Well burrowed, old mole!

Essays on Philosophy

Category: Politics

A Modest Proposal for Revitalizing Philosophy

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     In every generation, someone makes the claim that philosophy is dead, and yet, like the ever-imminent Christian Apocalypse, this death never seems to come.  History is done, philosophy is dead, the stars are not wanted now, put out every one, pack up the moon and dismantle the sun etc etc… This mentality of self-pity or whatever you want to call it usually is the result of taking some theological, philosophical or scientific hyperbolist a bit too seriously.  Wittgenstein did not murder philosophy with the Tractatus, nor Hegel with his Phenomenology,  nor Fukuyama with his End of History, nor Dewey with his frightful pragmatist nonsense, what they did was to provide a certain type of enabling optical illusion, an excuse for the tired, for the weary for those whose fantasy was such a death to seize upon. 

        Philosophy will never die as a result of its problems being “solved” or “dissolved.”  It will only be clinically dead for as long as a people lack imagination enough to practice it.  The definition of philosophy in these terms falsifies it.  Philosophy is about the creation of the problem, about posing a problem, about problematization, not about reconciliations or solutions. As soon as one “problem” is “(dis)solved,” life has already thrown another mountain in the way of the sensitive mind.  As Emerson put it in his essay Circles:

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Marx and the “Death of God”

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    It is remarkable that so many postmodernists seem to mourn the death of God.  The fact that the totality is no longer total, that there is no ultimate mystical reality behind the world seems to disappoint these people.  Their writings show a pathetic nostalgia for the total even as they proclaim its opposite. 

Their actions are a part of the tradition which they place themselves over against.  We can begin with Plato and Socrates, in their confrontation with the sophists. The problem with the sophists was that their art was nomadic; it had to be domesticated.  The sophists did not teach a transcendent term that should govern all discourse, their way of teaching was foundationless.  It seems that Plato was a brilliant sophist, who appropriated many sophistic techniques in order to compose his works, but then turned around and attempted to declare himself the last prophet.  His theory of the forms is a theory of the beyond, one which falsifies the life-world and subordinates it to external concepts.  The bottom line, the most essential characteristic of Plato is his insistence on the universality of values.      

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Juvenal and Capitalism

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Juvenal’s Satires are conservative.  However, they are also anti-capitalist.  Juvenal has nightmares of capitalism as a sort of nihilistic obscenity, those are his Satires they are his intuitions of the rise of the bourgeoisie in Rome, these intuitions fill him with horror.  His satires have as their object a society where the only value is wealth where nothing else matters.  This sort of a critique of capitalism worries me because it coincides with an affirmation of Aristocratic values, if Juvenal is holding Rome’s past up to glory I cannot agree with him at all.  He is a master of the critique in terms of a deviation from a nonexistent past, this trope has been used many times since he employed it.  His criticisms of Roman Society are very acute, he sees the incursion of capitalism and he denounces it, yet he does not denounce it in terms of exploitation he denounces it in terms of degeneracy and corruption.  He does not get to the root of the issue, he complains that offices can be bought or that masters mistreat their slaves, but he never questions the offices or the institution of slavery.    

Juvenal’s verses are dotted with just as many traditional allusions as they are with proper names.  Juvenal would like to see a return to traditional values, and these traditions to which he refers are all aristocratic myths of heroes and so on.  He achieves humor by way of juxtaposing the degenerate person in the capitalistic atmosphere- the one who has no values who cares for nothing –with the great figures of myth and legend.  In Juvenal’s day his verses did have some subversive value, but all too often people are lead to see them as satires on a monarchical or aristocratic society which had become corrupt, and to miss the criticism of a pre-natal capitalistic order which was beginning to hold sway in Rome.  He is what Marx would call a ‘feudal socialist’ criticizing capitalism in its emergence from the aristocratic perspective, for this reason, he is not going to criticize exploitation because it is the very cornerstone of feudalism as well as capitalism. He may criticize miserliness but never inequality, he dislikes the capitalist for subverting an even older system of inequality. 

Despite the conservative origin of this type of critique, many progressives radicals and artists have given voice to the spiritual vacuity of capitalist society.  This Juvenalian moralism and all of the talk of spiritual emptiness and cultural malaise and meaninglessness are many ways of not focusing on the naked reality of exploitation and enslavement which are the foundation of the current capitalist order.  Can one appropriate such a conservative critique without becoming conservative? If I say capitalism is not cool because under capitalism all people care about is money, it is easy to point to a person who does not care about money like a philanthropist and thereby justify the system, but if I say that I oppose capitalism because it is based on enslavement of one group of people by another, or if you prefer, the theft of surplus value, one can point to a hobo who is not caught in that surplus-value cycle and he does not justify the system.  When we denounce another for only caring about the bottom line what we truly denounce him for is excusing enslavement using the authority of the idea of the bottom line.  Similarly, if I denounce America for becoming an Empire and ceasing to be a republic, I may miss the point that the republic was based on exploitation too. 

          

Reflections on Revolutionary Consciousness

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    We must begin by acknowledging a presently existing form of anarchy, one which is largely dormant, but one that can become more manifest. In other words, we must begin by acknowledging that all existing hierarchies are based on the quasi-voluntary association of free persons to a much greater degree than is generally conceded.  Most Americans, and citizens of first world countries, live a large portion of their lives with no actual hand holding a gun to their heads and forcing them to obey anything.  Most of these countries right now run on “auto-pilot,” most people regulate themselves for the system, or more precisely are regulated under their own supervision for the system. One can even hypothesize that, following Sartre’s discussion of the solitude in which the reception of a command leaves one, without self-organization no institutions are possible at all.  In practice, there are groups of people who claim to be in charge and so on, but if their so-called subordinates do not use their own creative capacities to carry out the directives they are given nothing at all would be possible except frustration.     

     A great mass of consciousness is currently configured in such a way as to make a realization of the fact that we ultimately regulate ourselves in the interest of a system which exploits us unthinkable or at least very difficult to think. If this is difficult to think, the thought that we could reorganize in a different way should be impossible, but this is not the case.  How are people led to forget the anarchy of the pure present which is the first experience of life and its prevailing atmosphere for much of early childhood? The answer is two fold, they are not, and an attempt is made to do so by various means which it shall be our task to explore, these are commonly called “mainstream culture”.  People never forget this experience because it recurs in life very often; this is the case when one witnesses a crime, or when one is present at a momentous conjunction of forces, it is the sensation of suspension of the law.  We feel for a moment that law only exists in the past and that right now that could cease to be the case.  In this type of moment we have a taste of something, something which has been subject to manipulation and mystification for far too long. 

               It is a corollary of this position that authority is quite different than many people imagine it to be.  Mao was quite correct when he characterized the United States as a ‘paper tiger’ implying that its power was possessed of a different type of substance than it would have us believe.  This is a good figure for all authority; authority is not power, and we confuse the two at our peril.  If we wish to choose a similar image, possibly more familiar to most people in the United States, we can say that authority is a “scarecrow” or a “straw man.” How does the scare crow function? How is it possible for the paper tiger or the straw man to compel and discourage behaviors? Kenneth Burke almost explains this when he discusses the issue of  the externality of voices to the individual mind.  He claims that an external voice can never successfully compel anyone to do anything unless it is internalized, but he neglects the fact that the external voice does not just penetrate the skull by osmosis. One is not penetrated by the voice, one becomes the voice and the voice becomes one.  The farmer only has to chase the birds a few times and put up a straw man, then they regulate themselves through fear, he does not have to be present in the field at all times, yet the crows act as if he was. The important point here is that the farmer has power, and the birds have power; now, the farmer puts the straw man in the field and the crows endow it with significance, they regulate themselves based on this attribution of meaning.   Similarly, in intra-human affairs authority does not compel submission; most of what we would classify under this heading should be thought as participation in the most concrete sense in the legitimation of law. No law is ever fully legitimate but it is a constant process of legitimation.  Thus, we can say that authority depends for its force on the actions of those over whom it is said to be wielded. Authority is the legislative power, the force which is the law which never achieves legitimacy. That this should continue to return, that it should be reproduced on a daily basis bespeaks a complicity in the creation of one’s own manacles which is the basic principle of politics. 

     Thus, we can see that authority has a ritual character, and as Joseph Campbell has claimed, ritual is the enactment of myth. However, it seems that thinkers like Campbell and Eliade have performed an inversion here.  It seems that myths are both a sublimation of the individual’s role as participant in the reproduction of authority, and consumption of such myths is a form of such reproduction at the same time.  Rituals in the anthropological sense and rites of various kinds are attempts to instantiate a world in which the apologetics of the myth become truth. In the case of American society, we can formulate one example among many as follows: the first term is the oppressive workday in the work or starve environment of mutual hostility, the myth is the American Dream world of advertisements, and the ritual is the act of watching television, or visiting places such as Disneyworld where the corporate dream-world displaces focus from the life-world which surrounds it and in which its values are empty and unwelcome. However, the ritual act of watching television does not end when one turns off the set to retire.  Cues for the television watching mind exist dispersed throughout reality and the right cue can effect a televisionification of the life-world, a moment in which decisions about non-television situations are made based on principles derived from television shows. This effect is very important in the propagation of authority, but the basic principle which we can extract from it is more important.  When we say that decisions are made based on television principles, what we actually mean is that memory of the television displaces the concrete situation, the ‘social rules’ values and modes of conduct which are manifested on the television come to be identified with those which are at play in concrete non-contrived situations, memory of the television is equated with social experience, and displaces it. Thus, we can say that the basic currency of authority is memory, the creation organization and direction of memory is what keeps authority in existence.  Consciousness is composed of memory and attention and we must assert that attention is under the power of memory in most cases, in our first moments of life we have openness, but it gradually accumulates memory, through means I shall discuss in the next paragraph, which transforms it into attention and hence consciousness, most times we see what we remember to look for.

    Nietzsche has shown us how authority creates memory through violence, more specifically through cruelty.  Walter Benjamin echoes this in his discussion of the legislative force of violence.  Benjamin states that violence can be law-making, law-maintaining, or law-destroying.  What authority is composed of are disconnected acts of violence and memory networks which attempt to link them in such a way as to make them seem connected, apologized for, and justified. How are memory networks established? They correspond inevitably to networks of violence, something like Canetti’s sting of command circulating through a group, hey he kicked me so I’m gonna kick you.  The act of violence is not justified we are made complicit in it, we reproduce it and thus remove the need for justification.  In the case of America, we can say that the first law making violence was simultaneously a law-destroying violence, the revolution against England and today’s networks of law-maintaining violence occur in situations of mass audience concentration such as school-houses.  However, for the concrete individual the first acts of law-making violence are committed against them by their families who commit them as semi-conscious acts of law-maintaining violence. These acts prepare children to endure the imposition of ‘discipline’ in the schoolhouse.  The parent knows a certain sadism of command combined with paranoia, I love you but what will the others think if I do not do this coupled with how dare you resist what I do for your own good you’ll do it because it is my will.  In this case, what the parent is doing is appropriating the imperative of their own paranoia about the group, and achieving the filthy  jouissance of complicity in the crime which oppresses them in inflicting it on the child. These forces derive from the parent having undergone the same violent inscription as a child and having endured law-maintaining violence in the form of the barking sadistic boss and the merciless ticking of the office clock, as well as the hazing received as a condition of affiliation for many groups.     

     When we think, Why bother going to work, why should I? this is not depression or laziness, ( a la Nietzschean bas conscience) but a call to action in another direction, a call to form a new type of society in which joy and desire are valued rather than order and structure. It is no coincidence that we do not value order and structure until we are taught to.  These values are in no sense directly related to the pursuit of our own well-being or that of our families, they are in all instances code words for other values which if revealed would be immediately rejected.  We are told by institutions to value order and structure in our lives as a matter of their convenience, for example, a slave owner in the south would have said that he hanged a black man to maintain ‘order’ what he actually means is the order of things or the status quo.  Or today, an educational institution values the eight hour school day because it reproduces the corporate workday, and engraves it as the immutable form of normalcy in the formative period of early childhood, but the spokespersons of this way of doing things will say that it is necessary for the child to have ‘structure’ in their life.  Each of us as a living being resists stasis on the cellular level, order and structure are inimical to life if they are raised above it. 

      This question why bother? comes to most of us as an overflow of the energy of life in us wishing against ‘reason’ to cast off our shackles and live, it does not bespeak a lack of motivation it indicates a damming of the flow of desire which we seek to remove in spite of all of our so-called education.  It indicates a greater motivation to greater acts which we cannot achieve from a cubicle, acts which require that we have the time to determine our own lives and do not have to serve the system for the entire period of daylight 300 days per year.   However, the realization of the significance of this impulse, the comprehension of our own vital flows is not yet at the level of conscious awareness. In fact, the present form of social organization depends for its continued existence on the hope that this awareness will remain submerged, that this type of lucidity about our own power and this type of seizure of the power of meaning attribution over our own mental states will never come to presence in the majority of people, or even a significant minority. The system produces thousands of well-paid experts who tell us that there is something wrong with the person who does not want to live the majority of their life in a cubicle under fluorescent lights, who does not want to come home to the dull hum of the television every night.  These experts will claim that this person should take pills which help them adjust to that life, these experts never even countenance the possibility that the society is flawed, not the minds of the people.

                     

     

            

The Great Revolution

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I. Anniversaries      

     As the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin wall approaches we are called to reckon with the twentieth century and what it really meant. At the time when the wall fell, we were told that History had come to an end, that liberal democracy was the final term of human social evolution, that capitalism had triumphed, that there was no alternative, that markets had shown themselves as the only possible basis for organizing the human metabolism with nature. We were told that this event was demonstrative proof that anything other than capitalism doesn’t work.

          That was the immediacy of the moment, but now that 25 years have passed, we are called to think this through with a bit more depth. What was the real meaning of this event–the fall of the USSR and the GDR the dismantling of the soviet republics and so on. What did it mean? It was impossible to say at the time because the meaning of this was still in the future.  The meaning of this event would be the capstone of the 20th century. The meaning of this event would be the doorway into the 21st century.

         On  the 100th anniversary of the Russian revolution, where will we be?  How will we answer to the tens of millions whose world-historical refutation of fascist irrationalism set the tone for the latter half of the twentieth century? Now we stand back with a bit of distance, with the accumulation of 25 years of action and reaction. We can now see how things stand and say with confidence: what happened in 1989 was the triumph of injustice over justice on a global scale. 

II. Imperialism

     There has been a feverish production of names for the system that we live under.  The bourgeois press has been busy producing words and phrases, up to and including a discourse on the impossibility of naming the system we live under. Hardt and Negri, along with many others, choose to say “empire,”  Guattari chooses to call it “integrated world capitalism,” still others will call it “technological society” or some variant of the technological motif–industry, information etc etc. Then there are those who speak of societies of control, of hyperindustrialism, totalitarianism and so on. Still others see it as a fundamental pathology of civilization and civilized life as such and so on. These names are ideological and dishonest–many are critical efforts devoted to an uncritical task–talking away the fact of imperialism.

     What we have is not empire, nor is it capitalism, nor is it civilization, nor is it globalization or its more cosmopolitan form mondalisation. The system we live under is full-blown imperialist capitalism with concentrated finance capital calling all the shots–the system that Lenin was talking about in his pamphlet on imperialism. As common as it has become in ‘enlightened’ bourgeois circles to give some kind of credit to Marx after the crisis of 2008, Lenin is the theorist of the type of capitalism that we actually live under and we act like he doesn’t even exist.

     

Eugenics and Capital

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Problem: Why did the Soviets end up equating genetics and fascism?

Definitions:

Capitalism–form of social organization in which the economy is the sovereign principle, the economy being that dimension of human activity concerned not only with securing sustenance for living bodies but with the production of profit through exchange of commodities

Biologism–social mythology which functions to avert discussion of social matters in terms of historical/social categories (i.e. class) by claiming to analyze human beings according to ‘natural’ categories which are always already historical but not acknowledged as such.

Geneticism–With the elaboration of biology in the 20th century according to the Mendelian-Darwinian synthesis a new subcategory of biologist ideology was born. According to this ideology, if there is no inheritance of acquired characteristics, the distribution of characteristics and resultant inequalities within human populations can be explained by reference to differences within the gene pool without reference to any outside factors.

Demographic Politics–the conception of politics beginning in the bourgeois epoch where the object of the interventions of power is the statistically analyzed population as a biological thing.

Eugeni-conomy–The capitalist principle combined with demographic politics and geneticism gives rise to a tendency toward an economically oriented “rationalization of the species.” This is the capitalist form of utopia which it is destined to repeat as a demand so long as it maintains itself in existence.    

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Under the capitalist form of social organization everything in on the market.  This includes bodies and the molecules that compose them insofar as industrial techno-science can render them accessible to marketization-economization-commodification. This gives rise to two potentially disastrous tendencies:

1. Human Monoculture

2. Molecular Market

We have by no means reached either of these limits.  However, in our own day we are seeing a re-normalization of eugenic or para-eugenic discourse both in an increasingly meanspirited ‘let-em-starve’ libertarianism, and under the rubric of various forms of genetic screening and biotechnology.  The possibility of therapeutic interventions today is used to cushion the potential shock of the reintroduction of a way of thinking that was thoroughly discredited by the Nazis as a representative of the global eugenics movement of the 20th century.       

Gangsters and Realism

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In politics there is one question. Do we want to do everything right or do we want to win? Do we want to be ‘correct’ or do we want to actually achieve the aim? This divides idealists and materialists, reformists and revolutionaries.

In society we have reform groups that need to be ‘correct’ in terms of the dominant significations (i.e. “law”) in order to achieve credibility, a place at the table etc. These groups get grants and support for their role as loyal opposition within domination.

We also have direct action groups which do not recognize these dominant significations. Among them, there are some which are most feared by the establishment. Following Onyx’s lead, we can look to the film Menace 2 Society, the character O-Dog, described as “America’s nightmare. Young, black, and just don’t give a fuck.”  We can also look to the film State Property where we see Beans and his crew working by direct action and showing the most intense contempt for the law. This culminates in Beans’ idea of how things ought to be, with his people shooting up the courtroom; in this act throwing physical force against symbolic power. That would have been gangsta.

Deleuze and Guattari held that Capitalism produces the schizo as its gravedigger. Let us think again about what this system is producing. It is producing the gangsta and the gang. Today we would have to write Capitalism and Gangstas. Placing this in a slightly different relation, perhaps we could see the gang as the contemporary form of the soviet–the effective form of working class organization. However we come to it, this is of the greatest importance for emancipation.

For too long we have allowed the law enforcement apparatus to code the phenomenon of gangsterism. Despite the systems efforts to mark and separate ‘workers’ and ‘criminals,’ the truth is plain. Most gangsters are working class people who take matters into their own hands, the legalism common to the system and the left is sickening, the gangsta’s rejection of this bullshit indicates an approach to emancipatory activity. The gang is the alternative to the party. This insight is nothing new. We can look to the “affinity group” which we find defined as a “street gang with an analysis.”

The prison is the most important institution of bourgeois society.  The gangs have discovered means of negating this form of social violence. Gangs have developed advanced underground cultures that make the left appear very naive. There is an incredibly inventive realism that we can find in criminal organizations. Knowledge of the strategies and tactics of law enforcement, the modes of exercise of power in society, the real map, requires a thorough knowledge of the underworld, the unmapped portions of the economy or social reality, the ‘there be dragons’ of state cartography. The victory of working people only occurs through a recognition of the community that demolishes the walls surrounding the ghetto, that storms the Prison Industry, the Bastille-function, that is the prime term of bourgeois power.   

The gangster is a worker with a gun without allegiance to the state. Dangerous. A gang is an armed working class organization. The genesis of gangs is from the system’s vain attempt to calculate superfluous lives. The system attempts to plan that certain people will not live, that certain social sectors will not be supported. The gangster rejects this and fights the system in order to live. Thus, everyday life becomes a sort of revolution in which the conditions of survival have been declared illegal and in order to live one must ignore and break the law.   

Fasting Aesthesis Desire

Yesterday I was fasting sortof. While not eating, I was walking around the airport and marveling at a lot of food but without hunger for it. I explained that I was taking an “aesthetic” interest in the food and not an acquisitive one.  A “purely aesthetic interest in it”…what does that mean? Aesthesis is sensing as such—so it could not have meant a visual but also a tactile, a taste, a smell and so on.  I was allowing the food to stimulate me in some sense, but not my desire to consume it. It was then I realized that aesthetic experience is something that acts on the boundaries of our desires, it is not so much that aesthetic experience provokes desire, but that it gives us something to use to recalibrate, to reconstruct our desires.  This is vital in a capitalist world in which one of the main obstacles to autonomy is the pernicious operation whereby people pre-match the bounds of their desire to what the market is willing to offer them at any given time whether it is products services human relationships etc …

Stupidity Philosophy Civilization

“[A] tyrant institutionalizes stupidity, but he is the first servant of his own system and the first to be installed within it. Slaves are always commanded by another slave. Here too, how could the concept of error account for this unity of stupidity and cruelty”

Stupidity is political. This is true in a two senses: first, certain populations are characterized through the attribution of stupidity, defined as a lack of intelligence understanding, or some other uniquely human mental characteristic; second, stultification practices arise which function to stupefy the population.  What both have in common is an element of misrecognition. Stupidity seems always to involve a semi-conscious misrecognition: a refusal to see the truth, one on the border of conscious intention, but never quite conscious or unconscious, never quite intentional or unintentional.

The market is a great tyrant in this sense.

“Stupidity is not animality. The animal is protected by specific forms which prevent if from being ‘stupid’ [betise]….[S]tupidity, finally, is the faculty for false problems; it is evidence of an inability to constitute comprehend or determine a problem as such”

Civilization has always relied upon a logic of domestication. It domesticates animals, breeding them for slaughter and servitude, homo sapiens is no exception, the ideal citizen is happy to serve in the military and does not gripe about extraction of surplus value when he comes home.  The reproduction of social hierarchy and domination require that a great deal of what one might call ‘animal insight’ or ‘animal materialism’ be transformed, redirected or suppressed in the population. It is not for nothing that our emotions, that our impulses tell us having to go to work is bullshit, that having to answer to a boss is not the best possible option, that it is better to be free than to be enslaved and so on. It is within this context that we can see the present state of philosophy and civilization–[Utah Phillips as a sort of anarchist Socrates] .

Overall, stupidity is the cultivation of false problems. The animal does not know the false problem.  It is naturally a materialist. It is absurd to imagine an idealist wolf or lion.  Stultification is thus an active process: it is not so much that inquiry is crippled, which it sometimes is, but that false problems are subsidized and elaborated.

We new Philosophers

Phillips’ poetry and stories ex-pose the false capitalist problems. He lived his thought etc etc. He is a true philosopher on the pre-socratic model that we must take heed of if philosophy is not to die. or something like that. His thought shows how philosophy ignores reality and we can get back to the real problems if we attend.

His sensibility: hobo-nomad revolutionary

 

Notes on Incarceration and Politics

The threat of arrest and detainment  is a major deterrent to political action in modern societies. The political moment is the moment in which this threat of arrest is displaced.  In that moment, affective disidentification with the law crystallizes from vague notions of reform or transgression[1] and people mobilize as a law unto themselves.

There is good reason for arrest and detention to be such a deterrent. First, the judicial/correctional system marks/criminalizes bodies in various ways. Second, the judicial correctional system’s objective conditions are magnified/amplified/mythologized/mystified in social discourses/practices of terror.

We must begin with gangs.  We can call them American soviets[2]–i.e. the spontaneous form of organization adopted by working class communities. Gangs are one example of organizations that have developed strategies for negating arrest and  incarceration as a deterrent to action They do this by having a network on both sides of the wall. In many cases, gangs begin by establishing hegemony within correctional facilities, and then their hegemony begins to spread to the outside world as converts are released.

Knowing that they are affiliated with an organization that can guarantee them security behind bars, these people are less inclined to fear incarceration: moreover, knowing that the organization values certain acts very highly, as indications of loyalty, intensity, courage and so on, adherents can anticipate gains in status based on performing illegal acts.  Thus, many are lead to a progressive disidentification with the law, both affective and cognitive.

Mark Twain’s famous novel, Huckleberry Finn offers us a very clear example of the arrival of a ‘political moment’ figured forth in the life of an individual.  Huck disidentifies with “god’s law” and in a sense his action becomes a law unto itself.

Likewise, the recent events in Athens, Greece give us a more straightforwardly political example.

From the other angle, namely the reactionary angle, we can see the emergence of the new right wing after the demise of post-war American liberalism as an example of a political moment.[3]

Overall, the political moment arises from an affective displacement. As Spinoza held, an affect can only be displaced by another stronger affect.[4]


[1] Cf. Pecheux/Theories of Discourse Disidentification vs. rebel vs. conformist

[2] Mike Davis preface to A World of Gangs xvi and preceding

[3] Suburban Warriors  Also Thomas frank and Naomi Klein

[4] Ethica IV (Of Human Bondage, or the Strength of the Emotions)

Prop. 7. An emotion cannot be checked or destroyed except by a contrary emotion which is stronger than the emotion which is to be checked.