Brian Holmes on Sun, 31 Aug 2014 17:42:06 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> World at War? Counter-revolution and Unbalanced Multipolarism |
Alex, it's always great to read your all-embracing visions (though actually what we are living through now is more like a Bruce Sterling novel than a William Gibson one). Anyway, I would like to go a little further with the closing points:
In Ukraine, American and European interests seem to diverge. For all the tension built in East Asia by signs of Chinese expansionism and Japanese militarism, with the downing of the (second) Malaysian passenger jet, it is Ukraine that is sending the shivers down the spine of the global economy.
Since 2008, and above all, since the euro-crisis came online and never went off, what's happening is - for the 90s generation anyway - THE UNTHINKABLE: the end of the predominance of the economy as such. Globalization was the globalization of money, period. Even the Revolution in Military Affairs was a sales pitch for new technology, and the Iraq invasion of 2003 was a business plan for the extractive industries. Since 2008 growth in the West has been radically stalled, the US recovery is a mirage, the German miracle is unsustainable in a devastated EU, and the chatter of web 2.0 can't hide the ravages of technological unemployment. Brad DeLong, who was a Clinton economist, now talks of the Greater Depression instead of the Great Recession. For Euro-American neoliberalism this is an anthropological change. The idea that a kid from the neighborhood can't score a million with a killer app or a new real-estate scheme is the end of an era, the fall of homo delirius. In the void, all interests diverge and entirely new forms of human motivation start vying for some space in the ideological vacuum that human nature abhors.
But the real threat to an already imbalanced multipolar geopolitical system (historically the most war-prone, think the Napoleonic era or Belle Epoque) is ISIS apocalyptic aggressiveness (uniting popes and ayatollahs in their hostility to it), its mix of media sophistication and barbaric determination something that seems to occur on a different historical time-scale different than the one we normally use to make sense of modernity.
In the twilight of the universal equivalent (Dollardammerung) the question of a life-project becomes the huge overriding existential issue, on which the tattered left is almost totally silent after the cocaine and cynicism of the long credit-boom. Multipolar eras are all about grabbing territory, but the real-estate of the heart is just as important. Western intellectuals and political-artistic vanguards are paralyzed by our impotence in the face of both oligarchical control and climate change, while the ISIS jihadis are storming heaven. In the Former West right now I only see two beacons: Podemos in Spain and the Negro Summer of Ferguson, Missouri. But we need a sunrise, not a fire in the night.
In the end, Realpolitik and the radical democratic aspirations unleashed by the Revolution will clash, as they have always had in the past. War is a way to normalize revolution, to discipline its wild outcomes. Historically, war has also been the tool of choice for every expansionary ideology. For ISIS to lose, Assad, Sisi, and Erdogan can't win.
Yeah, we on the radical left have seen the ways that war neutralizes and normalizes revolution, no question about it. Right now Kerry is calling for a global coalition against ISIS. Reboot the global war machine, empire-style. But who would pay for it? The Saudis of course, the same way that Japan paid for the Grand Coalition of the first Gulf War, the one that opened up the era of neoliberal globalization. Let's hope it doesn't happen, because then Assad, Sisi and Erdogan do win. The spectacular religious barbarism of ISIS is a dart to the heart of the disenfranchised militants and intellectuals here in the Former West. What is our answer to multipolar chaos? What is our life project? restlessly yours, Brian # 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