Flick Harrison on Mon, 25 Jan 2021 22:35:17 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> In God We Tryst |
It’s interesting that we have the problem even on this list of the “brainwashing” label being used to quash any arguments against a certain ideology, and we also have the nostalgia of McCarthyism as a backdrop, but from the other side. These techniques might be evidence of a spiritual belief that defends itself by any means necessary, but in all these cases it should be seen as evidence of authoritarianism as a gut instinct as well - not spiritual but animal. When Trump argues, for instance, or when a police officer decides how to deal with a smart-alecky subject, they're not constructing a philosophy based on well-considered beliefs; they are switching to animal mode and simply generating the words that will destroy the resistance as surely as possible. “Fake News!” isn’t a spiritual _expression_, it’s an insult and a weapon. “I felt threatened” isn’t an _expression_ of a policing pedagogy, but a defense mechanism, to alleviate both personal and public guilt. These instincts are amped up by social networks that seek profit in rewarding people for their gut instincts, however unsavoury or unhealthy. The networks also bring people together to agree with one another, reinforcing their worst instincts despite the obvious benefits for marginalized people to also use these networks to organize. Stephen Harper, our very Conservative Prime Minister for around 10 years, had a sarcastic chuckle that he would use as a preface to a serious question or challenge. The campaigns they ran against the Liberals for that whole period mostly amounted to childish bullying, which is a good gut-level strategy to bring their natural supporters on board with strength and aggression. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rHEX4LifR9A But: Certainly, you can treat most ideologies as a form of cult or conspiracy theory. I mean, I believe we’re living under a lot of structural racism and patriarchy, and I believe that capitalism is a powerful self-generating force to centralize power and wealth. But at a certain point it’s obvious that no amount of new information is going to stop me from thinking that. When I find myself muttering grumpy old white man rebuttals to myself after a particularly galling over-reach in a hyper-intersectional Facebook post, I usually take a deep breath and say a few hail-mary equivalents instead of responding. Often any evidence of, say, structural anti-racism or structural feminism (like Canada’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms for instance) can be angrily dismissed from a spiritual angle as a challenge to this worldview.
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