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Title: Right-Wing Collectivism
Author: William Gillis
Date: March 27th, 2018
Language: en
Topics: libertarianism, anti-capitalism, book review
Source: https://c4ss.org/content/50614

William Gillis

Right-Wing Collectivism

There are few figures the alt-right hate more than Jeffrey Tucker —

which may be something of a plot twist, given his alleged hand in the

racist Ron Paul newsletters of the 80s. Yet Tucker has evolved into a

passionate critic of racism, the alt-right and Trump. An affable and

optimistic proponent of cosmopolitanism and classical liberalism, his

tone has taken a more desperate and furious tilt in the last two years,

becoming the most prominent outspoken figure against fascism within

libertarian circles.

Right-Wing Collectivism is a compilation of Tucker’s writings between

2015 and 2017 as he sought to emphasize and explain the menace of

fascism to his audience. Taken together they form a volume that isn’t

bad, but also remains deeply incomplete.

Tucker is clearly shooting for historical generality, to tell a very

broad story, yet he instinctively focuses on policy positions and a few

big name philosophers more namechecked than explored, rather than a

sociology of fascist movements or exploration of how the ideology found

wide appeal.

Right-Wing Collectivism is also incontrovertibly written for a very

specific audience, it wears its tribal affiliations on its sleeve. And

while I have no issue with the political content — a book on fascism by

a libertarian for libertarians is a perfectly fine undertaking — the

cultural signaling is stark.

Tucker himself is infamously a creature of fancy suits and McDonalds.

The split in bourgeoisie culture, between aspirations to aristocratic

rarification and suburban simplicity, bridged together unabashedly in

one person. This personal class allegiance is very loud and explicit in

Right-Wing Collectivism, which at points practically revels in his own

ignorance of fascist movements and the struggles against them. I don’t

begrudge Tucker his cultural affiliations, but his loud screams of

in-group status to his audience, which is primarily — as we would see it

— right-wing and bourgeois detract from the book becoming anything

remotely timeless or substantive. Yet this signaling is an irritation we

should look past precisely because Tucker’s message is so needed given

his audience.

Beyond the infamous turn to fetishize Pinochet’s mass murder of

dissidents, the last two years saw a particularly stupid trend of young

libertarians saying things like “fashies are friends” and getting

suckered by “ancap – fascist alliances.” While the upper echelons of

libertarian academia has been relatively immune — with only a little bit

of lapping up fascist narratives re antifa and a few particularly

horrendous “blood and soil” debacles — the libertarian base of 20

something white men has incontrovertibly shifted out from underneath

them, gobbled up by fascism and reaction. The moral of this story I feel

should be that ideologies are rarely directly representative of what the

ostensible proponents of those ideologies actually believe or are

motivated by. Many libertarians never embraced libertarianism as

codified by its theorists, what they embraced was libertarianism as a

grab bag of justifications for feeling elite and for resisting critique

of their privilege and the status quo. Libertarianism, in short,

provided the only remotely acceptable shield for reactionaries who

wanted intellectual airs. Now that fascism is speakable in public

they’ve rushed to either abandon or attempt to redefine libertarianism.

A book like Right-Wing Collectivism should be judged primarily by its

explicit goal — its effectiveness in helping to wrench libertarianism

back from the fascist abyss. However, while I go to libertarian

conferences and debate libertarian theorists, I make no pretenses of

being embedded in the flows of libertarian culture and identity. I am a

very conventional anarchist who became convinced of the value of

markets, and am not a native in the libertarian tribe. I am thus poorly

equipped to judge the rhetorical and political context in which

Right-Wing Collectivism is embedded.

I cannot predict how potent Tucker’s book will be in pursuit of his

ends, what I can do however is explicitly bring to bear my outsider

perspective to examine the book in a more abstract capacity. If

libertarians truly wish to enter the realm of antifascist scholarship

and commentary on fascism it is imperative that they actually be

challenged, so as to ultimately better their analyses and discourse. We

shouldn’t give them gold stars for trying.

The objectively weakest part of Right-Wing Collectivism is what you

would expect: Tucker is aggressively and proudly ignorant of antifascist

activism (a proud preening ignorance unfortunately shared by the

otherwise lovely Deirdre McCloskey in her introduction). At one point

Tucker literally says, “Remember, this was 1999. We had no notion then

of the alt-right or The Antifa.” Oh jesus. Is it even possible to be

this embarrassed for someone? I assure you, Jeffrey, antifa activism was

widely known in many cities in 1999. Particularly in working class

industrial towns like Portland and Minneapolis that had not so many

years prior been so thick with neonazis that you would see clusters of

them driving down any major street. It was hard to grow up in certain

towns or certain neighborhoods and not be hyper-aware of the difference

that antifa organizing made in cleaning out the once omnipresent gangs.

Truly the epistemic bubble of the right is astonishing.

This is unfortunately tied to how Tucker’s signaling to culturally-right

folks involves a lot of framings of “the left” and the left-right divide

that are inaccurate or misleading simplifications and can lead to

hamfisted prescriptions. And I say this as an outspoken critic of the

left. There’s no mistaking the fact that Tucker carries

right-libertarian political baggage — in particular a weakness when it

comes to opposing the centralization of power in the market outside of

the evil state.

Yet Tucker rightfully brings to attention the progressive legacy that

fascism pulled heavily from. And this is something most left-wing

antifascists I’ve read squirrel around a little bit. They recognize it,

they just don’t focus on it that much, in part because the condemnation

of the modern regulatory state is so inextricable from such awareness.

If the book as a whole were a little stronger Right-Wing Collectivism

would have stood as a wonderful counterbalance to the focuses of leftist

antifascists. Leftists have been generally loathe to truly grapple with

just how central hostility to the market and to “the merchant class” are

within fascist thought, not just as a dog whistle for antisemitism but

often as the root of it. This avoidance is how you get all kinds of

flagrant nonsense like many marxists’ declarations that fascism is

bourgeois and a “stage of capitalism.” And in the worst corners of the

left this is the point of commonality between nazis and tankies, both

historically happy to rant about “rootless cosmopolitans.” Of course

actual antifa scholars like Shane Burley are quite honest about

fascism’s frequent hostility to markets, but it’s rarely a central

focus, covered more as a footnote or as prompt for anti-market leftists

to do more recruitment. Tucker is thus a breath of fresh air on this and

his implicit view of history as a struggle between liberty and power

rather than social groups is a refreshing return to plumbline anarchism.

For those who might suspect opportunism or shallow commitment on

Tucker’s part, there are many parts of Right-Wing Collectivism where an

anarchist spirit undeniably pierces through. The horror he expresses

upon reading The Turner Diaries is sincere and moving. And Tucker takes

shots against the right-wing inclinations of his own audience in many

cases where he doesn’t have to, for instance correctly diagnosing

efforts to tear down confederate statues as a positive cultural

development — not to erase history but to refuse to condone symbols of

unimaginable oppression explicitly erected in the 20th century as fuck

yous to the civil rights movement.

Unfortunately, Tucker’s focus on the state creates its own kind of

myopia. If the left fails to really grapple with how anti-market fascism

ultimately is, Tucker fails to really grapple with the problem of

nationalism outside of formal statist contexts.

While all fascists embrace life as a zero-sum power struggle, hunger for

a return to a mythologized past, and fetishize national identity, this

core motivation often operates orthogonally to issues of the state. In

terms of ethical values fascism is now and always the exact opposite of

anarchism, but there are nevertheless many anti-state fascists, for whom

the “nation” may exist at the scale of tribes. We must remember that

fascism originally arose in Italy in no small part from nihilistic

militants who saw the state as an enemy. That fascists happily shift

their stance on the state without a glimmer of shame is to be expected,

the state is not the central feature of fascism as an ideology and

movement. Rather, mass murdering statist authoritarianism is its usual

output. In much the same way that marxism is not best defined at root by

the dystopian leviathans it inexorably generates.

We must recognize that while fascism is evil incarnate its expressions

need not inherently take the form of formal statism. Many of today’s

fascists salivate at the thought of a decentralized race war, not even

bothering to once again pursue the path of bureaucratic and

industrialized extermination.

Tucker’s analysis of nationalism is right there in the title:

Collectivism. But nationalism isn’t so much about the worship of some

collective spirit as it is about cutting off lines of engagement and

empathy with outsiders. Nationalism can take the form of a grandiose

building up of One’s Own, a surrender of individual agency and autonomy

to this reassuring spectre, but the only thing nationalism really

requires is the severing of compassion and contact beyond the tribe. In

this manner, nationalism can look a lot like a cancerous sort of

individualism, “why should I care about anyone other than My Family??”

“We’ve got ours, so fuck you lot.”

One is reminded of certain hunter-gatherer tribes so callous they laugh

at the cries of one of their own desperately in need of help, but

actively collaborate in the murder of outsiders for sport. In many

respects, this could be argued to be fascism at its most basic, the

brief flirtation with Third Reich style pageantry boiled away. A brutal

nationalism so sharp it seamlessly becomes the most toxic sort of

individualism.

This overfocus on the state and failure to see to the ethical, social,

and historical issues beyond it is, I feel, to blame for Tucker’s

regrettable embrace of the term “liberalism.”

On the one hand, obviously Tucker’s lauding of “liberalism” is a

valorous push to repolarize libertarianism against conservatism,

reaction, tradition, etc. However, to anarchists it’s just as obviously

a push too short and this is hilariously evident in Tucker’s grandiose

praise for the Libertarian Party in the same chapters in which he

embraces “liberalism.”

I’ve written before about the duality at play when it comes to critiques

of “liberalism” — universally derided for myopia and cowardice, but from

dramatically opposed perspectives. Anarchists have nothing in common

with those who critique liberalism for being too timid to embrace

slaughter and authoritarianism. But at the same time we must stick to

our critiques of liberalism’s spineless and halfassed ethics and

strategy.

Nothing is more in keeping with “liberalism” as an epithet than an

embrace of electoral politics. You want to compare things to marxism?

There is no more crucial mistake in marxism than the embrace of the

state as a tool. Libertarians often forget that Marx explicitly, albeit

unconvincingly, set liberty as the goal. Capture the state and it will

wither away! This strategy is utter nonsense. It’s a waste of energy, a

massively inefficient investment that can only backfire, and — worse —

it reveals a stark lack of trust in the people, their creativity and

spontaneous order. When libertarians retreat to adopting the means of

their enemies it reveals the paucity of their imaginations.

For all of Tucker’s talk about fascism he studiously avoids talking

about fascistic regimes like Franco’s Spain or Pinochet’s Chile. Where

are the poetic odes to the student dissidents abducted off the streets,

tortured and raped to death, the mass murder done in silence while their

parents waited forever for the disappeared? Where does Tucker grapple

with the legacy of Milton Friedman and the Chicago school’s complicity

in these crimes against humanity that scar generations to this day?

Where is the fucking outrage, the scorching self-criticism at the ways

that middle-class apathy for anything beyond tax rates and business

regulation kept these regimes in power? Myopia is the defining

characteristic of liberalism, and we must not lose sight of that or its

horrific effects.

Tucker doesn’t really stop at all to analyze fascism’s opposition to

communism. In his picture, it’s a few minor differences over things like

religion and whether one’s collectivism is on racial or class grounds.

And certainly this is true if you’re comparing fascists with

authoritarian communists, but communism comes in many flavors including

ardent opponents of the state, even in the form of anarchists with solid

footing in the war between liberty and power. It’s critical that we

understand that what fascism opposes in “communism” is precisely what it

opposes in liberalism — that is to say, their definition of communism is

precisely “caring about everyone” and they see that as a bad thing, the

most primordial and despicable infection in our world.

Tucker mentions this just once, on page 151 of Right-Wing Collectivism,

noting that fascists hated communism’s universalizing. He doesn’t

explore this because it would involve eroding the rhetorical power of

absolute and singular definitions when it comes to “left,” “right,” and

“liberalism.” But I’m strongly of the opinion that we need to be able to

look at what people really mean, and not necessarily which banner they

fly. Under certain definitions, the right, left, and liberalism are each

fucking terrible, and under other definitions, they can be valorous.

This is of course also true when it comes to terms like “capitalism:”

some seeing only the oligarchy and immiserating, rent-seeking

hierarchies of our present order, while others seeing the dynamic

anarchy of free association eroding all traditions and power relations,

aggressively reducing profit margins. Of course, which of these notions

you see as positive or negative is yet another matter entirely.

It’s amusing to read Tucker’s book as a counter-balance to Alexander

Reid Ross’ Against The Fascist Creep. As an anarchist Ross sees the left

as the humanist project of liberation for all, a grand coalition of

those who actually care about overthrowing tyranny versus the defenders

of power and domination on the right. But Tucker sees both left and

right as champions of power and domination opposed to humanist

liberalism.

At the same time Tucker is speaking to an audience that he knows sees

the terms “left” and “right” in exactly the opposite frame as Ross. If

someone is a tyrant that makes them by definition a leftist, and if

someone seeks neither to rule or to allow others to rule them, they’re

right-wing. Duh. This is a frame that would place King Leopold as a

leftist and Leo Tolstoy as a right-winger, but somehow this makes

perfect sense to the people pickled in the right wing’s discursive

world. And I think this obliges some charitableness to Tucker, I mean

this is literally the level of the audience he’s trying to reach.

Obviously I think it’s a mistake to treat the right’s critique of

communism as always the anti-authoritarian critique of collectivism,

when in practice it’s often a critique of caring about strangers or the

outgroup. It can be an effective rhetorical strategy to reframe a

group’s orientation by defending their position in a way that reframes

the reasons they hold said position, but the danger is always that the

good justification won’t truly replace the bad justification, just

muddle them together. And ignoring the bad reasons some people hold a

position you share can lead one to an inaccurate picture of the world.

For example, Tucker repeats the claim that fascism is a response to the

perceived danger of imminently arising leftist tyranny. This is a common

canard among the right, but I’m not sure the proof is really there. It

seems rather that authoritarian leftist and right-wing movements arise

at the same time not in response to each other but in response to the

same conditions, and only THEN feedback in strength through

fearmongering about the threat of the other.

On the other hand, Tucker’s right-wing biases can be a strength.

The strongest parts of Right-Wing Collectivism are Tucker’s exploration

of Eugenics and the Progressive Era. His is a righteous fury at the

myriad ways in which profoundly racist and sexist notions were applied

by central planners. While leftists make a lot of noise about their

legacy we often forget just how much of our modern institutions and

norms were the conscious result of deeply white supremacist and

patriarchal people.

This is one of the places where libertarian discourse holds much-needed

correctives. So much of the regulatory state, so many of the regulations

that liberals and social democrats instinctively defend and see as

champions of the common man were, in fact, dreamed up with vicious

intent. The moment women and ethnic minorities were in risk of getting

an education or achieving economic autonomy a thicket of regulatory

constraints were introduced. Things like minimum wage laws were intended

to be barriers to entry, to largely remove specific groups of people

from employment, decreasing their bargaining power and creating a

surplus pool of labor incapable of providing for itself.

Tucker focuses on how Eugenicists intended these laws to exclude (and

ultimately exterminate) those they saw as degenerates, but it’s worth

drawing our attention back to the economic implications. While barring

your aunt from selling tamales is bad for the market, it’s good for

capital. What removes choice and the collaborative competition of free

association forces the desperate competition of labor for employment and

increases the rate of profit — precisely the thing healthy markets

should drive to zero.

Tucker doesn’t tackle details very much in Right-Wing Collectivism, but

he does when it comes to Progressivism, and his rage is quite well

placed. Did you know for example that women’s wages were higher relative

to men in 1920 then they were in 1980? Almost anyone who’s read any

left-libertarian is familiar with just how horrific Progressive policies

were and their long shadow, but Tucker’s in good form here and the

endless quotes from Progressives extolling the most horrifically racist,

sexist and ageist justifications for now well-received laws are

blood-curdling.

But of course, Tucker retains his blindspot when it comes to the

perniciousness of capital in addition to the state. So for example a

progressive is rightfully excoriated for objecting to women’s employment

because labor would make them ugly, but Tucker skips right on by the

context of oligarchical elites employing desperate laborers in

backbreaking work that really would scar the bodies of both men and

women.

I cannot overemphasize the way this focus on the evil of statism warps

and blinds Right-Wing Collectivism.

Reconsider Tucker’s characterization of fascism as claiming that,

“society does not contain within itself the capacity for its own

self-ordering.” To the contrary, many fascists would claim that ethnic

collectivism is a quite natural self-ordering that emerges spontaneously

when not suppressed. That it emerges through violence is for many of

them no stain on its character. The sin here, in their eyes, is the way

such paroxysms of violence are presently “artificially” suppressed.

One doesn’t have to speculate of fascists who position themselves

against statism precisely because a functioning state with any sort of

rational self-interest in its own powerbase will be less than fully

bloodthirsty and as inclined to ethnic cleansing. Let us never forget

that the decentralized genocide in Rwanda was in many respects more

efficient than the centralized genocides of the Third Reich.

If anything this should be a distinctly libertarian insight.

Decentralization provides great efficiencies over centralized planning,

not just in the obtainment of the fruits of a peaceful and creative

existence, but also in the achievement of misery and abject evil. The

market is a tool to provide people what they want. It is not enough just

to free the market from the state, we must work to ensure that values of

cosmopolitanism and compassion dominate the whole of humanity.

I’ve spoken out about this repeatedly but there’s an insufficiently

noted tangle in our political language when it comes to the term

“nationalism.” Is it the worship of an all mighty collective entity or

spirit (The Nation) or is it a closing off of empathy, engagement, and

connection with others beyond some arbitrary point? Should our models of

“nationalism” center on the particularities of the modern nation-state

or should they focus on tribalism?

These two dynamics and representative systems interplay and intermingle

in practice, but I think the latter must be recognized as the truly

pernicious root. And thus we must understand fascism as something that

can be largely removed from the context of statism. A fascist can be an

anti-statist, although he cannot be an anarchist — as he does not oppose

domination itself nor seek the liberation of all — and thus such

anti-statism is weak to the slightest gust of wind.

For liberty to win we must not just critique The Nation — that is to say

the narratives of mass and collectivism that underpin nationalism in its

statist expressions — but also critique nationalism as an atrophying of

conscience and concern.

The state is bad, but it is only the apex predator in a vast ecosystem

of power dynamics in our society.

We would do well to avoid brutally simple diagnoses. We would do well to

see the war between liberty and power as a stunningly sweeping one that

touches every corner of our culture and habit. The solutions to the

state will not come through statist thinking. To defeat central planners

we must avoid the conceits of a central planner who thinks there is but

One Problem that can easily be targeted and rooted out. We must grow to

appreciate just how thickly the unseen can surround and underpin a

single visible evil.

The most stark passage in Right-Wing Collectivism deals with a younger

Tucker being approached by a wealthy and charming benefactor delighted

in his politics and who — it is revealed — desires to recruit him as a

nazi. Annoyingly, Tucker doesn’t name the damn woman as is his ethical

duty, but I take his revulsion as genuine. Tucker provides this passage

to illuminate that the even though the left owns academia the nazis have

continued lurking in places of influence. It’s a good point that anyone

from a right wing background desperately needs to hear, but it is a bit

undercut by his relative inaction and lack of self-reflection on the

situation.

What could go so catastrophically wrong that a literal fascist could

ever think of propositioning a sincere proponent of liberty?

The answer, of course, is libertarianism. A movement that once

unquestionably demanded the abolition of borders, slowly infested and

corrupted to the point where the literal goddamn nazis see it as their

primary recruiting base. A movement constrained to the most narrow

anti-statism, so it could be better surrounded and consumed.

It’s not that libertarians “forgot” that the right was a threat the same

as the left, it’s that they were systematically defanged against power

save in the most inane suburbanite-got-a-speeding-ticket variety. There

are countless glorious exceptions, of course, I count many as friends.

But on the whole, the robust proponents of liberty have been thinned out

of libertarianism. A political coalition with fewer and fewer points of

commonality, much less deep substance, stripping what should be a rich

ethics down to the most superficial and myopic of formulisms.

One can’t merely declare oneself opposed to both right and left forms of

collectivism and think the problem of power solved. Tucker righteously

eviscerates the historical “progressives” but he returns again and again

to simplistic just-world thinking about “progress” that frames the left

and right as both revanchisms, longing for everything past, seeking

revenge on a modern world that has improved in every respect.

The centralization of private power is simply not to be cast in with all

the social decentralizations and erosions of hierarchy as equally a

measure of progress. Even Rothbard recognized the injustice of

oligarchy. The accumulation of greater wealth in the hands of a few is

not “progress” in any positive sense. I would ask Tucker to examine how

much he — in his ecstatic optimism — is implicitly framing the runaway

concentration of wealth as a matter of natural hierarchies. A fascist

concept if ever there was one.

There is a frame in which liberalism/libertarianism is proclaimed as a

cosmopolitan embrace of freedom and positive-sum cooperation rather than

a war of all versus all. But if you’re going to adopt such a definition

of liberalism/libertarianism you should damn well openly admit that many

socialists throughout history have been motivated by the same worldview,

even if their embrace of statist means has been catastrophically stupid.

If you’re going to see noble beauty in the culture and preoccupations of

bourgeoisie why not in subcultures like the unwashed rabble of activists

so declasse and gauche as to (quelle horreur) protest? Might there be

spontaneous self-organized beauty and order beyond the border of

Tucker’s cultural tribe?

Sincere proponents of liberty are everywhere, the indomitable bubbling

up of human creativity and compassion. What they need more of is

audacity.

Tucker is infamously optimistic and his vision is infectious.

Cosmopolitan commerce leaking through the iron fist and improving the

lives of everyone in a decentralized flurry of unparalleled beauty. I

share his wonder, at least among other useful lenses through which to

view our world.

But just as optimism is a useful lens, so too is outrage at the

inefficiency and slowness of such. Forget how many have been saved, how

many remain starving today because of statist horrors like the

international apartheid of borders?

In our war on power we cannot afford to merely hack at branches, we must

strike the root. The state is just one expression of power. To fight the

horror of fascism we must understand the appeal and function of things

like nationalism outside the state apparatus proper. We must seek to, in

the words of Karl Hess and anarchists throughout history, abolish power.

Far beyond the myopic, limited half-measures of liberalism and

libertarianism lies a full-throated anarchism. Undaunted and ceaseless

in ruthless critique of all power. The distance is vast, but it can be

crossed in an instant if you have the gumption to but take the step.