Felix Stalder on Fri, 21 Apr 2017 10:18:09 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Phillips/Beyer/Coleman: "false assumption that |
I'm not sure I get where this thread is going, or better, where it is coming from. There are, in my view, two different questions here. A) has the far-right meme culture played a significant role in Trump winning the election? The short answer is clearly no. We're in the midsts of a deep systemic crisis and one candidate came to represent change and managed to built a new coalition (tax-cutting conservatives, carbon and finance oligarchs, and white and/or economic nationalists) while the other stood for continuity and could not hold her coalition together (unionised labour, white liberal middle class and minorities). If that isn't enough, add the effects of gerrymandering and voter suppression and if that is not enough, the add the effect of the FBI intervention a few days before the election. For much of the rest -- the Russians, fake news etc -- I agree with Gleen Greenwald who called it the "liberal Benghazi", meaning self-serving conspiracy theories to paper over a total lack of political strategy. And the magic powers of Pepe the Frog, belong, in my view, to the same category. B) More interesting is the second question: Is there something inherently alt-right in Anonymous? On 2017-04-20 00:04, Florian Cramer wrote: > These are classical questions concerning the historiography of > fascism which also applied to the German Third Reich. Hold your horses. The relationship between continuity and change belongs to the standard questions of any historic analysis no matter what its subject is. But Anonymous is an interesting case, because it has always been a very unusual entity, more of a many-headed hydra than of coherent set of principles. As far as principles go, what seems to be always present is an anti-systemic commitment to free speech, the joy of offending, going all the way back to the trolling history of the internet, which, of course, is much older than 4chan. But it didn't end there. Since 2008, some people began to move beyond the simple joys of sticking their finger into the face of anyone who cares to notice (or has the bad luck not to be able to ignore it). They developed different analyses of what it is that actually restricts speech. One set of groups began to point to specific powerful organisations -- say Scientology, private security contractors, sports teams covering up rape -- which leads to a loosely left-wing politics. Biella has covered this particularly streak / phase / set of heads of Anonymous very well. The same basic intuition can lead you down toward an analysis of "PC-culture", which is also a warped kind of power analysis, but one that leads you to towards the right. Combine this with the anti-establishment shock/entertainment qualities of the Trump campaign, then there is a clear pull here at work. So, of course institutions change, and loose and flexible one like Anonymous change particularly quickly. They change because of outside pressures/opportunities, but they do so following their own logic. In other words, change in unpredictable, but not random. In the case of Anonymous, it seems to me, it's not so much that the organisation changeѕ -- there has never been enough organisation there -- but that different heads of the hydra grow and decline at different rates and in different times. The media exposure plays, of course, in important role here, and the fact that liberal media in their newly found thirst for conspiracy theories focus on the right-wing troll culture, certainly adds to the fun of the right-wing trolls. To clarify, by calling this conspiracy theories, I don't mean to suggest that right-wong trolling and online harassment doesn't exist. But that its importance is blown out of proportion and thus creating non-existant causal relationships. ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| http://felix.openflows.com |OPEN PGP: 056C E7D3 9B25 CAE1 336D 6D2F 0BBB 5B95 0C9F F2AC # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: