Ted Byfield on Fri, 3 Mar 2023 16:09:01 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Germany's geopolitics |
Andre, you really nailed it. As some may have noticed, the US in particular is suffering from, let's say, a *maldistribution of agency*. It's mostly imaginary, but like all imaginaries, it functions like a mass-magic spell: its very unreality makes it that much more real. The left — not a good name for it, but that's a discussion for another time — has been consumed with efforts to "give agency to" or "empower" its various grassroots constituencies for decades. I happen to support those liberationist struggles, *and* I can also see the myriad ways those cultural activities are inextricably intertwined with the left's plainly obvious inability to effectively occupy governmental entities and functions at *any* level. The right, which has been supremely effective at subsuming government functions — whether by simply taking them over or by rewriting the laws and media that construct them — is consumed with growing imaginary allegations of excessive agency: conspiracies, "the gubmint," "globalists," various insidious "agendas," "cancellations," "false flags" (i.e., misattributed agency), and ridiculous "lizard people"–style nonsense (i.e., allegations of infinite agency to entities that look like they don't have agency *because they look like us*), etc, etc More: US police forces are increasingly consumed by their sense of helplessness and even fragility, even as their numbers skyrocket, their budgets and powers expand uncontrollably, and the quantity and "quality" of their weaponry — as well as their willingness to use it on the slightest pretext — has metastasized. US courts have become little more than a forum for rightists to adjudicate ways to destroy ideas and facts developed by the left. But the courts can't *do* anything directly — all they can do is direct other branches not do or not do this or that. So they too are acutely aware of their lack of agency and power, even as they grow by the day. And the US federal government, with almost undisputed military and financial power, is suffering from some sort of collective aphasia, unable to effectively *name* the abuses tearing people's lives to pieces: "insurrection" and "coup," the "mass murder" of gun violence, "criminal negligence" (like public beta tests of allegedly self-driving cars on the public at large), mass "disenfranchisement" through gerrymandering and worse, the "indentured servitude" of student debt and the "slavery" of so much employment, the "price-gouging" and "profiteering" of corporations, large-scale "fraud" and "theft" by networks of grifters. The state's undisputed power to *name* things is dissolving into endless scholastic debates and procedural formalisms, resulting in inexplicable paralysis. It's a prime example of how *seeing like a state* — which is more about naming than seeing — both works and doesn't work: if you can't name it you can't do anything about it, so if you don't want to do anything about just don't name it. I could go on with this list, but there's no need because they're all variations on the same paradoxical misapprehension of agency. People, institutions, forces see it where it isn't, can't see it where it is, imagine they have none and others have it all. No realistic or effective analysis of agency or power can come from this mess. The funny-not-funny thing about this is that the left has the conceptual tools it needs to sort this out this, but (wait for it...) can't seem to use them. For example, if someone were to apply theories of intersectionality — a staple of leftist thinking that comes from (cue the horror-movie soundtrack) CRT and therefore for domestic use only — to Ukraine and its people, lo and behold, their struggle could be seen in both/and rather than either/or terms: as part of a cynical geopolitical strategy *and* a legitimate struggle for autonomy, as politically problematic *and* morally right, as terrifyingly risky *and* worth the risk, etc. But acknowledging that might mean supporting their struggle, however awful the consequences. And that support would violate Rule #1: it would be *inconsistent*. Inconsistent, that is, with other stances and beliefs - pacifism or commitment to nonviolence, say. And so we can see that one major obstacle to support often has little or nothing to do with actual Ukrainians, their actual lives, their actual country. Instead, it stems from a reluctance to make exceptions on whatever grounds, to hold incompatible beliefs, to recommend one thing in one context and its opposite in another. To do that, to take the personal authority of believing things that don't fit together easily or clearly, is a sovereign act: it asserts priority over the systems of thought that constrain agency. Doing that, being inconsistent, doesn't go well these days, because much of our mediated landscape — and therefore much of our conversational landscape, at every level — is devoted to "holding people accountable" for being, saying, or doing inconsistent things. Your career prospects will tank, your credit score will plummet, and your insurance rates will skyrocket. Your puritanically consistent friends will (as we've seen here) denounce you as hypnotized by the "media" or "propaganda," or just a "troll," or some will suspect you must've taken some colored pill — red, blue, black, it doesn't matter which, as long as it can explain away your sense of agency. Academia, consumed by nonsense about ever-narrower job titles, consistent patterns of consistent publication, application of consistent "methodologies," will banish you. And if anyone pays too much attention, the media will treat you variously as "mavericky," a "personality," or part of — that is, consistent with — some subculture organized around either (a) the assertion of raw privilege that consists entirely and only of being completely incoherent, or (b) some boutique model of hyper-consistency applied to anything without regard for others' humanity — for example, incels on the one hand, long-termists on the other. And so it's no surprise to see, basically, white male leftists receding into the ether of world-systems theory — again, consumed with dreams of finding some consistency. That is, taking a view (which implies occupying a position, however imaginary) whose theoretical sophistication and breadth of considerations are matched only by a complete lack of engagement with the simple truth: one country — which as you say, has a broken political environment — ruthlessly invaded another country and has rained total destruction on it for a year now. So, again as you say, we imagine Ukrainians are, or at least should be, *like us*: NPCs — that is, no agency. And the recommendation is that they should accept *being like us* by submitting to an inexorable and incoherent system of power. If they'd just do that, everything would be fine. For us. But they won't, so we should stop helping them to be different from us. The solipsism you point out is really astonishing. And it certainly affects the UK, but someone else who knows more would have to make that argument. But, clearly, the UK suffers from dynamics that are all too similar: a lunatic series of Tory governments that have systematically plundered all things public and rewritten the fabric of everyday life at every level — all so they could, in their own way, *be like us*, and not like those awful people on the continent who don't suffer quite so much from problems of agency. If people want to object specifically and concretely to support for Ukraine's fight for independence, that's a conversation worth having. But grounding opposition in imaginary terrains whose defining qualities are abstraction — systemic, theoretical, historical — that negates what anyone with eyes and ears can see, no. Those considerations might be real, valid, or important, but if weighing them *necessarily* results in paralysis — a lack of agency that seeks to deny others' agency — that's not a conversation worth having, because it's not really a conversation. Cheers, Ted On 1 Mar 2023, at 5:37, Andre Rebentisch wrote: > An interesting pattern - also in conspiracy theory type imagination - is to imagine your own government as a capable, acting party that in a way starts or controls developments. Basically one ensures that the > main narration is its capability to lead action, good or evil. > > Here we have a uthless invader of Ukraine and a broken political > environment in Russia, but instead one talks about the West. and > Ukraine supposedly did something wrong but not on its own but as a > proxy that distracts Europe from its smarter geopolitical choices, > whatever they are, something Chinese, Tianxia. > > You know, like there is no Vietnamese perspective in the Vietnam war narrative complex, all are NPC. It is all about US faults, suffering, > politicians, soldiers, veterans, protests. > > One does not leave it to Russia to do wrong and for Ukraine to suffer and others to react, the initiative needs to be claimed for "us" who allegedly orchestrate it to go wrong. > > -- A # 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: