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for fucking things up.
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I never said that the notion of the primitive as a world of free-
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dom and abundance is devoid of even a shred of truth; I merely
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suggested that we reserve judgment, that the primitivist view is
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simplistic, and that it represents an age-old strain of wishful
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thinking. My point was not that those who believed in such a view
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could find no evidence to cite for it, but rather, that such
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citation was besides the point, which is the transparently sub-
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jective nature of such belief, and its tendency to become dogma.
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Nonetheless, Simons chooses to answer me with a raft of scholarly
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citations=FEof books I'm already familiar with, thanks, incidentally,
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to the helpful, very civilized personal advice of the Fifth
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Estate's Bradford!
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It appears that Paul and I have different definitions of "work"
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and "play." I understand the distinction he makes between
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"productive" work and "goal-less" play, but=FEwhile rejecting a
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Puritanical, dutiful approach to work and to life=FEI believe we're
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mistaken to uphold "play" over "work," or even to value the
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distinction. Hierarchical societies, after all, maintain spheres of
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"unproductive" activity=FEeither as coerced economic endeavor (e.g.,
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packaging and junk mail)=FEor as reactive, escapist "recreation." And
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then there's shopping!
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Simons, conflating two definitions, also uses the word "work" to
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mean alienated or coerced labor. I'm as opposed as Paul to
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alienated labor. I use "work" to mean directed effort, especially
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highly focused creative effort. (Some might say "disciplined" or
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"purposeful"; I don't. Even "fun" is a purpose.) Right now I'm
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working on a letter, but I'm also playing. When a hungry animal or
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person forages in the woods, they're working=FEhowever playfully.
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(And when we play, we also learn.) My definition of work includes
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work done without explicit or implicit coercion. It includes work
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that one enjoys.
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Life should be a labor of love. I enjoy my work. I hate my job.
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(The outcome of my job had better be a check that clears. The
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outcome of work had better be something lovingly produced, a memory
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treasured, an experience savored, or at least a feeling of
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accomplishment.) This, too, is clear and obvious in my writing.
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While I'll stand by my skepticism regarding romantic primitivism's
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line of hype, this divergence may ultimately be a matter more of
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style than of substance. When we strip away differences in
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vocabulary and imagery, Simons and I actually agree on much
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regarding the pathology of this society. Even Zerzan (along with
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Wittgenstein) is right.. The very nature of language and abstract,
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"reflective" thought are themselves close to the root of the
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problem. Meanwhile, I've worked on this letter long enough. It's
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Friday night, and my check has cleared. Sorry, Paul, I'm going out
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to play, before Monday comes and it's back to the grind.
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Mitchell Halberstadt
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Daly City, CA.
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POETIC SOPHISTRIES
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Hello Jason et al,
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Feral Faun, in the "Iconoclast's Hammer" in Anarchy #36, rejects
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anarchists who believe in "a moral and/or social system that they
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wish to create and expand into a worldwide system of
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relationships." This sort of belief, F.F. says, causes these
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anarchists to "morally oppose... aspects of...society which are in
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contradiction to their values." F.F. states, "I am not an anarchist
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in this sense"; and goes on to defend egoism, greed, and
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selfishness=FEalbeit of an "expansive" sort that transcends property
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and economic relations=FEwhile denigrating "altruism."
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While I appreciate F.F.'s subtle and poetic sophistries, I'd like
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to interpose a word in defense of the "moral anarchism" which comes
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in for such scorn and ridicule in F.F.'s column and elsewhere in
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your pages from time to time.
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The word "moral" refers to the concepts of "right and wrong."
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Without digressing too deeply into the tangled byways of ethical
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theory, I would assert that the central identifying characteristic
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of anarchism is the recognition of an innate human sense of
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"rightness"=FEa gut-level feeling of "the way it's supposed to be,"
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of "fairness"=FEa quality or element of consciousness, common to all
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humanity, that each of us was aware of during our childhood. This
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instinctual moral sense exists on a pre-rational level, arising
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spontaneously within us; it's a basic part of our equipment, woven
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into the genetic fabric of our being, prior to
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learned/indoctrinated moral concepts. Kropotkin describes it as
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"...the principles of morality which are engraved on the hearts of
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each one of us" (in his Prisons and their Moral Influence on
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Prisoners).
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This innate moral sense constitutes the sole valid core of the
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religious teachings of the world, beneath the accretions of super-
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stition and manipulative authoritarianism; it is the "golden rule"
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that finds essential agreement in the traditional scriptures of all
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languages. Religions base their claim to legitimacy on the degree
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to which they reflect this common instinctive knowledge.
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It is alluded to in Thomas Jefferson's preamble to the Declaration
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of Independence=FE"We hold these truths to be self-evident..."; the
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innate sense of rightness is the basis of the concept of "rights"=FE
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civil rights, the Bill of Rights, etc. "Rights" are not abstract
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metaphysical entities in some Platonic realm; they are simple
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formulations of the folk-wisdom that recognizes the rightness and
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wrongness of certain basic behaviors of humans with each other.
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Anarchism is the idea that our natural innate moral sense will re-
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emerge when the externally imposed inhibiting social forces are
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removed. Natural human instincts of social harmony=FEmutual aid,
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voluntary cooperation, synergy, altruism=FEwill assert themselves
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when the corrupting influence of authoritarian power is broken. As
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water seeks its own level, as green plants turn toward the sun,
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humanity will return to social and ecological "rightness" when the
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social revolution ends our decamillenial detour down the dead-end
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evolutionary alley of hierarchical, authoritarian, ego-bound social
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relations.
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Dale R. Gowin #91-B-0209
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POB 500
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Elmira, NY. 14902
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Feral Faun responds:
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No evidence
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If "the central identifying characteristic of anarchism is
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recognition [sic] of an innate sense of `rightness'...," so much
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the worse for anarchism. There is no evidence that such a sense
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exists, and much that it does not. Children exhibit no "pre-
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rational" "instinctual moral sense." As a child, I lied, stole and
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committed acts of cruelty without compunction. The closest I had to
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"moral sense" was fear of getting caught. Nothing I've observed
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indicates I was unusual. Concepts of fairness I manipulated to my
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own ends=FEagain, not unusual. Though raised fundamentalist
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christian, I always recognized morality as an external imposition.
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When I killed the god in my head, morality and belief in an
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inherent human nature quickly followed. Non-state societies (tribal
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groups) also indicate a lack of an inherent moral sense, valuing
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drastically different traits and behaviors=FEincluding, in some
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cases, extreme cruelty, deception for deception's sake, hatred of
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strangers.
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Belief in an "innate moral sense" is, indeed, a "religious
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teaching," but one no less superstitious or manipulatively
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authoritarian than the concept of sin (which goes hand in hand with
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it). The golden rule: "Do unto others as you would have them do
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unto you," is an absurd basis for behavior. How do I know that
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anyone else wants what I want? It's much more sensible if I do what
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will create what I want.
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Even if we assumed that an "innate moral sense" existed, obviously
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people (including pre-rational children and non-static, non-
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capitalist tribal people) don't act on any such thing. Some
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authority is always necessary to enforce morality. So to put an end
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to authority is to put an end to morality, and to discover
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perpetually free uncodified ways of living and relating.
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``RAP COPS'' RACIST
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Dear Friends at Anarchy,
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Just wanted to respond to a couple of things in the most recent
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issue (#36) of your magazine. I was reading the article on
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supporting the anarchist press and the need for anarchist media to
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network and help one another out. I wholeheartedly agree. I work
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with the Love and Rage production group and I definitely feel
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there's far too much sectarianism in our movement. The difficulty
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is often in letting personalities get in the way of discussing
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valid political differences. I'm going to try to walk the tight
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rope of being critical of an article at the same time as saying
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that we'd like to work with you and hope you'll contact us on some
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of the specific ways we might be able to help one another out. One
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note considering the "distributor hall of shame." @ Collective in
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New Orleans and Dayton Anarchist Collective, both listed as Love
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and Rage supporting groups, haven't been much more supportive or
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responsive to us. Perhaps at one time they were, we just haven't
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decided a process for deciding who's a supporting group, yet too
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broke to contribute money and who's not being supportive of the
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anarchist movement. It's a delicate question as many of us live on
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very little and often put so much into local projects that it's
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difficult to help with broader or seemingly more distant ones.
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The article I wish to comment on is the one on "Rap Cops" by
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Michael William. The page is titled "The Sad Truth" and I can only
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hope that you meant the piece in some ironical way, yet reading the
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article over and over I couldn't help but come to the conclusion
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that it was racist. For anarchists to publish a positive piece on
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the police in and of itself is enough to raise eyebrows. One cop
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says "We were being judged and hung just for being the police." To
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serve and protect. Who are they serving and what is it they
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protect? They protect property and serve those with the most of it,
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using force to do so. They'll help me out when the property of my
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body is in danger. Having once been homeless, I was witness to, and
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victim of continual police harassment, often for being in the wrong
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place. In other words if I try to get out of the rain and sleep in
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an empty building the police are paid, by real estate speculators,
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to come in and throw me out. The worst part of the article however
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is to continue with "in a related incident" in which a Mr. Howard
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is accused of shooting a Texas cop while listening to Tupac Amuru
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Shakur's album. I say all power to Ronald Ray Howard and that we as
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anarchists ought to do some prisoner support work for him. To say
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someone killed someone because of music sounds like Tipper Gore.
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The name Tupac Amuru Shakur is symbolic for 500 years of resistance
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to racism. I wonder how many anarchists even know the story of
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Tupac Amuru and the native uprising against the Spanish in South
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America? The name Shakur in its original African language means
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"the thankful." Others that have taken the name, like Assata Shakur
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embody the best in the anti-racist struggle. Despite some ideologi-
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cal differences, her courage and others who have taken the name
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Shakur in the fight against racism are a role model for any one who
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might seriously think themselves to be a revolutionary. The full
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name of the group is rich in the tradition of standing up to
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racism, in particular in the Americas. The U.S. has the #1 prisoner
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per capita in the world. Racist South Africa is #2, and the evil
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former empire of the Soviet Union (CIS) #3. The rate of
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incarceration in the U.S., for those of African descent is seven
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times that of whites! There is no mention whatsoever of the cir-
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cumstances of why Mr. Howard might feel his life endangered enough
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to risk shooting a cop. It's not the music, it's the ways of white
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folks who just don't seem to get it. This is not the first
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controversy with Anarchy editorial policy running racist material
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without commentary. Calling the article a "scam" hardly puts it in
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an anarchist perspective. I, too, believe in free speech, but
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there's a difference when you run something under the banner of
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anarchy. People think that this is what anarchy is all about, when
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I find it difficult to imagine any anarchist as supporting
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something so exploitative as racism or the armed thugs used to
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perpetuate it. In a choice between freedom and dropin' a cop I say
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all power to the people and fuck da po-lice. If the article was
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meant as satire it was neither self-evident, nor placed in such a
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context as to how Anarchy felt about the article.
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Love and Rage is no stranger to controversy. I hope you'll
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consider the criticism as constructive and that likewise Anarchy,
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Love and Rage, and other anarchist projects can recognize and
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respect our various differences and still find ways in which to
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practice mutual aid. We look forward to hearing from you.
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Sincerely,
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R.S., New York, NY.
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Michael William replies:
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A bogus ``controversy''
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Having indicated its anti-cop stance in the first sentence with
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the epithet "pigs," I am baffled that R.S. found my "Rap Cops" a
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"positive piece on the police." Elsewhere, social workers are
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insulted by comparing them to cops: "The cops come on with a soft-
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cop social worker spiel..." Two anti-cop songs are quoted at
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length.
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My article was a straightforward news piece about a recuperation
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that I thought would be of interest to Anarchy readers. Aside from
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the part on the rap cops, it contained related material I found in
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a gay and lesbian journal about anti-cop rap music being
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censored/self-censored (in the case of Ice-T's "Cop Killer"), and
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about legal proceedings against it (in the case of Tupac Amuru
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Shakur's album). Composed of quotes and information, it contained
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minimal commentary or analysis. I simply wanted to get the
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information out.
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In the letter there is no attempt to substantiate the charge of
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racism. His only specific accusation, in effect, concerns my lack
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of speculation about precisely why Ronald Howard allegedly shot the
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cop. In R.S.'s opinion, I should have discussed the very strained
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relations between African-Americans and the cops and why someone
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might shoot a cop. But more directly than any possible comment of
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mine, this is expressed by people who are quoted in the text (e.g,
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"I don't like the police; they be shooting and killing people").
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Both of the anti-cop songs evoke situations in which cops are
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killed. Calling my piece racist because I don't comment on this al-
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ready discussed point is pretty far-fetched.
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Concerning his comment about Tupac Amuru, it is worth noting that
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these words have been adopted by MRTA, a Peruvian guerrilla group
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which has been responsible for killing gays as part of a "cleansing
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of undesirables" campaign=FEanother example of how easily symbols
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are recuperated by bigots and thugs (and of the dangers of un-
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critically embracing symbolic values).
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It may well be "sincere," but I hardly consider R.S.'s letter
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"constructive." Rather, his attempt to conjure up a bogus
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"controversy" out of thin air only discredits him.
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R.S. mentions doing support work for Ronald Howard. People who
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want to find out more about his case may be able to obtain this
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information from the journal where I found the uncredited news
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article. Write to: Frighten the Horses, 41 Sutter Street #1108, San
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Francisco, California 94104, U.S.A.
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Michael William
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C.P. 1554 Succ. B
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Montr=82al, Qu=82bec
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Canada H3B 3L2
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IMPUTATIONISM
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Dear Politically Challenged,
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Getting three issues at once, as I just did, impresses on me the
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enormity of your output=FEthat anthology you've considered will have
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to be huge to be at all representative. I am not going to try to
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make up for lost time, just lash out a little here and there.
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Imagine my delight at a Russian anarchist invoking my name as the
|
||
|
epitome of intra-anarchist critique! "I seem to be a verb," as the
|
||
|
futurist idiot Buckminster Fuller once senascently mused.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Max Anger is up to the same old scam the situationists and many
|
||
|
others (myself included) have too often pulled, it needs a name:
|
||
|
imputationism. Imputationism is wishful thinking dressed up as
|
||
|
critical theory, an esoteric variant on what the psychoanalysts
|
||
|
call "projection." Max Anger, like the S.I. before him, wants the
|
||
|
Los Angeles riots (1965, 1992, same difference) to be
|
||
|
revolutionary, therefore, inspection discloses they were exactly
|
||
|
that.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of course, this calls for some serious spin control. There is, for
|
||
|
instance, the targeting of Korean-owned shops by black looters and
|
||
|
arsonists. Class war was "subsumed, unfortunately, under the rubric
|
||
|
of race." Evidently the rubric of race trumped the imputation of
|
||
|
class war since, as Anger sorrowfully acknowledges, many businesses
|
||
|
owned by or employing blacks were spared. Like many white men
|
||
|
before him, Anger knows what black folk are up to better than they
|
||
|
do themselves. Words =FEhis words=FEspeak louder than actions=FEtheir
|
||
|
actions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Fifty years of totalitarian disinformation" is to blame for this
|
||
|
unfortunate misunderstanding on the part of rioters who just
|
||
|
"happened" to be black regarding small businessmen who just
|
||
|
"happened" to be Korean. Now maybe I don't watch enough TV or
|
||
|
something but I am entirely unaware of any media efforts in my less
|
||
|
than 50 years (and Anger is younger still) to incite blacks to hate
|
||
|
Koreans. Indeed the only media treatment of black/Korean relations
|
||
|
I've ever seen, pre-riot, was Do the Right Thing by black filmmaker
|
||
|
Spike Lee which I didn't understand to be at all anti-Korean, and
|
||
|
if it were, a black would be to blame. Anger is just making this
|
||
|
stuff up. Too many blacks figured out how to hate Koreans all by
|
||
|
themselves. Give them that much credit; if their anger was
|
||
|
misdirected it was, at least, theirs. Anger's anger is abstract and
|
||
|
bookish.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Anger also has to explain away the brutal beating of white truck
|
||
|
driver Reginald Denney by black thugs. Denney had nothing to do
|
||
|
with the acquittal of Rodney King's police assailants. Anger opines
|
||
|
this episode was not "typical," but first repeats an unconfirmed
|
||
|
and self-serving allegation by the accused that Denney "taunted"
|
||
|
them about the verdict in the King case. This is blatantly
|
||
|
improbable=FEa white guy drives into a black ghetto to taunt the
|
||
|
locals about the King verdict?=FEbut even if it happened, does this
|
||
|
justify beating him half to death? Whatever happened to free
|
||
|
speech?
|
||
|
|
||
|
When Anger says "typical," what does he refer to? Black-on-white
|
||
|
street crime is much more "typical" than white-on-black street
|
||
|
crime. Maybe he wasn't thinking along these lines. Maybe he wasn't
|
||
|
doing much thinking at all. Rodney King wasn't beaten by a random
|
||
|
sample of whites. He was beaten by police. In this he has a lot of
|
||
|
white, black, Asian and Hispanic company. Anger says we should
|
||
|
"support" the black goons. Why? Why not support the white goons who
|
||
|
beat up Rodney King? They're not "typical" either.
|
||
|
|
||
|
What else? Why is everybody freaking out over Molly Gill's white
|
||
|
nationalist infiltration of anarchdom, although she has never
|
||
|
concealed her opinions or claimed to be an anarchist, whereas
|
||
|
nobody but Lawrence and I have noticed the red nationalist
|
||
|
infiltration of anarchdom by Professor Ward Churchill and his
|
||
|
partner Dr. M. Annette Jaimes? This pair is to indigenism what
|
||
|
Dworkin and MacKinnon are to feminism. Churchill, formerly of
|
||
|
Weatherman SDS, is that only too ubiquitous figure, the Marxist-
|
||
|
turned-nationalist. He and his girl friend play good cop/bad cop,
|
||
|
Churchill serving his racism straight up, Jaimes watering her
|
||
|
drinks.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Jaimes' article was, in Anarchy, a waste of space, although it
|
||
|
might have been enlightening for its original leftist readership.
|
||
|
It said nothing that has not been as well or better said in
|
||
|
publications like Anarchy and the Fifth Estate for ten to twenty
|
||
|
years now. Even some of her phraseology sounded like it was taken
|
||
|
from people like John Zerzan and myself, both conspicuous by our
|
||
|
absence from her footnotes. I'm not affronted by these omissions=FE
|
||
|
the more this information gets around, the better I like it=FEbut I
|
||
|
wonder what they mean.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Zerzan was too gentle with Dr. Jaimes, intimidated, perhaps, by
|
||
|
her privileged position as a woman and a Native American. She
|
||
|
openly celebrates Amerindian civilizations like the Aztecs and
|
||
|
Incas for their independent invention of the state, imperialism,
|
||
|
slavery, priestly religion, human sacrifice and other Old World
|
||
|
accomplishments. Euro- and Afro-Americans need no lessons from
|
||
|
Indians in these activities, we need lessons in living in entirely
|
||
|
different ways. What matters is not, as for Jaimes and Churchill,
|
||
|
who, what matters is how. The thousands of Europeans who went
|
||
|
native ("gone to Croatan") in colonial America learned such lessons
|
||
|
from their Indian hosts. So should Churchill and Jaimes. What
|
||
|
they're teaching we already know only too well.
|
||
|
(Wish I Were)
|
||
|
Gone to Croatan,
|
||
|
Bob Black
|
||
|
POB 3142
|
||
|
Albany, NY. 12203-0142
|
||
|
|
||
|
HETERO, HOMO & BI BOXES
|
||
|
Dear @narchists,
|
||
|
|
||
|
I think the most important point in Michael William's piece
|
||
|
"Bisexuality" in Anarchy #36 is that the burgeoning bisexual
|
||
|
movements, like the gay and lesbian movements before them, are
|
||
|
operating for the most part within the established authoritarian
|
||
|
structure=FEand liking it! As someone who, when pressed, describes
|
||
|
himself as voyeuristically bisexual but interactively
|
||
|
heterosubmissive, but also at various times an ambi/asexual (and
|
||
|
even anarchosexual) rubberist, foot-fetishist, fan of vanilla
|
||
|
hetero porn videos and male homoerotic literature, above all an
|
||
|
anarchist, this just does not do much for me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Liz Highleyman's quote is apt, to a point. All these gay, lesbian,
|
||
|
and bi "leaders" I see, especially in conjunction with this sum-
|
||
|
mer's March on Washington, seem very establishment. Could it be
|
||
|
that the leadership of these "liberation" groups seeks to maintain
|
||
|
its own power by courting the very institutions that oppress not
|
||
|
only so-called sexual minorities but all people? No government can
|
||
|
make you free, folks. Whenever all the Gays In The Military talk
|
||
|
starts to wear on me, I just put on Buffy Sainte-Marie singing "The
|
||
|
Universal Soldier" to remind myself there should not be a military
|
||
|
Marriage? Nearly 100 years ago, Wanda von Sacher-Masoch, wife of
|
||
|
the original masochist (so-called), named and damned marriage for
|
||
|
the sham and tool of repression that it is.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So what do we have here? The hetero box, and its attendant
|
||
|
privilege of heterosexual identity, which is highly internalized in
|
||
|
our culture. ("Privilege" to be lorded over by other hets,
|
||
|
perhaps?) The homo box. It took me a while to realize that the
|
||
|
reason I was not actively seeking sex with men had nothing to do
|
||
|
with "repression" or being "closeted," but simply because I have no
|
||
|
particular desire to initiate or, in most cases, reciprocate sex
|
||
|
with men, enjoyable as it may be. Period. These ideas are very
|
||
|
popular in our society and constantly reinforced in a variety of
|
||
|
venues. But I don't consider myself some kind of traitor (to what
|
||
|
or whom?) just because I'm not gay enough to join some peoples'
|
||
|
clubs. Now there's the recently re-vocalized bi box. It sounds like
|
||
|
you're supposed to hang out a banner, join a support group, and
|
||
|
sign up for some kind of newsletter. There's also the role model
|
||
|
thing, but I don't think I'd be much good for that.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Frankly, people, I am sorry, but I'm just too busy being human for
|
||
|
most of this.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Gender, Basically arbitrary. Kinsey scale? I spit on it. Bio-
|
||
|
logical origins of sexual identity? Please. I don't have time to
|
||
|
run out and get a brain scan every time I wake up wondering how I'm
|
||
|
going to feel that day. Besides, the 3 boxes are not big enough to
|
||
|
hold all the may ways people find of experiencing their sexuality
|
||
|
and their humanity. That's why there are so many closeted
|
||
|
heterosexuals of varying stripes and the multitudes of other
|
||
|
suppressed individuals.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I know this is controversial. The people I love most have strong
|
||
|
gay, lesbian, and straight identities. Many have suffered
|
||
|
considerable personal anguish in arriving at them. But it must be
|
||
|
remembered that one of the most powerful tools of control is the
|
||
|
imposition of a uniform identity, or at the least the outward
|
||
|
appearance of such identity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For some time in our culture, this has meant vanilla hetero. Many
|
||
|
people are, and that's fine. Today, in our so-called "progressive,"
|
||
|
post-Stonewall era, the power structure is responding to the
|
||
|
assertion of gays and lesbians. Thus, we have the possibility of a
|
||
|
new, officially sanctioned option for being. Looks to me like it's
|
||
|
going to be vanilla homo. Who knows? Maybe even vanilla bi, as
|
||
|
well. Meanwhile, though it makes many people uncomfortable, there
|
||
|
seems to be considerable debate in the gay community as to the
|
||
|
proper way to be gay and who gets the full embrace of the "tribe."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Please understand, I think vanilla is a fine, fine flavor.
|
||
|
Moreover, I would not question the validity of anyone's sexual
|
||
|
identity or the gratification and self-affirmation in finding a
|
||
|
group of like-minded friends in a hostile world. But my concern is
|
||
|
that it seems to me it might be more liberating if we relied less
|
||
|
on the seemingly arbitrary terms by which we purport to describe
|
||
|
our sexual proclivity, skin color, genitalia, etc. It is no secret
|
||
|
these categories are fluid. I believe that to a great extent they
|
||
|
exist and change in response to the self-preservation needs of the
|
||
|
power structure and the feelings of alienation it engenders. I say
|
||
|
what you have said in your masthead: "Disarm authority! Arm your
|
||
|
desires!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
I do not waver in or apologize for my feeling that we are all
|
||
|
human and that human liberation is an anarchist goal. (As a vegan,
|
||
|
I would include nonhumans as well.) For me, there isn't really any
|
||
|
such thing as "queer" any more than there could be a "perverted"
|
||
|
consensual relationship. We are all whom we are. Essentially, we
|
||
|
are human, and to put too much faith in the millennia-old Divide
|
||
|
and Conquer, stock-in-trade of the authoritarians, is deadly. Knock
|
||
|
down walls. Don't put up new ones.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As for my own penchant for "sadomasochism" (another misnomer if
|
||
|
there ever was one and used far too loosely to hold much
|
||
|
significance), I do not find it incongruous with my being an
|
||
|
anarchist. In fact, outside the anarchist press, the best anti-
|
||
|
authoritarian writing I've found appears in publications which
|
||
|
cater to this interest. (Dian Hansen's Leg Show and Lily Brain-
|
||
|
drop's Taste of Latex come to mind.) Without going into boring
|
||
|
details of my personal life, let me say that it's just me, expe-
|
||
|
riencing my humanity to the fullest extent of my desire (armed!)
|
||
|
and ability, loving every minute of it, and doing so without
|
||
|
apology. Consensuality is a must, but PC? I'd spit on it if I had
|
||
|
any saliva left.
|
||
|
|
||
|
American anarchist Voltairine de Cleyre wrote in her essay
|
||
|
"Anarchism": "Ah, once to stand unflinchingly on the brink of that
|
||
|
dark gulf of passions and desires, once at last to send a bold,
|
||
|
straight-driven gaze down into the volcanic Me, once, and in that
|
||
|
once forever, to throw off the command to cover and flee from the
|
||
|
knowledge of that abyss,=FEnay, to dare it to hiss and seethe if it
|
||
|
will, and make us writhe and shiver with its force!" (It gets even
|
||
|
better. Find it and read it!)
|
||
|
|
||
|
That's the banner under which I want to march!
|
||
|
Sincerely,
|
||
|
Bob-Boy, District of Columbia
|
||
|
|
||
|
PS: Space limitations precluded my discussing AIDS, feminism, gay-
|
||
|
and bi-bashing, homo- and bi-phobia, and the always popular Anarchy
|
||
|
letters section topic of adult-child sex. I am aware that these are
|
||
|
important topics which need to be included in full-scale
|
||
|
discussions of gender and sexual identity.
|
||
|
|