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Title: Bad People
Author: William Gillis
Date: 14th August 2020
Language: en
Topics: individualist, social structure, anti-state, anti-authoritarianism, post-structuralist, post-left
Source: Retrieved on 14th August 2020 from https://c4ss.org/content/53289

William Gillis

Bad People

Contrary to the assertions of some leftists there are in fact thoroughly

monstrous people who are not just victims of their social conditions.

Humans vary. We each follow somewhat random paths in the development of

our values and instincts, buffeted by a million tiny butterfly wings of

context that can never be managed or predicted.

A hundred cloned children with identical genes, given identical love and

education, will nevertheless face moments of uncertainty where one must

randomly pick a hypothesis or strategy from among those possible and run

with it, to test out different models and values. Tendencies of course

emerge in the aggregate, but they have exceptions. Sometimes these

exceptions are themselves an aggregate phenomenon. An approach that is

stable when adopted by 99% of a population may nevertheless be hard to

keep stable at 100%, with random lone defectors seeing sufficient reward

as to re-emerge. Game theory reveals that while compassion and mutual

aid are broadly embraced in certain environments, this is often

paralleled by the emergence of persistent minor tendencies of parasites

and predators around the margins, with varying degrees of complexity.

Most populations stabilize with a mix of individual strategies. Further,

an individual’s life path is not only shaped by impossible to control

random conditions, it also necessitates a degree of randomness in their

personal exploration. Unfortunately there are certain perspectives that,

once reached, aggressively wall themselves off from further

consideration, adaptation, or mutation.

In the most harmonious and enlightened community, in the most advanced

culture, in the most egalitarian and fair world, there will still emerge

the cruel and callous, the manipulative, and brutal. Those for whom

other people are not an extension of their own existence as sites of

agency, but objects to be crushed or used. These monsters can be

drastically diminished in number by various institutional and cultural

changes, but their emergence cannot be entirely suppressed. And they

will invariably seize whatever means and tools are available to them to

harm others and seize power.

Bad people will always exist.

We can problematize the fuzzy edges of “badness” and we can plunge into

greater psychological detail on the variety of forms taken, but at the

end of the day there is still the brute fact of individuals locked to

bad values and habits. People not mistaken or confused, people for whom

no therapy, argument, enticement, or punishment will ever work. People

for all intents and purposes permanently locked to certain malicious

values and perspectives. People whose exploration dead-ended in values

and strategies that studiously seal themselves off from further

development, from further engagement. People who are not just merely

passing through badness, but who have taken it in and bonded to it.

These bad people are the walking dead, husks of former imaginative and

inquisitive minds. They vary in how much insight they lapped down before

they walled off the world, some become great specialists in certain

domains of manipulation, some are inane and immediately visible. Often

they are both, experts at certain games of power, bumbling fools at the

world beyond.

But this is adamantly not a conservative argument for the state or any

power system that might paternalistically ‘save’ us from such bad

people.

A core anarchist realization is that we cannot guard against bad people

by creating institutions of power because the same bad people will

inevitably seize and wield those institutions. The only long term answer

is to remove all positions of power, to make it, in a million ways,

impossible for anyone to seize or maintain control over other people.

The left is repeatedly marred by the mistake of assuming that individual

monsters are purely a product of social structures. This is

anti-reductionist in the most grievously mistaken way. It thinks

entirely in terms of the “forest” and ignores the actual trees. The left

correctly notes that persistent societal macrostructures are reinforced

by certain feedback loops, but then it often simplifies its model of the

world purely into such terms. The agents it focuses on become things

like nations, “capitalism,” “civilization,” et al., and these accounts

are often quite good at mapping how these structures persist, or at

least cutting through delusional liberal narratives about these

abstractions, but they’re extraordinarily bad at predicting when such

abstractions break down.

From above a “forest” might appear to behave like a single entity, but

no one ever told the plants and animals beneath the canopy about our

concept of a “forest.” They are not simply gears in a wider clockwork

mechanism.

Because the left tends to think in terms of such grand structures it

tends to assume that the arrangements of individuals are simply and

directly caused by those grand structures, that they’ll just march along

to further those narratives like rigid cells in a body. This is the

source of the left’s persistent statism. It is why Leninists believe in

capturing “control” over the state, believing that capitalism can be

abolished top-down by a series of edicts.

Anarchists are smarter, we realize that change has to emerge bottom-up,

but many unfortunately often inherit the left’s macroscopic thinking

when it comes to futures after capitalism.

There is no better example of this than when it comes to policing.

Leftists are quick to point out that All Cops Are Bastards because of

their functional role in the institution. It doesn’t matter if an

individual means well as a cop, they’re bound up as components in an

overall oppressive system. This is true enough, although it obfuscates

opportunities for a committed infiltrator to disrupt policing. We might

imagine a genuinely good person that goes undercover as a cop, and sets

up the murders of fellow officers, ruins evidence to let hundreds free,

or leaks critical intel.

Of course such extreme exceptions only prove the general rule, but this

kind of top-down thinking of police purely in terms of their

institutional function misses another way in which cops are monsters.

The police are rotten because policing attracts rot.

The role of the police is to preserve simplistic hierarchies and rules

with violence. To maintain “order” — that is to say to make the world

legible to the simple-minded. And to exercise unrivaled brute violence

to make this so.

This is everywhere the same regardless of the flag the police are under,

and regardless of the contours of the specific order sought. Forget the

horrors of the USSR, even if the order to be maintained was a direct

democratic commune of enlightened values, the role of policing this

order would attract many of the very worst people. Incentives matter.

If police are “bureaucrats with guns” as David Graeber puts it, they are

so both to serve our highest rulers and because a great many more — in

hunger for simplicity — allow issues of conflict and security to be

offloaded upon a very small number of people who are almost uncheckable.

Leftists are correct to point out that modern policing is a recent

invention, and in america tied to slave patrols, but conservatives are

right to tie policing with gangs and armies more generally. Just because

the exact contours and trappings of these gangs has changed dramatically

over history, doesn’t mean their core nature has. Anyone telling you

otherwise is just trying to sell you a re-skin, not honest abolition.

Police Abolition that doesn’t seek to undo a form of relating that dates

back to the earliest city states is just tame reformism by another name.

Despite some occasional rhetoric, conservatives are broadly nihilistic

realists about power, and they are right to remember that the state

poses itself as the alternative to roving bands of marauders, a very

real phenomenon. The state is a protection racket often formed by those

same roving gangs of monsters setting up permanent shop. The more

cooperative civilized folks get extorted for their crops and learn to

tolerate these barbarians as “their own,” but the occupiers always have

more in common with the vicious marauders. The same underlying cognitive

strategies. The same personality. They may paint themselves as sheep

dogs protecting the sheep against the wolves, but they are at the end of

the day both meat-eating canines, and the sheep end up being butchered

either way.

Cops today are very much a continuation of this recurring dynamic. Even

the right-left dichotomy rapidly polarized to reactionary rural

communities and left-leaning cities, while in north america the cops

live in a suburban ring around the cities they terrorize. The narratives

of simplistic gang warfare simply hold more appeal outside cosmopolitan

spaces where people are pressed up against one another and forced to

find more complex ways to cooperate and conflict. The survivalists

fantasizing of marauding as warlords find deep common personality — and

from there common culture — with the police that ostensibly protect

against precisely that.

The legacy of white supremacy provides framing to this, and certainly

the police help maintain white supremacy in complex structural ways, but

many a reactionary without conscious racial animus instinctively sees a

black cop at the bar as an ally, not because of any conscious evaluation

that the black cop is functionally reinforcing white supremacy. No, at

the most base level the black cop and the reactionary share a worldview

and aspects of personality. It is one largely of zero-sum violent

competition, fearful of messy complexity, disdainful of empathy,

inquiry, and creativity, anything that might undermine hard resolve.

The role of policing attracts, facilitates, and is best performed by

pre-existing bad people.

And like knows like.

Understanding affinities and predilections in terms of character, not

just structural positions, is critical to understanding the world.

The reactionary explosion that was Gamergate and Trump has forged an

alliance across all sorts of divides and differences that on paper look

impossible. What united them was a general recognition that the world

was removing operating space for bad people like them, at an

accelerating pace.

This was as horrifying as it was unexpected for many of them. After all,

their worldview tells them that brute violence and selfish opportunism

are the True Nature of the world. The Way Things Just Are. They were

playing The Game and everyone else was caught up in temporary delusions.

So how on earth could they be losing?!

The left often tries to parse the reactionary coalition in terms of axes

of systemic oppression. Patriarchy, racism, homophobia, ableism, class,

etc.. Those who fear losing their privileges often react with violence,

that’s broadly true. But why are they losing? And simply looking at a

person’s systemic privilege chart is not as predictive of their politics

as such an account would suggest. What would drive a coalition together

so fervently? Is it just the inevitable response to a black president

and economic travails? This doesn’t explain the steady growth of

reaction in numerous circles and it doesn’t explain the volcano of

reaction online from Gamergate on. There are many complex explanations

for the archipelago of grifters, militants, and opportunists working

against their ostensible structural affinities, and most of them are

right, to a degree.

But at root the reality is that in the last decade bad people and even

just the moderately apathetic in almost every subcultural corner started

finding a rapidly tightening noose around their necks thanks to the

internet. What is derided as “cancel culture” is just old fashioned

boycott dynamics supercharged by massive connectivity and the rapid

progression of political/ethical discourse as the collective hive mind

grows in size.

As people came online in greater numbers and greater activity the

promise of the internet was fulfilled. The oppressed gained a voice and

made their case. Radical ideas finally had their day in court. The

altruistic were persuaded and mobilized. What were once extremely

marginal (although correct) analyses of systemic injustice rapidly won

out in the marketplace of ideas. Not in the sense that they persuaded

literally everyone — some folks weren’t interested in listening, some

were less connected, and some were indeed hostile to the loss of

privileges these arguments prescribed — but in the sense that they

accumulated large enough support to apply pressure.

You see, boycotts are an asymmetric tool. They require sacrifice on the

part of the boycotters and they don’t present very many opportunities

for personal benefit. A negligible transient status bump from signaling

your participation and a massive energy drain to launch and keep

campaigns going.

Let’s say that you get raped by Sam. The default self-interested

calculus is to shut up about it and pretend like it never happened while

avoiding him. The damage is done, the legal system and public opinion is

overwhelmingly stocked against you. You could maybe inflict a little

revenge, but you’d take massive damage. And as revenge, it wouldn’t be a

stunning victory that would demonstrate your superior power to all those

watching, no, you would appear weak. You were raped, you lost standing

fighting him. You took the path of the damaged, self-destructive, crazy

woman. No, better to shut up.

But what of the other people he could hurt? If you’re a selfish person

you don’t care, or only care enough for a deniable whisper of warning

here or there.

If, however, you’re an empathetic person for whom the rape of another

person is akin to getting raped again yourself
 the answer is obvious,

you have to do what you can to stop Sam from raping again.

So you whisper and yell, you warn everyone you can.

And since people are mostly selfish or apathetic bastards most of them

don’t give a shit. They continue being friends with Sam, they continue

to provide him with access to spaces and people to prey on. So long as

they can avoid the issue, so long as they can deflect or ‘both sides’ or

whatever it takes to not have to sacrifice anything, they will.

So you demand that people pick a side or you’ll burn your bridges with

them. The people more invested in Sam than you get outraged you’d damage

them over this and drop you for Sam. You’re just one person, how much

damage could you do to them.

But here’s the thing. The people sticking with Sam are purely some

degree of Bad People. They’re not altruists. They won’t sacrifice to

stop Sam from raping again. So you get a few altruists on your side

willing to sacrifice to help you. If you get enough of them together,

even when you’re a minority, you can collectively leverage a lot more.

“If you stay friends with Sam you will lose not just one friend but five

friends.”

Boycotts, like strikes, are most effective when they’re transitive in

some manner. You don’t just boycott the tomato company, you boycott

every company that buys from them as well. You get colleges to divest

investments from anything near the tomato company. You threaten to

boycott any state that continues giving the tomato company tax

write-offs. You sacrifice collectively immense reputation, time, energy,

money, etc, until the impact starts dissuading people. Then you target

the remaining defectors. The moment another tomato company adopts the

same practices you come out swinging hard, no matter the personal cost.

You never allow defectors.

Every boycott requires a different critical mass to work, but that mass

is not a 51% majority. The leverage individuals have varies, but what

usually remains the case is that the sacrifice is not directly

advantageous in net to the individuals involved, even if the boycott

works. The benefit is usually over a large number of people.

Boycotts are not just a collective action problem, they’re often not

even a benefit to the individuals boycotting. And this is why boycotts

are a style of conflict that tends to slightly favor altruistic people.

The internet decreases networking costs and so it made different types

of boycotts easier. Everywhere.

This is the noose that the shitbags could feel tightening. One day they

woke up and saw their friend getting shit for calling someone the

n-word, the next day it was for a minor joke, a joke! What were the

boundaries of allowable etiquette one day seemed to suddenly ratchet the

next day. It was absurd! To keep up you had to constantly pay attention,

you had to waste a ton of energy acting like you cared about other

people.

The whole thing was madness to anyone with a right mind (ie selfish

bastards), because there was very little winning in this new game. At

best a bad person might eek out a little prestige wearing sheep’s

clothing and trying to herd them in their crusade against wolves, but

the sheep inevitably came for them too. Sometimes the sheep even came

for each other! Even if you could somehow brainwash yourself into being

altruistic like them, that was no assurance you’d get power! Quite the

opposite. There were no truly stable positions of power to be seized.

And what good is a game if there’s no throne?

In all corners, in all walks of life, bad people had a collective

shudder in horror and realized suddenly that to preserve the various

games they’d been playing they’d have to do something weird: they’d have

to unite.

Just one little teensy problem. They’re not that fucking good at it.

Their core values and strategies leave them incapable of autonomously

sacrificing for a collective good. They fight each other, they grab for

power, they run grifts, they get bored. Heady moments of possibility

invariably collapsed into grueling, whining shambles. Beside a few true

believers — so damaged they’d sacrifice for the collective bad, the

maintenance of The Game — most everyone turned out to not want to

sacrifice.

They were willing to loudly vice-signal for years when that meant

trumpeting their cruelty and bullying anyone that smacked of sincere

altruism. They were willing to spend a few bucks a month subscribing to

personal entertainment catered directly to bad people. But they weren’t

generally willing to lay down their lives, much less their day-to-day

comfort, and sacrifice in grueling unpaid unrewarding organizing and

activism.

Bad people excel when there are external regimented hierarchies to

weaponize them. But they are toothless without them, incapable of the

sacrifice necessary to resolve collective action problems. Some of them

are willing to do violence and die for The Cause, but dying is easy.

It’s the drudge work with no personal reward that’s impossible.

And so, as the neoreactionary fascists say, “Cthulhu always swims left.”

Not because institutions are captured in democratic spirals of

majoritarian tyranny, no, democracy would be far more reactionary than

boycotts. If the only way to change things was a mere vote almost every

country would have more conservative institutions. No, boycotts on the

whole super-empower altruistic minorities.

Obviously this includes mistaken altruists who sincerely believe that a

fetus has a “soul” or that white people shouldn’t eat burritos. These

particulars matter, but don’t derail the broad tendency of information

age boycotting against the sort of games many have specialized at. It’s

also true that centralized epistemic organizations have collapsed, and

as a result the internet is a churning place, filled with Qanons and

horoscopes, temporarily generating all kinds of batshit foam, but the

long arc of discourse is towards greater accuracy.

As social complexity grew in bottom-up ways with urbanization,

globalization, and various other increases of connectivity,

reactionaries continued to win all the rock solid, easily identifiable

hard power stuff, and the altruists in turn melted around their iron

fists in a thousand complicated facets of culture and society.

Personal strategies that were tailored to a world of simple violence and

simple small communities, have floundered in the face of a more complex

world. It’s unfair. It’s unnatural. Trying to understand or keep track

of the new game hurts many a poor little reactionary mind.

Some have adapted, of course, the left has many a grifter and

opportunist, but they find themselves increasingly pressed. The rapist

or careerist who thought they had a solid game going suddenly finds

themselves cancelled, or gets fed up with the amount of energy they have

to put into preference falsifying. And those who’ve tried to weaponize

the new social norms into “give me something or I’ll call you out over

nothing” plays face diminishing returns (because they’re unwilling to

truly sacrifice) and rarely last more than a year or two before being

themselves identified and marginalized.

This is why the more clearheaded selfish bastards look at the left and

see a suicide cult, an astonishingly stupid game that can’t be won.

“You’ll deserve it when they eat you alive.” They can never imagine

being motivated by altruism in a self-sacrificing way, and so they see

the boycotters as a storm of insanity and shortsightedness. Everywhere

around them is empty virtue signalling. Actual righteous fury and

passion — raised by increased direct connection to injustice — is beyond

their comprehension or written off as the braying of irrelevant sheep.

The left often talks of establishing a world without class, racism,

patriarchy, homophobia, ableism, etc, but these are merely flavors of

power — they leave the promise of entirely new power systems emerging

from the ashes. The replacement of one set of games with another. A

young upper middle class person with floundering options for personal

power under the Czar might see great opportunity in getting in on the

ground floor of Bolshevism — at least they’d have a shot at establishing

themselves higher up. But over time the left has not just added numerous

modules of oppressions to be toppled, it has increasingly moved towards

rejecting positions of power themselves. This anarchization of the left,

of anarchism itself, is a horrifying nightmare to many.

A bad person — long ago calcified by a hunger for personal power — might

be willing to watch as many particular ladders of status and control are

eroded, but the idea of being left no ladders is intolerable in the

extreme.

This is the problem we now face. While conscious anarchists are only one

part of the overall ratchet, the world is waking up to the threat of

anarchism, realizing for the first time that it is not just a specific

set of abusers, rulers, or selfish jackasses that is threatened by the

changing world, but all of them.

The sharpest disadvantage of anarchism is that, by its very nature as a

radical rejection of all domination, it leaves no line of retreat. By

targeting all evil, it offers nothing of appeal to fundamentally evil

people.

There are, of course, even bad people who, for a variety of reasons,

find anarchist circles to be stalking grounds more suited to their

aptitudes than finance or human trafficking. They are inherently hostile

to “cancel culture” or any theoretical approach that might cast

judgement on individuals or frame anarchism in radical ethical terms. It

should be no surprise that, for example, the white-nationalist Michael

Schmidt tried studiously to strip the anarchist tradition of ethical and

philosophical content, re-casting it as merely an anti-state and

anti-capital movement, silent on everything else. Everyone knows

examples of predators, rapists, abusers, etc., that have whined about

anarchist critiques of power that ventured too close to their own chosen

ladder. And we might expect that at least some of the left’s inclination

to get lost in structural thinking is the result of intentional

misdirection, to leave room for individual bad actors.

But while boycotts can and do fire in directions not aligned with

anarchism’s aspirations, the overall ratcheting effect of internet-era

boycotting has been both a strangling of the selfish by the altruistic,

and an undermining of positions of power. Every throne is more

precarious and short-lived. Every rapist now fears their survivors.

Anarchism, once written off as a fringe and preposterous cult of naive

sheep, is now revealing itself to a number of people around the world as

their worst enemy. The implicit logic behind a cleansing firestorm that

risks demolishing every relationship of control, every position of

power, every reassuring but violently-maintained simplicity.

While big self-reinforcing patterns of capitalism, white supremacy,

patriarchy, etc, are certainly real enough, it is individuals who make

the future. And while class, race, gender, etc., help statistically

prompt the emergence of certain habits of mind and orientations to the

world, it is ideology and habituated character that directly propels a

given individual to act.

It is often said that the internet has turned politics into a mechanism

to sort ourselves by personality. This process is far from complete, but

it is more real than not.

And if the reactionary alliance and the fascist resurgence we face today

are dynamics of personal character, we cannot merely derail or smash

something systemic and solve the problem. A fascist person will keep on

being fascist, cloaked or not. And reactionaries who have woken up to

the noose tightening around their necks will not soon forget the

existential risk they face.

Bad people have achieved a certain degree of class consciousness.

The biggest open question is whether they can manage to slaughter enough

of us to revert society to a simpler game that’s less biased against

them.

There are a few pathways available.

The first is the ecofascist collapsism you find among Atomwaffen and

their ilk. This is probably the most coherent grand picture thinking

among reactionaries. Social connectivity is the root of the problem

reactionaries face, the thing that’s allowing boycott dynamics to start

to eclipse brute force dynamics, and so the grandest possible reset

would be to wipe out not just the internet but cities as well. Hard to

‘cancel’ a marauding warlord for rape in the ruins of civilization. But

there are countless significant challenges between a few kids building

bombs while whacking it to Evola and Kaczynski and their goal. Their

attack space is the widest, but even wider is the counter-attack space.

They can bomb dams and poison water supplies, but can they stop every

scientist and tinkerer on the planet from autonomously probing and

inventing? Civilization, properly understood, is not a brittle

megamachine but an emergent hive of collective collaboration. Ecofascist

terrorists are a serious danger, but they are so small in number that

wiping them out is conceivable.

The harder problem lies with the more popular pathways of reaction. From

exterminationist Right Wing Death Squads to balkanization to sweeping

institutional fascism. While more ecofascist and collapsist variants

seek to permanently demolish the infrastructure that connects people and

super-empowers altruistic minorities — letting the rubble of

civilization serve as perpetual prison walls — this other path seeks to

maintain proactive social control. Rather than transforming everything

to something hopefully perpetually stable, this form of reaction seeks

to preserve much of the existing order through unmitigated violence

against the rest. You get to keep your surburban home and consumption

rituals largely intact, in return for rivers of blood just over the

horizon as all those unruly city/colored/queer folk are permanently

silenced and the rest of the world more brutally enslaved.

These re-colonization fantasies are virtually everywhere in the US

today. The liberals have made noise for too long, they’ve cluttered up

your world with all kinds of complicated things you can’t quite grasp

and a sense of entitlement to stop you from raping and hurting as you

please. Won’t it be great when we get revenge. When the clean simple

understandable game of violence is all that’s in play.

One thing to note about such — the hunger to grab guns you’ve never used

and point them at protesters in your rich neighborhood — is that it’s in

some twisted sense “defensive.” Someone in a surburban home will talk a

lot of shit about the need for other people to genocide away the libs,

but this stems from a deep aversion to risk, novelty, and complexity. He

may donate a pile of cash to grifter thugs livestreaming fights with

antifa, but he hesitates at facing risk himself. While borderline

fascists are legion in number, they’re mostly chickenhawks. Like the old

white man screaming himself into horrified hysterics when the lynch mob

finds a black man armed with a gun, he knows that his social order is

falling apart because it is brittle to this kind of collective action

problem. The reactionary mob may outnumber the black man, but not a one

of them is willing to make the first move.

Bad people have a hard time acting in their common interest without a

hierarchical system to handle coordinating them. While bad people love

to fantasize of a world without n-iterated games — shrunken down to a

local patch disconnected from all else — where they can murder and rape

without fear of consequences, they flounder in the face of decentralized

complexities.

The recent nationwide freakout over “ANTIFA buses” is reactionary

dysfunction in perfect miniature. The conservative media ecosystem is

relatively centralized and in lockstep, leading to individuals with

atrophied epistemic muscles and a completely inaccurate shared map of

the world and their enemies. They’re mostly selfish bastards so there’s

incentive for randos to make shit up for a semblance of importance. This

spirals out into the most absurd dysfunction. Sure these chuckleheads

have more guns — as they incessantly remind the world — but that doesn’t

mean much if whenever Karen reposts a shit meme you deploy your troops

to random big boxes in nowheresville.

There is of course a dangerous ratchet of tribal identity and shared

delusion, but that’s because those things benefit all individual parties

in the short term. In the long term if they actually do finally start

the civil war they hunger for, reactionaries will be horribly hobbled by

this kind of systemic inaccuracy.

Conservatives habitually assume anarchists must be “paid protesters”

because they’d never put their lives on the line to fight the cops

without a paycheck. And most would certainly never spend hours every day

exhaustively tracking the opposition to zero personal acclaim.

Reactionaries endlessly think in military terms because such blunt

hierarchical systems are the only thing capable of organizing them.

If they were to autonomously form up into gangs on their own there’s a

good chance they’d squabble into catastrophic dysfunction, at least

before reaching the scale necessary to create long-lasting institutional

incentive structures that can bend selfish pricks to a collective

purpose.

In contrast the police (an occupying military force designed to

continually put down a population) don’t sacrifice, they have huge

salaries and plush accommodations, absurd liability protections and

expect everyone to bend over backwards for them, they whine and quit

over the slightest inconvenience.

This is why dismantling the apparatuses of the police state is so

pressing. But it is also the site of insufficiently examined danger. If

existing hierarchical structures can be demolished or dismantled, how

quickly and efficiently will police deputize other bad people as

paramilitary auxiliaries? They would happily give guns to rapey incels

from 8chan and tell them to start killing libs. And even if we do

successfully dismantle the police/military command institutions capable

of organizing other monsters, how do we clean up a world of such

unemployed landmines.

If indeed 800 officers are quitting the NYPD in response to the George

Floyd uprising those people aren’t magically going to stop being

authoritarian thugs. They’re not doing it for ethical reasons, they’re

quitting because popular revolt made the job harder for them. The

absence of the badge, the removal of the institution that harbored them,

won’t transform these rabid creatures into people with consciences. It’s

not enough to abolish the institutions they congealed in. People don’t

change overnight.

De-Ba’athification in Iraq removed the torturers and murderers from

Saddam’s administrative and security forces, but it let those cops

continue to fester as the base of new terrorist and paramilitary groups;

unemployed professionals in violence have to do something. The police we

merely fire today will be the core of the marauding gangs they warn will

come in their absence. At worst they will provide a crystallizing seed

of centralization and legitimacy capable of organizing bad people

through to their collective self-interest.

This is adamantly not to advocate an exterminationist policy. There are

seven hundred thousand law enforcement officers in the United States.

They may be the worst of the worst, but offensive mass murder on

anything near that scale should be unthinkable, and is clearly not on a

path to anything like a liberated world. Mass imprisonment in some kind

of Stalinesque re-education project is likewise beyond unconscionable,

and even less likely than therapy to have a deep impact. The US

currently incarcerates 2.3 million, they may be mostly far better people

than the average cop, but simply putting the cops inside the prisons

they currently run would reproduce the current carceral state with only

modest reforms. No anarchist who truly believes in a world without

domination can embrace endless bloodshed.

How then, do we live with these monsters?

Even if we remove institutions of power/terror, how will we stop them

from rebuilding them?

As you can tell from my approach so far I think the answer is to really

look at and understand the game theoretic dysfunction that stops all the

non-cop monsters from organizing today.

Police make up far less than one percent of the population and yet they

are able to imprison a larger percentage, able to hold back the

rebellion of a much greater percentage. This is because an existing

order is defended by collective action problems. Even when you have a

huge base it’s hard to initially motivate and organize a sufficient mass

of folks to act. The first few white supremacists intent on launching a

pogrom are put down, if not they become a movement and soon a genocide.

The first crew of former cops to try and return to criminality — whether

raiding or setting up a protection racket — must be quickly and

proactively stopped before their gang can metastasize.

As bad as leftists can fall to squabbling in pursuit of moral purity,

and for all the few opportunists that try to momentarily exploit such

within the ladders of the left, fascists backstab each other with even

more ferocity. The only way the right has learned to solve collective

action problems is with blunt tools like nationalism and racism. These

are supremely undexterous mobilizing tools, which is why the right’s

base is, for lack of better terms, astonishingly ignorant and stupid.

They also only thinly paper over the vicious jockeying for personal

power.

The left has its grifters and abusers, but the right is almost nothing

but. Reactionaries are not prone to revolutionary breaks with the status

quo in no small part because they are the people least capable of

organizing such. Even when sociopaths feel under pressure enough to form

a defensive union and reactionaries radicalize into self-conscious

fascists, they still face serious challenges achieving critical mass.

Antifascist groups run rings around neonazi groups because antifascists

are altruistically self-sacrificing. Neonazis meme a lot about

sacrificing for the white race or whatever, but they all realize — as

Anglin and Spencer have made explicit — that race is just an empty and

arbitrary construct they cling to because of its utility in pursuit of

personal power. They can brainwash a few dipshit kids to die for the

cause (more usually personal fame), but not much beyond that.

Cops are, to be fair, generally pretty stupid, but they are also

overwhelmingly self-interested. Even the world of divorced old white

guys wearing wraparound sunglasses in their cars, while they may delight

in opportunities to publicly demonstrate their machismo and reaffirm

comfortingly simple narratives, they are still deeply selfish creatures.

Willing to wear tacticool armor and scream at cops, but only so they can

sit and be served at Baskin Robbins or TGI Fridays. “America” isn’t an

ideal of freedom for other people, it’s a deeply personal totem standing

for their privileges and comfort, a set of norms and conditions.

If you want to stop former cops from immediately transitioning to

genocidal gangs and insurgent terrorism, like the Ba-athists in Iraq,

you have to build an appropriate incentive structure for them. Mobilize

such universal and powerful self-defense forces from the bottom up as to

make them afraid of being the first stepping across a fixed and clear

line, but also — and this is the hardest part — leave them something to

be invested in.

A friend of mine has long argued that we should pay the police double

what they currently make to sit at home and not kill anyone. Police

abolition through giant pensions. A kind of explicit extortion agreement

where at least the extorted public can set and oversee the terms. I have

my doubts that this could be implemented or overseen without a state,

but further I have my doubts that they wouldn’t simply finance the

creation of their own army were they so generously compensated.

What’s left is a kind of preservation compact. We agree to leave you

that stupid house you bought in the surburbs, with firm social norms

against violating such. You can operate on the market, collect food and

basic needs from post-state social services, and we’ll retrain anyone to

work in professions without power. But the moment someone organizes a

hierarchy or fields an ex-cop gang to spread terror again that gang gets

exterminated by every surrounding watchful civilian. We have to be

willing to, at the drop of a hat, race out of our houses and confront

and stop with violence the predatory gangs the ex-cops will try to form.

You’ll note that although reformulated so they can be secured through

bottom-up social organizing rather than a state, such a prescription

replicates many of the incentive structures the state uses.

Reactionaries instinctively think in such terms because such incentive

structures work on them. Obviously they do not work as well on everyone,

as selfless martyrs in resistance struggles around the world prove.

Reactionaries think you can shock and awe people into compliance, and

then are eternally surprised when the subjugated are willing to make

personal sacrifices to oppose injustice generally. While conservatives

desperately want the rhetorical mantle of victim, a much smaller

minority of them truly believe or are willing to sacrifice in any

continuous sense.

There is an alternative to both mafias and marauders, but it requires

the city folk to take their security into their own hands. It requires

that the altruistic get the apathetic to stop off-handing conflict to a

distant few, that we stop shoving our problems into a black box.