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Title: Black Seed: Issue 6 Author: Various Authors Date: 2018, summer Language: en Topics: Black Seed, Black Seed #6, anti-civ, green anarchy Source: OCR'd via PDF Notes: We will copy edit submissions for wording, punctuation, and typing errors. Editors: Dominique Ganawaabi, Ramon Elani, S0ren Aubade, Aragorn!, dot matrix http://blackseed.anarchyplanet.org / Cover photo by Ben Cody / Thanks! / Deadline for submissions for next issue: September 1, 2018 / blackseed@anarchyplanet.org
The sixth issue of Black Seed continues an effort to challenge and
expand the meanings of both Green and Anarchy. As editors and
contributors, we not only wish to reject notions of the state and
capitalism, but seek perspectives that are earth-focused, unexpected, or
inhuman.
The binary of the Fearsome Sky God and Sweet Mother Earth is a
historical fallacy. If we seek to speak of the earth, let it not be in
language perverted and twisted by narrow-minded gender ideals, but in
language that rejoices in the cruel glory of the natural world.
The preceding is from the call for submissions to this issue. Even
beyond this issue and this theme, this callout stands as a marker for
our continuing efforts to live and imagine differently in a world that
has seen and foiled many previous such efforts.
Ambiguity is one word for the reality of things that cannot be said to
be good or bad, or even good and bad, but that exist orthogonal to that
polarity. Is a mother who kills her child bad or good? Can you call her
good or bad if sheâs a slave and her child will be a slave too? What if
sheâs attempting to keep older children alive by killing her most
recent? These are only a few examples of real decisions that real women
(and families) have made and will make, and they point to the two
branches of this issueâs theme; one that reflects on earth as a mother,
and the other on mothers as primarily nurturers.
Our cover image for this issue, a photo of one of the two destroyed dams
on the Elwha River, speaks to some of the ambiguous terrain weâre
exploring. At face value, the destruction of the Elwha dams is an
incredible and rare success story. Decades of struggle through legal and
less- or not-legal means were finally successful. Dams are one of the
most significant interventions in indigenous subsistence practices, and
the removal of these two has meant a remarkable resuscitation in the
ecosystem of the river, with birds, salmon, native plants, all coming
back with almost unbelievable speed. And yet, there are more complicated
ramifications. First, it signifies a struggle that was successfully
pushed through the apparatus of the state. For those of us who recognize
the structural and perspectival limitations of fighting by the rules of
the current system, this step towards a balanced ecosystem will be two
steps back if itâs seen as a reason to use the tools of the system.
As significantly, one reason to build dams is for energy production.
Given the scale of the (ever- increasing) demand for energy, there are
no good optionsâto the extent that sincere and passionate
environmentalists have promoted nuclear energy, despite the toxins
lasting for thousands of years, because everything else is worse.
We celebrate the victory of the Elwha River, while keeping clear in our
mind that that victory, that ecosystemâs return, can only come at the
cost of other ecosystems. That is the way of the civilization that
surrounds and informs us. That victory is both real and not real, in a
world in which floating continents of plastic and miles of fishing nets
denude the oceans, in which ongoing oil-spills in Africa have no one
even attempting to clean them up, in which toxic waste is buried or
dumped offshore by the multi-ton load, etc. The very real successes
happen in a context of overwhelming poison, misery, and extinction, and
cannot be said to offset them.
The goal of Black Seed is to look at all of it, not to hide from or
over-emphasize the bad or the good, or the things that are neither or
both, to see humans, to see ourselves, as small, overly-loud parts of a
whole that was doing better when we were quieter, and to consider how we
can loudly remember, or learn, to be quieter again, in a civilization
that promotes the equation of silence with death.
by Ramon Elani
For Avalon
It was because the children of the Empire were not suckled by the wolf
that they were conquered and displaced by the children of the Northern
forests who were.
-Thoreau, âWalkingâ
To speak of green anarchy, to attack or denounce civilization and
industrialism, without speaking from a mystical place, a sacred place,
is to speak with a mouth full of ash. Proper reverence for the gods,
spirits, and forces of the earth is at the very heart of our critique.
To re-emphasize and strengthen this connection, to re-affirm that what
we are about is in essence a religious crusade, is to lead the green
anarchist position forward. Do you deny the gods? Guess who else does
that? The engineers of the state, the capitalists, the industrialists,
the humanists, the ones who will sacrifice the world itself to serve
their own ambitions toward godhood. As soon as humanity, in the infancy
of the Enlightenment, declared its independence from the gods and the
world of so-called superstition, technoindustrial society was born.
Those who seek to define a sense of the world in which humanity does not
occupy the sole position of power without basing their position in the
nature of the sacred are grasping at straws. It is an incoherent
position because it has no foundation on which to stand. In this regard,
technoindustrial society is correct: if there is no god(s) than why
should humanity not exploit the cosmos as it will?
Leave the earth a withered husk and dream of worlds beyond to scour. For
as long as the green anarchist trend has existed, we have venerated the
memories and lifeways of those who lived and still live without
civilization. And for just as long, we have neglected the fact that
those communities, without exception, based their entire existence upon
a spiritual conception of the world. There is not, and has never been, a
community of people that lived outside of techno-industrial society that
did not see the gods in the sky, in the dirt, in the stones, rivers,
trees, and creatures.
Thus, let us proudly return to such a vision of the world.
No longer picking and choosing the elements of primitive life that
appeal to us and neglecting those that threaten our modern,
Enlightenment morals and assumptions, which continue to dominate the
thinking of too many, that say that the world of spirits and gods is
superstitious and irrational. We do not get to venerate the ways of
ancient people on one hand and then dismiss them as simple-minded and
ignorant on the other because they believed that powers and deities
ruled the world. Make no mistake, the ideology of techno-industrial
society is nothing if not secular. And by rejecting the world of the
gods and spirits, we put ourselves on the side that we claim to be
fighting. Let us clarify further: when we speak of gods and
spirituality, we do not speak of the world-denying Abrahamic religions,
though even within that repressive tradition there are ways that the old
gods filter through via the gnostics, the sufis, and the cults of the
saints, among other mystical strands.
In articulating a spiritual basis for green anarchy, we put ourselves
back in conversation with some of the our own most foundational and
influential thinkers. Moreover, just as we will seek to no longer mould
the examples of uncivilized communities to meet our own secular tastes,
we will find that the roots of our own intellectual tradition were
utterly committed to a spiritual understanding of the world. For Gary
Snyder, âthe poet laureate of deep ecologyâ and one of the most powerful
theorists of âthe wild,â zen buddhism and indigenous spirituality formed
the core of his understanding of the world. In 1973, he described
himself as a âBuddhist-animistâ or âBuddhist-shamanist.â However, and
this point cannot be overstated, the spirituality that I propose as a
basis for contemporary green anarchy and the spirituality that Snyder
promoted, as we will see in what follows, is not of a kind that takes us
away from the world to a place beyond the stars. It is not a
spirituality that is above nature. It is not a spirituality that teaches
humanity that this is not our home and that our true destiny resides in
the world to come. It is a spirituality that is immanent, it is
instantiated in the world we live in. It is a spirituality that is alive
in every fern, in every rock, in every flying, buzzing thing, in every
grain of sand. Like the indigenous communities that we are right to
venerate, we must rediscover that the universe is animate, vibrant, and
alive, with thought and will and spirit. What is at stake in this
spiritual understanding of the world is nothing less than connection and
relation. This is what we have lost as we have increasingly denied the
spirit world. And once again, we must emphasize that the monotheistic
religions have not necessarily sought to repair this lost sense of
connection. As Snyder remarks in a conversation with philosopher Bron
Taylor: Interrelatedness is a common-sense observation... Whatâs not
common is the mind-body dualism that begins to come in with monotheism.
And the alliance of monotheism with the formation of centralized
governance and the national state, thatâs whatâs unnatural, and
statistically in a minority on earth. The [most common] human experience
has been an experience of Animism.
For Snyder, an animist spiritual orientation was linked to a critique of
the state. While Snyderâs relationship to anarchy as such might be
debatable, itâs clear that he was utterly opposed to the state
formation.
In his 2010 book Dark Green Religion, Bron Taylor argues that radical
environmentalism is fundamentally a religious movement, despite the fact
that many individuals who identify themselves that way are explicitly
hostile towards religion or supernatural phenomena. Taylor perceives a
number of different tendencies within a broader spiritual, environmental
orientation. He writes: the first two types are forms of Animism...one
supernatu- ralistic and the other naturalistic. Taylor refers to the
other form as Gaian Earth Religion...a shorthand way to suggest holistic
and organicist worldviews. This type also expresses itself in
supernaturalist or naturalist variations. The two sets of distinctions
here are significant. Animism, according to Taylorâs definition, refers
to the perception of consciousness, vitality, soul, or breath in natural
entities. This kind of âspiritâ may exhibit supernatural power or not,
as the distinction between naturalistic and supernaturalistic
demonstrates. What Taylor calls âspiritual animismâ is the belief these
energies or consciousnesses contain âsome immaterial, supernaturalistic
dimension,â while ânaturalistic animismâ denies or is at least skeptical
of these immaterial qualities but nevertheless seeks some form of
understanding or even communication. In this latter form, we can say
that there is an emphasis on respect for the animistic world, if not
outright reverence. We might think of this distinction as respecting a
tree because it is a tree, and thus alive and containing some kind of
vital essence, as opposed to giving reverence to the tree because it
contains a particular kind of spirit that may offer boons in exchange
for sacrifices. Taylor identifies Gary Snyder firmly within the
tradition of spiritual animism, for example.
What Taylor terms Ga- ian Earth Religion is based in the belief that the
universe or cosmos itself is alive or conscious, or at least by metaphor
and analogy to resemble organisms with their many interdependent parts.
Thus, this tendency is inclined to think of the natural world as a
whole, either in scientific terms or not. The supernaturalistic
variation of this tendency is explicitly invested in the notion that the
universe itself has some kind of consciousness or soul. Taylor
identifies this type of conception within conventional ideas of âGodâ or
the Ve- dic âBrahma.â Taylor also points out that this model is
especially powerful within the so-called New Age movement. Ga- ian
Naturalism is Taylorâs term for the conception of a holistic universe
that is nevertheless perceived and engaged with via scientific analysis
rather than explicitly spiritual metaphors and concepts. However, as
Taylor points out, even those who adhere to this perspective most often
express their feelings of awe and wonder when facing the complexity and
mysteries of life and the universe in the language of the sacred. Taylor
identifies James Lovelock as a prime example of the Gaian Naturalist
type. Lovelock, throughout his career, has emphasized that the basis for
his Gaia theory lies in the scientific realm. Taylor writes, Lovelock
emphasized that for him Gaia is a metaphor, not a sentient god. Indeed,
Lovelock consistently identified himself as a scientific agnostic.
However, as we shall see, these distinctions are muddier than they
appear. While Lovelock argues in favor of a scientific understand of a
holistic and sentient universe, he acknowledges that if we could revere
our planet with the same respect and love that we gave in the past to
God, it would benefit us as well as the Earth. Taylorâs analysis of what
he calls âdark green religionâ becomes especially relevant to our
purposes when he discusses its articulation among radical
environmentalists.
Taylor dedicates the better part of his chapter on Radical
Environmentalism to a discussion of William âAvalonâ Rogers, who
committed suicide while in jail for the infamous 1998 ELF Vail action.
We should pause here for a moment and acknowledge that the lesson of
Avalon is one that contemporary green anarchists would do well to
remember. Years of squabbling about agriculture, symbolic culture, and
rewilding has not honored the memory of this courageous man. For the
moment, let us simply say that in urging green anarchists to embrace the
latent spirituality of our position, I also urge us to return to Avalon.
In Mountains and Rivers Compel Me, Avalonâs photocopied compilation of
essays, poetry, and art (which he distributed freely), he writes that
his goal is to urge activists to abandon âhuman chauvinism.â At this
point, it is not clear that green anarchy, broadly speaking, has
succeeded in this. Among other influential writers, Avalon also included
essays by Vine Deloria, arguing that Christianity was responsible for
waging a war against the cosmos and that only a return to an indigenous,
that is to say animist, worldview could save humanity. The works of
Edward Abbey and Dave Foreman also feature heavily in Avalonâs
compilation. Both thinkers are paradigmatic of the naturalistic
tendency, emphasizing the sacredness of the natural world but ending
their critique somewhat before arriving at a fully supernatural
position. In an interview with Bron Taylor, Foreman remarks
Itâs very difficult in our society to discuss the notion of sacred apart
from the supernatural, I think thats something that we need to work on,
I nonsupernatural concept of sacred; a nontheistic basis of sacred. When
I say Iâm a nontheistic pantheist itâs a recognition that whatâs really
important is the flow of life, the process of life.
Edward Abbeyâs works also demonstrate this insistence upon a notion of
the sacred, albeit in naturalistic terms, as a guiding principle for
environmentalism.
Radical environmentalism presents a key formulation of âdark green
religionâ in terms of its ambivalent apocalyptic perspective. On one
hand the end is coming and it will involve immense human and non-human
suffering; it may come quickly, it may unfold slowly, but it is
unstoppable. On the other hand, the end, however it is conceptualized,
will involve the breakdown of the anthropo- centric techno-industrial
world, which is responsible for the loss of contact with the natural
world and the extinction of countless species. The millenarian
orientation of the âdark green religionsâ can be understood in terms of
hastening the collapse or bringing about the rapture in Christian
theology. The collapse of techno-industrial civilization is seen as
imminent and thus we are in the position to give it a final nudge. In
1986, for instance, Edward Abbey stated his belief that industrial
civilization would not last another fifty years.
Having seen some of the ways that a spirituality, whether naturalistic
or su- pernaturalistic, has informed many of the foundational concepts
of thinkers within and around green anarchy, let us focus on the example
of Gary Snyder.
Forget wild plants, their virtues lose dream-time.
It is the spirit that ties us to the land. In his seminal 1990
collection The Practice of the Wild, Gary Snyder writes:
For a people of an old culture, all their mutually owned territory holds
numinous life and spirit. Certain places are perceived to be of high
spiritual density because of plant or animal habitat intensities, or
associations with legend, or connection with human totemic ancestry, or
because of geomor- phological anomaly.
The spirit dwells in the land. Features of the landscape, animal and
plant species have meaning beyond what is simply perceived by the
confessedly inadequate human senses. But we have other senses, as well.
Ones that have withered from neglect. Contemporary green anarchists are
no less likely to laugh at the idea of talking to trees than those who
blindly follow the ideology of the techno-industrial world. What does it
say about us that we refuse to accept the common beliefs of those who
came before us? We may be tempted to dismiss such stuff as hippie new
age nonsense and hokum. But in doing so, we may as well abandon the
entirety of our convictions regarding the path of humanity and the
natural world. If the trees do not speak to us, we must begin to ask if
the fault lies not with us, who no longer address them. As Snyder
writes: If we are on the verge of postcivilization, then our next step
must take account of the primitive worldview which has traditionally and
intelligently tried to open and keep open lines of communication with
the forces of nature. As green anarchists, it is not clear that we have
yet taken this step. The old anarchist insistence on denying the gods
puts us at odds with both the indigenous worldview and the cosmos.
Down with demonic killers who mouth revolutionary
slogans and muddy the flow of change, may they be
Bound by the Noose, and Instructed by the Diamond
Sword of ACHALA the Immovable, Lord of Wisdom, Lord
of Heat, who is squint-eyed and whose face is terrible
with bare fangs, who wears on his crown a garland
of severed heads, clad in a tiger skin, he who turns
Wrath to Purified Accomplishment.
It is clear that anthropocen- trism is the root of the industrial and
techno-industrial worldview.
We can frame this as humanism or human exceptionalism. In any case, it
comes down to the same thing: a vision of the universe that places
humanity above nature or the world. Where in ages past, indigenous
people saw spirits, deities, individual entities populating the world,
techno-industrial society sees the world as having one species and then
a lot of raw material, aesthetically pleasing or displeasing scenery,
gross things, cute things, and food. To say that the world is spirit
neither denies the materiality of the world nor posits an
anthropocentric perspective. The things of the spirit are not
intangible, invisible specters, not wholly anyway. Perhaps they have
this form as well. But the spirit and the land are one. They are
intermingled, interpenetrated. The stream that I see is the stream but
it is also more than what I see. We may call what that otherness is by
different names. There is an intelligence there, an agency, an identity.
But let us pause here, for a moment. Just as the bland secularism and
denial of the gods by most anarchists takes us further away from the
proper reverence of the land and accurate estimation of indigenous
communities, we must also be wary of positing a return to a lost
innocence. This position likewise takes us away from the world that is
and puts us into the realm of delusion. The world is what it is. We are
no longer what we were ten thousand years ago. What we are now, who can
say? The passage of ten thousand years may not be long in geological
terms but in terms of human life and society it is not nothing. There is
an even more profound point to make, however, which is that there was
never innocence in the world. Not among animals, not among early humans,
not among the grinding might of the glacier, not among the flaming
stars. In reconsecrating our bonds to the gods of the earth, we do not
seek to return to some idyllic childhood of our race. To paraphrase
Robinson Jeffers, it was dark already when humanity first walked upon
the earth. The bonds between humanity and the earth were always, and
always must be, honored with blood, without the bourgeois moralism of
the Enlightenment. No, there was never innocence. Perhaps there was
wholeness or a greater sense of connection to the spiritual, animate
earth. But such gifts were bestowed by putting humanity in its proper
place, among the other creatures that crawl through the dust. The
strength of the non-industrial world is not that it is egalitarian,
peaceful, or kind. Its strength is derived from properly estimating the
worth of humanity, which is to say, very little indeed. This is not to
say that equality, peace, and kindness are absent from the course of
human history. They will always have their moments.
âNo need to survive!" âIn the fires that destroy the universe at the end
of the kalpa, what survives?âââThe iron tree blooms in the void!â
Innocence. How long has this idea perniciously invaded our vision of the
world? The world is innocent and humanity is wicked. Within humanity,
moreover, the civilized are wicked and the primitive are innocent. It is
time to dispense with this nonsense once and for all. The innocent is
the simple. To be innocent is to lack proper understanding. To be
innocent is an enviable though ultimately untenable position. The
innocent is so because he does not know. He is naive and gullible
because he doesnât know any better. He is innocent because he doesnât
have language, because he doesnât have culture. He is innocent because
he does not make war, because he does not eat the flesh of animals,
because he does not dominate his fellows or the earth. To conceptualize
those we admire and seek to emulate in such terms is to reduce them to
being ahistorical, one-dimensional, and childlike. In other words, we
reduce and simplify them in order to feel better about our own
wickedness: âNothing makes one so vain as being told that he is a
sinner.â Those who would find an idyllic primeval past full of brainless
saints would do well to look at the literature of the architects of
modernity, colonialism, and empire and find their poisonous words
repeated back to them.
If we acknowledge agency among the other we must acknowledge its
capacity to act as it will, not as we would prefer, according to our
moral assumptions. The entities and forces of the world will act however
they choose. They do not give a damn for our ideas of how one should
act. The techno-industrial world cannot grasp that it is not the moral
compass of the universe, no matter how radically it has been proven to
be morally bankrupt. If we prefer to view the world and its spirits as
techno-industrialism does, as inert bodies, dumb and senseless matter,
as so much material that must be ordered and arranged by our enlightened
hands, then by all means we should continue to ascribe the same level of
agency to them as we do to our children.
From âKingâ project a law. (Foxy self-survival sense is Reason, since it
âworksâ)
and Reason gets ferocious as it goes for
order throughout natureâturns Law back on
nature. (A rooster was burned at the stake
for laying an egg. Unnatural. 1474.)
Re-acknowledging the spiritual vitality of the world may force green
anarchy to reexamine some of its current preoccupations. On some level,
this may account for the hesitation of so many anarchists to embrace a
properly spiritual orientation. Too many are unwilling to let go of the
struggles for equality, justice, and freedom. To truly dehumanize our
perspective means changing our response to the sufferings of humanity.
If we truly seek to renounce an anthropocentric view of the world, we
must unfortunately recognize that equality, justice, and freedom are
unknown to the spirit of the cosmos. Reason, rationality, and the others
are not to be found on earth, other than in the dreams of the same
modern, Enlightened consciousness that enslaved and massacred half the
world: the same consciousness that gave birth to industrialism. Again,
letâs be thoroughâto deny the existence of a world without suffering,
exploitation, and cruelty is not the same thing as sanctioning,
promoting, or celebrating the horror and vileness of the current state
of humanity. We may be able to trade certain types of suffering for
others. And doing so may constitute more than a quantitative difference.
But as long as solving human problemsâwhether disguised or not beneath
layers of superficial variationâremains the primary orientation of green
anarchists, we will continue to maintain and reinforce an
anthropocentric consciousness. Regretfully, we would be better off
sitting on the mountaintop and dedicating our lives to prayer than
trying to fight the battles that so many are preoccupied with. In the
words of Dogen: The imperial power has no authority over the wise people
in the mountains. These are understandable battles, perhaps. Worthy
battles, perhaps. But nonetheless, battles that will bring us no closer
to what we claim to seek. Perhaps with prayer and meditation we can
return to the spirit of the world: knowing that nothing need be done, is
where we begin to move from. There is no doubt that we stand in the
midst of the Kali Yuga, the age of vice, of quarrel and contention, and
the bull of dharma stands upon one leg alone.
Death himself,
(Liquid Metal Fast Breeder Reactor) stands grinning, beckoning.
Plutonium tooth-glow.
Eyebrows buzzing.
Strip-mining scythe.
Kali dances on the dead stiff cock.
Aluminum beer cans, plastic spoons, plywood veneer, PVC pipe, vinyl seat
covers,
donât exactly burn, donât quite rot,
flood over us,
robes and garbs
of the Kali-yuga
end of days.
To evoke the Vedic goddess Kali here is not coincidental, for she
represents a conception of mother nature or mother earth that provides
an important corrective to the ways that mother earth or nature has been
imagined in technoindustrial society.
It is not surprising that contemporary society is inclined to view the
earth as a mother, given the dysfunctional ideas we have about
motherhood. Within a patriarchal society, the mother is deprived of all
power. The awe-inspiring power to create life is relegated to a figure
of domestic servitude. She is expected to love and provide endlessly for
her children. She is expected to be selfless, to ask nothing in return,
to give and give, without ever thinking of herself or her needs. When we
think about this as a model for our relationship with the earth, much of
the basis for our exploitation of the natural world becomes clear. It is
not that conceptualizing the earth, or nature, or the wild in terms of
the mother is a mistake. Itâs that our ideas about what constitutes
motherhood are so severely flawed. In the vedas, Kali is simultaneously
creator and destroyer, war goddess and nurturing mother nature. She is
loving as well as terrifying. Moreover, the worship of Kali demonstrates
an awareness of the terrible aspect of mothering, as well as the
nurturing. What would it mean if we brought this kind of awareness to
our conceptions of the natural world? First of all, as we have said, it
would mean that we acknowledge how small and trivial humanity truly is.
We are not our motherâs favorite child, only one among billions. She
does not bestow special favors upon us, certainly not without receiving
offerings from us, which she has not received in a very, very long time.
We are not exceptional, other than the childish petulance with which we
ruin things. Secondly, it would mean that we understand the proper role
of fear and terror in the wild world. Given the fact that humanity has
made its own world, cut off from the wild, it has been a long time since
we experienced the kind of fear that we were made to feel. The only fear
that humanity now faces, by and large, is the solitary fear of its own
madness. It is right for human beings to feel fear in the face of the
awesome powers that stand above us. The leopard, the storm, the
mountains, the dark woods, the reeking swamps. It is right to be afraid
of these things. For fear is the twin of love. And what we do not fear
becomes deprived of agency, passive and inert material that we can
heedlessly exploit and squander.
Not all those who pass
In front of the Great Motherâs chair
Get past with only a stare.
Some she looks at their hands To see what sort of savages they were.
In regards to the dual nature of the mother, as creator and destroyer,
that informs our sense of the earth and the wild, Snyder points us to
Thoreauâs 1851 essay âWalking.â In that classic piece Thoreau writes of
this vast, savage, howling mother of ours, Nature, lying all around,
with such beauty, and such affection for her children, as the leopard.
We also know, however, that leopards occasionally devour their own
children. Thus, this metaphor is even more apt than it first appears.
Affection and violence are not mutually exclusive. Love and terror.
Thoreau continues: the Spaniards have a good term to express this wild
and dusky knowledge, Gramatica parda, tawny grammar, a kind of
mother-wit derived from that same leopard to which I have referred.
Humanity is inarguably a child of the cosmos. This does not protect us,
however. For the spirit of the world is armed with stabbing teeth and
ripping claws. In the dreamtime, this truth was known by all. For the
gods walked the earth then and were armed with fearsome weapons indeed.
We know that the spirit world exists, because we see it in our dreams.
Our hidden parts, the parts that have been sealed shut by
techno-industrial society like an oyster protecting the pearl within,
remain connected with the spiritual nature of the world. It is within
the unconscious, within the world of dreams that we confront the self
that is beyond the self. And is this not ultimately the lesson of
spiritual and mystical traditions? That all is one, all is not human.
For that matter, human is not human. We are in the rock, tree, beast,
and insect. And they are in us. For all is one, and that one is the
spirit. Snyder puts it thus: the world is our consciousness, and it
surrounds us. There are more things in the mind, in the imagination than
âyou" can keep track ofâ thoughts, memories, images, angers, delights
rise unbidden. The depths of mind, the unconscious, are our inner
wilderness areas, and that is where a bobcat is right now. I do not mean
personal bobcats in personal psyches, but the bobcat that roams from
dream to dream.
To dehumanize the human perspective, as Robinson Jeffers urged, requires
finding that the true essence of humanity is not as human but as part
and parcel of the cosmos themselves. We are less than the storming
waves, less than the thundering storm, less than the bear, and the oak.
But we are also a part of them all. The wilderness is the place where
these truths become self-evident. And yes, it is no coincidence that the
city is the heart of the techno-industrial world and the temple of
humanityâs worship of itself. The spirit of the world, the wilderness
still pulses through us. Stalking silently through the jungles and dark
forests of the soul, like a bobcat, a leopard. We are not what we think
we are, not as individuals and not as humans.
The dream-world, the world of the unconscious, the spirit world, the
dew- drop world has been understood in various ways by pre-industrial
communities all around the world. This is the world that we must seek.
It is not above or beyond the world that we see but it is deeper and
richer. We once dreamed with the trees, rivers, and stones. But now, for
too long we have dreamed our own lonely dreams, constructed by the awful
logic of the techno-industrial world. For Gary Snyder, the indigenous
American spiritual perspective still remains central. It is etched into
the landscape, into the earth. It is still alive among individuals and
communities that persist. He writes, the possibility of passage into
that mythtime world had been all but forgotten in Europe. Its
rediscoveryâthe unsettling vision of a natural selfâhas haunted the
Euro-American people. The mythic world cannot be expunged, no matter how
grievous the sins of our culture. And our connection to that world
cannot be severed. It can go dormant and be forgotten but I will persist
in my belief that there are powers which can awaken it. To sit in the
stillness of the forestâif one can manage to put aside the chatter of
the human worldâis to touch that power, to gaze into the heart of the
raging seas, to feel the thunder on the moun- taintop. I mistrust anyone
who sincerely claims that they do not feel the pull of that other world
in those moments and a host of others, both dramatic and simple. To
borrow Snyderâs phrase, there is a âghost wildernessâ that drifts like
mist over the world we have built.
For those who have not swallowed the poisoned pill of
techno-industrialism, envisioning a world animated by spirit is as
simple as acknowledging that consciousness is not unique to humanity.
This consciousness is what is meant by âspirit.â In many cases, the word
itself is the same. Among the Inupiaq people of the Bering Sea, Snyder
tells us, as wth many other communities around the world, shape changing
is a common enough occurrence. Animals change form, humans change form,
as do rocks, mountains, rivers and other entities. In Inupiaq animal
totems, however, it is common for a small human-like face to be carved,
stitched, or hidden somewhere on its body: this is the inua, which is
often called âspiritâ but could just as well be termed the âessential
natureâ of that creature. We are not to assume, however, that this
practice demonstrates that all things are essentially human. It is
simply meant to reflect the belief that all things contain a spirit or
consciousness that is maintained and consistent no matter how much the
outward form changes. Humanity is not alone.
The ultimate, unforgivable crime of techno-industrial society is
godlessness and denial of the spirit. When traditional people killed
animals and consumed their flesh, they did so in reverence of the life
they had taken and with respect and love for the spirit of the animal.
One only has to look at the modern meat industry to see how utterly we
have denied the existence of any such spirit or consciousness. While
among many indigenous communities it was considered impolite even to
point at a mountain, technoindustrial society bulldozes mountains to the
ground to strip out the ore within. One does not act in such a way
towards another consciousness. And confronted with a world denuded of
all spiritual life or consciousness, humanity strips those away from
itself as well. Once you are in the habit of denying life, itâs hard to
stop. So, imagining the world to be barren and lonely, we deprive this
or that group of humans until we literally stand alone. And this will be
our future.
Returning again to Kali and the figure of the wrathful mother, the
giving of gifts and offerings consecrates our bonds to each other and
the world. We do not acknowledge the other and so we do not honor the
gift exchange. We give nothing to the earth, to the animals, plants,
rocks, dirt, wind, and waters. We offer them nothing because we do not
recognize them. And so we likewise receive nothing from them. Again,
according to the logic of techno-industrial society, humanity is right
to view the cosmos as devoid of spirit. In the end, our stinginess harms
us the most. We hoard what we have and in the end, are poisoned by it.
The worship of Kali demands offerings and austerities and sacrifices.
Gifts are given and received. But this is hardly a capitalistic sense of
exchange. Gifts and offerings do not have a perceptible exchange value.
We give what we have and we receive what the goddess chooses to bestow
upon us. It may be what we want, it may not. But according to the wisdom
of those powers above us, it is always what we need, whether or not we
recognize it. The importance of this relationship is in acknowledging
the spirit or consciousness of non-human entities and in recognizing the
small, but no less significant part in the universe that humanity plays.
Gary Snyder offers us little as far as action and praxis. This is not a
coincidence. The more we search for paths to follow, the further we are
from the way of the world. We have only to effortlessly grasp the
meaning of things and leave it at that. As it is written in the
daodejing: a path that can be followed is not a spiritual path. Let us
leave things to the spirit of the world. In the end, this is the way to
ultimately renounce our anthropocen- trism. If humanity is not the
culmination of the natural world, then why should we assume that the
world is ours to save. It will not be saved by us, no matter what path
we try to follow. Our delusions of control will only become reinforced
in the process. If we are gods, as technoindustrial society tries to
convince us we are, then the world is ours to exploit or to save. But if
we reject the idea that humanity is the center of the universe then it
would be presumptuous to think that Gaia much needs our prayers or
healing vibes. Human beings themselves are at riskânot just on some
survival of civilization level but more basically on the level of heart
and soul. We are in danger of losing our souls.
We donât understand what we are, what we are made of. We donât
understand that this world that we treat as the backdrop for our petty
dramas and squabbles or as material for our conquests, is alive with
spiritual energy and myriad entities and powers. We would not be able to
ignore this fact if we threw ourselves into the fearsome and
aweinspiring heart of life. Once, we could perceive the leopardâs
grammar. The law that says, âI will eat you. I will devour you. For you
are weak and I am strong.â Techno-industrial civilization denies the law
of the world. The spiritual life of our ancestors taught us to honor the
law: the archaic religion is to kill god and eat him. Or her. The
shimmering food-chain, the food-web, is the scary, beautiful condition
of the biosphere. If we wish to recover what has been lost, what has
been taken from us by techno-industrial society, we must look inward to
find it. We must rediscover that we exist as spiritual beings in a
living world that is simultaneously alive and divine. What is needed now
is reconsecration, for there are no longer any paths for us to follow.
Let us proudly declare to the mountains and the rivers: we renounce the
cult of humanity, we renounce the world of technoindustrial society, and
we bind ourselves in reverence and service to the gods.
in the service of the wilderness of life of death
of the Motherâs breasts!
sources cited:
Gary Snyder, Turtle Island
Gary Snyder, The Practice of the Wild
Bron Taylor, Dark Green Religion
by Dominique Ganawaabi and Soren Aubade
One evening in the month of September 1731, a girl nine or ten years
old, pressed, as it would seem, by thirst, entered about twilight into
Songi, a village situated four or five leagues south of Chalons in
Champagne. She had nothing on her feet: her body was covered with rags
and skins: her hair with a gourd leaf; and her face and hands were black
as a Negro's. She was armed with a short baton, thicker at one end than
the other, like a club. Those who first observed her, took to their
heels, crying out, âThere is the devil.â
The History of a Wild Girl, 1768
The story of Marie-Angelique Le Blanc is one way to talk about of the
potential consequences of escaping from civilization. She captivated the
French imagination of the time, in part because her life took place
against a backdrop of the socio- psychological implications of leaving
the confines of the Old World. The success of mapping out the previously
unknown spaces at the edges of Christendom entailed a kind of
confirmation of a certain worldview but it also meant that Europe was
being Othered in the way it usually managed to deflect.
Her story is that of young girl who survived alone while crossing
expanses of untamed forest for an unknown number of years. Some reports
at the time stated that she protected herself from wolves with a wooden
club or a sharpened stick. She was said to subsist by catching frogs and
butchering rabbits with only her fingernails. Marie-Angelique would
become the darling of some Enlightenment intellectuals who would
eventually teach her to read and write. Her tale, seen as partially a
hoax by many scholars, is typical of the very old and far-reaching
narratives about âwild children.â She was rumored to be from the Fox
tribe of the east coast of North America or perhaps indigenous to the
Caribbean islands before sailing to Europe in order to become a servant
for a nobel woman. Speculations about her ethnic origins are important
here because meeting the peoples of the Americas posed new challenges to
âWesternâ thought around the concepts of language, human nature, and the
distinction between savage and civilized. The European self had to come
to terms with seeing its reflection in the mirror of the Indian.
She did not begin to reflect till after she had made some progress in
her education; and that during her life in the woods, she had scarcely
any other ideas than a sense of her wants, and a desire to satisfy them.
She has no remembrance either of father or mother, or any other person
of her own country, and hardly any of the country itself, except that
she does not remember having seen any houses there, but only holes under
ground, and a kind of hut-like barracks.
The idea that a child could live alone in the wilderness without the
protection of social armor or language to guide her choices must have
seemed almost supernatural to the rationality-reverent men who examined
her. Native people were often viewed as childlike creatures in
comparison to the sophisticated Christian races. They appeared to be
mouthing words, but were they really speaking?
Le Blanc pretends to remember that aboard the ship in which she was
transported, there were people who understood her language, which was
nothing but shrill piercing cries, formed in the throat, without any
articulation or motion of the lips. There were some strange characters
engraved on her arms, which might have led to a more particular
discovery of her nation.
If Marie-Angelique were a Native American it could help explain how she
managed to survive the harshness of the forest beyond Champagne. Indians
were said to possess an innate ability to live off the land. Like in
many other cases of feral children, intellectuals would rejoice in the
potential to gain useful knowledge from tragedy. Recent cases are seen
through the lenses of medicine, developmental psychology, and
linguistics. But if the cause of separation is now understood as neglect
or autism, the goal of learning as much as possible for universal
benefit is still present. There is always an attempt (often a failed
one) to reintegrate the child into society.
The weaning of her from feeding on raw bloody flesh, and the leaves,
branches, and roots of trees, was the most difficult and dangerous part
of her reformation. Her stomach and constitution, accustomed to raw
food, full of its natural juice, could by no means endure our artificial
kinds of food, rendered by cookery, according to the opinion of several
physicians, much more difficult to digest.
An earlier religious debate before the Council of Valladolid sought to
decide if biblical and canonical ideas would justify the existence of
encomienda practices of forced labor in Spanish colonies. Philosopher
Juan Sepulveda argued, in the tradition of Aristotle, that certain
peoples were natural slaves. The Bishop of Chiapas, MexicoâBartolome de
Las Casas offered a different reading on sacred texts to say âAll the
World is Human!â
We can imagine early explorers seeing in the New World a kind of
realization of Eden and the abyss: its inhabitants as either demonic
cannibals or moss-covered cherubs. Hobbes and Rousseau said as much in
so many words. Lost children are fertile ground for proving the validity
of prefigured hypotheses using now- observable Apparitions. Those of us
who still seek refuge in the hope of an Outside could try to listen to
the language of these infantes sauvage, but maybe not in the way other
adults have tried to hear.
Wildness has enchanted the European imaginary for centuries. Wild men
were central adornments of medieval tapestries. Feral children were
shuttled from court to court and viewed as fascinating oddities.
Theologians debated whether or not they had souls. It must have been
this dramatic distinction between human and animal, civilised and
boorish, those who speak and those who remain silent, that inspired such
a mixture of infatuation, terror and disgust for that which is neither,
or both. The Other is always obscured and mysterious, and often lives
between worlds.
I am immune from sanity or insanityâI am an empty present box all
unwrapped for somebody else's disposal. I am a throw away egg shell with
no life inside meâFor I am not touchable but a slave to nothingness.
June and Jennifer Gibbons, September Poems
The Gibbons sisters were born in 1963 in Barbados, before their family
moved to Wales. Identical twins, the only black children in their
community aside from their own two siblings, trying to translate their
rapidly spoken Bajan Creole into a drawling southern English accentâthey
must have seemed out of place, to say the least. They were bullied and
isolated at school, both by teachers and peers. Their sad, enigmatic
story is quite different from that of many so-called feral children, in
part because of their brilliance, but also because they were feral while
still living within society.
Perhaps the most widely publicized stories of selective mutism, June and
Jennifer showed no signs of developmental disability at any point. They
actually showed exceptional intellect and talentâtheir fluency in
written English far surpassing developmental standards for their age.
However, rather than assimilating into the culture and community that so
pointedly rejected them, they chose silence. Compelled within the depths
of Kaspar Hauserâs cellar, towards each other, towards them- selvesâJune
later stated, We made a pact. We said we werenât going to speak to
anybody. We stopped talking altogetherâonly us two, in our bedroom
upstairs.
It is estimated that as many as half of identical twin pairs develop
some form of twin language for a time. June and Jennifer developed not a
rudimentary language, but a rich and highly complex one indecipherable
to any outsider. In the process, they began to develop their own culture
and morality. When they were eleven, their family moved to an even more
conservative town, somewhat infamous for its racism, and their isolation
deepened.
An attempt was made to separate them on the recommendation of a speech
pathologist when they were 14. At this point, they had not spoken to
anyone except the other for at least six years. And yet when forced into
treatment centers away from one another, both would call their case
managers on the phone, speaking English, promising to speak more if only
they could be reunited. After two years, their family, doctors, and
therapists gave up. They returned home at age 16.
What happened next is rather spectacular. The twins began writing
manuscripts for novels, eventually self-published, eroticizing their
profound love of Americana, crime, and transgression. In The Pepsi-Cola
Addict, depicting the life and downfall of a boy from Malibu hopelessly
addicted to Pepsi, Juneâs hero contemplates suicide, but his best friend
talks him out it. Thatâs the easy way out Preston, and as the Indians
say, any timeâs as good as today to die. Jenniferâs Discomania echoes
similar themes of addiction, desperation, and the mythical life of an
American teen, in a land full of attractive youth with multicolored skin
and a thousand convenience stores waiting to be robbed.
They played elaborate, ritualistic doll games, spending hours recording
birth and death ledgers detailing the genealogy of the doll clan, all
the while communicating with whispers, clicks, and eye movements that
unnerved onlookers to the point that some described them as being
possessed with each other. They also met three American boysâwhite boys
that âlooked like Leo DiCaprio.â They began drinking whiskey and
sniffing glue, and discovered that under the influence, they could talk
to the boys. June wrote upon watching her sister lose her virginity:
Something like magic is happening. I am seeing Jennifer for the first
time like she is seeing me. I think she is slow, cold, has no respect
and talks too much; but she thinks I am the same. We are both holding
each other back. ...There is a murderous gleam in her eye. Dear Lord, I
am scared of her. She is not normal. She is having a nervous breakdown.
Someone is driving her insane. It is me.
The girls became increasingly interested in theft and destruction. They
attempted to join a gang only to be rejectedâthen plotted to start their
own gang. They began smashing windows at random, stealing bikes and
glue, only to call the police and flee before capture. They plotted to
make bombs. They burnt down buildings. June wrote in 1981:
All this week Iâve wanted to burn down the tractor store in Snowdrop
Lane. I burned it down todayâwith the help of J., of course. It was the
biggest night of my life. We climbed over a barbed wire fence. The sky
grew blacker and it started to rain.... All the while, my lovely
glorious fire was licking its way through the roof, and the thick smoke
filled the night sky. It was a picture which will live in my mind for
everâoh what a sinful, evil, selfish mind. I know the Lord will forgive
me. Itâs been a long, painful, hard year. Donât I deserve to express my
distress?
Shortly after this, they were caught by a beat cop nearby. After lengthy
judiciary proceedings, they were sent to the infamous Broadmoor Hospital
for the Criminally Insane. By far the youngest patients, they underwent
years of turmoil and heavy medication. Jennifer developed tardive
dyskinesia. They lost interest in writing novels, playing games, and
drawing pictures, but maintained diaries. Despite being hailed as the
âQueens of Broadmoorâ by fellow patients, their diaries reveal an
increasing level of desperation, pain, and animosity towards each other.
They were separated often. Hospital records detail many eerie instances
in which they seemed to act in tandemâ one day June attacked a nurse
while Jennifer attempted suicide in a different ward; they were often
observed to be sitting with the same posture and affect simultaneously,
in different rooms. After 14 years of torture, they chose their
long-standing pact since childhood: if one died, the other would speak,
and live. June wrote:
One of us is plotting to kill one of us. A thud on the head on a cool
evening, dragging the lifeless body, digging a secret grave. Iâm in a
dangerous situation, a scheming, insidious plot. How will it end? ...Iâm
in enslavement to her. This creature who lounges in this cell, who is
with me every hour of my living soul.
We have become fatal enemies in each otherâs eyes.... We scheme, we
plot, and who will win? ... A deadly day is getting closer each minute,
coming to a point of imminent death like hands creeping out against the
night sky, intentions of evil, blood, a knife, a mincer. ...I say to
myself, how can I get rid of my own shadow? Impossible or not
impossible? Without my shadow would I die? Without my shadow would I
gain life?
And yet their bond was undeniable, unbreakable, insolvent:
(...) locked in
locked up
creating stories
inventing life
you and me
you are me
I want to find a part of me
that doesn't belong to you
After lengthy discussion recorded in their diaries, Jennifer volunteered
to die. A few days later, she was overcome with an inflammation of the
heart, without any previous signs of illness nor signs of poison, undue
stress, self-injury or foul play. And her sister began to speak. An
excerpt of Juneâs poem is inscribed on her sisterâs grave:
We once were two
We two made one
We no more two
Through life be one
Rest in peace.
Photographs of them together at Broadmore show them as smart, eccentric,
beautiful young women wearing turbans, silver bangles, elaborate makeup,
and slight, strange smiles. They seem to exemplify a tense synthesis
between the ultimate modesty and an ultimate, burning ex-
pletiveâforever foreign in all worlds but their own.
A House of Skin
The 'Other Half' is the word. The 'Other Half' is an organism. Word is
an organism. The presence of the 'Other Half is a separate organism
attached to your nervous system on an air line of words can now be
demonstrated experimentally. One of the most common 'hallucinations' of
subject during sense withdrawal is the feeling of another body sprawled
through the subject's body at an angle... yes quite an angle it is the
'Other Half' worked quite some years on a symbiotic basis. From
symbiosis to parasitism is a short step. The word is now a virus. The
flu virus may have once been a healthy lung cell. It is now a parasitic
organism that invades and damages the central nervous system. Modern man
has lost the option of silence. Try halting sub-vocal speech. Try to
achieve even ten seconds of inner silence. You will encounter a
resisting organism that forces you to talk. That organism is the word.
- William Burroughs, The Ticket That Exploded
What does it mean to be physically naked? What does it mean to be
intellectually naked, without lingua franca? What does it mean to be
naked in the eyes of society? Where is the Eden in which we are
innocent, unashamed, and free? Language ties us to each other but it
also leaves lacerating marks.
Herodotus tells the story of a king of Egypt who had two children
brought up together, but in silence, reared only by a goat. After two
years they held out their hands to the man responsible for the
experiment in education, and said to him âbeccos.â The king, who knew
that in the Phrygian tongue âbekâ signifies âbreadâ concluded from this
that Phrygian was a natural language, and that the Phrygians were the
most ancient people of the world. The scientific method seems cruel when
applied to humans, especially when its conclusions are lacking.
The life of Ishi provides another twist on the Wild Man motif. He was
said to be the last of the Yahi tribe that was vanishing in the midst of
Gold Rush expansion into California. Instead of being a child denied
inclusion into communal structures, he was purported to be the sole
member of his society. Anthropologist Arnold Kroeber, father of science
fiction novelist Ursula K. Le Guin, held him as a living museum specimen
at the University of California. While living on campus he was
constantly ill due to a lack of immunity to society. Le Guin drew
considerably on anthropology in order to create the visions of
believable, desirable societies that populate her work. She was silent
about the existence of Ishi for the most part. In one short note about
Ishi she says that her father gave him his name (meaning âperson,â)
because the Yahi held a taboo against speaking one's given name or the
names of the dead. We know now that his gestures said something to the
world around him, even if ethnology collapses when focused on an
individual.
[Ishi] demonstrated his tool- making and hunting skills, and spoke his
tribal stories and songs. Newspapers frequently referred to Ishi as the
âlast wild Indian,â and the press was full of anecdotes referring to
Ishi's reaction to twentieth-century technological wonders like
streetcars, theaters, and airplanes. In his writings, Waterman
respectfully noted Ishi's âgentlemanliness, which lies outside of all
training and is an expression of inward spirit,â and the records of the
time reveal much mutual respect on the part of Ishi and his scien-
tist-observers. Each weekend, hundreds of visitors flocked to Parnassus
to watch Ishi demonstrate arrow-making and other aspects of his tribal
culture.
After just a few years living at the University, he died. Ishi's brain
was donated to the Smithsonian for further study after his death in
1916. A living museum specimen, and then a dead one, preserved in a bell
jar.
A century later, a postmodern experiment is being conducted on those not
quite dead, not quite alive, under the banner of Humanism.
Hogewey is a quaint village, home to some hundred and forty people. At a
quick glance, a traveler might not notice much different from any other
small Dutch community, but soon would begin to realize that this village
is completely unlike anything else in the world. First, no travellers
pass through, since Hogewey is enclosed by walls with locked gates.
Second, although there are shop clerks, landscapers, and baris- tas of
all ages, the residents are very, very old. Hogewey is being heralded as
a great advancement in the field of care. It is a village, but it is
also a care facility. It is also a rather nightmarish vision of life
without sentience.
The residents of Hogewey each have their own apartment, filled with
personal touches and tasteful furniture. They all suffer (or perhaps are
blessed with) advanced memory loss. The streets are lined with cafes,
markets, and shops where no money is ever exchanged. The friendly girl
at the hair salon is not only a hairdress- erâshe is a nurse, ready to
administer medical assistance if anyone has a stroke or a fall. Everyone
is either a caregiver or aide of some kind with specialized training, or
a resident suffering from dementia. The citizens of Hogewey do not know
that they live in a care facility, that they are being monitored at all
times by security cameras, that their lives are being engineered for
them, or that at any sign of confusion or anxiety, someone is waiting to
guide them through the next moment so that they can forget the last. It
is kept secret from them. They live much longer than similar patients in
more clinical or institutional environments. Their families say that
they are much happier, that this affords them at least the illusion of
independence and dignity. No shadows dance on the walls of this caveâ
just the flicker of smiling faces in soft, diffuse lighting. They live
in a perfect world, where all edges are blunted.
Oikophobia is a term derived from psychology to describe the fear of the
home, especially of household objects like armchairs or kitchen
instruments. Conservative writer Roger Scruton uses it to critique what
he sees as the left's tendency to reject aspects of the Western project
such as respect for political authority, homeland, traditions, etc. The
concept of oikophobia exists alongside xenophilia, an inversion of
xenophobia where progressive actors express a love for things outside of
their cultural borders, as solutions to all kinds of anxieties. Examples
from the Vietnam war era include the attraction to the religion of the
east: Zen meditation, tantric sex, and martial arts. Today, conversion
to radical Islam is popular in some subcultural circles.
In the 1960s efforts were made to negate âboth the common culture of the
West, and the old educational curriculum that sought to transmit its
humane values.â This disposition has grown out of, for example, the
writings of Jacques Derrida and of Michel Foucault's assault on
bourgeois society resulting in an âanti-cultureâ that took direct aim at
holy and sacred things, condemning and repudiating them as âoppressive
and power-ridden.â
Another example of oikophobia is the hippie back-to-the-land movement
that arose after the failure of the anti-war counterculture. This
utopian urge was preceded by Anabaptist communes, such as the Bruderhof
community (formed out of the German Youth Movement), which drew
inspiration from Nietzscheâs ideas about creating new transcendent
values. They longed to âget back to nature.â There is an affinity here
with early anarchist experiments in living life outside of social mores.
Anarchists at the time responded to industrialisation and modern warfare
with nudism, vegetarianism, nature walks, and free love.
Multi-generational nudism was justified by the idea that children were
equals with adults and did not need to be shamed for, or protected from,
their natural state. John Henry Mackay, an Individualist Anarchist
influenced by Max Stirner, is most known for writing The Anarchists in
1891. He also wrote about his love of boys age fourteen to seventeen
under a pseudonym in The Hustler: A Book of Nameless Love. The desire to
create a life outside of the one we were thrown into will always have an
aftertaste of the dread and wonder of the forbidden.
Those of us who take on rewilding as an existential solution are faced
with the possibility that our ability to imagine new worlds is in some
way defined by the reality we emerged from. What would it be like to
walk alone through the woods for ten years? To hear passing from our
unnamed lips only strange new utterances? To feel our feet and hands
harden, our fingernails sharpen, and our teeth able to chew through raw
scavengings? Could we ever walk far enough to avoid the fates of Ishi,
June, or Marie-Angelique, or would we be returned to society, no longer
as humans, but as rare specimens? Would we become animals only to die in
zoos?
Our desire for an Eden may inspire us to search for the Other within
ourselves, but our fear of the Self may drive the utopian impulse. And
to further confound our search for the keys to paradise, our ability to
imagine such questions is, inherently, tied to the same aptitude that
allowed us to name our kings and nation states in the first place. When
we envision a world in which we can walk no longer burdened by our own
humanity, a path to escape the poisons and prisons of modern society, we
do so using that which makes us so horribly human. We ask a question. We
use words. We name ourselves. Instead, let us pray our names be
unspoken.
by coolsquid
Okay. Try to think of the most normal thing imaginableânot in your own
existance, but as a societal whole. The most socially acceptable,
commonly-held thought, concept, or idea. Do you imagine the grocery
store? Middle-class 40-somethings? Holding a steady job?
Maybe broaden your perspective beyond human society: the most common,
normal thing for any thing on the planet. Sunlight? Air? No, plenty of
things live without that... Movement? Sort of? I mean, if you qualify it
by counting âinternalâ movements, sureâŠ
Anything/everything has, guaranteed, at least one thing (and possibly
only this one thing) in common: life itself. Every organism manages to
be alive, continue existence, and ensure things beyond it will exist. It
maintains, it devours, it expels, it goes on. At this point in lifeâs
development, reproduction is the #1 thing required for it to continue
replicating itself into infinity. So, sex: arguably the most
disgustingly normal thing on the planet.
Itâs baffling that this process of life and its replication constantly
surrounds us, with no escape in sight. We must eat, we must shit, we
must breathe, we must be born, etc.âlife is far more oppressive in its
demands than any other civilized structure, but for some reason most of
us are content with its control over usâcelebrate it, even! It seems
that the only way to escape its unending crushing demands is to figure
out how to live forever (to die would be to give in to the cycle of
life, not a defiance of it).
A brief explanation of what âsexâ means in terms of this article: an act
of penetrative reproduction, or an act simulating such. Letâs say...
anything involving genitalia, penetration, and orgasm. Iâm talking
primarily âstraightâ sex, but honestly, feel free to imagine the best
sex youâve ever had and maybe itâll still fit into this critique. In
addition, I can only critique reproduction from a human lens; while the
ongoing existence and reproduction of all life is incomprehensible and
repulsive, I canât claim to understand how or why oak trees, sea
anemones, chanterelle mushrooms, red ants, jellyfish, et al, reach
understanding of this concept (as much as I would like to, because
frankly, jizzing wildly into the sea or dispersing my clones through
fruiting spore bodies sounds way more appealing).
For all the shame and stigma that supposedly surround sex, people sure
do manage to keep having babies, and continue to do so even under the
most repressive of conditions. Current society engineers every way
possible for two people to breed, with social structures built around
making that possible (and then chained to that structure). Latex and
pharmaceutical industries allow for plenty of ways to prevent life from
being bornâper- haps to keep us well practiced?
Anarchists and queers everywhere seem joyous at our new, oh-
so-progressive, sex-positive culture. By acknowledging and pursuing our
physical desires, weâre embracing our âtrueâ primal animalistic selves,
fucking and frolicking as we please. As if performing such a mundane,
everyday occurrence can somehow be a revolutionary act, or anything more
than a byproduct of biological impulses at best, and a set of social
roles/obligations at worst. Everything everywhere is desperately trying
to get laid, so why would âdoing itâ be considered radical?
Sex is mandatory for the ongoing existence of civilization: having
babies is a requirement for society to continue. Denying sex becomes the
marginal act. (Though if reproduction is how weâve determined whether or
not something is alive, I wonder, does civilization, as a concept, count
as a living being as it replicates itself across the planet? Has
civilization fucked us?)
Sexual reproduction, by basic physical requirements, requires a
catastrophically enormous imbalance of power. One individual in a
pairing is inevitably saddled with the immense resource deprivation
required for giving birth, while the other must give up nothing of
itself, is allowed to remain weak, lazy, and is left with nothing other
than a false sense of superiority. These power dynamics are born of
biology (if biology means nothing more than a relationship with oneâs
physical state, not practice of science or a generalization). Itâs a
wholly individual experience and yet, also entirely the opposite: itâs
environmental, as our boundaryless bodies alter in response to
everything surrounding us. Those with functioning wombs live in a
different biological reality where threat of pregnancy (and all the
horrors that come with it) looms over not just sexual interactions, but
how we consider and move through the world. If one doesnât value life or
the continuation of it, the ability to give birth can be nothing but
punishment. Motherhood be damned.
Society took hold of this already- inconvenient bodily function, adding
more and more conditions, obligations, expectations, and disadvantages
to those cursed with birth bowels. From the regrettable moment that a
child enters into the world, physical traits determine the course of
someoneâs lived experienceâgender and social roles were born to fit into
this already-existing âbiologicalâ box. To quote James Carseâs Finite
and Infinite Games (emphasis mine),
It is [] somewhat misleading to describe society as a regulator of
finite sexual play. It is more the case that finite sexuality shapes
society than is shaped by it. Only to a limited extent do we take on the
sexual roles assigned us by society. Much more frequently we enter into
societal arrangements by way of sexual roles. While society does serve a
regulatory function, it is probably more correctly understood as
sexuality making use of society to regulate itself.
Identity within society is formed by the sex you have. Sex begat gender.
The penetratee risks violation, death by childbirth, having resources
exploited by force or otherwiseâthe womb is a resource to be colonized
by life. Babies are born, the circle repeatsâlife hijacked society to
replicate itself! People who gave birth became women; those who
impregnated became men. For some reason people fight to maintain these
basic roles over themselves (radical feminists and MRAs both see
benefits and argue for the importance/validity of their biology). Others
find new and creative ways of applying womanhood and masculinity that
are inclusive of all sorts of different biological realities. Both seem
like disturbing, undesirable outcomes, and rather than replicating these
biological power dynamics, it seems preferable to abolish them from our
bodies completely. Thereâs nothing deeper to be found at the core of
sexual roles than a social function based on physical reproduction
capability, and rarely if ever do acts of penetration do more than
replicate the existing power differential (whether vaginal birth canal
or sperm-producing penis involved or not). Defy the tyranny of physical
existence, defy the urge of biologyâ thereâs an infinite body waiting to
be touched, with modes of pleasure that negate socially-prescripted
roles upon our bodies.
Birth control, from the pill to condoms, remove the greatest fear of sex
(i.e. reproduction/disease), thus the role of subjugation and power
exchange continue to emanate outwards from the physical form without
personal penalization. Frankly, the clitoris must be some kind of trick,
engineered towards the downfall of all uterinekind! Orgasms and pleasure
sneakily lure people into reckless acts, reproducing unfavorable power
exchanges or accidental conception. While orgasms themselves certainly
arenât invaluable, the fact that many (queers included) stick to
societally-prescribed positions and replicated reproductive functions
such as penetration in any orifice in order to achieve release is
nothing short of soul-crushingly disappointing. Even if children are not
a goal or possibility of intercourse, production if not reproduction is
almost always the focus of sex in the form of orgasm. Humans replicate
an industrialized version of pleasure with a set goal/product at the end
result, and value placed on the quantity of orgasms is produced. Rather
than bring the factory home to our lovers, we could do away with
systemized gratification entirely.
Any animal occasionally forced to carry young should do everything it
can to avoid sex. Ducks grew labyrinthine vaginas; water-spiders
developed literal shields to cover their genitals; dragonflies play
dead; sharks, elephants, snow leopards, guppies, elephant seals,
dolphins, baboons (pick an animal), flee or form gangs to prevent
copulation. Those who eat their penetrators donât seem to fear it quite
as much, maybe because the resource exchange is more equal. Birth-giving
animals outside of humans often appear drab and unimpressive in
correlation with their sperm-giving counterparts, because being seen as
sexually viable ISNâT AN ADVANTAGE, but rather makes their lives more
difficult. Creatures with both sets of genitalia such as snails will
literally fight with chitin- ous knives over who gets to leave
un-pregnated. Meanwhile, humans create entire industries based on
finding sex, and seem to do little more with their lives other than seek
it out!
As weâve seen, life goes on, despite the resistance of those responsible
for birth. Coercion is integral to sex across the animal kingdom,
including humanityâwhere we futilely attempt to give consent using
abstract symbols known as words.
Rape is not a product of civilization, but a norm of the biological
reality of birth. Rather â[r]apeâs violence and transgression is not
aberrant but rather a defining aspect of sexuality.... Normative, civil
sex is only one part of a system that has rape as its basis, as a
central operating principle. The imagined integrity of the perfectly
consenting subject amounts to little more than a regulatory principle of
rape, a purity to be defended against a threatening Otherâ (Undoing Sex:
Against Sexual Optimism by c.e.).
This is the origin of the existence of womanâto be
penetrated/impregnated, to have power asserted over them, and agency
denied, for the sake of life. The fear of rape is the fear of being
treated as a woman, of being used as a utility. And attempting to heal
from this process as a socialized woman becomes another trau- maâitâs
alienating to extrapolate the experience of an assigned role on to
myself. What happened didnât happen to meâit happened to all women. It
didnât happen to me because of anything other than a common, natural
practice. The circumstances around it have nothing to do with me as an
individual. (Authors Angela Carter and Octavia Butler both tackle this
subject remarkablyâthey both understand rape is a function of their
everyday selves, not some horrific evil or virtue signal to villainy.)
Societyâs constraints on the one who is raped are the true torture.
Civilization blocks us from the physical and psychological acts that
would relieve this traumaâslitting the throats of those who hurt us over
a clear pool, so they can watch themselves die, for example, or
releasing the energy in some trembling, overwhelming shake, as do
gazelles who have just escaped death. We canât fight back or even run
away in any meaningful capacity within existing social structures that
keep us trapped inside roles where this is encouraged practice.
Sex is the core way in which we enter society. Gender has been built out
of the tyranny of biology. The way out is to deny both by negating the
acts defining sex, most especially the sex acts leading to or alluding
to reproduction.
This piece began with discussing how reproduction is absolutely critical
for maintaining social orderâbut any piece of philosophy or ideology
wouldnât be complete without embracing its glaring and disturbing
contradictions.
One would think that by advocating for the end of sex and therefore
reproduction, Iâm merely reflecting ideas behind anti-natalism: that we
should stop breeding in order to let the human race die out, since it
would be far better (for whom or what, exactly?) if humanity became
extinct. And yetâit seems obvious that the more people we create on the
planet, the more resources we extract/consume for population growth, the
less likely our chances of survival. Perhaps reproducing until life is
no longer possible is the best way to bring about our own extinction.
Many environmentalists (and, I suspect, green anarchists) hold James
Lovelockâs Gaia theory as a given truth: living organisms form a
selfregulating and synergistic system that maintains and perpetuates the
conditions for life. Gaia, the nurturing, all-caring earth goddess
bestows her benevolence upon all living beings, and we exist within her
grace. And yetâall but one of the past mass extinction events have been
caused by some microbial creature or another reproducing to such a
dangerous degree that it wiped itself, as well as most of its fellow
living beings, off the face of the planet forever (at least, if you
believe the stories science has to tell, which I, like everyone else,
only choose to do when it serves my purpose). Enter Medea, murderer of
her own children, and her hypothesis: that life on the planet ultimately
leads to the end of conditions favorable to lifeâs existence. Life
destroys life.
Organic life has repeatedly caused the collapse of the biosphere (on a
regular basis, on a small scale), and on at least one occasion has
almost extinguished it entirely. When cyanobacteria first figured out
photosynthesis, the sudden influx of oxygen (still considered a
poisonous gas by the way) eradicated enough of the existing life at the
time that we still find it notable. Twice, photosynthetic creatures
consumed so much carbon dioxide that they induced a âsnowball Earthâ
that made the planet nearly uninhabitable by anything. Nice try, yâall,
maybe third timeâs the charm.
So is this perhaps why we find sexâundoubtedly a repulsive, dangerous
practiceâso desirable? Because we are driven to bring an end to
ourselves and everything else? Is this the real urge of reproduction:
the will to die? We are slaves to life, helpless towards the drive
towards destruction. We canât help being alive. Unable to break our link
to life, completely obsessed by itâwith no way to oppose it.
Humans, I wish you luck in being the first multicellular organisms to
abolish all life on earth. Fuck to negate all life on the planet. Also
props to everybody out there reproducing asexually, holding it down for
the rest of us. If we insist on pursuing sex, let it be for the
revolutionary purpose of destroying life itself.
by Mallory Wournos
This piece is dedicated to all those who have paid the ultimate price
and all those currently incarcerated for transgressing one of the most
fundamental identities to carry society on into the future: that of the
parent.
âInfanticide is typically regarded as not only intrinsically wrong but
more so than almost any other action, not excepting the murder of an
adult or an older child. It is important to note, however, that a
majority of human societies in the past have openly accepted infanticide
and have not regarded it as morally problematic.â
During the Middle Ages in Portugal, a group of women known as âWeavers
of Angelsâ made their living âtaking care ofâ newborns that excessively
burdened families. After smothering them, they would tell the community
they died due to high fever. Thereâs little doubt their neighbors knew
the truth, but treating the death as resulting from natural causes
helped to dispel whatever collective guilt may have lingered. These
incidents, however common, are now looked down upon as primitive
practices that donât deserve attention. Even those who claim to be live
in total opposition to society and its demands on our bodies often hold
these beliefs. In bringing these types of taboo subjects out of the
shadows, perhaps more people can re-evaluate their moral reactions to
what most see as incomprehensible. The story of the Weavers of Angels
and others like it has shown that despite its discouragement
universally, it hasnât always been the scandalous aberration it has
become today. Even during times of severe penalties leveled against the
concealment of pregnancy and infanticide, there has always been support
for parents that take this course of action, whether that came in the
form of helping to conceal the crime and/or providing material
assistance.
Peruse any zine fest or anarchist bookfair and you will notice a
plethora of materials on D.I.Y abortions and the politics of womenâs
health and bodily autonomy. In killig her child, a woman declares her
sovereign power over her body, and the body of her child, yet noticeably
absent from any of these radical publications are discussions of
late-term abortions and infanticide. Infanticide is a rare taboo topic
that is not deliberately omitted due to the discomfort it invokes in
others (though this is certainly a factor); it isnât discussed because
the majority of people in the United States and other rich nations
simply donât believe it exists anymore, and when they are discovered the
case is written off to its own peculiar circumstances. For society at
large, any occurrence of child killing is an abhorrence and the work of
mental illness for the secular or, for some, the devil.
The reasons for this invisibility are simple: today there is a wide
belief in the easy accessibility of all other options, which include
everything from contraceptives to adoption. However, as so many can
attest, not everyone even has access to condoms and other
contraceptives, let alone abortion services. In the U.S., a battle was
waged by the evangelical right and abortion doctors experienced a wave
of terrorism and political attacks; the result is there are less than 10
doctors that are able and willing to perform the late-term abortions and
it is extremely difficult to meet all the requirements. Even the most
ardent feminists vocally supporting of womenâs rights in general have a
hard time defending late-term abortions and are often morally opposed.
They certainly wonât be advocating for a womanâs choice to kill their
children anytime soon. The perception by the public that (in the West)
there are these ready options available makes the killing of children a
particularly shocking and sensational crime. Often the most âat-riskâ
are, of course, low-income, single women and teens, many who have become
pregnant through rape or naievity, as well as suffering in abusive
relationships (in the past it was domestic servants who were constantly
faced with rape and sexual exploitation from their masters). These are
the girls and women who are condemned with long prison sentences (even
when others are sympathetic) and the shame imposed on them from society
for committing what is considered one of, if not the most heinous crime
one can commit.
Destruction occurs among many living organisms including primates and
other mammals. Hardly a recent phenomenon, infanticide has been around
as long as the human story. Anybody who knows simple biology should have
no trouble figuring out why our ancient ancestors would have destroyed
their offspring. As nomadic peoples that carried little and were
constantly on the move for nourishment, only one baby could be nursed
and carried at a time, until it became old enough to walk alone. This
meant babies born before their siblings were weaned would be sacrificed
for the survival of the tribe. Infanticide was born out of practicality.
It wasnât until the coming of the missionaries and Christian values
where the savages were told it was a sin that would send them to burn in
the eternal lake of fire that these practices decreased in frequency, if
they were not completely wiped out. Of course, infanticide was just as
common in Christian Europe right up until the 19th century, albeit for
different reasons, one of the biggest being illegitimacy.
What makes children exceptional and the killing of them so much more
heinous than the killing of an adult? For one, Christianity still
manages to seep into popular consciousness its command for humans to go
forth and multiply. Secular society has its own logic which puts
significant value on children. Marked by an obsession with progress and
growth, a stagnant or dwindling population signals a decline in economic
stability and optimism for the future. Those cute bundles of joy are
dollar signs. They are consumers from the get go (if the family has the
means), and will eventually become adults who will consume even more and
toil away to keep the economy afloat, entering into a while making
others pockets even fatter. Similar to animal abuse, the helplessness of
a child also plays to peopleâs emotions, along with notions of innocence
(if they are white this is especially the case) and as an image of hope.
Perhaps this child will cure cancer or become a famous celebrity, or
even the next president.
Infanticide also disrupts common societal expectations of women, which
makes it a powerful act of subversion, and an aspect of a âfallen
woman,â one who is morally corrupted, and extremely dangerous to the
state and the status quo. Women were turned into âwell-constructed folk
devilsâ who defied expectations that women are naturally inclined
towards submissiveness and nurturing. Thus, mental illness came to be
used to rationalize the sudden turn to wickedness, to rationalize their
fall from grace.
In the past, infanticide in many places reflected a different set of
values, one of balance and comfort with death. In Japan, a number of
sources have shown a âpopular tolerance of infanticide in parts of Japan
between the 1540s and the 1870s.â In their first description of Japan in
1548, Jesuit priests reported that women there âkilled their newborn
children without any social censure.â Unlike other places where single
women were the most likely to do away with their progeny, here it was
primarily married couples from all classes. What allowed women to openly
commit infanticide was the view that newborns were not yet fully human,
which happened gradually as the child grew more independent. They were
likened to radishes that had to be thinned out for the benefit of
surrounding plants (mabiki), or thought of as simply âsending a child
backâ (kogaeshi) to the spirit world (these beliefs would certainly be
looked down upon in a Western secular society, one reason to reconsider
spiritual practice and the values they can impart and help us navigate
this awful world we find ourselves in). Birth, and by extension
infanticide and abortion held little ontological significance.
By the 12th century, however, foundling homes had appeared to take in
the growing numbers of unwanted offspring being dumped in the streets
and riverways. Of particular concern at the time was the fact that the
children had been killed before they had been given the baptismal rites.
Many believed that foundling homes âdeliberately commit[ted] vicarious
murderâ due to their extremely high mortality rates. If death didnât
come at the hands of the mother or a midwife, it would happen under the
auspices of charity.
Despite its continued practice, its relevance to women, and its
transgression of motherly values (which proclaim the family as the
ultimate achievement for anybody with a uterus), infanticide seem to
unworthy of discussion. Taboo topics such as this will have people
question your sanity, and/or immediately dismiss you as edgy. With both
physical and mental healthcare in their current abysmal state, it is
ludicrous to stay silent about late-term abortions and infanticide. This
articleâs title is only slightly tongue-in-cheek; more, it is a
challenge to the morals that seek to convince us that all human life is
intrinsically sacred.
From the quick and painless to the drawn out and cruel, there are
numerous ways to terminate the growth of unwanted offspring. In places
where there would be scandal if people knew your business (and they
would), people came up with creative ways to avoid suspicion. Family
members and midwives can declare the child stillborn, and in some cases
if you could prove you had prepared for the child with clothes and
blankets you could also clear your name, as it was seen as proof that
you desired to keep your baby. In general, fellow town and country folk
had a great deal of sympathy for women accused of infanticide and would
be hesitant to press charges, or mete out only a lenient punishment.
1. Smothering
Cutting off the airways of babies either by placing the hands or an
object such as a pillow over their face has been an extremely common
method for much of recorded human history. Often this was performed by a
midwife who âknew the ways to produce a âquiet âun.â Until modern
forensic science brought about technologies that could detect whether or
not pressure had been applied to restrict breathing, it would have been
difficult to determine whether the child died of natural causes or was
killed intentionally.
2.Strangulation
Both smothering and strangulation work by cutting off the airway, but
bruises have always been evidence of a crime. If the child is newborn,
this can be passed off as the result of an umbilical cord around the
neck, yet another way deaths were passed off as natural.
3.Drowning
In the past, so many children were dumped in waterways that their bodies
were said to clog rivers near heavily populated areas, and were
constantly being fished out. Many babies just happened to be born on
washing days, stillborn in tubs of water. It is clearly still a
convenient method of ridding yourself of unwanted offspring. In 1995 a
woman Susan Smith would claim a black man kidnapped her children.
Smithâs two sons, 3 years and 14 months, were dead in her vehicle at the
bottom of a lake. The black man, of course, was fictional. The case
became a media circus and so many people traveled to visit the ramp she
drove down, that it was removed, like so many mundane memorials that
seem to hold collective trauma. Another modern occurrence that ignited
public fury was the case of Andrea Yates. In 2001, she took her five
children one by one, the youngest of them 6 months and the oldest 7
years, into their bathroom and drowned them in the bathtub. After each
child died, she took them into their rooms and laid them in their beds.
The last child tried to run, after seeing a siblings floating in the
bath. She caught him and dragged him into the bathroom, completing her
mission. Many people find it hard to have much sympathy for a woman who
could be that callous, even if they believed that she was suffering from
postpartum depression at the time, or had homicidal ideations due to the
anti-depressant Effexor.
4.Burying Alive
In some cultures this has been a method of population control. In the
Northern Cape of Africa, until missionary interventions, the San and
Khoi would kill children who were born while another was still at the
breast by burying them alive in a shallow grave or leaving them to be
predated upon (see abandonment).
5.Poisoning
Herbs are another old method of midwives and others who use
abortificants. While often used to expel a fetus with concoctions that
are still of value today, they have also been used to send newborns,
infants and older children to early graves.
6. Abandonment
Recorded by the Chinese as early as 2000 B.C., abandonment has been a
popular method of infanticide since time immemorial. At times the
abandonment of children became an epidemic, leading to foundling homes
and laws guaranteeing anonymity and immunity from prosecution if the
newborn is left at the door (usually before it reaches a certain age).
Often the parents of the child abandoned it in hopes that a traveler
would stumble upon it and take it in. Otherwise, it would die of
exposure or predation. Abandonment of children is a fixture in myths,
folklore, and fairy tales, including Hansel and Gretel and Romulus and
Remus, who were raised by wolves.
For those who were found and taken in, it was not unusual for them to
end up in a cycle of abuse and exploitation.
7. With a weapon
The use of weapons tends to be more opportunistic than premeditated.
Women in pre-modern societies would be well acquainted with butchering
and would have considerable knife skills. One example of this kind of
death is the tragic case of Margaret...a runaway slave who, after being
hunted down and cornered, slit one of her childrenâs throats. She was
grabbed before she could kill the second one. Obviously, in these cases,
one canât really speak of Margaret having a choice. Her decision meant
sparing them the humility and suffering of a lifetime of slavery. It is
little surprise that she reached for that blade.
8.Tossing in the Trash
Melissa Drexler was enjoying her high school prom when her water broke.
She went into the restroom and delivered her child into a toilet, and
then cut the umbilical cord with the metal side of a napkin bin. If you
were around when this happened in 1997, chances are you heard about the
âprom mom.â Drexlerâs case certainly wasnât the first nor the last of
its kind. As long as thereâve been garbage piles, theyâve been
convenient places to dispose of newborns and small rotting corpses.
9. Crushing the skull or breaking the neck
Our closest primate relatives have been witnessed using rocks to kill
other male offspring in this manner, and it is likely, along with
abandonment, the oldest method of what one could call early family
planning.
10. Throwing off a cliff
The ransacking of cities in antiquity in some cases led to the mass
suicide of the people on the losing end. Faced with becoming slaves to
the invaders, rape, or death, women often chose death and took their
children with them, the easiest way to do this was with the help of tall
and rocky cliffs.
11. Neglect
Deaths due to neglect can be caused by starvation, unchecked injuries,
exposure to diseases, or poisoning from drugs or household products; all
particularly cruel and painful ways to pass. Sexual and physical abuse
of children in foster homes and other shelters is frequent and trauma is
no less painful than physical wounds, and can lead to death by suicide.
Often kids die by a beating gone too far, like the 6 year old boy in
Florida who was beaten to death over a cookie.
One of the worst cases of child abuse and neglect occurred recently in
California. A 17 year old escaped her house to alert a neighbor that she
and her siblings were being held captive. Discovered in the house were
thirteen children, aged 2 to 29 (seven were legally adults) where they
were brutally tortured by their parents. They were allowed just one meal
a day, and a single shower a year. They lived in a filthy house; the
dogs were kept healthy while the victims were subjected to horrific
psychological and physical abuse. And what does freedom mean to them
now? According to the blissful reporting of numerous media outlets the
older children are âwatching Harry Potter moviesâ âusing Iphones for the
first time,â and âskypingâ with their siblings in foster care. Most of
the articles giving updates on the childrenâs well being focus
specifically on their introduction to modern technology, which, we are
told, we take for granted. Is this freedom worth the long years of
suffering they lived through, which will no doubt affect them the rest
of their lives? Might it have been better to have never been born or
ended it early?
The accusation that some despised group regularly captures members of
the subjectâs group, preferably children, murders them in terrible
bloody fashion, and uses their blood in some magical and/or
cannibalistic ritual, has been so widely applied through history that it
has been given a specific name, âthe blood libel. â Greeks and Romans
and later Christians applied the libel against Jews, Protestants applied
it to Catholics and vice versa, and both charged Masons with it. Knights
Templar, Christian heretics, Gypsies (Roma and others), Native
Americans, Mormons, Africans, members of African-based New World
religions, neopagans, Communists, and colonists, have been among the
groups so charged.
Encyclopedia of Infanticide
The idea that infanticide was the work of the devil has, of course, led
to many groups of people being demonized as child killers and cannibals,
witches, devil worshipers, and other representatives of evil. Nowadays,
questions about issues related to infanticide-such as overpopulation
(which some call a myth--arguing that if the supply chains were better,
there would be no need to have natural checks-- which they say either
stems from racist ideology, or leads to it in the form of eugenics), or
on what would we do in a society with no technology to keep infants
alive--lead to suspicions that you are an advocate for genocide and
racial cleansing. You might also be called ableist if you question how
one would take care of those children who have historically been
terminated, and are still terminated today through abortion, due to
their scant chance at living a full life. Anybody who has ever had to
take care of a severely handicapped child knows the immense sacrifice
one has to make to provide for someone who will never be able to take
care of themselves. Most people, being the humanists they are, cannot
accept that some people cannot live without the kind of system we live
with today.
...there always will be some who refuse to deal openly with the children
they have conceived. These women, who bear and dispose of their children
secretly, occupy one far end of the spectrum of maternal behavior. But
it is less useful to think of them all as monsters than to see most of
them as women in the grip of a fear and denial and despair that the rest
of us are lucky never to know.
Can we summon the grace to see it this way? That there are circumstances
in which a woman may experience a baby as a profound disaster is, of
course, one of the same truths that animate the politics of abortion.
Marjorie Williams
What is lost in conversations when certain topics arenât open for
discussion so as to reassure the politically correct? How does this
affect women and others who have to make difficult decisions regarding
their bodies and reproduction? While this piece has been about
infanticide, it is a lens for examining our value systems. Does our
value system put more importance on birth and childhood than death? What
are the limits of freedom? What is okay to talk about (not talking about
âbad thingsâ doesnât make those them go away). Dismissing the
interrogation of taboo and subversive practices as the terrain solely of
edgelords insults those sitting behind bars, many of them young,
ill-prepared teenagers with no support. Infanticide was certainly
relevant to them, and perhaps if more were honest about the trauma of
birth and the constant pressures to get married and start a family, the
critics would be more willing to accept the moral ambiguity and
difficult questions raised by infanticide and other actions deemed
morally depraved.
The massive human population is faced with unprecedented global
catastrophe of our own making. More and more people who would never have
thought to commit such a terrible deed will be caught in situations
where they are moved to do the unthinkable. Things will be seen and done
that may bring about revulsion, guilt, and shame. These people could
instead be viewed as empowered sovereigns making difficult decisions
during trying times.
For educational purposes only. The author of this piece cannot be held
responsible for any deaths influenced by this article.
by Val Storm
It is beyond the scope of this article to extrapolate the history and
practice of science both privately and academically and to elucidate
just what might be driving this allegedly pure and benevolent,
humanistic curiosity, this global media stage show. I recommend skimming
the first chapter of The Forces of Production by David Noble, which
covers the intriguing time period between the Depression and the Cold
War up to the hilarious formation of the National Science Foundation.
However, let it suffice to claim that science is driven and funded by a
desire for militaristic supremacy, market power, delusions of grandeur,
and all kinds of characters, ideas, and behaviors that can break down to
myriad inhumane and anti-social end uses. -V.S.
Mindfulness glares at you while you wait in line to purchase your
organic produce. The magazines of the fully conscious and productive
members of late capitalism proclaim to tell you how to unlock yourself
from the chains of suffering. For after all these are scientific
breakthroughs, life- hacks, and ancient wisdom, âWe have the
technology!â It is a trend that has grown since the âconscious
consumerismâ movement of the 1970s through the romanticism of the
techno-utopian Whole Earth scene, and now blossoms in the glut of
affluence in the liberal-intellectual pockets of a most dreary and
violent society.
The ideology, like that of science at large, sets its sights against
chaos and entropy, against the inhumanities of the 2nd Law of
Thermodynamics, to establish an anthropocentric and benevolent Order.
Not only upon Nature (its cruel weather and dangerous beasts), but upon
the Nature of Self, our tortured and unclean flesh. But, when after the
death of god did we get Stockholm syndrome? Perhaps god never really
dies, or perhaps the death of god remains an attribute only of certain
territories and an inevitability in others.
Mindfulness, similar to Transhumanism (or Human+) would like to extend
the reach of scientific control to the biological processes that
inaugurate the world at every moment: our bodies, our thoughts, and our
emotions, resulting in limitless happiness, health, and cognitive
abilities. Without yet dissecting the latent spiritual values of this
rather frightening eschatology (for to them it is imminent) there is one
simple assessment that deserves immediate attention. In the statement,
âif only my moods and emotionsâmy mindâ could better suit me,â there
lies a curious problem. In humanityâs apparent wish to subdue the world
with order, to make it kind and hospitable to usâto force
humanitarianism on the cosmosâour very bodies do not fail to be against
us. Our bodies are too dumb, too emotional, too sexed, too human... and
for that, they must be ordained with or consecrated to our new values.
This scientific Gnosticism implies that even our bodies are not
ourselves, that we lie somewhere beyond the betrayal of matter. It is
hard to discern if scientists have not all along been driven by the
desire to establish control over chaos: Promethean man vs. the cosmic
undoing. Tragic and comic then is the obfuscation of values: chaos is
bad and order is good. Heat death is chaos and crystallized order is the
epitome of humanity. However, all of this binary thinking has left out a
small, yet prized, piece of experience: creativity. No doubt
humanitarians love the arts, but what have they to do with order, how
does order serve them? Does not the dark, chaotic, impulsive, creative
nature of some thinking disrupt this agenda? When lauded by critics,
chaotic impulses acquire the status of art, and become sanctioned by our
standards of truth and beauty, but the creative and chaotic white noise
of our emotional weather patterns and the bane of moods are not so
fortunate.
Intoxication Sin Ambiance The Museum is not the hall of evaporated
actual momentsâlight scattering through leaves on the grass, what people
actually say and do, or the perception of these things. The Museum is
made up of virtual halls of narratives that tell us about ourselves and
the world. Whether or not these narratives tell us anything of substance
is another matter, but let The Museum be where people create histories
and people view, select, and respond to histories. The Museum is the
primordial virtual reality. The Museum is a product of deciding what
things are. The Museum is a vocabulary, and a vernacular, and the
symbols that overlay the night sky. Or put another way, it is memory
weighed against language.
However, The Museum is untrustworthy in that it makes its way to us by
means of others, who may have no care to contemplate the things we do,
to live by the same calendar, or to attribute beauty to what we do, and
who have not yet proven they do not wish to exploit us (because, letâs
be honest, humans are exceptional exploiters, and this might become
important). The Museum differs from the now in that it is a retreat from
the now that establishes connections to value. The Museum produces the
Fascist and the Philosopher, the Master and Servant, the satiation and
the appetite of ontology, us asking questions: âHm, what is this about?
Let us stroll through this wonderful installation and glean for
ourselves something about the world that we can know.â
The Museum is the archive of concepts; as we allow ourselves sequences
of information, and hold them, and enter a state of beholding
information, we enter the Museum. Concepts are a form of technology, a
modular marketplace of vistas and their cortical geometry. As one spends
more time in The Museum one acquires the technology of real value, words
such as truth and beauty, that must be true and must be beautiful, for
there are no other ways to apprehend these elements other than their
value. Further, truth and beautyâeventual outposts of conceptual
understandingâimply by their very nature as concepts, an order and a
language of thought. The life and transmissibility of an idea determined
by its value. We weigh information by them, âWhat truth lies here, and
what beauty?â
Truth and beauty are our meager defenses against alienation. They are
some kind of primordial affirmation, gateway drugs to consensus and
thus, society. Nothing walks into The Museum alone, one must dream The
Museum and dream of consensus. Truth and Beauty presuppose society in
their nature, for beauty is not in the eye of the beholder but in the
passage of one eye to the next, and truth is only a thought until it
repeats in another entity. In this thinking The Museum gives rise to an
aesthetics of consciousness, which in turn manifests a globalized
aesthetics of action, in that it even claims a unified view and criteria
of human thought. However, to engage with The Museum and to engage in
viewing the world through narratives is to also accept âfake newsâ
(read: all news), to accept brainwashing, revisionism, and that we may
brainwash ourselves, to the ends of further tailoring your taste and
confining you to halls in which experience of The Museum, self, and
selected histories all mingle and carry one off into psychoses. None of
this is a problem, for psychoses are mere individuations and patterns of
mood and a hierarchy of concepts, roads paved in inner-experience. Isnât
our world made of these groping stories? And looking at The Museum from
a distance it appears like an endless multi-dimensional anthill full of
ghosts roving in currents.
As I write these words, a square of cool, intoxicating light enters
through my window and is inscribed in my pupils, my desk extends out to
a new set of friendly tools that appear as floating symbols and leaves
off at the stars, my desk is a spaceship for my mind that opens unto a
liquid crystal cosmos in serotonin releasing violet and lavender. I am
at Mission Control. I am on the bridge of my dream machineâŠ
Anonymous User
It is easy to see how the optimism of early Silicon Valley tinkerers,
eager to get rich, mingled with the thorough research and capital of
their initial employers within the post-war
military-industrial-education complex and led to all the breakthroughs
that produced this peculiar view of the infinite: the endless expanse of
technological conveniences and media tools catering to both producer and
consumer, to developers and users, to engineers and. all the people with
their eyes glued to Facebook at the library waiting for the information
of the world. Only slightlyâ technicallyâdifferent is illusion of the
1984 themed PR campaign: in the Marxist imagery of the industrial
laborer, the smashing--through the screen--the face of the dictator. The
hacker myth born: the end of centralized power, the democratization of
information. Out decades from this gold rushâa virtual-reality, user-
centered arms raceâto sell us access to information, over half a century
from the post-war warnings of elite scientists and historians that were
outraged at permanent military and industrial occupation of academia and
the private ownership of patents developed with the aid of public money,
over a century (if not galaxies) from Marx... At the desktop we can read
all about these events, if we know where to look, we have the technology
to get all the information we desire and--quite often--so much more that
weâve trained ourselves to block things out.
We donât need to strap phones to our heads with 3D glasses to achieve
virtual reality. VR is here, and it has been here. Concepts of
immersion, integration, and symbiosis have been implemented to great
effect consistently through the development of personal computers and
operating systems. The personal computer speeds through The Museum,
allowing a rapid intake of text and image (hypertext). The mind and the
mirror, in a spiraling ascent of love, reifying what our humanity is:
our consciousness. Yet, where are we when we havenât entered the halls
of The Museum?
Our love of our consciousness has led some to dream of uploading a
consciousness into the cloud, or nanotechnology that can heal disease
keeping us more fit to extend our consciousness, super intelligent
machines that amplify consciousness, and programming our DNA to be
âfitter, happier.â and thus have an optimal access to consciousness.
Ideas of this nature have all but permeated our technological
imagination to the point which most lay people can no longer distinguish
fact from fiction. Scientific journalism will proclaim at once how far
from these fictions we actually are today, then carelessly attribute the
word âthinkingâ to the activity of a new algorithm, embedding a covert
logic deep in our bio-hardware. Singularity, or the belief that we as
thinking animals can transcend our biology, to such extent that we merge
with machines of our own creation, inaugurating a new era of super-human
intelligence that runs at the speed of light and is benevolent, solving
the problems of its past, curing our diseases, saving us, absolving us
all at the same time has intoxicated humans in growing numbers (the
Chief of Engineering at Google, for one).
It is an impossible task to research just how many humans believe in
this âSingularity,â in the tragic tenants of Trans-humanism (Human+,
Post-Humanism et al), and in the vain and religious origins of these
beliefs; for those beliefs are ghostly tendrils of brain cells that our
science can still not point to. Our information spaceships shuttle us by
headlines and sound bytes and out there forming like a black cloud in
the deep web, the intrepid and inevitable es- chatological Event. The
Singularity is near! A gravitational threshold we careen towards and
after which there is no turning back, and no one knows what is on the
other side; a Rapture or Kingdom Come of humanityâs own making. These
morsels of sugary information lie waiting in the spongy, grey-matter for
more click- bait headlines that will galvanize one (accidental?) fallacy
to the next, until it forms an apparition, a god. Because âonly a god
can save us, so we must invent new gods.â
Perhaps for the sake of drama our scientific and techno-venture-
capitalist-entrepreneurs, our symbols of virtuosic intellect and
success, our dear heroes, now irresponsibly express fear at the
âexistential threatâ our machines pose to us, as if itâs all spiraling
out of our control and that these scientific truths would appear to us
no matter which way we directed our trusted instruments. But who is
directing this intrepid progress in which this âexistential threatâ lies
waiting like a demon seed inside a nucleus waiting to be let out? More
importantly, isnât this existential threat a product of consciousness
itself? Does Science have a will of its own? Are discoveries really made
as if on accident or are situations being studied with an underwritten
end use? To be facetious, did a scientist look through a microscope and
say, âBy Jove! The A-Bomb!â
Obviously, there are likely some scientists that are by no means
villains, that study chrysalis or bird migrations, and we do not claim
the practice of science to be inherently corrupt. We merely suggest that
it is easy to see, when taking the world at large, a very disturbing
trend involving the minute inter-workings of government, military,
academic institutions, technologists, industrialists, and capital of all
kinds. Let us not forget that the invention of magnetic tape, precursor
to the hard drive was one of the technologies âstolenâ from the Nazis at
the end of WWII (as well as a disturbing amount of Nazi scientists and
industrialists). These figureheads of Science, though, speak as if there
is no bias to their work and their observations and no implications of
the technology theyâre developing, of the world theyâre creating, that
they work in objective truths, and yet, now we see them evangelizing,
speaking in prophecies and predictions, telling us information that they
know and we can know too. If weâd just believe.
Knowledge against old wisdom, breakthroughs against tradition, our now
verifiable truth beckonsânoâ demands our attention. Knowledge proclaims
to be permanent, infinite, the-way-it-is. Knowledge says to the rest, I
am the order of the cosmos and you must heed my mechanics. Knowledge too
easily attracts attributes of the mathematical and the rational,
forgetting the limitations specific to those formalities of relativity.
Wisdom cowers in its poetic temporality, tradition tries to incorporate
and revise its prophecy, and knowledge now says. But, this saying, is
ours a world that can harbor such things as to be saying? Is there any
reason upon which one could stand and speak the words, I say.? Reason is
a forgiving word in this situation, in that it presupposes a reason to
be saying. âHere is my reason.â The reason is the impetus of the saying.
So, when I say, âthis reasonâ, the context is inherent. I reason about
the world, and I say my reason to others.
Ideally, reason would have stopped at explanation, in response to an
inquiry. Why are you dancing? I have gotten drunk and the shadows of my
pet tree induced a vivid wind upon my mood! Why are you leaving? Because
I realized you currently annoy me! Such is the good of reason. When
saying comes first, however, without inquiry, is the practice by which
the world turns. The reason for this drought is your sins, the reason of
this bad economy is the liberal mind, reason tells us that the
singularity is inevitable; when saying has had no inquiry and only
platform. When people engage us about how we should see the world, or
what the future might hold, when people evangelize explicitly or
implicitly for a certain reason (cause).
Those that reason, that say, they show us pictures, they point to
graphs, âseeâ this is my reason, this is what I mean. Like a surprise
tour guide in the Museum, âThis way to some exciting new information!â
But, reason, in the real world is much more complex than that. What
reason do those that say have to be saying in the first place? For what
reason is such and such person in the media? What is the reason for this
suggested content? Really. It is quite easy to reason. It is easy to
select from the massive amounts of data exactly what one needs to create
âa reasonâ. Several critics of the Singularity prophets point to the
fact that they use arbitrary, exponential graphs that end in the years
of their predictions, ones that paint dramatic pictures despite being
misleading.
Reasons hang like stars, at the whim of our beckoning, to say what they
mean, to be made into constellations. Seven points become a graph and
seven stars become a bear. Reasons can become signs, which can then
relate to subjectivities, which we claim are bound in a continuum of
restraint to a vista or location, in other words knowledge is embodied.
Knowledge, or an object of thereof, is subjective, point specific,
mutable, relative, temporal and impermanent. Knowledge is a seizure, a
state of beholding a sequence of signs upon which we attribute some
meaning. Signs we get from being in the world. Beholding these signs and
being âseized in knowingâ allows for an intelligence or emotion to blaze
through to create judgments and actions. This beholding can open the
automatic glass doors to The Museum, but we find that there are
innumerable museums and other more frightening things like, say, pure
fear, for instance. Knowledge is embodied in that it is dependent on the
location both temporal and spatial of our body. Our bodies are the only
ledger of knowledge.
Considering knowledge as a seizure of beholding, take for example a
cluster of signs and slogans: âintelligence that has transcended human
levels.â The elements easily give rise to assumptions in the mind.
Either by themselves, or in combination they electrify our imaginations,
and yet mean nothing. Are there levels of intelligence? What is the
metric of these levels? What is an âintelligence?â What is a human level
of intelligence? How does intelligence show itself to be transcendent or
above-without of another level?
Trans-humanists have no care for these metaphysical and labor-intensive
questions. The trans-humanist wants to drag every critic into the murky
swamp of ethical puzzles, for there is not a single purely philosophical
defense or explanation of this so-called movement. Just like them, we
are obliged to leave metaphysics to metaphysicians, and here simply give
them a nod. All this to bring to the attention of the reader that those
scientist developing âartificial intelligenceâ have not addressed the
answers to these questions, let alone acknowledge that there are
complicated questions (not only the wishy- washy ethical ones), and seem
to not care to clarify that they are completely ignoring these
questions. It is apparent their inability to comprehend matters of
thought is dubious to their claims of recreating it. In spite of the
appropriation of anthropomorphic words there remains a vast difference
between algorithmic intelligence and the centuries long metaphysical
arguments about what part of the world our thought inhabits, and the
lack of these arguments in the realm of cognitive science, especially at
the popular level, now appear as negligence and malpractice.
As of yet, âartificial intelligenceâ remains in the domains of commerce,
military and police: driving sales, placing ads, automating
transactions, recognizing shoppers, or shoplifters, determining the
sentences of convicted persons, the movements of terrifying robotic
killing machines (which are still not autonomous by the way), and
thousands of backdoor intricacies of The Dark Future. In short, the
âintelligenceâ of artificial intelligence is too mundane to deserve much
worry in and of itself. After all, they are programs, mechanical in
nature, logical machines and extensions that work on information alone
and produce output in the form of information, a ticker tape with a
verdict. The implications on the other hand, of it becoming uncontested
to have proprietary algorithms, purchased by a state institution, that
are subject to no explanation or transparency... That elements of state
bureaucracy are embedding itself into code, not the legal codes written
in English able to be pointed to and argued in court, but within
outsourced, obscured, proprietary computer code, insulated from the
scrutiny of the public and the non-specialist, should raise some
eyebrows (but it wonât).
Scientists are the innocent theologians of capital. Artificial
Intelligence is predominately machines made by humans for industry like
any other means of production, yet their uses are encroaching mass
manipulation. Our very words that search for our humanity: knowledge,
intelligence, awareness, etc., are fraught with fractal complexities. It
is all such an excellent diversion, so maddeningâ so unfortunately
obvious. As the closing accelerates, as our options become more limited,
the force of artificial intelligence upon our systems is amplified.
Monopolies of all kinds (industry, ideology, modality) galvanize and
presuppose themselves with the aid of our frameworks of cybernetic
governance. On the back end, their algorithms weigh the efficacies of
new methods of control and force adoption of the behaviors required to
be stored as workable data. Many argue that this is our power over the
2nd law of thermodynamics, that we are organizing, crystallizing in
antientropy against the âgreat evilâ chaos and heat death. However,
might this closing, this bureaucratic force of consecration to ever
limiting modes is itself be much more symptomatic of heat death? This
homogenizing of culture is precarious, from our political behavior to
food production to our every day. Our blind traditions become our
disease, with the all too human oversimplification of life, and thus, of
our dear consciousness.
Our fantasy of uploading our consciousness is the mirror side of what
has actually happened: we have sheathed our entire civilization in glass
and metals. Our activity is simplified down to that of automata encased
and crystallized, denaturing ourselves, enshrining our castes; perhaps
our consciousness is the one thing that wonât make it into the vacuum,
for it will be lost like the rest of ânatureâ under the gaze of our
arrogant instruments, whoâs operators seek not âwhat isâ but âwhat can
be of use to power.â Whoâs science would limit the scope of the world to
have their hypotheses validated into theory and law. An ethos that would
rather have humanity mirror our own artificial intelligence, dumbing
itself down and removing its connection with unknowing and unthinking
and all the chaos our minds are connected to and seek only happiness and
comfort (the modes deemed evolutionarily acceptable) fleeing death and
discomfort as if they are not intrinsic to life itself, as if one would
feel anything floating around as pure intelligence in the music of the
spheres, like DMT angels, now bitterly jealous of mere mortals, Lucifer
by the billions.
In seeking the keys of consciousness, of animation and awareness, one
can never have the correct approach. The lens is always too exclusive,
the instruments focus blindly and leave out the world in which they
exist. Seekers mine to their idea of the center of the world, but a
center is a naive a concept as a fathomable whole. Like the wolf who in
licking flesh off the blade cuts itâs tongue and devours itself to
death, the plagued mind of the Scientist rips apart the world in front
of him looking for the proof of his superiority of his chosen-ness and
stands in heaps of flesh and fire with only the curse of indifference.
In the shade of steel monoliths, an inverted sublime, in terror of our
own power, the myths of Lucifer and Bacchus lose their initial
revisionary lights and evil and delight are taxed and dreary. The heroic
have long been cast out as nuisance, for in their sobriety they know
they are now the Un-makers, the disruption of mass unmaking, and for
that they would suffer unimaginably.
Outside of these myths, in the horizontal light of a rotating Earth, a
magic still dances. The play of light on nothing-something for no one,
and there life is but for no reason. There are no omens in the moon and
wind, just light and displacement. With the arrogance of language we
seek to live only within it and not of the world it represents. Nature
was perceived as frightening and hostile, so it was fashioned into a
nemesis. Now as it runs off with itself still independent of our will,
thriving and careless, yet different, always different. Like a sound too
loud and distant, and ricocheted across all valleys, so both its origin
and texture are indeterminable. A solar flare trumpets the cornucopia.
We hold our bitterness like flowers at gods grave. The Earth will pay
for not loving me. If I canât have her no one will. Scorned and jealous
of every moment we canât preserve of every love not endless. Life lived
only for itself is an unbearable torture to the vain. The dreamers of
Heaven or Elysium wander, locked out by their own failures to keep the
dream alive. For god is but one dream to have died: the dream of
objective approval, of validation of our thoughts and feelings and ways
of life. But not all dreams have yet been exhausted and vexed. Our
shadow dances on the horizon as the dawn silhouettes us toward the
mountainside. A mere body, caster and perceiver of shadow in oneâa
Platoâs Cave-Machineâ living the dream.
by ca/sh
Introductory prayer to Nrsimhadeva, the half-lion half-man incarnation
of Vishnu, who slays demons to protect his devotees:
om Hrim Kshraum ugram viram ma- ha-vishnum
jvalantam sarvato mukham
nrisimham bhishanam bhadram mrityur mrityum namamy aham
I bow down to Lord Narasimha who is ferocious and heroic like Lord
Vishnu. He is burning from every side. He is terrific, auspicious and
the death of death personified.â
A devout Hindu preacher named AC Bhaktivedanta Swami Srila Prabhupada
brought the practice of Gaud- iya Vaishnavism (the worship of Lord
Caitanya Mahaprabhu as a direct in avatar of Vishnu) to the north
American continent, in the 1960s.
It was the fastest growing religion to hit these shores, within ten
years of his arrival, the Hare Krishna explosion had a temple in every
major world city, many preaching centers and cow protection farms. This
religious path emphasized the congregational chanting of the holy name
of a merged God in his Radha-Krsna form as well as ritual and meditation
as sacrificial entryways to Krsnaâs heavenly abode of Vrndavana Goloka.
Straightedge culture in the 1990s, reincarnated this trend, the desire
for physical purity and emotional release dovetailed almost perfectly
with Prabhupadaâs version of ve- dic culture. Bands and scene members
were yelling primordial names of God, chanting rounds of holy names,
taking ancient ritual initiation, preaching this path and visiting itâs
root of India.
I traveled to India under this mode in the early 2000s. Channeling my
youth experience into austerity and deep transcendental understanding.
It was here at the Vrndavana Iskcon temple that I met and sang with my
adopted guru, Aindra dasa babaji.
Your eternal servant, Aindraâs song entered my ears and heart, the sound
vibration made me weep as all of my misconceptions and investment in the
material world melted away and I saw your eternal forms dancing in
candle light.
That night, dissolution came with the revelation that the purpose of
syllabic intonation, sound vibration can be hypnotizing or hallucinatory
or rock splitting or healing powers.
Next, I visited Shyama and Radha Kunda, a bathing place where tears of
separation from Krsnas girlfriend, Radha fill a warm pool. Next to this
pool is a cooler, larger pool formed when Krsna saw the watery result of
his separation from Radha, he then cried a pool. I bathed in both. Rad-
haâs tears stripped me of my speaking voice for at least 24 hours. The
waters were another dissolution, another revelation; cosmic,
supernatural energy runs through everything earthbound, skybound and
heaven- bound. The syllables, the water, even the blessed food were
profound energies to commune with.
I have tried over and over to commit austerity to feel it again, to
transmute sound to a force multiplier, harnessing the elements through
primal âhumsâ and âphatsâ
I have used my physical absence to practice more correct intonation,
material austerities, the compete de- nial/ absorption of self. I have
embraced knowing the illusion is just that, manipulating it to my
control, playing with gods. I have acquired many more manifestations of
these Gods and Goddesses, more bronze, more marble, more wood and
soapstone but mostly more rocks, in which the seed syllables buzz in
different names than I started with, different sacrifices, same methods
of offering and worship, just different wavelengths of creations buzz.
oh, Maheswara, Shivayah, Gopes- war, You sat on Mount Mehru for eons of
earthly time in deep drugged meditation.
Your Nataraja form dances material creation to nothing.
You taught Kali that she must break from your neglect.
Your care taker, your lover, is nothing compared to your visions of
vrndavana. Your focus on the rasa dance earned you the name gopeswara,
protector of the gopis, the deepest love in the universe.
In your desire to merge into the dance, your corpse was left for her to
dance on in the material cremation grounds.
This union transcends the material. It stops time, it is creation and
destruction in one instant. Please Gopeswara, let me have one taste of
this absolution, this dissolution into the loving arms of Her.
Bom shiva, bom babulnath.
Namo shivayah.
Namo bhutanath.
Complete offering to Siva,
Lord of smoke, the underworld and ganja.
Praise shiva.
Praise the Lord of the ghosts
Each vedic deity has internal and external balance of life and death,
which complements their physical counterpart; in mathematics, this
disposition would equal zero or nothingness. This is the void, where the
seeds of material creation manifest; ruled by the deities, Garbodakshya
Vishnu and Laksmi, they maintain the realms of dark and light energy.
The demiGod Bramha is then born from this energy to exhale the material
universe. His inhalation destroys material creation. This cycle
maintains in periods of time known as yugas, of which there are 4. We
will not discuss the first three in this tract, but will focus intention
in the current era, known as Kali yuga, the period of struggle and
strife of the Material condition, the end times, right before Bramha
breathes in again.
This history was spoken into the ear of vyasadeva in the form of the
Vedas and the written word of God, Sanskrit. This language is rooted in
primordial sound vibrations known as bija or seed. The contemporary
study of cymatics proves the inherent energy of focused sound. These
seed syllables are used in meditation and ritual to break the vibrations
of the material energy, Maya, a goddess manifesting the illusory potency
of material creation.
oh Chinnamasta, incarnation of the divine mother Kali,
You sever Your head to feed Your disciples, You dance on the back of
lust and desire.
Barren mother of mothers,
Your blood feast is nourishing sacrifice. How can I be worthy of your
warm red embrace. I cannot give up the way you can. I can not give of my
own self solely for the benefit of others, for I am male bodied.
I am the focus of your rage, I am your jealous lover, and I will betray
you.
Yet you stand bleedingâfeeding.
Life giving blood milk.
Your scimitar glistening in the darkest night, the crescent moon hangs
in the sky. Procreation is my material curse, please have mercy on those
I have selfishly hexed in the seeds of birth.
Screams in a motherâs voice,
My life went to shit.
I was crying myself to sleep again. Feeling over tired and shaky no
matter what time I went to bed. I started participating in my eating
disorder. I lost forty pounds and my milk tried to dry up. I kept saying
Iâm so sad Iâm so sad.
I wasnât parenting the way I wanted to parent. I wasnt being a friend to
my friends. I was empty. I wanted to die so badly but I knew I couldnât
because I have all these children. I was drinking gallons of ginger tea
trying so fucking hard to feel better.
Wellness, anything.
I was frantically searching for a reason not to kill myself. This is a
familiar place. A comfort zone. I hadnât been back here in ten years. I
had to make it stop. Iâd been talking to the moon a lot. (This wasnât a
coincidence) She gave me answers, mostly gave me fifteen minutes of
quiet in a salt circle to slow down and smoke some weed after my kids
were asleep. She made me listen to the night and she told me to try to
connect. Sit on the earth. Take up space. Stop fucking crying, youâre
drying up your own milk. Put that water back you fucking life giver.
I needed something tangible. Something I could hold and something I
could watch myself, feel myself transmute this energy to. I needed to
give off some darkness. I started to give Kali offerings every day. A
tomato from the garden, some moon flower. A morning glory. I wasnât sure
that she wanted them but I kept offering. I didnât know any of her
pushpam prayers but Iâd messed with a little diety worship before and
have studied my share of meditation so I wasnât exactly unfamiliar.
My problems were earth problems, my crisis wasnât existential. I knew I
needed to get free so I asked her to free me on the off chance that she
might oblige. I studied her form and I asked myself, how can you relate
to this?
I have to be honest, I thought I was forcing a connection where there
wasnât any. I felt stupid in my woo, desperate and out of place like a
white girl in a head dress.
I was afraid that I was doing it wrong but I kept doing it and one day I
felt a shift. I donât think I saw it for what it was at the time but she
doesnât bear her fruit like that. It was subtle. A decision. A shift.
I decided that my problems were bullshit as long as my milk was drying
up. Everything else could wait. I gave life to three people who didnât
ask for me, the least I could do was sustain them.
My baby was freaking out, clawing at my breasts, trying to scratch the
milk out. My midwife told me what herbs to drink and to nurse thru the
dry sockets. It will let down, it will come back.
Om Shrim Hreem Hreem Aim Vajra Vairochaniye Shrim Hreem Hreem PhatSvaha
Prayer to Chinnamasta for protection and dissolution of fear.
by Sever
We had travelled far that day, even though it was the equinox. A car is
not a healthy thing to have a relationship with, and though travellers
have always come to love the things that bear them across the face of
the earth, burning gasoline is not a good way to celebrate the balancing
of the seasons, the beginning of the return of the sun to our
hemisphere. But we live in the wasteland, and nowadays, people have to
go great distances to connect all their disparate parts.
We were headed to Uytaahkoo, the mountain that rootless ones like me
know as Shasta, to find the headwaters of the river that the Spanish
colonizers called âSacramento.â The place was not treated as well as it
should be. An asphalt parking lot and easy sign posts made access banal.
An informative placard gave the spring its scientific explanation.
Nonetheless, there it was, a veritable river erupting from the womb of
the earth, surging up around the rocks at the base of a steep slope,
gathering in a pool, spilling over a fallen log and running its way
downhill, to join with countless other tributaries in a long journey to
the southâto the Oceanâin one vision, or in anotherâto a series of dams
and irrigation channels to feed a delusional Machine that believes it
constructs itself.
It was raining that day, and the heights were lost in dense mist. We
knelt, wetted our hands, filled our water bottles, and carried them a
ways, accompanying the river on its path. Evergreens collected the
cloud- spray and released it half-time in fat drops. The earth soaked up
the rain and passed it on to the river. Not a mile downstream the river
was already fattened, running white over the stones. When we came around
a bend, I looked into the waters and the face of a coyote appeared,
staring at me. âMove in,â she said.
I thought of the way coyotes move back in to the wasteland, preying on
the rodents that are more tolerant of the Disaster, eating beloved
housecats, haunting suburban nights with their ghostly yapping. They
belie the victorious narrative of Civilization, breaking through the
acoustic barriers that block out all the other voices, the endless
voices of the world. They rewild, not in a âDesertâ that Civilization
has relinquished (Civilization never relinquishes), but at the
interstices where the grinding of the gears can still be heard, where
the radio voice still booms out, âThere is no other way but Onwards.â
I realized that the Collapse has already occurred, maybe it happened
decades ago, but the State continues to shout out its marching orders,
to direct those who follow it and, in a way, those who fight against it.
States can manage collapse indefinitely. And in truth, no State has ever
collapsed, but that those who suffer it give it a little push. Sometimes
we are the protagonists of the destruction of the State, rising against
it at its most powerful, and surviving the clash when so many times
before we have been slaughtered. Other times, the State is weakened by
its own hubris and sickness, and we topple it when it is already off
balance. But not even a weak State fails if its subjects choose to
remain weaker still, spectators to entropy, waiting for the God-Kings to
leave this earth of their own volition.
We are entropy, devouring structures with razor teeth, or we are nothing
at all.
The coyote said to move back in, to reclaim the wasteland. It is time,
long since time. The Collapse has already occurred.
The world of Civilization and the world of the world are overlapping,
one atop the other. There is no moving out of the one, but there is a
moving into the other, putting our feet down, eating from it, dying into
it. The battles in the streets of the city of the Machine are important.
They set the whole thing trembling. Yet the tower is already tumbling,
and we are within it, tumbling too. If everything is falling, then
nothing moves. Only when we have our feet on other ground can we see the
tower fall, and not fall with it.
I have never written of these things before, that the religion forced
upon us calls âhallucinations,â that an earlier, more charitable albeit
in- fantilizing paradigm referred to as âdaydreams.â But part of the
experience was the compulsion to share it, to talk about it. Here it is.
Take from it what you will.
by D/G
Your eyes are bigger than your stomach. Your brain is as big as two
balled hands held together, your appendix is as long as your pinky
finger, your stomach is the size of your fist. We use our body to
measure the world around us. In the forgotten northern end of South
America, among certain people, the old customs had the lower social
classes portioned out with tattoos. The blown-out blue lines of ash and
vegetable ink ran around joints and down legs, and across torsos. They
made a map. In a hard yearâa flooded year with no game or a drought year
with no fishâ these tattooed bodies showed the way through famine. They
would be butchered and divvied up using the guide inked to their flesh;
a tattooed bit here, a sectioned morsel there.
The Arawak speakers are familiar with eating flesh, if not personally
then historically. Cannibalism was, after all, the justification that
the Spanish Queen Isabella gave to Columbus to capture and enslave the
indigenous population of the Caribbean. Those who ate their own had to
be savage children of the Devil, not a wayward flock of Godâs, waiting
to be shown the way to civilization. Lacking any exposure or evidence of
true cannibals in the Caribbean, Columbus invented them, and slaves he
got.
Butchering a compatriot to feed your kids is a gruesome, seemingly
unimaginable act, but in that extreme instance there is intimate
exposure to the junction of ecological disturbance and resilience.
Empty, black rock volcanic islands have been populated by wave-riding
seeds. Entire species have flourished after being forced to new lands by
immense storms. Static mountains hold the potential for eruption, stoic
redwood stands have the ability to rage with fire. In upheaval there is
a bloom of complex and dynamic interactions. Even drought can provide
new possibilities for sustenance.
Cannibal is the anglicized version of cannible, the Spanish
pluralization of Canibe, a mispronunciation of Cari- be or Carib, a
supposedly man-eating tribe from the islands. The regionâs name,
Caribbean, is derived from the name of those people, the Carib. Before
Columbus, humans eating humans was known by the Greek word
anthropophagia.
Before there were Greeks or Spaniards or Caribs there were cavemen.
Neanderthals ate their dead, at least in some capacity. Bones show the
marks of scraping and cleaningâclues suggesting meticulous removal of
flesh from wet bone. Some of the bones were then used to make tools,
others were crushed and had the marrow removed to be eaten in the same
manner as the reindeer, horses, and wild boar the Neanderthals subsisted
on.
These hairier Homo ancestors may have scavenged and eaten the partially
cooked starchy leftovers of tubers in the charred remains of lightning
strikes and subsequent wildfires on the savanna. Although the eating of
meat is now fetishized by diet gurus, hunters, and animal rights
activists, it may actually have been the tuber, not meat, that was the
caloric ticket into the world of enhanced brain power. With the
carbohydrates already partially digested by the heavens the primate
stomach was able to extract more nutritional value from the subterranean
starch.
Even then, those few million years ago on the mother continent, the Homo
genus was probably bitten by mosquitoes. Insects have been dated to as
far as back as the Devonian, some 400 million years ago. People believe
that insects were the first creatures to develop flight. In amber the
delicate wings of mosquitoes can be seen folded upon themselves.
The worldâs hungriest killer instinct is borne on these ancient wings.
Responsible for the deaths of an estimated 1 million humans every year,
it is only the female mosquito that seeks blood, which she finds by
following the scent of the carbon dioxide that we mammals exhale.
Protein and iron found in blood is used for the production of eggs. Some
mosquitoes drink so much blood that they have difficulty leaving the
body of the host, drunkenly flying off in search of some moist place to
lay their eggs.
Ticks, no see ums, bedbugs, fleas, assassin bugs, and lice are also in
the business of blood, a nutritional proclivity known as hematophagy. On
chickens, blood-sucking mites come out to feed at night, sheltering near
the vent of the bird during the day. The host individual will peck and
scratch at the bites, causing feather loss and exposure of pink skin. At
the sight of flesh the other chickens in the pen will begin pecking at
the skin and drawing blood. With blood in the air and meat in their eyes
the fratricidal fowl chase and peck and eventually devour their
penmates, leaving the ground littered with hollow carcasses.
It seems as though this behavior is very old. There is fossil evidence
of both healed wounds and potentially fatal skeletal injuries suggesting
that T. Rex may have engaged in violent behavior of a possibly
cannibalistic nature. If you squint, you can easily see the terrible
lizard lurking deep in the chicken. Listen to them groan and coo as they
pick through grassâitâs not hard to see them foraging through steamy
Jurassic foliage.
The beak is a choke point for birds. Most birds are gape-limited
predators, meaning they can only ingest what they can slide down their
toothless maws. For the most part there is no cutting, butchering, or
dividing of prey, and tearing and shredding is limited to the sharp
beaks of birds of prey.
Not all birds will get the chance to hunt worms at dawn. Certain
fledglings donât stand a chance. There are lazy species that have
learned to roll the unattended eggs of other species out of the nest and
quickly lay their own, leaving the parents of the dead to incubate the
usurpersâ offspring. With colonial nesters such as gulls, it is common
for smaller, weaker hatchlings to be preyed upon by older, more
developed birds. It is an easy, low-risk foraging strategy that values
the species over the familial unit.
In ancient Egypt the mantis, known as bird-fly, was a courier of souls,
bringing the dead to meet the arbiters and divine deities of the
afterlife. In Su- meria the two names for the mantids translate to
necromancer and soothsayer, suggesting the Sumerians also saw the mantis
as a magical, even divine creature. The praying mantisâ most noted
behavioral characteristic is the sexual dynamic. In the book The Praying
Mantids the authors describe the phenomenon as such:
Males are renowned for their ability to initiate copulation while being
eaten. The organization of a mantidâs central nervous system will allow
both copulation and spermatophore transfer in the absence of descending
input from the cephalic ganglia.
The females and males find each other using the chemical networks used
by many insects, but cannibalism may not be as much a factor of ritual
as just of hunger. Sexual cannibalism is more readily observed in
controlled environments and well fed females are less likely to
decapitate the smaller male.
Hunger also factors into the sexually cannibalistic behavior of the
Australian red-backed spider. In red- backed spiders the fractionally
smaller male will launch himself onto the fangs of the much larger
female. She disembowels him as they mate over the course of five to
thirty minutes. Itâs understood to be an investment. The well-fed female
has little interest in other males, and the cannibalized male has given
his offspring a nutritional nest-egg, a caloric head start. Generational
foresight taken to a sacrificial extreme.
After their late-summer fertilization, the female mantis extrudes a foam
that encases and then hardens around her offspring, protecting them from
predators and the elements. When winter has passed and temperatures
begin to warm, the egg case cracks and nymphs extract themselves from
the hardened foam. In the open air their exoskeletons harden and gain
slight color. The tiny mantids crawl out of the split egg case, using
their siblings like a ladder to dangle to the nearest leaf or stick,
where they sway and assess their surroundings. Their eyes swivel and
observe. Their spiny raptorial arms are already prepared to hunt. Their
mandibles are ready to gnaw. While some venture off to hunt aphids or
gnats, others lie in wait for a slower, smaller brother or sister to
feast upon.
Sharks also occasionally taste their siblings. Adelphophagy is the name
for the eating of a sibling. For sand sharks, this meal occurs in ute-
ro. In the mature female reproductive system, the young sharks are like
a chain with progressively larger links, the most developed of the young
swimming freely in the oviduct fed by a conveyor belt of younger kin,
eating the others until its expulsion from the uterus as a born killer.
Implicit in the survival of the shark is the remora, that strange
sucking fish that hangs from the hunters, as well as the crabs that will
feast on the decomposing body of the toothed fish when it dies, and in
turn the parasites that live on the crabsâ carapace. This harmony with
unpredictability and the faculty to seamlessly adapt many functions
within a single form is what has allowed sharks to exist, to thrive.
Whether hunters, scavengers, prey, or hosts, when all sharks and remoras
become detritus there will be another such symbiosis to take their
place.
The devouring of a sibling in utero is part of a web that runs from the
motherâs uterus to detritivores in the deepest crevices of the Mariana
trench. Spurious, fickle, impartial, gregariously violent and heartless,
the âweb of lifeâ is anything but. Far from the warm embrace of a loving
parent, it is full of claws and teeth that creep and lurk.
Mabiki is a Japanese word that has the dual meanings of âto harvest
riceâ and âinfanticide.â In the rural regions of 17th century Japan a
married woman could expect to raise three children on average but to
give birth to twice that number. Particularly for poor families, the
benefits of raising a child for future labor had to be weighed against
the time and energy expended to do so. The value of an infant was
considered in terms of cosmology, economy, and time.
There was no consensus of the sanctity of every individual human life
and the loss of one was considered to be potentially beneficial in the
long run to many. Death was seen as an act of stewardship akin to the
farmer uprooting some crops to allow light and room for others to grow.
Balance isnât found in outcome but in the processes. There is no static
expression of succession to achieve, or an ideal climax to strive and
sacrifice for. Even the most profane, reprehensible acts play part in
the simple hardwired drive for hunger. The beauty of complexity is found
in disturbance.
by Emily Johnson
There is a fish that lives in very deep, very cold rivers. Their taste
is strong, pungent, oily. They are caught in weighted traps that fall,
then rest somewhere near the muddy bottom. The traps are left for days.
In winter, when the tops of rivers freeze, blackfish push their plump
bellies down into the mud, as far from the ice as they can get. They
wait. They are never seen swimming in their rivers. They don't jump up
into the air to break their egg sacks like salmon or to catch bugs like
trout. People know they are there because they know they are there.
When blackfish are hauled up in traps, they are motionless and then they
are stored in buckets. 3, 5, 6, 7 blackfish can lay in the bottom of an
average bucket. They lay there, belly down. They don't flop, they don't
roll off, heaving, to one side. They don't fight the air. They press
their plump bellies down on the bottom of the bucket, holding themselves
in the fish kind of upright. I imagine that they imagine the top of the
bucket covered with ice, the bottom covered with mud.
Blackfish can lay in the bottom of a bucket, sitting on a porch for
months; no water, no mud, no food, no fish air. They lay there, on their
bellies, still. But when brought back to their river, when held in their
very deep, very cold water, when gently primed in the cups of two human
hands, the blackfish heaves, its sides pulse, its head moves from side
to side, and then, it swims away.
My cousin told me about the time he tried studying blackfish for the
science fair at school. It was spring. He put his blackfish trap down
into the river and waited two days. He caught four blackfish. He placed
these in his bucket which he placed in the back mud room of the house
near the dog food. He had to wait until fall.
I said you can eat blackfish, that their taste is strong, pungent, oily.
You can, but you eat them raw, and you eat them head in. Head in your
mouth. It's as if you eat the blackfish while, at the same time, the
black- fish swims to your belly.
My cousin didn't eat his spring caught blackfish. He wanted to study
them. To open them. To see the guts, the bones that seem to dissolve
with spit. He imagined blood and a heart and lungs. He wanted to pin the
blackfish open, draw a picture, label parts, find out how they sit
themselves upright in the bottom of buckets, why they never surface
their rivers, how they come to life after months pressed into mud. He
took one blackfish and held it in his hand. He didn't wake it. He took a
knife, and he cut it. From anus to head, up the belly. But he didn't see
lungs or guts or blood. He held the knife in his right hand, the black-
fish in his left, but after the cut, he couldn't hold onto the fish. It
dissolved in his hand, became a kind of thick, black, liquid goo. He
tried to stop it from slipping between his fingers, but the blackfish
goo got heavier as it dripped toward the floor and the whole mess of it
slid off his palm, gathering in a puddle at his feet.
He tried another.
Same thing.
"If you cannot cut a blackfish open to look at its insides, can you
study its insides?" he asked me.
But he didn't give me time to answer.
Instead, he continued, "I couldn't cut another. I ate my last two black-
fish. And I ate the blackfish that were sitting upright in my father's
bucket, the ones he caught for feasting in late winter. Emily, I ate
five blackfish," he said.
"Good god," I said.
No one eats five blackfish.
You eat ONE, for health, but my cousin thought that if he ate a lot of
blackfish he could find out about the blackfish soul. About what they
dream during the ice over. About their survival through the harshest
conditions; laying in buckets in homes, away from the deep, cold habitat
of river and mud. About their swim down our throats. He thought there
was something the black- fish could teach him that he could, maybe, in
turn, teach his family and friends and teacher at school.
But the blackfish made him puke. It poured out of his mouth, swam over
his tongue, that same thick, black liquid goo he felt slipping through
his fingers. It pulled out of him, leaving him feeling cleaner than
before, but with a horrible taste in his mouth. He lay down, belly
pressed to the floor. He couldn't move, so he fell asleep.
He told me, "The blackfish are unstudyable. They exist to live in
rivers, and buckets, and bellies. You cannot cut a blackfish. Please, do
not try. You cannot eat too many. Trust me, don't. But, when the
blackfish enters your dreams, you hold still and listen to what it says.
It will tell you when to swim head first into danger, it will tell you
when to press your belly down wherever you are, and rest. It will tell
you how to survive this world. It will tell you its secrets."
by Gerald Vizenor
The term Earthdivers is borrowed from a traditional theme in tribal
creation myths and is dedicated here as an imaginative metaphor. The
earth- divers are mixedbloods, or Metis, tribal tricksters and recast
cultural heroes, the mournful and whimsical heirs and survivors from
that primer union between the daughters of the woodland shamans and
white fur traders. The Metis, or mixedblood, earthdivers dive into
unknown urban places now, into the racial darkness in the cities, to
create a new consciousness of coexistence.
Metis is a French word which means mixedblood in current usage, or a
person of mixed Indian and French-Canadian ancestry. The Spanish word
mestizo means a person of mixed Indian and European ancestry. The words
Metis and mixedblood possess no social or scientific validation because
blood mixture is not a measurement of consciousness, culture, or human
experiences; but the word Metis is a source of notable and radical
identification. Louis Riel, for example, one of the great leaders of the
Metis, declared a new mixed- blood nation in the last century. He was
convicted of âhigh treasonâ and executed.
âIt is true that our savage origin is humble, but it is meet that we
honor our mothers as well as our fathers,â said Louis Riel to his proud
followers. He is quoted from The Strange Empire of Louis Riel by Joseph
Kinsey Howard. âWhy should we concern ourselves about what degree of
mixture we possess of European or Indian blood? If we have ever so
little of either gratitude or filial love, should we not be proud to
say, We are Metis?â
Metis John Baptiste Cadotte was distinguished in tribal and white
histories. William Whipple Warren noted in his History of the Ojibway
Nation the Cadotte had âreceived a college education in Montreal. He was
among the first individuals whose European, or white blood, became mixed
with the blood of the Ojibways. On leaving college, he became possessed
of forty thousand francs which had been bequeathed to him by his father,
and with this sum as capital, he immediately launched into the
northwestern fur trade.â Warren was educated in mission schools and was
the first mixedblood to serve as representative in the territorial
legislature.
âIntermarriage went hand-in- glove with the trade of skins and furs from
the first decades of discovery,â writes Jacqueline Peterson in her
brilliant essay âPrelude to Red River: A Social Portrait of the Great
lake Metis.â She explains that the âcore denominator of Metis identity
was not participation in the fur trading network per se,â but the
mixedblood middleman âstance between Indian and European societies.â The
Metis âfunctioned not only as human carriers linking Indians and
Europeans, but as buffers behind which the ethnic boundaries of
antagonistic cultures remained relatively secure.â
Jacqueline Peterson points out that âit is no coincidence that many of
the labels describing the offspring of interracial unions articulate an
implicit wish to blot out or sterilize the human consequences of
miscegenation. Thus like the derogation âmulatto,â which stems from
mule, and âgriffeâ the monstrous winged child of black and Indian
parents, âhalfbreed,â âbreed,â and âmixed-bloodâ hint broadly at
cultural and biological impotence.â
In the traditional earthdiver creation myths the cultural hero or tribal
trickster asked animals and birds to dive for the earth, but here, in
the metaphor of the Metis earth- diver, white settlers are summoned to
dive with mixed- blood survivors into the unknown, into the legal morass
of treaties and bureaucratic evils, and to swim deep down and around
federal exclaves and colonial economic enterprises in search of a few
honest words upon which to build a new urban turtle island. In
traditional stories the metaphor of the earthdiver centers on the return
to the earth, rather than a separation from the earth and a futurist
transcendence to a computerized heaven. The earthdiver does not dive
into space. The trickster secures his earth, his urban places now, and
then he dreams out of familiar time and space. Tricksters and
earthdivers are the metaphors between new sources of opposition and
colonial ideas about savagism and civilization.
The earthdiver myth has a âworld-wide distribution,â according to the
folklorist Elli Kaija Kongasin in an article published in Ethno-history.
âIt is told in various forms, but it always has four invariable traitsâ
earth covered with water, the creator, the diver, and the making of the
earthâŠâ
In his book The Religions of the American Indians, Ake Hultkrantz writes
that the âprimal sea represents primordial chaos, while the great flood
is chaos of a later date, caused, for example, by the wrath of a god or
the transgression of a taboo... No other creation myth in North America
is as extensive as the one about the Earth Diver who brings up land from
the primal water â
âIn North America there is a profusion of tales regarding the origin of
the world, whereas the creation of man is a rarer topic. . . . One of
these traditions, which is prevalent in North America and well known in
North Asia and Europe, tells how the creator sent an animal down to the
bottom of the sea to bring up sand or mud from which the earth was
subsequently madeâŠâ
Earl Count in his essay âThe Earth-Diver and the Rival Twins: A Clue to
Time Correlation in North- Eurasiatic and North American Mythology,â
published in The Civilizations of Ancient America, states that the
âcosmogonic notion of a primal sea out of which a diver fetches material
for making dry land, is easily among the most widespread single concepts
held by man.â
In his provocative research article âEarth-Diver: Creation of the
Mythopoetic,â published in American Anthropologist, Alan Dundes turns
his attention from modern myths to psychoanalytic theories and assumes,
for purposes of his hypothesis, the existence of a cloacal theory of
birth; and the existence of pregnancy envy on the part of males.â While
Dundes waits to be invited to dive, in the metaphorical sense of the
urban earthdiver, through his own assumptions and ideas, consider one
version of an earthdiver myth as an illustration of the creation of
turtle island. Creation myths are not time bound; the creation takes
place in the telling, in present-tense metaphors.
Victor Barnouw collected earthdiver creation stories as Lac du Flambeau
and published them in his book Wisconsin Chippewa Myths and Tales.
Barnouw writes that the narrator of the following earthdiver myth was a
shaman, or a tribal spiritual leader, âto who I have given the pseudonym
of Tom Badger... a quite level-headed man in his seventies, with a good
sense of humor.â
Wenebojo is also transcribed as manibozho, nanibozhu, wanibozu,
manabozho, nanabozho, nanabush, and other variations from the oral
tradition. Nanabozho,is the compassionate tribal trickster of the
woodland anishinaabeg, the people named the Chippewa, Ojibway, Ojibwa,
or Ojibwe. Wenebojo or naanabozho is the compassionate trickster, not
the trickster in the word constructions of the anthropologist Paul
Radin, the one who âpossesses no values, moral or social. knows neither
good nor evil yet is responsible for both,â but the imaginative
trickster, the one who cares to balance the world between terminal
creeds and humor with unusual manners and ecstatic strategies.
Wenebojo was standing on the top of the tree.. .and the water was up to
his mouth. Pretty soon Wenebojo felt that he wanted to defecate. He
couldnât hold it. The shit floated up to the top of the water and
floated around his mouth.
Wenebojo noticed that there was an animal in the water. .Then he saw
several animalsâbeaver, muskrat, and otter. Wenebojo spoke to the otter
first.
âBrother,â he said, âcould you go down and get some earth? If you do
that, I will make an earth for you and me to live on.. â
Anyway he went to the bottom of the water....he drowned. Then he floated
to the top. Wenebojo tried to reach the otter. He got hold of him
finally and looked into the otterâs paws and mouth, but he didnât find
any dirt. Then Wenebojo blew on the otter, and the otter came to again.
Wenebojo asked him, âDid you see anything?â
âNo,â said the otter.
The next person Wenebojo spoke to was the beaver. He asked him to go
after some earth down below and said, If you do, Iâll make an earth for
us to live on.. â
The beaver was gone a long time. Pretty soon he floated to the top of
the water. He also drowned. Wenebo- jo got hold of the beaver and blew
on him. When he came to, Wenebojo examined his paws and mouth to see if
there was any dirt there, but he couldnât find anything. He asked the
beaver, âDid you see any earth at the bottom?â
âYes, I did,â said the beaver. âI saw it, but I couldnât get any of it.â
These animals had tried and failed..
The muskrat was playing around there too. Wenebojo didnât think much
about the muskrat, since he was so small; but after awhile he said to
him, âWhy donât you try and go after some of the dirt too?â
The muskrat said, âIâll tryâ and he dived down.
Wenebojo waited and waited a long time for the muskrat to come up to the
top of the water. When he floated up to the top, he was all crippled.
Wenebojo caught the muskrat and looked him over. The muskrat had his
paws closed up tight. His mouth was shut too. Wenebojo opened the
muskratâs front paw and found a grain of earth in it. He took it. In his
other front paw he found another little grain, and one grain of dirt in
each of his hind paws. There was another grain in his mouth.
When he found these five grains, Wenebojo started to blow on the
muskrat, blew on him until he came back to life. Then Wenebojo took the
grains of sand in the palm of his hand and held them up to the sun to
dry them out. When the sand was all dry, he threw it around onto the
water. There was a little island then.
They went onto the little islandâ Wenebojo, the beaver, the otter, and
the muskrat. Wenebojo got more earth on the island and threw it all
around. The island got bigger. It got larger every time Wenebojo threw
out another handful of dirt. Then, animals at the bottom of the water,
whoever was there, all came up to the top of the water and went to the
island where Wenebojo was. They were tired of being in the water all the
time, and when they heard about the earth that Wenebojo had made, they
all wanted to stay there.
Wenebojo kept on throwing the earth around.
Dundes observes that despite the âlack of a great number of actual
excremental myths, the existence of any at all would appear to lend
support to the hypothesis that men think of creativity in anal terms,
and further that this conception is projected into mythic cosmogonic
terms.â
Dundes continues his comments on excremental expansion: âThe fecal
nature of the particle is also suggested by its magical expansion. One
could imagine that as one defecates one is thereby creating an
ever-increasing amount of earth.â
We are fortunate, perhaps, as Metis and mixedblood earthdivers, that
Alan Dundes did not choose to explain creation in terms of female penile
envies, or penis captivus, and the expansion of urine as a theoretical
assumption to account for the flood. Expanding his discussion to include
ideas from the tradition of philosophical dualism, Dundes asserts that
the âdevil is clearly identified with matter and in particular with
defecation. In a phrase, it is the devil who does the dirty work.â
Victor Barnouw does not seem to resist these mythic movements or rise
above fecal interpretations of tribal creation stories.
In a section of his book devoted to anal themes he writes that âAlan
Dundes has suggested that the Earth-Diver motif is a male fantasy of
creation stemming from male envy of female pregnancy and an assumed
cloa- cal theory of birth. In Dundesâ view the mud from which the earth
is formed is symbolic of feces. This may seem an extravagant hypothesis,
but it would be in keeping with Chippewa myth with its exclusion of
women and its striking anal themes. . . . The idea of creating people
from feces occurs in some Chippewa tales. . . .in our series Wenebojo
creates some Indian warriors by defecation here and there and sticking
feathers into turds.â
Barnouw refers to other stories in his discussion of anal themes,
including one where the daughter of a chief denies her suitors. The
suitors, âin revenge, defecate into a hole, make a human form from the
dung, dress it up in fine clothes, and will that it become a human
being. The dung man goes to the village, where the chiefâs daughter
falls in love with him. He leaves, and the girl follows his tracks. She
finally comes to a pile of dung, where the trail ends.
In both of these stories males create people by defecating, in line with
Dundesâ hypothesis.â
Some anthropologists seem to have little appreciation for sacred games
in tribal creations. Their secular seriousness separates the tribes from
humor, from untimed metaphors, and the academic intensities of career
bound anthropologists approach diarrhetic levels of terminal theoretical
creeds. The creation myth that anthropologists never seem to tell is the
one where naanabozho, the cultural trickster, made the first
anthropologist from fecal matter. Once made, more were cloned in
graduate schools from the first fecal creation of an anthropologist.
While the traditional earthdiver themes have been exhausted in minor
academic word wars, the mixed-blood earthdiver is a metaphor in a
timeless tribal drama. Turtle island is an imaginative place; not a
formula, but a metaphor which connects dreams to the earth. The Metis
are divided in white consciousness, denied an absolute cultural corner,
and, therefore, spared from extinction in word and phrase museums.
Earthdivers and new urban shamans now summon the white world to dive, to
dive deep and return with the sacred earth. The Metis wait above the
chaos at common intersections in the cities for the white animals to
return with earth, enough to build a new urban turtle island.
Earthdivers, tricksters, shamans, poets, dream back the earth.
âWe demand too much when we ask that the poet establish a new world,â
Writes Karsten Harries in his article âMetaphor and Transcendence.â The
world seems to float on words, but âfirst we have to learn to listen
more attentively to the many voices of the earth. What makes listening
difficult is the fact that as members of a community we are necessarily
caught up in already established and taken-for-granted ways of speaking
and seeing.
âWe understand things without having made them our own. The adequacy of
words is taken for granted, their origin forgotten. There are moments
when the inadequacy of our language seizes us, when language seems to
fall apart and falling apart opens us to what transcends it....As
language falls apart, contact with being is reestablished.. â
Earthdivers speak a new language, their experiences and dreams are
metaphors, and in some urban places they speak backwards to be better
heard and understood on the earth. They speak in unusual languages, so
unusual that âlanguage seems to fall apart,â but this illusion of
disintegration, Karsten Harries asserts, âdoes not lead to silence.. â
In his essay on âWhat Metaphors Meanâ Donald Davidson writes that
âmeataphor is the dreamwork of language and, like all dreamwork, its
interpretation reflects as much on the interpreter as on the originator.
The interpretation of dreams requires collaboration between a dreamer
and a waker, even if they be the same person; and the act of
interpretation is itself a work of the imagination.
âSo too understanding a metaphor is as much a creative endeavor as
making a metaphor, and as little guided by rules. . . . The idea, then,
is that in metaphor certain words take on new, or what are often called
âextendedâ meanings. . . . Perhaps, then, we can explain metaphor as a
kind of ambiguity: in the context of a metaphor, certain words have
either a new or an original meaning, and the force of the metaphor
depends on our uncertainty as we waver between two meanings. . . .â
Earthdivers waver and forbear extinction in two worlds. Metis are the
force in the earthdiver metaphor, the tension in the blood and the
uncertain word, the imaginative and compassionate trickster on street
corners in the cities. When the mixedblood earthdiver summons the white
world to dive like the otter and beaver and muskrat in search of the
earth, and federal funds, he is both animal and trickster, both white
and tribal, the uncertain creator in an urban metaphor based on a
creation myth that preceded him in two world views and oral traditions.
Metis, naanabozho tells, were the first earthdivers.
Tribal ideas and sources of consciousness, and earthdiver metaphors,
demand some privities on tribal world views: time is circular and
creation takes place in ceremonies and between tellers and listeners;
sacred names, dreams, and visions are images that connect the bearer to
the earth; shamans and other tribal healers and visionaries speak the
various languages of plants and animals and feel the special dream power
to travel backward from familiar times and places.
A. Irving Hallowell has written numerous descriptive and research
articles about woodland anishinaa- beg. His stories are familiar to most
listeners. For example, he once asked an old anishinaabe man about the
animation of stones:
Are all the stones we see about us alive? He reflected for a long while
and then replied, âNo! But some are.â This qualified answer made a
lasting impression on me. And that is thoroughly consistent with other
data that indicate that the Ojibwa are not animists in the sense that
they dogmatically attribute living souls to inanimate objects such as
stones.
In his article âOjibwa Ontology, Behavior, and World View,â Hal- lowell
explains that his tribal friends were
puzzled by the white manâs conception of thunder and lightning as
natural phenomena as they were by the idea that the earth is round and
flat. I was pressed on more than one occasion to explain thunder and
lightning, but I doubt whether my somewhat feeble efforts made much
sense to them.... my explanations left their own beliefs completely
unshaken.... Underlying the Ojibwa view there may be a level of naive
perceptual experience that should be taken into account.... What is
particularly interesting is that the avian nature of the Thunder Bird
does not rest solely on an arbitrary image. Phenomenally, thunder does
exhibit âbehavioralâ characteristics that are analogous to avian
phenomena in this region.
Hallowell did not have to talk to old men to learn that the earth and
other forms of life are personal experiences. Some anthropologists
separate themselves from the earth and imagination with colonial
research words and elitist templates. The earthdivers now turn around,
talk backward, and summon anthropologists to dive for the earth with
imaginative words.
The Ojibwa self is not oriented to a behavioral environment in which a
distinction between human beings and supernatural beings is stressed....
Impersonal forces are never the causes of events. Somebody is always
responsible,
Hallowell points out in his book Culture and Experience.
The names of characters in narrative are real and imagined, but it is
difficult to know the difference. Real characters seem fictional, at
times more imaginary. The real worlds are not unlike the imagined mythic
worlds. Differences in realities are never clear because the distances
between tribal dreams, earthdiver myths, comedies and metaphors, and
familiar places float free from time in some conversations.
Peter Jones, of Kahkewaqouna- by, the Ojibway missionary, said that his
personal tribal name, which means âsacred featherâ in translation, was
given to him by his traditional grandfather.
The Indians have but one name, which is derived either from their gods
or some circumstance connected with their birth or character, Jones
wrote in The History of the Ojebway Indians: With Especial Reference to
Their Conversion to Christianity, published more than a century ago in
England. When an Indian is asked his name he will look at some bystander
and request him to answer. This reluctance arises from an impression
they receive when young, that if they repeat their own names it will
prevent their growth, and they will be small in stature. On account of
this unwillingness to tell their names, many strangers have fancied that
they either have no names or have forgotten them... â
Jones described traditional practices at a time when tribal cultures
were burdened with disease and death, colonial revisions, primal
survival; his comments were romantic, perhaps servile to his religious
conversion, because this assumed reluctance to reveal personal names,
whether such a practice was true or not, belies martial domination.
Would we have revealed our names to the men who denied our cultures, or
to those who were dedicated to either our destruction or conversion?
Indeed, tribal names, dream names, and words that assured the sacred in
communal and oral traditions were protected, but tribal cultures were
seldom passiveânever as submissive as the neocolonial transformers once
imagined.
The use of a created name for an author avoids the limitations suggested
in autobiographical writing and the use of first-person pronouns.
However, other critical textual considerations are raised when an author
writes about himself through any name as a character in a narrative.
Georges Gusdorf expresses with unusual ease the consciousness of the
autobiographer in his article âConditions and Limits of Autobiography,â
The man who takes delight in thus drawing his own images believes
himself worthy of a special interest. Each of us tends to think of
himself as the center of a living space: I count, my existence is
significant to the world, and my death will leave the world incomplete.âŠ
This conscious awareness of the singularity off each individual life is
the late product of a specific civilization. Through most of human
history, the individual does not oppose himself to all others; he does
not feel himself to exist outside of others, and still less against
others, but very much with others in an interdependent existence that
asserts its rhythms everywhere in the community.
Earthdivers are the new metaphors between communal tribal cultures and
the cultures that oppose traditional connections, the cultures that
would own and market the earth. The experiences of the autobiographer
are similar to those of the earth- diver: the blood wavers in personal
metaphors.
It is obvious that autobiography is not possible in a cultural landscape
where consciousness of self does not... exist, writes Gusdorf.
But this unconsciousness of personality, characteristic of primitive
societies such as ethnologists describe to us, lasts also in more
advanced civilizations that subscribe to mythic structures, they too are
being governed by principles of repetition
Autobiography becomes possible only under certain metaphysical
preconditions. To begin with, at the cost of a cultural revolution,
humanity must have emerged from the mythic framework of traditional
teachers and must have entered into the perilous domain of history. The
man who knows that the present differs from the past and that it will
not be repeated in the future; he has become more aware of the
differences than similarities... Artistic creation is a struggle with an
angel, in which the creator is more certain of being vanquished since
the opponent is still himself. He wrestles with his shadow, certain only
of never laying hold of itâŠ
Earthdivers wrestle with their shadows; they capture some light from the
written images of their experiences. The opposition of the trickster,
and the implied resolutions, are internal; anarchism is balanced in
dreams and mythic imagination. The verbal contradance is more than a
mere autobiographical cakewalk.
âThere is no question but that a spirit of anarchism is bred within the
autobiographical act,â writes Louis Renza in âA Theory of
Autobiography.â The sense of anarchism is âmitigated in words where the
writer blends the exclusive, though collective, âminorityâ persona.â In
literature or in ecology, comedy enlightens and enriches human
experience without trying to transform either mankind or the world.
Wenebojo kept on throwing the earth around.
By swiddening elf 2
My heartâs aflutter!
I am standing in the bath tub
crying. Mother, mother
who am I? If he
will just come back once
and kiss me on the face
his coarse hair brush
my temple, itâs throbbing!
then I can put on my clothes
I guess, and walk the streets.
Iâve been living (staring) at the trees that surround my tiny cabin in
the pacific Northwest. Most of them are Large Leaf Maples, Acer
macrophyl- lum. When I arrived here in February, they had no leaves.
There they stood, dormant, appearing the same day after day. One of my
landmates tapped some of them for maple syrup. Sap poured and moved from
the outwardly appearing stillness and dormancy of each tapped tree. A
current of sugar and essence and water dragged up and dragged down the
cambium tissue, with a particular sweetness, a particular proportion of
sugar, of micronutrients, particular to the contour of the land. Tapping
opened my eyes to other aspects of the tree, of each particular tree, to
their gnarled curves, arcing into the light above.
Over many days and weeks the trees appeared dormant, except for that
nagging current of sap that moved through their veins. And I knew, as
well, that a time of quickening was approaching when the buds would grow
noticeably fatter each day, and during each day. Their motion would
become perceptible, while in the end of the winter, it required a way of
seeing and experiencing the trees. This gave their stillness a tension.
I felt myself waiting, waiting for this inevitable burst of life and
growth.
I knew that this process would take place whether I acted or not (short
of cutting the trees down!). In other words, this process happened
autonomously of my interventions, wishes, critiques, desires.
If changing our lives is changing our actions, and changing our actions
is changing what we think, and if we think in language, this language
reveals certain limits to thought. What saw in the forest around me was
tightly bound up with this.
Languages are ways of communicating about the world, and are thus a way
of describing the world. We can say this about ideologies as well.
The jig is up, the fix is in, and itâs time to get the fuck out of here.
Out of here? Yes, out of what it is we are stuck talking about. Pack
your shit, weâre moving again.
If the state wants to make us its captives, then we have to capsize
ourselves, and escape. We have to carve out space where we can play and
experiment with just what playing is, to discover what capacity for play
still lives inside us, and then gently tend it and cultivate it into our
power. This inevitably entails talking and thinking in new ways.
The lifestyle anarchists and the insurrectionary guerillas both agree:
the bottom line is to stay free and evade capture. And what of those of
us who have become captives?; of work, of television, of social media,
of school, of the next new prison and its recyclable architecture? We
might start by remembering what it is to be free, to play, to be
liberated. We can remember and we can tell stories to tend to this
remembering. These stories can be told at the campfire, in the
coffeeshop, at the party, on the corner, in the trenches, and on the
frontlines. In this tending and storytelling we are building a net, a
glue, that will hold on to the parts of ourselves that know what it is
to be ecstatic.
Desertion is a permanent position in relation to the state that
continues with or without the existence of the state, and involves
adopting tactics in real time through a moment -by-moment analysis of
the state and its imposition into the deserterâs life. It is not simply
constituted by yet another land project but originates in a discourseâa
collection of certain storiesâthat inform practices that generate more
stories. The discourse of desertion is a discourse of verbs. Note that
there is not a way to say desertion, desert, or deserting that is not,
at least in part, describing a state of change, of motion. Our aim is
the ecstatic abandonment of the shackles of conversation, and beyond.
Desertion is an eruption of the spirit that breaks new ground, whether
in the prison cafeteria, or in the woods.
2
I love you. I love you,
but Iâm turning to my verses
and my heart is closing
like a fist.
Words! be
sick as I am sick, swoon,
roll back your eyes, a pool,
and Iâll stare down
at my wounded beauty
which at best is only a talent
for poetry.
Cannot please, cannot charm or win
what a poet!
and the clear water is thick
with bloody blows on its head.
I embrace a cloud,
but when I soared
it rained.
Iâve been tracking deer in the woods around my cabin. Their pebble-like
scat appears glistening and fresh within days of being defecated, and
slowly erodes by wind and rain to small piles of dirt resembling a mole
hill. My eyes move variously from wide-angle peripheral vision: to
subtleties in the surrounding landscape; to the ground just in front of
my feet where I continuously verify that I am still on a deer path; to
the path arcing forward, leading me, as I read the track into the
indiscernible veg- etationâhoof print, hoof print, hoof print, scat,
hoof print, crushed fern leaf, a deep print where the deer leap, over an
undisturbed bramble branch. And then plants, and plants against the
color of the sky, and skyâs time of day, and the whole majesty of it.
This is a way of perceiving and reading. This is language and
communication. âHoof-printâ could be denoted otherwise. I hope you will
understand, but you are not present here with me, and I will never
demand that of you either way.
I appreciate John Zerzanâs critique of language, but I disagree with
him. In his essay Language: Origin and Meaning, he readily intermixes
and confuses language, with writing, with communication. Writing does
appear to be a hallmark of bureaucracy and statecraft in many if not
most cases, but this is a topic for another essay. Because Zerzan does
not clearly define language, we must stop at this point of origin
ourselves and unpack its involvement in our crisis.
Rather than critique language, I would propose a means by which we might
discover a way of communicating with our friends that is
indigestible/illegible to state metabolism. I donât believe we can yet
recognize when we are engaged in this process, but I think it will look
like the unnoticed or undescribed ritual life between friends. We are
all familiar with the experience in which we choose not to name a moment
in order to protect it fromâits eventual destruction. Instead, we allow
it to dance upon our gestures and glances and improvisation, like
holding smoke in our palm and passing it around as it drips through our
fingers and dissipates.
There is a language to this, a language of imagination and escape
available to the prisoner and the CEO alike that might define a path
toward liberationâif we can procrastinate its eventual destruction.
A native person where I live told me a story about his peopleâs word for
God. Their word was often mistranslated as âcreatorâ, but its closer
translation in English would be âcreationâ, because their word is a
verb. This phenomenon of god as a process is common in many languages of
Turtle Island. I wonât offer up the actual word here for the limitless
metabolism of civilization down the road, but I think holding onto this
idea of desertion, anarchy, remembering, daydreaming, resistance, and
insurgency as illegible verbs is fundamental.
3
Thatâs funny! thereâs blood on my chest
oh yes, Iâve been carrying bricks what a funny place to rupture!
and now it is raining on the ailanthus as I step out onto the window
ledge
the tracks below me are smoky and glistening with a passion for running
I leap into the leaves, green like the sea
Iâve been sitting still (staring?) at the tracks and at the maples and
my books and at theanarchistlibrary.org meditating on psychogeography
and nature. A more pure, a more moral, a more American, and a more
primitiv- ist eye sees purity in the wilderness just beyond our reach. A
wilderness of precisely nowhere. There arenât places where nothing is
constructed. If I leave only footprints and a meditative mind, is this
âconstructing the environmentâ? If we annihilate this world and leave it
alone, I suspect some weedy trees will be growing there within a few
seasons. Psychogeography, and the anarchist imagination draws almost
entirely from people writing in the cityâfrom the overconstructed.
psychogeography (n.)(v.) (origins Paris, France and the Situationists,
ca 1958)â1. An exploration of urban environments that emphasizes
playfulness and âdriftingâ. 2. The study of the precise laws and
specific effects of the geographical environment, consciously organized
or not, on the emotions and behavior of individuals. 3. A whole toy box
full of playful, inventive strategies for exploring cities that includes
just about anything that takes pedestrians off their predictable paths
and jolts them into a new awareness of the urban landscape.
At Standing Rock, it took 30-50 minutes depending on if there was snow
or the river was frozen to walk from one end of the encampment to
another. That is, 30 minutes of wandering through a dream of dreamers in
waking material time, space, and place. But the psychogeographers of
yester-generation and today have limited most of their wanderings to the
urban.
Annihilation and limitless negation, as a quick sketch of nihilist
tendency, are still earthly. They may come and go from the cosmos, but
they continue to inhabit and haunt the earth. They like it here. Perhaps
because volcanic eruptions, disturbances from old growth collapsing,
mountain lions attacking, annihilating, digesting, and assimiliating
black tailed deer, and vultures in turn eating the corpses of mountain
lions, appeal to the (an) nihilators sensibility that the destructive
urge is also a creative urge. We could say negation is fecund.
Clearing out the existent (nihilism) and leaving everyone alone
(anarchism) would look a lot like an an- archo-primitivist version of
rewilding, but perhaps most surprising to myself (although it shouldnât
be) it looks like indigeneity casting off the shackles placed their by
colonization. We could call it a contour of indigenous anarchism. Recall
this passage from the opening of the beautiful meditation Locating an
Indigenous Anarchism:
If we were to shape this world (an opportunity we would surely reject if
we were offered), we would begin with a great burning. We would likely
begin in the cities where with all the wooden structures of power and
underbrush of institutional assumption the fire would surely burn
brightly and for a very long time. It would be hard on those species
that lived in these places. It would be very hard to remember what
living was like without relying on deadfall and fire departments. But we
would remember. That remembering wouldnât look like a skill-share or an
extension class in the methods of survival, but an awareness that no
matter how skilled we personally are (or perceive ourselves to be) we
need our extended family.
In this poem Mayakovsky that Iâve woven in, Frank Oâhara writes: Thatâs
funny! thereâs blood on my chest
oh yes, Iâve been carrying bricks what a funny place to rupture! and now
it is raining on the ailan- thus
Here we encounter âan effectâ of the environment of the poem, whether
âconsciously organized or notâ that ushers me into a daydream of lovely
summertime riot, but with something decidedly Green. Blood, brick,
ruptureâall artifacts of the insurrectionary imaginationâand ailanthus.
Ailanthus altissima, whose common name in English is âTree of Heavenâ,
are common urban weed trees all over the temperature climates of Turtle
Island. They thrive in the cracks. Their crushed leaves have an aroma
similar to peanut butter. Their heavenly peanut essence busts through
the concrete of the existent.
If our aim is the annihilation of civilization, which is a way to
describe our current predicament, it is necessary to adopt models to
conceive of how it works as a totality through space and time, on Earth,
in order for it to be destroyed. Against His-Story provides us a chance
to experiment with civilization as an organism. This is fitting.
Organisms can heal. Institutions aim to produce a similar effect.
What stands out to a lot of people involved with ELF activity and
analysis is that nearly everything they destroyed was rebuilt. Who is it
that rebuilds, that heals, the wound inflicted by the insurgent act?
It is you and me, and the people just around us. Our neighbors. Our
schoolchildren. If the insurrectionary anarchist approach is valid (an
open question!), if we can actually destroy society through informally
organized asymmetric guerrilla war, a necessary aspect of annihilation
is that people we donât know and cannot reach, cease to repair the
system as we, the termites, the deserters, devour its foundations.
The barricade functions as Jung- ian archetype in rebel religion. Iâve
always adored barricades since seeing Les Miserables on Broadway. I
propose that we have experimented tremendously with the construction of
the road barricade to the detriment of the barricades that prevent the
invasion of the organismâcivilization, capitalism, the United States,
society, governmentâinto our creativity and moralities. How do we
prevent ourselves from adopting the discourse of the state and
domination, and from there opening our work to the metabolism of
civilization? How do we let the thing bleed to death with all of its
wounds from our pebbles? Demotivational Training can help us here:
[The] history of the 20th century has thoroughly demonstrated that the
attempts to oppose World Trade, Inc. with models of behavior aimed to
subvert it have in the end provided it with its best weapons. Today, the
managers want nothing less than to make every employee a situationist
... Trying to outdo this would be absurd. On the other hand, limiting
the critique to the domain of the negative, without prescribing a
specific goal, is to show great optimism stemming from the hypothesis
(obviously unproven) that most people have within them all the energy
necessary for their autonomy without their being the need to add any. In
his time Lichtenberg wrote, âNothing is more unfathomable than the
system of motivation behind our actions.â One can hope that this this
impenetrability can definitively restore its rights.
Desertion presents itself here, again, as a more holistic approach to
insurgency that doesnât rely on revolution or insurrection to be virile
and joyous, that remains open to attack, at the level of striking a
material blow, as well as the force of inertia of the drop out. This
updates the definition of sabotage to our time where mass submission is
perhaps as destructive as vacuuming ecosystems of life. One disagreement
with Demotivational Training would be this: I do not think critique is
limited to the domain of the negative. It always gestures in other
directions. The author in fact proposes a particular definition of
demotivation as an adoption of opacity that allows World Trade, Inc. to
collapse in the mire of the beaches of demotivation. This is
delightfully congruous with desertion.
4
Now I am quietly waiting for
the catastrophe of my personality
to seem beautiful again,
and interesting and modern.
The country is grey and
brown and white in trees,
snows and skies of laughter
always diminishing, less funny
not just darker, not just grey.
It may be the coldest day of
the year, what does he think of
that? I mean, what do I? And if I do,
perhaps I am myself again.
Is there a deriveâan indeterminate wandering through the urban
landscapeâfor the natural, for the woods?
Behind the property line of the four acres where Iâve been writing this
essay is state forest land. A short trail leads to a primitive logging
road and a great expanse of clearcuts, and old cutblocks in various
stages of Douglas fir regrowth ranging from four foot high saplings to
about 40 year old mono-aged stands. Here, the woods are farmed. There is
nothing particularly natural or wild about this space, but since Iâve
long since dispensed with those terms, except as a point of departure, I
donât seek them outside of myself and what is immediately available to
me.
So, I smoked part of a joint. I put on my rubber boots and high-tech
lightweight down jacket. I cued The Brilliant podcast, which I adore,
and listened to Bellamy and Aragorn!! discuss an ITS communique
addressed to the nihilists. I walked into the unwild.
Social structure is in large measure both a state effect and a choice;
and one possible choice is a social structure that is invisible and/or
illegible to state makers...The vagueness, plurality, and fungibility of
identities and social units have certain political advantages.
The Art of Not Being Governed
Desertion presupposes contingent and tentative identity. In the context
of living within or on the frontline of a state, identity becomes
partially defined by the state. Desertion may find its footing in
identity, but only for the sake of leaping beyond it. Static,
homogenizing, and ascriptive aspects of identity are the bedrocks of
domination and state discourse. From Mao to Thomas Jefferson, the state
has employed rigid categories to generate its division of labor in each
of its iterations. The place we seek for identity is the place that
overflows these categories and the roles they circumscribe.
Desertion cannot be sacrificed for the edification of identity; this is
precisely the problem we face. On the other hand, a simplistic rejection
of identity does not help to explain its tendency to resurface within a
band of deserters. What we are looking for might be a fluid, shifting
identity, and groups formed not through ascription, but on the basis of
affinity, friendship, and group practice. It is key to have both and to
slowly build them through time. This process is likely to generate a new
identity that can simply be abandoned because of the prerequisite of a
robust discourse of desertion. Any subcultural identity generated out of
the muck of the Spectacle has a shelflife, but they can create temporary
shelters and stepping stones for desertion. Again, The Art of Not Being
Governed:
Lois Beck says of the Qashqaâi of Iran: âTribal groups expanded and
contracted. Some tribal groups joined larger ones when, for example, the
state attempted to restrict access to resources or a foreign power sent
troops to attack them. Large tribal groups divided into smaller groups
to be less visible to the state and escaped its reach. Intertribal
mobility [shifting ethnic identity] was a common pattern and was part of
the process of tribal formation and dissolution.â
Desertion that manages to traverse intersections of class and identity
can be particularly potent. I am referring here to some of my own
experiences of what P.M calls ABC dysco: the coalescing of groups of
dysproducers from every class of the global economy partaking in
counter-information, sabotage, material infrastructure development, and
dropping out. I suggest this potency is due to the storytelling that
amplifies through encounter of a variety of social strata.
I stated above that a discourse is a collection of stories and that
desertion is a multivariate collection of stories that describe
movement, transience, and impermanence. ABCdyscoing/TAZing is the
practice of deserting by moving from one discrete independent process of
desertion to another as a means of simultaneously circulating and
cultivating the discourse of desertion. It is the practice of honing
oneâs storytelling skills, and furthering space for their development.
ABdyscoing generates and tells stories that enrich the connection
between desertions. But we ought to invent another more pleasing
sounding word/phrase/verb for this phenomenon.
The current surveillance apparatus in the Most Developed Countries, made
possible by the general invasion of information technology and
communication technology into every sphere of life, neutralizes the
ability to tell and spread certain types of discourses of desertion that
are particularly potentâsabotage, ille- galism, legendary riotous acts,
gun- fighting, etc..âwithin the fabric of everyday life. The antidote to
this has been Security Culture, which still marginalizes this discourse
and does not address this marginalization our recent ancestors never had
to face. I am often struck with surprise to learn sometimes years into a
friendship about that epic escapades of some of my fellows. I first
thought this a demonstration of successful security culture, but I have
since despaired. I disallow myself, along with many friends and
affinities from sharing my most rich moments ofâdesertion. This means,
in many ways, despite our best efforts, we do not know each other. We do
not know what we have done, nor do we know what we might do if this
situation was changed.
We face a tremendous problem at the basic level of storytelling itself.
Communication about radical, outlawed activity can no longer simply take
place in our homes, in the company of friends and affinities. Telling
stories in person is all the time becoming a more exclusive affair.
Political activity online is represented as an acceptable and effective
means for simultaneously constructing and deconstructing the totality.
This presents a problem for the supposed goal of relieving anxiety that
will prevent us from pursuing the lives of which we dream.
by Freddie Forest
Humanity is rudderless on a powerful ship of its own making. Having
built the impressive juggernaut of civilization, it no longer knows how
to steer it, or even why it was built in the first place. Lost in the
frenzied search for technique, growth becomes the purpose of life, and
distraction becomes the only recourse to address why we are here. Our
philosophical and political questions are outdated. Human supremacy, so
robust and unparalleled in our context, no longer evokes the question of
how human life should be, but if it should be at all. The perils that
undermine our existence, from climate change to nuclear war, seem to
point to this most radical of inquiries.
Such an atmosphere of cosmic pessimism has recently leaked into popular
culture. In the 2014 HBO television series, True Detective, one of the
characters, Rust Cohle, explains his views on the tragic futility of
life to his partner:
I think human consciousness is a tragic misstep in evolution.
We became too self-aware, nature created an aspect of nature separate
from itself, we are creatures that should not exist by natural law. We
are things that labor under the illusion of having a self; an accretion
of sensory, experience and feeling, programmed with total assurance that
we are each somebody, when in fact everybody is nobody. Maybe the
honorable thing for our species to do is deny our programming, stop
reproducing, walk hand in hand into extinction, one last
midnightâbrothers and sisters opting out of a raw deal.
A minor controversy arose around the series as to whether the television
writer, Nic Pizzolatto, had plagiarized Cohleâs views from the work of
horror writer Thomas Ligotti, specifically his 2010 nonfiction work, The
Conspiracy Against the Human Race (Conspiracy). Pizzolatto conceded
Ligottiâs influence, which introduced a new audience to Ligottiâs work,
and his pessimistic worldview in particular.
The reclusive Ligotti has been producing short fiction since the 1980âs
for a loyal cult audience. Influenced by the work of H.P. Love- craft
and Franz Kafka, as well as the philosophies of Emil Cioran and Peter
Zapffe, Ligotti has been a seminal author in the genre of horror and
âweird fiction.â
After establishing his renown as a fiction writer, Ligotti tried his
hand at nonfiction in Conspiracy. The origin of the work according to a
number of sources lies in a therapistâs injunction to write a self-help
book as part of his treatment of depression and other emotional
problems. In response, Ligotti went about writing an anti-self-help
book: not a work that discusses how to make life better, but one that
elucidates why human consciousness is a bottomless pit of absurdity and
suffering. Ligotti channeled his exceptional erudition and insight into
an extended essay denigrating the human quest for control and happiness.
In his reflections, Li- gotti indicates that humans are puppets playing
out a rigged game that traps people in agony until death and decay
inevitably triumph.
Ligotti begins Conspiracy by citing the very injunction he intends to
violate: âIf you canât say something positive about humanity, then say
something equivocal.â Ligotti disparages this obligatory optimism
throughout the book. The default opinion states that the fact that we
are here is enough for us to merit a ringing endorsement. At the very
least, you should keep your mouth shut if you think differently. Later,
in discussing Arthur Schopenhauerâs Will- to-live, Ligotti states the
following:
Wound up by some force... organisms go on running as they are bidden
until they run down.
In pessimistic philosophies only the force is real, not the things
activated by it. They are only puppets, and if they have consciousness
may mistakenly believe they are self-winding persons who are making a go
of it on their own.
The progressive and revolutionary milieu is based on the idea of an
autonomous individual making choices. The existence of free will is the
basis for political and social change, and the absence of such will is
considered a reactionary idea. Li- gotti is much more bleak in his
assessment of human striving. He cites another author stating that,
âConscious subjectivity is the case in which a single organism has
learned to enslave itself.â [Ligottiâs emphasis] There is no free inside
seeking to defend itself of the oppressive outside. The enemy isnât at
the gates, it has been in the center of the city all along. Ligotti
speculates that the human may be something âstrange and awful,â that we
may not be so radically special after all. He cites an extended passage
from Joseph Conrad about the tragic sense of life in humans:
Yes, egoism is good, and fidelity to nature would be best of all... if
we could only get rid of consciousness. What makes mankind tragic is not
that they are the victims of nature, it is that they are conscious of
it.
To be part of the animal kingdom under the conditions of this earth is
very wellâbut as soon as you know of your slavery, the pain, the anger,
and the strifeâthe tragedy begins.
Aside from the disease of consciousness, Ligotti refuses to concede
anything positive about human life:
Deviations from the natural have whirled around us all our days. We kept
them at armâs length, abnormalities we denied were elemental to our
being. But absent us there is nothing of the supernatural in the
universe. We are aber- rationsâbeings born undead, neither one thing nor
another, or two things at once... uncanny things that have nothing to do
with the rest of creation, horrors that poison the world by sowing our
madness everywhere we go, glutting daylight and darkness with
incorporeal obscenities.â
From this passage, one could interpret all dreams of perfect and
perfectible worlds as nightmares of undead animals: those creature that
refuse to live in the present but are frantically flailing in an
idealized past or a harmonious future. Ligotti comments on the mentality
of the humanist optimists:
They trust anything that authenticates their importance as persons,
tribes, societies, and particularly as a species that will endure in
this world and perhaps in an afterworld that may be uncertain in its
reality and unclear in its layout, but which sates their craving for
values not of this earthâthat depressing, meaningless place their
consciousness must sidestep every day. Sure enough, then, writers such
as Zapffe, Schopenhauer, and Lovecraft only wrote their ticket to mar-
ginality when they failed to affirm the worth and wonder of humanity,
the validity of its values (whether eternal or provisional), and,
naturally, a world without a foreseeable end, or at least a world whose
end no one wants to see.
In arguing with an optimist humanist, it doesnât matter how bleak the
reality is. The fantasy of the optimist always trumps the bleak reality
of the pessimist. The pessimist is always wrong because they deny that
every desire is legitimate, every world is possible, and that every
string moving the marionnette about can be cut. To deny any of these
expectations is the Last Heresy: it elicits the Biblical weeping and
gnashing of teeth almost on cue. That the absurdity of the human animal
itself is the primary cause of the impossibility of its dreams never
occurs to them. Itâs as if homo sapiens were an optimistic animal ipso
facto.
Ligotti ends Conspiracy with a litany of propositions concerning various
aspects of his pessimistic philosophy:
No self now, consciously speaking.
No feeling your old self or new self, false imaginings if you think
about it, self-conscious nothings everywhere you look...
No bosom of nature, abandoned on the doorstep of the supernatural, minds
full of flagrantly joyless possibilities, a real blunder that was, the
human tragedyâŠ
Jon Padgett, a writer inspired by Ligotti and founder of a website
devoted to his work, Thomas Ligotti Online, elaborates on many pessimist
themes in his own recent short story collection, The Secret of
Ventriloquism. A trained ventriloquist, Padgett revises old rules of
learning ventriloquism in his story, â20 Simple Steps to Ventriloquism,â
to make a broader point about the puppetry of going through the motions
of daily life. For example, Step 12 concludes with the following
observation:
Remember, the âPeopleâ you must deal with to survive are mere dummies
serving a higher purposeâa kind of Ultimate Ventriloquismâthat they
cannot hope to comprehend. Animal-dummies must be treated at all times
with false and/or unsympathetic regard. Believe me, they do not feel a
thing.
Step 20 describes the Greater Ventriloquists who speak with the voice of
the Ultimate Ventriloquist, a stand-in for the absurdity of the
universe:
But we Greater Ventriloquists are active. We are active as nature moves
us to be: perfect receivers and transmitters of nothing with nothing to
stifle the voice of our perfect suffering. Yes, we Greater
Ventriloquists speak with the voice of nature making itself suffer.
Nothing can be more normal than that. The head is a useless mechanism.
Cast it aside. We do not need it anymore. There is nothing but the voice
of this pain and this panic thrown into the darkness.
Returning to Conspiracy, it would be a mistake to believe that Ligotti
has no opinions concerning the ethical inclinations of humanity. Ligotti
presents an extinctionist perspective as the only acceptable approach to
address the problem of human suffering. Though he is pessimistic about
humans doing the âright thingâ in this case, he ends his book stating:
Why do so many of us bargain for a life sentence over the end of a rope
or a muzzle of a gun? Do we not deserve to die? But we are not obsessed
by such questions. To ask them is not in our interest, not to answer
them with hand on heart.
In such spirit might we not bring to an end the conspiracy against the
human race? This would be the right course: the death of tragedy in the
arms of nonexistence.
In a footnote, Ligotti elaborates further on the moral dimension of
preventing human suffering:
What has been called âmanâs inhumanity to manâ should not entice us to
misanthropy smarting for our species to come to an end. That deduction
is another blunder, as much as it would be a blunder to tub- thump for
our survival based on the real abundance of what is valued as âhumaneâ
behavior.... [T]o conspire in the suffering of future generations, is
the only misconduct to be expiated, not that we will ever be ready or
able to rectify our incorrigible nature. That we were naturally or
divinely made to collaborate in our own suffering and that of human
posterity is the blunder.
In the penultimate footnote of the book, Ligotti vents his frustration
at the cosmos (perhaps in keeping with the intention of this being an
âanti-self-helpâ manual):
One cringes to hear scientists cooing over the universe or any part
thereof like schoolgirls over-heated by their first crush. From the
studies of Krafft-Ebbing onward, we know that it is possible to become
excited about anythingâ from shins to shoehorns. But it would be nice if
just once these gushing eggheads would step back and, as a concession to
objectivity, speak the truth: THERE IS NOTHING INNATELY IMPRESSIVE ABOUT
THE UNIVERSE OR ANYTHING IN IT. [Emphasis in the original]
With these two last points I can express my minor differences with
Ligotti and his pessimistic worldview. For if Ligottiâs central point in
his book is to emphasize the absurd and banal nature of human existence
(in contrast to the self-importance we give ourselves), why should human
suffering have any special metaphysical status? If Ligotti can otherwise
simply look on human existence with a cold eye, why can he not have the
same eye of, say, Rene Descartes observing a dog being tortured and
concluding that its howls and convulsions are merely physiological
hiccups and nothing more? âPainâ isnât even an appropriate
classification for these phenomena. Why does Ligotti continue to give
particular regard to human suffering, to the point that we have to
self-immolate because our consciousness has become a hideous deformity
in an otherwise dead and tranquil cosmos? How did we become the only
evil in the universe? Should mountains be obliterated as well simply
because landslides occur, or trees exterminated because they sometimes
get struck by lightning or consumed by termites?
Perhaps Ligotti pulls back a little from the inhumanist precipice before
he falls over. Human consciousness is neither formidable nor
intimidating. Humans are indeed dumb creatures, and so is their pain.
The only reason pain exists is because we forget it: we neither suffer
all the time nor are we meant to live lazy endless days in Elysium. No
sooner do we despair of a pain than we fall asleep and forget it in the
morning. Is this not the real reason the human race keeps going? Our
ideas are not strong enough to bring about Paradise, or to damn us
entirely to Hell for that matter. Human beings donât live in a horror
story. Such tales are merely the other side of the utopian coin. Life
isnât absurd because it is perpetual suffering: itâs absurd because itâs
a blind game of chance between agony and ecstasy, governed by the tempos
of forgetfulness and decay. In this scenario, humans, like all animals,
are much better at coping with crises than preventing them altogether.
As for Ligottiâs disgust with the grandeurs of the cosmos, this calls to
mind some lines from Robinson Jeffersâ poem, âThe Broken Balanceâ:
All summer neither rain nor wave washes the cormorants'
Perch, and their droppings have painted it shining white.
If the excrement of fish-eaters makes the brown rock a snow-mountain At
noon, a rose in the morning, a beacon at moonrise
On the black water: it is barely possible that even men's present Lives
are something; their arts and sciences (by moonlight)
Not wholly ridiculous, nor their cities merely an offense.
Being unimpressed with the workings of nature or artifice is part of the
general stupefaction of modern life. We are unimpressed with some things
because we are often impressed by others (though foolishly perhaps).
This too is part of our condition, something that we simply cannot help.
There is no use being angry at this. Arguably the only anger that is
warranted is against putting too much stock in this wonder; against the
idiotic tendency to declare, âThe heavens declare the glory of God.â
They do no such thing; they proclaim their own glory: transitory,
material, and all-too-earthly. Not being content with this small glory
is the tragedy of our condition. It goes this far, and no further.
What then of the âpoliticalâ and âsocialâ, the asinine tendency of
modern people to want to âchange the worldâ or âmake a better oneâ? At
the very least, you should be suspicious of your own desires and
opinions, for they are not wholly yours, nor will you ever be sure where
they come from. If existential rage wells up within you, you should
acknowledge that it too is part of the puppetry of your animal and
social existence: a product of forces that you will never grasp. (For
only the forces are truly real. Here we are in complete agreement with
Ligotti.) Is inaction the only real freedom here? That is a silly
question which you should know the answer to by now. The puppet is not
freer when its strings are not being pulled, for the strings are still
there. I leave you then with this: If the throwing hand dangles from the
end of a string, should it throw the bomb anyway?
Later that evening she sees an eagle flying across the marshes, in the
same direction. It's golden-dark, almost night. The region is lonely and
Pan is very close. Geli has been to enough Sabbaths to handle itâshe
thinks. But what is a devil's blue bite on the ass to the shrieking-out-
ward, into stone resonance, where there is no good or evil, out in the
luminous spaces Pan will carry her to? Is she ready yet for anything so
real? The moon has risen. She sits now, at the same spot where she saw
the eagle, waiting, waiting for something to come and take her. Have you
ever waited for it? wondering whether it will come from outside or
inside? Finally past the futile guesses at what might happen... now and
then re-erasing brain to keep it clean for the Visit... yes wasn't it
close to here? remember didn't you sneak away from camp to have a moment
alone with What you felt stirring across the land... it was the
equinox... green spring equal nights... canyons are opening up, at the
bottoms are steaming fu- maroles, steaming the tropical life there like
greens in a pot, rank, dope-perfume, a hood of smell... human
consciousness, that poor cripple, that deformed and doomed thing, is
about to be born. This is the World just before men. Too violently
pitched alive in constant flow ever to be seen by men directly. They are
meant only to look at it dead, in still strata, transputrefied to oil or
coal. Alive, it was a threat: it was Titans, was an overspeaking of life
so clangorous and mad, such a green corona about Earth's body that some
spoiler had to be brought in before it blew the Creation apart. So we,
the crippled keepers, were sent out to multiply, to have dominion. God's
spoilers. Us. Counter-revolutionaries. It is our mission to promote
death. The way we kill, the way we die, being unique among the
Creatures. It was something we had to work on, historically and
personally. To build from scratch up to its present status as reaction,
nearly as strong as life, holding down the green uprising. But only
nearly as strong. Only nearly, because of the defection rate. A few keep
going over to the Titans every day, in their striving subcreation (how
can flesh tumble and flow so, and never be any less beautiful?), into
the rests of the folksong Death( empty stone rooms), out, and through,
and down under the net, down down to the uprising. In harsh-edged echo,
Titans stir far below. They are all the presences we are not supposed to
be see- ingâwind gods, hilltop gods, sunset godsâthat we train ourselves
away from to keep from looking further even though enough of us do,
leave Their electric voices behind in the twilight at the edge of the
town and move into the constantly parted cloak of our nightwalk till
Suddenly, Panâleapingâits face too beautiful to bear, beautiful Serpent,
its coils in rainbow lashings in the skyâinto the sure bones of frightâ
Excerpt from Gravityâs Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon
by Ramon Elani
I think what youâre groping for is that people need more than to be
scolded, more than to be made to feel stupid and guilty. They need more
than a vision of doom. They need a vision of the world and of themselves
that inspires them.
Daniel Quinn Ishmael
Itâs the late 1990s, Iâm a teenager. Iâm sitting on the floor in a
sparsely furnished old log cabin in the forest with my tribe. Proud,
beautiful girls with red bandanas worn over their long brown braids.
Strong young men, with the soft down of their first beards on their
faces. Friends and lovers, all. The air is thick with the smoke of sage
and weed. Pachelbelâs Canon in D Major plays on an old record player. A
pot of lentils boils away on the wood stove. My head rests in the lap of
my first love, a girl with a slightly upturned button nose and long red
hair. We read passages aloud to each other from Daniel Quinnâs Ishmael.
We drop acid and wander through the forests and meadows, dreaming of
returning to the blissful harmony of pre-civilized existence. Golden
youth and its dreams.
Thousands of miles away, Julia Butterfly Hill was sitting in the redwood
tree she named âLunaâ and a year or so earlier Ted Kaczynski had been
convicted for mailing bombs to computer labs and timber industry
lobbyists.
My friends and I had dropped out of high school around this time and
taken our education into our hands.
As we had already rejected the conventional notion that intelligent,
intellectually engaged young people belong in school, we were thrilled
by Quinnâs iconoclastic words. The power of stories and the truth behind
the stories are not the same thing. You donât need anyone how to tell
you how to live. We already know everything there is to know. Quinn
could hardly have found a more eager audience. We sought ideas that
recreated the world. We instinctively knew that something was deeply
wrong with the world. And we were young, naive, and idealistic enough to
think, at that moment, that something could still be done to make things
right. Quinnâs words radically and irrevocably changed the way we saw
the world around us.
As a red-diaper baby, raised by cosmopolitan intellectuals, the ideas of
Marx already seemed out of touch and reductive. There were deeper forces
at work than economics, that much was clear to me. Ishmael gave me an
entirely new understanding of the problem that I could only vaguely
perceive. The notion that there were ideas and biases so deeply
ingrained within human culture that we never even saw them at work
forever changed my intellectual orientation. Quinnâs writing influenced
the way I read and engaged with everything that came after. Truly, his
impact on me could not be overstated.
I wouldnât be surprised if others reading this piece have their own
stories of discovering Daniel Quinnâs writing that are similar to my
mine. As Lisa Wells writes in N+1, following Quinnâs death on February
17, 2018:
I persuaded my three best friends to read Ishmael, and they were
similarly affected. At night we convened a kind of book club in a
motorboat parked in my friend Mattâs garage, smoking cigarettes and
stacking empties of Milwaukeeâs Best Ice, discussing how best to spread
the word about the Civilization problem. Days, weâd cut class and walk
the streets of our suburb with oracular intensity, surveying the future
ruins of stripmalls and car lots and wondering if anyone else in those
multitudes foresaw what was coming. Soon, weâd dropped out of high
school.
In some ways Quinnâs message speaks best to teenagers. But this is not a
criticism. There is a beautiful, powerful simplicity to Quinnâs
philosophy that anyone can understand. This is a rare quality. It is a
testament to Quinnâs gifts as a writer and thinker that he found a way
to tell a profoundly threatening, controversial story is such a gentle
and accessible way. And furthermore, by framing the problem, an
admittedly terrifying, apocalyptic problem, in such a calm way actually
seems to have the effect of inspiring people to act. There is something
about unrestrained militant rhetoric that really undermines the gravity
of a message. That kind of rhetoric, so widespread among primitivists,
radical environmentalists, and enemies of civilization, is utterly
absent in Quinnâs writing.
Itâs important to stipulate here that Quinn never called himself an
anarchist and was hesitant to be associated with anarchy or anarchist
ideas. The only ideology that he explicitly identified with was what he
called new tribalism, building off the ideas of Gary Snyder. He likewise
distanced himself from environmentalism as such, with its hollow notions
of conservation. Nevertheless, as philosopher Bron Taylor argues, its
clear that Quinn âarticulated the most prevalent cosmogony found within
radical environmental subcultures.â In the end, whatever green
anarchists and anarcho-primitivists believe, Quinnâs ideas have been
staggeringly influential in the creation of those beliefs.
The content of Quinnâs philosophy is a version of story that most of our
readers are already familiar with: civilization is a force, a way of
life, which sprung from the idea of human exceptionalism. As
agriculturalists subdued nomadic communities, civilization progressively
spread across the globe. The ideology of civilization states that the
destiny of humanity is to rule and subjugate the earth. Thus civilized
humanity experiences its relationship to the cosmos as a war and as the
logic of war demands, there must be a winner and a loser. Ultimately
civilization makes a prison of human society and a graveyard of the
earth. The impulse to endlessly allow human society to grow is a demonic
one, which curses the individuals in that society as surely as the
non-human beings of the world.
For all his admiration for hunter- gatherers and non-civilized human
communities, Quinn never fell back on prescriptive solutions. In The
Story of B, Quinn writes, âThe world will not be saved by old minds with
new programs. If the world is saved, it will be saved by new mindsâwith
no programs.â We can see here the influence of Quinnâs youthful
aspiration to become a monk. The compulsive need of anarchists to act,
the absurd idea of insurrection, and of intentionally bringing about
industrial collapse were delusions that Quinn was utterly untempted by.
Nevertheless, Quinn saw his work as a way to âsave the world.â He
believed that as civilization inevitably weakened, human communities
organizing themselves into tribal groups was the only path forward for
humanity. This need not take the form of rewilding, per se, given the
limitations of the biosphere to suddenly accommodate seven billion
foragers.
Echoing Derrick Jensen, another foundational thinker within this milieu,
Quinn clearly identified the Malthusian problem of increasing
availability of food leading to increasing human population. At the end
of the day, whatever solutions are proposed without addressing the
simple question of endless human growth, will be meaningless. It seems
that Quinn was working on a book at the time of his death that was going
to suggest limiting access to food as a way to reduce the human
population back to a size that would less radically alter the
environment. Throughout his career, Quinn supported the idea of a
reassessment of the tribal model. As by far the most successful
organizational model for human communities, in terms of longevity and
minimal ecological impact, Quinn promotes some version of a new tribal
revolution, though in his writing he is quick to point out that this
does not mean trying to recreate a way of life that largely disappeared.
For Quinn, the point is not to try to return to the indigenous way of
life but to recognize it as a model or inspiration. The past is past. We
cannot go backwards. But we can use the examples of those who came
before us to guide us forward. Whatever is coming, Quinn believed, will
not happen all at once. We have time to adjust and adapt.
Again, there is a tremendous amount of flexibility in Quinnâs approach
and he avoids much of the dogmatism that is unfortunately so prevalent
in anti-civilization analyses. While recognizing the historical role
played by sedentary agriculturalists in relation to nomads and hunter
gatherers, Quinn acknowledges that there is nothing inherently
destructive in agriculture as a practice or a way of life. It becomes so
when it positions itself as the only viable way for human communities to
organize themselves, denies the validity of other ways of life, and
comes to dominate them. Quinn insisted that humanity as such was not the
problem, but one particular type of culture that had come to dominate
all others, which we call civilization. And the unforgivable flaw of
civilization is that it teaches humanity that it is above nature.
There is an overwhelming sense in the mainstream discourse that the
destruction of the biosphere has been the result of some kind of
incredible error or foolishness on the part of humanity. That we donât
realize what we are doing. That people merely need to be educated and
then the destruction will stop. Quinn deeply understood that this was
not the case. As he writes in Ishmael, âWeâre not destroying the world
because weâre clumsy. Weâre destroying the world because we are, in a
very literal and deliberate way, at war with it.â The doctrine of
anthropocentrism, whether it places civilized or uncivilized humanity at
the pinnacle of existence, will perpetuate this war until we destroy
ourselves and billions of other species. In other words, Quinn
understood that no critique of civilization that does not make some
version of an inhumanist argument central will ever carry very far. The
ultimate significance of hunter gatherer life was that it did not place
a high value on human life.
Quinnâs writing that sets him apart from other foundational thinkers is
that he manages to avoid justifying his position by depending utterly on
the tradition of Western anthropology, and its inherent links to racism,
colonialism, and industrialism. What does it say about our understanding
of indigenous communities if that understanding is completely derived
from the research of those who sought to destroy them? Instead of
deploying mountains of scientific evidence proving that hunter-gatherer
life was superior to our own, Quinn makes his case intuitively and
through the use of socratic dialogue.
The world has changed since Ish- mael was written in 1992. The tone of
our conversations has become darker, more hopeless. The sense of urgency
that so many felt in the 1990s evaporated, after decades of inaction and
defeat. At some point it became clear that whatever revolution we were
waiting for was never going to happen. And truly, before I learned of
Quinnâs death, I hadnât thought about him and his books for years. The
historical moment of seminal writers such John Moore, David Watson,
Derrick Jensen, John Zerzan, Fredy Perlman, and Daniel Quinn has clearly
passed. Some have been discredited and maligned, some simply forgotten.
Meanwhile, new voices have sought to build upon and revise the work of
these early pioneers. The young will always seek to distance themselves
from the old. And they are not wrong to do so. The old are notoriously
hesitant to recognize when it is time for them to step aside. This is
the way of things. But for all of the ways that we may deviate from
those who have come before, let us strive to be humble enough to praise
them for paving the way for us.
If itâs true that Quinn was working on a book at the time of his death
that proposed that the global food supply should be so heavily
restricted that no more than one billion humans were left alive, it
would put him in the same category as Scandinavian philosophers Peter
Wessel Zapffe and Pentti Linkola, the latter having also proposed the
human population should be reduced to one billion. Linkola writes,
The crippling human cover spread over the living layer of the Earth must
forcibly be made lighter: breathing holes must be punctured in this
blanket and the ecological footprint of man brushed away. Forms of
boastful consumption must violently be crushed, the natality of the
species violently controlled, and the number of those already born
violently reducedâby any means possible.
For all his gentleness, it appears that Quinn had come to a similar
conclusion by the end of his life. Cutting off the global food supply
and letting six billions starve is certainly no less violent than any
method that Linkola may promote. And yet this is where we are. And while
most still deny this path and its logic, I doubt I am alone when I say
that there are fewer and fewer alternatives that are remotely
compelling. If we were all Julia Butterfly Hill in her tree twenty years
ago, we are all of Kaczynskiâs party now, in one way or another.
Whatever my friends and I thought was going to happen back when we first
read Quinn seems less and less likely to happen. That fierce group of
passionate young people evaporated like dew. None followed that path we
discovered among Quinnâs words. Iâm not sure any of them would even
remember that experience we shared. For myself, I have ceased waiting
and withdrawn into the self. The future of the human race and the planet
ultimately no longer concerns me. I stand among the misty pines in my
high place and seek to lose myself in within the spirit of the cosmos,
come what may. I attempt to sublimate my consciousness among the spirits
of mountain, forest, and moon. To detonate this fragile human identity
and dissipate into the ten thousand myriad things. And rejecting utterly
the anti-natal- ism of Zappfe, Linkola, and Quinn, I will seek to guide
my children and their children down the path of the way. To whatever
extent the world can be saved, it can only be achieved within the soul
of the individual.
by Ramon Elani
âWe seem to move on a thin crust which may at any moment be rent by the
subterranean forces slumbering below.â
âFrom time immemorial the mistletoe has been the object of superstitious
veneration in Europe.â
âJames Frazer
Voy os pinos. I go to the pines. There is a hidden presence among the
trees there. It walks alongside me. Something I cannot see but feel in
the submerged parts of my soul. The dark lagoons of consciousness, where
strange fish swim and forgotten structures lie buried beneath algae and
dirt. Titanic beasts move beneath those waters with glacial slowness.
Shapes that blend and merge with each other. Mad, incomprehensible
struggles occur in those lightless deep places. A stirring upon the
fringes of awareness. A light fluttering in the bottomless caverns of
sleep. The Thing-Among-the-Pines whispers to me but it is my own voice.
Is it a dream? Or a memory?
Above the rocky cliffs, where millennia of waves have broken their
strength upon those fortresses of stone, stand the dolmen rising out of
the gloom of twilight. Fearsome monuments, mystic and dread. The fair
Iberian moon shines down on these relics of the people of the hill and
the forest. But I have seen the corridor through the pines that leads to
the great mound. The force that sleeps within stirs in its fitful
dreams. It has seen castles rise and fall. It has seen the great forests
torn down. It has seen the thousand rivers flow to the sea, bearing the
silt of ages. It has seen the wolf dancing among the lightning on frosty
peaks. And it will see many things more. Things forgotten, things
dreamed, things only partly remembered as consciousness slips beyond the
threshold. Is it night? Is it day? It is the moon, the moon and the
pines. Do I dream? Or do I remember?
It is upon the threshold between the two worlds that the gentle sounds
of Galician folk druids Sangre de Muerdago (âBlood of Mistletoeâ) dwell
and weave together ancient songs of the lost gods that once prowled lush
inlets and pine forests. The songs of those who now sleep beneath the
barrow and dance quietly under the moon. Since 2007, San- gre de
Muerdago have been evoking the haunting memories that wander among
unhewn stones and ruined castles on the Galician coast. Universally
acclaimed for their blend of medieval and contemporary folk traditions,
their latest LP Noite, continues to tell twilight stories of moss, mud,
and stone through the nickelharpa, hurdy-gurdy, and the celtic harp.
Having played almost 300 concerts in over 20 countries over the past
several years, Sangre de Muerdago has become one of the foremost voices
in the global neofolk movement. And fans of their recognizable haunting,
ethereal aesthetic will not be disappointed with this latest release.
Moving gracefully from gentle, somber, and contemplative moods to the
rousing, intoxicating, and ecstatic, Noite builds on the work Sangre de
Muerdago has done over their last three albums, split records, and EPs,
while also bringing a fresh sense of inspiration. Pablo Ursussonâs
otherworldly voice drifts through these songs like the mist descending
from the mountains, weaving its way through the pines. With
accompaniment by Asia Kindred Moore, Georg Borner, and Erik Heimans-
berg, Ursusson brings the listener on a rambling midnight journey
through the woods. There is a kind of selfdiscovery that can only be
achieved through the descent into darkness, a kind of knowing that only
shines by the light of the moon. Noite offers us a contemplation of this
dark knowing. There is sadness in these songs but it is of a sweet and
delicate kind, a stabbing at the heart occasioned by a potent memory.
The world we pass through now is the dew upon the blade of grass.
It exists in a moment of staggering beauty and pain before it vanishes
in the blazing truth of the sun. Sangre de Muerdago playfully reminds us
of the vastness that lies beneath our feet. A greater world, thickly
numinous, inhabited by the ten thousands things and spirits, vaster and
more true by far than the one we wander through blindly during our days
and nights of loneliness and confusion. This is music that calls us to
the groves, to the high places, to the ruins. It beckons us to follow
the image of the capering flute player, the Horned One and his skin of
wine, to leave behind the world of modernity and industrialism, a world
that seeks to bury the old gods and the Spirit of the Wild. But as we
know, buried things are no less potent, though they are entombed. A god
forgotten becomes a myth and in the dreams of night, myths rise from
their dusty slumber and stride boldly through meadows and woods. Noite
brings us to this dream-like realm, where the gods of the wild world
dance and sing around the bonfire, beneath the moon. It is music that
dances like the ceremonial flame.
Sangre de Muerdago Noite-LP/CD/
Digital, Out in Spring 2018
Neuropa, Musica MaxicaâLP
SMGS Records, Musica Maxicaâ CD & Digital
by Aragorn!
A new green anarchism wouldn't require words to describe it. It'd be as
simple as opening the door and saying, be here! Here, a place forever
hidden in the expansion of civilization, in the grousing about concrete
and wires, in the dissection of what exactly is wrong with... where
exactly? But a new (old) green anarchism would be located in one place
and one place only. A new green anarchism would be an anarchism of
infinite here-ness. Hello. Nice to meet you.
Words are put together just so. Into paragraphs and pages. Into rows and
columns. And for words to make sense they are organized by grammar. By
Strunk & White, by sentence diagrams, by slaps on the wrist from the
forever rulers. This discipline isnât part of the problem, it is the
problem. What I want to say has been disciplined into me. What I will
say to you has the rigor of the 1000 slaps it took for me to say it
correctly. The violence of grammar is that now I do it to myself, and
when I donât do it, it is only for a moment and Iâm aware of it the
entire time. Like the shy guy at an orgy.
Each issue of Black Seed could add to the new (old) GA, because the
parts lend themselves to infinite review. There are three parts:
unrecog- nizabilityâa basis in presence; here- nessâthis place called
Turtle Island; the metis, blurred, impure nature of life today. For this
issue weâll focus on recognizability.
I recall when I was trying to live in this world (instead of outside of
it) I went to a school, one I paid for, one filled with Brutalist blocks
of Real Live Learning. I took chemistry, I fell in love, but I was
alone. Largely this was because I was looking for a sign that others
were not giving.
Today it would be something else entirely. The kind of counter-cultural
signs I was looking for in the eighties are readily available today. It
is nothing to swing by Hot Topic on the way to campus and be seen. Iâm
talking about a different time, a time when Wikipedia didnât allow
people to easily calibrate themselves perfectly That was a time when
recogniz- ability was possible*. It was enough to understand that
Charles Hurwitz was evil and that the machinations of the Maxxam
corporation were going to destroy one of the last holy places left in
North America. What the kids today call wildness was an actual place. It
was called the Headwaters Forest Preserve and it was under attack. We
saw each other in a couple of old strummed songs and we went to warâa
war in which it seemed our bodies could possibly stop the machine.
By the time Judi Bari and Darryl Cherney were bombed, it wasnât possible
to believe this any more. The one weapon we had to fight the monster and
to stay clear of its horrors was dulled by overuse and un- suitabilityâa
sword against a tank works only in rare and very particular
circumstances.
But this is my story. Yours is probably different.
To put this in the now old-fashioned and tired war language of
anti-civilization discourse, how does the war against civilization turn
into the confused set of identifications-as-partici- pating in this war?
How come we are further removed from actually ending the reification,
separation, and the current order while at the same time having fiercer,
less-compromising, rhetoric?
The fundamentals are obvious, or should be to someone with a basic
radicalt education. At some point the world was divided into the takers
and the doers, the top and the bottom, the owners and the workers. From
our position as workers, this didnât seem like a preferable state of
affairs so we got organized. We found each other, we found our voice, we
named what was going on and what weâd prefer. We tried to make that
happen and basically failed.
At best we came to a kind of detente that is aggravating when calibrated
against how things should bet. But, for many, an 8 hour day was a fair
compromise to not living in the war-torn landscape of Pinkertons and our
bare naked divisions. If the choice is Total War or a peace that
embodies structural inequality, guess which won? After the victory of
liberal reforms we relaxed, smoked a joint, and divided into our
constituent parts.
Those who chose peace lost again when the takers got organized and used
our own divided selves as the very way to control us§. In our condition
itâs easy to diagnose the cause and impossible to know what the cure is.
Do you know anyone who is not infected?
This is not to say that many arenât trying. A large part of the fierce
rhetoric about the beautiful being that is me, and you, is that each
expression of it has a chance of appealing to another oppressed person.
Leftist math says that adding up all the pain will somehow equal
enoughâfor a movement, a new category of demands, a hip new slogan,
something real. But if what you want is a different world entirely, it
is clear that leftist math is wrong. Itâs probably always been wrong but
since the owners got organized it becomes easy to see leftist math as
the desperate attempt to create another cop inside our heads.
The new (old) green anarchy is another world that is impossible. It is
not possible to live without constraint when every day a new headline
blares excitement about a new enclosure. Whether itâs social media, a
fantastic ideology, or a movement heading towards a new law, our
attention is drawn to the productive energy of doing something.
Anything.
Turtle Island is here and not here. We both live there and have done
everything humanly possible to distance ourselves from this place we
live on. This disconnect is as fundamental as the body-mind split but
doesnât have a movement to express it. (Perhaps the New Age expression
of a new direction from Western pedagogy is a type of answer but itâs
always been too mired in personalities that directly benefit from its
not-rad- ical approach to difficult subjectsâ like capitalism.)
My effort, started last issue and continuing here, is to articulate this
impossible goal by way of a kind of negation. If we canât say, âthis is
what we are for,â we can only say what we are against. Stack up our
objections and climb them, reaching, for the sky, for the sun, for the
world out of reach. Our mouths cannot say words that do not exist. There
is no enunciation of what the beauty of not-this could be. Iâve never
seen it but I welcome you to join me in this sound and flow.
to an outside of abstractions represented by the state forms like band,
tribe, nation, and country. But also outside of the knowledge of genre
and team-sports. Prior to the Internet is also prior to the knowledge of
a type of division that has refined itself into an incapacity to meet
someone outside of their brands, signifiers, or disgust.
t Radical is a term Iâve been criticized for using that Iâd like to
reflect on for a paragraph or two. On the one hand every term to
describe someone informed by the same ideas that I have been is kind of
silly. On the other it is necessary. I can feel the hunger for its lack.
I wish anarchism or anarchy were enough, but they're not by a long shot.
For starters I disagree with about 80% of anarchists on just about
everything and many somethings I agree with far more (as a distracting
sidebar I mention those who are influenced by the SI who stopped
thinking after they criticized anarchists for being bureaucratic, as if
that were a unique characteristic).
So what to do? In my case Iâve picked a broad term, with its own
baggage, to say that I am part of a conversation that is bigger than the
10,000 people who might see Black Seed but not as large as Iâd like it
to be. There are some pre-conditions but the bar to entry is low. Letâs
call radical-the-word what it is, a speed- bump and not a reason to slow
down all that much.
$ The sweet anarchy of a lawless land dictated by no value but the one
we determine together.
§ The best description of this, to my taste, is in Adam Curtisâs
excellent documentary series The Century of the Self and especially the
episode titled âThere is a Policeman Inside All Our Heads; He Must Be
Destroyed.â
by Los hijos del Mencho (FracciĂłn anti-pirata)
Eco-extremists and aligned theorists writing in the English language
have contributed little regarding recent polemics against our Tendency.
This is a wise decision since, for those who hate us, our words only
inflame their hatred all the more and, while we donât mind being hated,
we would rather focus our energies elsewhere. Our enemies seem to thrive
on finding opponents they are unable to defeat (Nazis, the Republican
Party, civilization, etc.) so accumulating a few more enemies can make
it seem like they are getting somewhere., We neither need nor desire
their parasitic attention.
Unfortunately for us, aligned parties have asked us to respond, and to
that end we have produced this essay. Herein we seek to inform on
certain controversial topics that Anglophone readers may have missed in
an environment of social media and twenty-four hour distraction. We do
this both for those interested in what we write, but also for those who
hate us. If that much emotional investment is going to be placed in
events that occur outside of oneâs immediate sphere, it might as well be
for the right reasons.
We will primarily address the essay, âOf Indiscriminate Attacks & Wild
Reactions,â from the Olympia-based âedelweiss pirates.â We will also
touch on criticisms expressed in Black Seed 5, as well as in other
communiqués and call-outs issued in the last six months or so as needed.
Our aim is not to make ourselves, the Individualists Tending Toward the
Wild (ITS), eco-extremism or nihilist terrorism appear better than they
have been portrayed as this would be a foolâs errand, and not at all
honest. We donât fear being despised, and we understand that people want
to kill us. You should want to kill us, because you are our enemy, and
we donât even like ourselves that much. You can call us edgy but,
honestly, thatâs one of the nicer things you can say about us.
After the release of the 29th Communiqué of the Indiscriminate Group
Tending Toward the Wild (GITS) in May of last year and a cell of the
Individualists Tending Toward the Wild (ITS) claiming responsibility for
homicides and the attempted bombing of the National Autonomous
University of Mexico (UNAM), the international insurrectionary anarchist
community, as well as the social anarchist Scott Campbell, have issued
counter-communiqué after counter-communiqué opposing eco-extremism, and
ITS in particular. Most of these were rather short until the release of
a long 50 page essay on the Anarchist Library website and later
Anarchist News entitled, âOf Indiscriminate Attacks & Wild Reactions: An
Anti-civ Anarchist Engages with ITS and Atassa, Their Defenders and
Their False Critics.â (Henceforth, OIAWR) Upon first examination (at
least to the uninformed reader) the essay seemed rather comprehensive
and well-prepared. However, due to the number of targets it attempts to
hit as seen in its lengthy title, engagement with eco-extremists texts
and rhetoric is rather minimal within the development of the essay. Most
of the accusations are thus inaccurate and a product of the author(s)â
rather active imagination when it comes to the current political
situation.
The author(s)â main claims against their opponents can be summarized in
the following points:
primarily targets women and societyâs most helpless;
circles;
for spreading this pro-rape misogynist rhetoric in the anarchist
community in the United States due to an irresponsible drive to stir up
conversation for its own sake;
forces that seek to give comfort to the enemy as an unwitting Fifth
Column within the fight against oppression and domination.
We will address each accusation in what follows.
After an introductory section, OIAWR enters into a tendentious reading
of two central essays of the first issue of the journal, Atassa:
Readings in Eco-Extremism. Generally, the author(s)â method of reading
could best be termed as a âhermeneutic of suspicionâ. Ramon Elaniâs
essay, âReturn of the Warriorâ, is denigrated as a bad reading of a
questionable author, Pierre Clastres, with judgments made against the
cited scholarship that are little better than unwarranted ad hominem:
In addition to whatever patriarchy was found on his travels, itâs fairly
obvious in reading Clastres that he himself is some kind of male
chauvinist, in the good French intellectual style, who occasionally
starts blathering on about the ideas of gender and sexuality that he
supposedly locates in the cosmology and customs of the people with whom
he lived, but without ever really offering the reader any reason to
believe that this is how these people understand themselves, or that any
of their material practices confirm the sexism Clastres seems so eager
to confirm[1]
Citation needed but of course none is forthcoming. In the
anarcho-primitivist social justice world of the edelweiss pirates, an
accusation is all that is needed to prove guilt, and then one moves on
to the next slander. Anything that conforms to their ânecessaryâ
morality, inherited from Christianity, is a primordial re-wilded desire
for egalitarianism, and everything that doesnât is a plot by bad
misogynist colonizer anthropologists, or something to that effect:
I canât think of any self-interested or dubious motive for why these
observers would remark with horror, can you? Maybe itâs because they had
a vested interest in making indigenous peoples look like warlike apes to
justify their civilizing colonial ventures. Maybe underlying that was a
perceptual bias, that spiritual illness that inheres in the very culture
we claim to be trying to fight.
OIAWR hits its stride with the accusation that in describing the crime
of rape in primitive warfare, women as spoils of war, Elani endorses
this behavior. Again, the pirates accuse:
After reiterating that primitive war is a means of preventing radical
inequality, we learn that âThis is the complexity of primitive society:
there are enemies and there are allies [...] Such alliances are created
and maintained primarily through the exchange of women, who are also
accumulated as spoils of war. This paradox, the exchange of women in
securing alliances and the capture of women in war, illustrates, for
Clastres the disdain toward exchange economy. Why should we trade for
women when we can simply go get some for ourselves: âthe risk [of war]
is considerable (injury, death) but so are the benefits: they are total,
the women are free.â
If these bits of pedagogy and rape culture sound suspiciously rather
like modern compulsions, imperatives, and fantasies to the
critically-minded reader, you should know that Elani agrees with you...
We will leave Elaniâs essay for now and turn to the piratesâ reading of
the titular essay of the journal, Abe Cabreraâs âAtassa: Lessons of the
Creek War (1813-1814)â. In their brief treatment of this essay (which
establishes, along with Elaniâs contribution, the putative âpro-rapeâ
tenor of the project), they focus on one scene of the lengthy essay: the
massacre of the white inhabitants of Fort Mims by the Red Stick Creeks:
The section of the essay that follows shortly on the heels of this
quotation is âThe Massacre at Fort Mims as Re-Wilding,â in which one of
the bloodiest attacks of the Creeks is related. Cabrera is certain to
assure us: âWhat followed was a slaughter of exceptional brutality, but
well in keeping with the ethos of Creek vengeance in war,â and quotes a
number of white His-storians and anthropologists (who seemingly donât
all agree on the precise extent to which this behavior was precedented
among the Creek) about the âpurifying blazeâ that would now rid the
nation of the apostate Creeks. Throughout the piece, Cabrera is certain
to demarcate the concepts and the actions that are admirable and in
keeping with an ancient wisdom. This mostly takes the form of a kind of
inverted Noble Savage proposition that always and in all cases upholds
whatever brutality was done by the Creeks of 200 years ago and posits
such acts and principles as eternal, salutary, and Wild.
When Cabrera arrives at discussing the fate of the women at Fort Mims,
his laudatory tone and narrative is utterly unbroken. With an incipient
giddiness consonant with everything heâs written up to now, he quotes at
length about the gratuitous mass rape that took place at Fort Mims. Not
a word of contextualization of the horrors of civilized war, or of war
at all, is proffered. After this-- his crown-jewel block quotationâhe
begins the next paragraph, âFar from being acts of gratuitous or
extraordinary violence, what occurred at Fort Mims was well within the
cultural and spiritual logic of traditional Creek culture.â To prove his
point, he quotes another white historian at length.
Here is the ideological underpinning being offered by their US boosters
for the femicidal actions claimed by ITS. Here is the âindiscriminate
attackâ being refined, in print as in thought. Here is
Rape-as-Re-Wilding.
Again, we must point out here the âhermeneutic of suspicionâ. In spite
of being an essay that aims to be well-documented, the pirates feel that
they can discredit all of the âHis-storiansâ and white scholars without
it seems having done any research of their own, or citing any
counter-narratives describing the same events. But here it is worth
citing in full the passage that so scandalized the authors of OIAWR:
A special fate was reserved for the women. The Indians stripped them
naked, scalped both head and nether parts, then raped some with fence
rails and clubbed all to death like small game. Those unfortunate enough
to be pregnant had their bellies slit open. Then the glistening fetus
was snatched out, cord still attached, and laid, still living, carefully
by the motherâs side in horrible tableauxâin the case of Mrs.
Summerlinâs twins, on both sides of her. The indomitable Nancy Bailey
met a similar end. When approached by an Indian who asked who her family
was, she reportedly pointed to a body sprawled nearby and boldly
exclaimed, âI am the sister of that great man you have murdered there.â
At which the enraged Indians clubbed her to the ground, slit open her
belly, yanked out her intestines, and threw them onto the ground around
her.
While a gruesome sight to be sure, this was not the only atrocity that
the Red Sticks committed at Fort Mims. Right above the cited text, the
âAtassaâ author describes a small boy being clubbed to death and bodies
being dismembered and held aloft as trophies of war, a custom among some
of the Shawnee warriors present at the massacre. One wonders why child
murder and dismemberment left the pirates so unfazed, but brutal rapes
with fence rails were a bridge too far.
And of course, the âwhite historianâ cited at length after this passage
appears to be nothing but an exploiter who wants to spread calumny and
detraction against poor indigenous people, because that is the only
reason white His-torians exist.
Dr. Shuck-Hall has directed [Christopher Newport Universityâs] public
history program for almost a decade. Her book-length analyses of
Southeastern Indians were published by both the University of Nebraska
Press and the University of Oklahoma Press. She assisted tribal
advocates to secure claims to ancestral lands, and undertook museum
curatorial assignments for Southeastern Indian tribes.[2]
It appears here that the edelweiss pirates were too preoccupied with
their invective to do a simple Google search, but we suppose thatâs
forgivable if the object of oneâs polemic is so vile and lacking in
human decency.
One wonders what the pirates think indigenous warfare was actually like,
uninformed by Christian admonitions to âturn the other cheekâ (which
Christian soldiers did not even follow) and where scalping and torturous
death were widely reported in the context of war. The Creeks were a
remnant of the Mississippian cultures, and in places like Cahokia human
sacrifices are widely believed to have taken place. It is odd that the
pirates did not blame agriculture and sedentism for all of the bad
things done at Fort Mims like every other primitivist. It is rather
foolish then to cast doubt on heavily documented historical events,
especially if one presents no counter-narrative in its place.
And Abe Cabrera isnât white. One could state that white authors are
âcleansedâ of their whiteness if he cites them.
We leave the piratesâ yellow journalist exegesis and lay our cards on
the table. First and foremost, eco-extremists donât have any
prescriptive counsels for any human at all in our context. None. We
donât care if people rape, murder, kill, commit infanticide, etc. etc.
We do not believe that condemning behaviors, issuing trigger or content
warnings, or admonitions from hindsight are of any use, or even
desirable. Ramon Elani and Abe Cabreraâs matter-of-fact descriptions of
previous atrocities are neither âlaudatoryâ nor âsalutaryâ. Some
confusion might lie in the fact that they feel no need to judge two
hundred year old events through the prism of modern egalitarianism or
morality. Atassa is no more a âpro-rapeâ journal than it is a
âpro-infanticideâ or âpro-horse theftâ journal, as these are also crimes
described in its pages. One could here suspect that mentioning ârapeâ
hits the âright buttons,â and is the piratesâ attempt to jump on the
âfake newsâ bandwagon of 2017. In this case, accuracy suffers when
marketing is oneâs ultimate goal.
If the pirates had so desired, they could have easily found other
damning evidence of eco-extremism being soft on sexual violence. Here we
will cite one example as the pirates do not seem to have performed even
cursory research on the topic. It comes from a work during the Wild
Reaction phase of eco-extremism called, âThey took their time already:
Wild Reaction responds to Destroy the Prisonsâ:
âBefore this comment RS [Wild Reaction] answers that if DP take
themselves for community connoisseurs, we hope they know that the people
of the hills in Mexico, since hundreds of years ago, are used to
lifestyles that are frowned upon by the city dwellers sick with Western
culture, certain ways of life that are perceived as âbrutalâ. For
example, to exchange a woman for a cow or a swine, is common among
natives, it is part of their customs, their way of life, and is
something normal, while for Western moralists (including some
anarchists) it is something unworthy, they get all worked up and cry to
the heavens when they hear about this. Generally anarchists of the
feminist type are those who most make a scandal about it. RS doesnât see
it as a bad thing, RS respects the development and customs of the
country people, this is why we express ourselves in favor of power
relations in such communities because it is not our concern to try and
change them. We emphasize, it is not that we are âmachistasâ but
honestly we donât set ourselves against this kind of native attitudes.
This is what we think, even though it will infuriate the anarchists that
we talk in this way, oh well.â[3]
There is absolutely nothing prescriptive about eco-extremism. There is
only an extreme pessimism concerning human thought and action, so it is
no surprise to us if some indios in the hills of Mexico still give away
their daughters for the price of a cow. We do not expect humans to be
just or reasonable in this or any other context. Eco-extremism has no
inclination to tell uncivilized societies how they should behave, we
donât believe in âThe Fall,â good guys vs. bad guys, etc. If that sort
of talk was ever appropriate, it isnât anymore. We have no inclination
to be Lawgivers to this or any other society, past or present. Our
pursuit is attack on this society, this reality, and we do not feel the
need to go back two-hundred years to call out injustices that most
people have forgotten.
Do eco-extremists then advocate that women simply accept their rapes? To
the extent that we care about those in affinity, there are two ideas at
play here: 1. To renounce the idea that women (or anyone else) are
victims who need to be protected by hyper-civilized society and 2. That
all vengeance and retribution be carried out amorally and
individualistically, as âsocietal solutionsâ and shaming are mere
frauds. As some female eco-extremists have stated (yes, they exist):
The Western view is for one to look upon oneself as a woman as a victim
of everyone and everything. It forces you to focus on dumb struggles
which only distract from the true problem: Civilization. The system
benefits when we look for the guilty amongst ourselves, and when we turn
our anger on men, immigrants, the justice system, the state, the
speciesists, etc. Thus, going along with all of the ephemeral struggles
makes us part of the herd, but of a black herd: the supposedly ârebelâ
one, which one realizes is not even the case.
I have not wanted to remain thus. I have accepted my existence as a
woman, and I have declared war without quarter on civilization, and not
on a model of a system of domination called âpatriarchyâ. The
eco-extremism that I defend is not focused on gender. I have wounded
both men and women equally since this war is against civilization as a
whole. Though the gender of the target is not important, at the same
time I realize that as an individualist my condition as a woman in what
I have done. Maybe I donât recognize it publicly for strategic reasons,
but I do with those in affinity.[4]
She acknowledges, at least tacitly, the role the subjugation of women
played in the emergence of civilization. The point is that it is no
longer important, or rather, it would be important if one expects a
âbetterâ society to emerge out of the rubble of the current
hyper-civilized techno-industrial civilization. As we donât expect this,
and as we think it is absurd to try to engineer a society based on
spotty anthropological information, talking about abolishing patriarchy
is about as useful as talking about terraforming the Moon or colonizing
Mars. We will not waste our energy trying to achieve it.
Is there an eco-extremist approach to rape in particular? One
eco-extremist spoke on the topic on an Internet radio program called,
âRadio Primateâ. At around the forty-five minute mark, he stated
something along the lines of the following:
âIf I say that I oppose rape, what good would it do?... If someone, even
if they are old or young, a neighbor, relative, etc. raped you, instead
of condemning rape, or victimizing yourself, why donât you look for that
person, and in an intelligent manner, get a knife, or even a gun, look
that person in the eye, and, again, in an intelligent manner, kill them.
Why are we going to declare ourselves in favor of or in opposition to
civilizing activities? If someone did something like that to you, take
justice into your own hands. Do what has to be done and thatâs it⊠If
you, individualist, were a victim of this sort of civilizing activity,
look for the person who harmed you and make them pay, so that their
blood is splattered everywhere and your hands are stained with their
blood. And be happy that you did it⊠and donât be ashamed. When youâre
doing it, enjoy it, without regrets, your will be doneâŠâ[5]
One might say thatâs âableistâ or psychopathic, we cannot imagine
anything more cathartic. What good are endless analyses of the past and
present versus vengeance in the here and now?
The ârape apologistâ accusation is just a marketing ploy. The
eco-extremist, echoing an anarchist of yesteryear, could retort that
they could never be rape apologists because they are too busy advocating
for (and working for, in their own way) the extinction of the human
species. They are innocent of that minor charge as they are busy working
on a greater project (even if, admittedly, they could never bring it
about themselves).
Of course, to paraphrase Joseph Stalin, one rape is a tragedy, and the
extinction of the human race is merely a statistic.
That accusation refuted, we move on.
This is somewhat related to rape, but deserving of its own section. The
premise is that misanthropy is merely a cover for oppressing the most
vulnerable and downtrodden sector of society, insinuating that ITS and
other eco-extremists target women and oppressed people
disproportionately. We quote the pirates:
Why is it so often that those who claim to be âpessimistic about all
human endeavorsâ seem bound to express this alleged pessimism most
potently as a hatred of women? One wonders at how deeply the misogyny
runs in those for whom rape is not part of the reason for their
pessimism, their alleged misanthropy, but instead is their stock
response to the despair, a check in their own plus column, the form
taken by their revenge upon âthe world.â
Itâs not just that they claim to hate humans but never kill themselves
or each other. Itâs not just that they dress up âthe indiscriminate
attackâ in the clothes of a serious theoretical proposition as cover for
the fact that they increasingly only attack women, faggots and pussies.
Itâs not only that they profess their hatred for anarchists while
eagerly claiming a lineage with Severino Di Giovanni, the Italian
anarchist and anti-fascist transplant to Argentina of a century ago, who
indeed placed bombs with little regard for the possibility of collateral
damage, but never randomly, always targeting the powerful.
And again:
Meanwhile, ITS is so bad at war, so bad at being the nomadic, cannibal
warriors of their own deranged imaginations that all they can muster is
collateral damage, the âindiscriminate attack,â being their attempt to
maintain their aura or nimbus of being the Most Down while actually
camouflaging their own letting off the hook of those most responsible
(impotence may be to embarrassing of a word to admit). To call their
recent claims emblematic of an attack on low-hanging fruit may be
understatement to the point of absurdity, an insult added to the injury
done to their ârandomâ targets.
And again:
Hyper-masculinized and/or indiscriminate violence, exalted as means and
end, coupled with a mythic spiritual ideal is in line with
proto-fascism, especially that of ex-anarchists who take their aim
primarily or exclusively at "reds," egalitarians, queers, women, etc.
This one is pretty easy to address. We list here all of the attacks by
ITS in the last calendar year (2017) and tally how many women, âfaggotsâ
etc. theyâve killed or injured. We can then assess how âmisogynistâ and
âbad at warâ they are.
Landerretche, one of the largest mining companies in the world, in
Santiago, Chile. He suffered minor injuries to his hands due to the
trajectory of the blast, though his mother-in-law, maid, and three year
old daughter were also in the room, though uninjured.
company in Torreon, Mexico. No one was injured.
Mexico. No injuries.
Technological Institute of Advanced Studies, Luis Arturo Torres Garcia.
Mexico. No known injuries.
park bench in Torreon, Mexico. A girl found it, it exploded, but the
media reported that no one was injured.
and female), the placing of an explosive device at the National
Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), and the death of Lesvy Berlin
Osorio.
which did not explode.
Mexico. The sacristan of the church picked it up and it exploded,
wounding him.
bench in Torreon, Mexico. It is not known what happened to the envelope.
Mexico State, Mexico. No known injuries.
State. No known injuries.
Santiago, Chile, which started a fire and consumed the vehicle. No known
injuries.
astronomy building at the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina,
addressed to the director of that department, Dr. Gloria Dubner. The
bomb was found and disposed of by the bomb squad. No known injuries.
State, Mexico. No known injuries.
St. Jude statue in the state of Queretaro in Mexico.
Santiago, Chile. No known injuries.
lines in the state of Nuevo Leon in Mexico.
major processing center in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Two male workers
sustained minor injuries.
So let us break down the total deaths, injuries, etc. that ITS has
claimed responsibility for and see if they are targeting (in the
piratesâ words) âwomen, faggots, and pussiesâ. Now, I donât see any hate
crimes against homosexuals here, so thatâs off the list. Women? Of
course, there is the Great Martyr Lesvy Berlin Osorio of UNAM fame
(whose boyfriend is being tried for her murder, just for everyoneâs
general information), but also the female hiker who no one talks about
(Because she was hiking with her boyfriend who was also killed? What
sort of headline-grabber is that?) Thatâs two women, versus the
university administrator, the male hiker, and the two Catholic male
pilgrims. Add to that the CODELCO chief (where the bomb exploded in his
kitchen) and the maimed Catholic sacristan, and we still donât see a war
on women. There is the bomb sent to Dr. Dubner, but was she off-limits
for being a woman, or fair game due to her position within the
university? And the poor random girl who picked up the envelope. Still,
no misogynist war in sight.
What we do see, overall, is a war against companies and infrastructure
(CEOs, university administrators, construction equipment,
infrastructure, vehicles, etc.) as well as against such institutions as
the Catholic Church (Have anarchists buried the hatchet with the Papists
yet? We must have not gotten the memo.) While the ârandom attacksâ
against the âmost vulnerableâ makes a great talking point for enemies
and âfrenemiesâ of eco-extremism alike, thatâs clearly not what is going
on here. Most of the eco-extremistâs targets are also being attacked by
insurrectionary anarchists in the same regions of the world, only the
methodology is different.[6] Any attack that eco-extremists carry out
requires planning, scoping out the location, and exceptional measures so
as to not get caught. For the most part, their targets are carefully
selected not out of any moral considerations, but merely because of
logistics. The two major considerations are âCan I do it?â and âCan I
get away with it?â
But what of the poor âvulnerableâ people who were attacked or died?
Lesvy Berlin was walking in front of the engineering department of the
university. Perhaps their intention was to leave a dead body in front of
a center of techno-industrial progress: hardly a random choice of venue.
The two hikers: well, they explain themselves there, and we will discuss
this below. The vice-rector: do I really have to describe that one to
anarchists? And the head of a mining company? How about the sacristan
and the two pilgrims carrying a statue? So Catholics are now off limits
to anarchists, I suppose. Durruti would be proud of todayâs
insurrectionaries for sticking up for the poor innocent believers.
So these attacks and casualties are far from ârandomâ. They are most
definitely not leaving the powerful alone, but they arenât sparing the
âvulnerableâ either (whose complacency keeps the âpowerfulâ in power).
It is tempting to make sloppy generalizations due to deeply felt
antagonism, but this feeling does not make these generalizations
accurate.
Individualist eco-extremism refuses to âcall-outâ or mandate a
particular action. If one person wants to sabotage some power lines, and
they can get away with it, fine, that is their individual prerogative.
If someone wants to randomly kill someone, as enemies of the human race,
eco-extremists would never oppose or condemn that. There are no
coordinated attacks, no meetings where individualists hash out and have
struggle sessions about âcorrect strategyâ. The correct strategy is:
will someone get hurt or killed; will something be destroyed; and can I
get away with it? Itâs that simple. If you donât think X is a good idea,
do Y instead.
So with the true nature of eco-extremist actions in the recent past
established, we can move on to the next accusation.
This accusation is true. I will let Scott Campbell summarize:
OkupaChe is an autonomous space for a variety of collectives and
individuals that for years has been under threat and attacks from the
police and university administration. On December 14, after a growing
push for the eviction of the okupa, there was to be a large student
assembly with OkupaChe as the first item on the agenda. At some point
during the night before the assembly, an explosive device was left
outside the doorway of the auditorium. It was described as a package
made up of flammable material and nails, powerful enough to have started
a fire and wounded people at the space as well as passers-by. Initially
thought to be part of the push to evict OkupaChe, in March an ITS group
mentioned ïżœïżœïżœan annoying device that we left in the mousetrap called che.â
In the more recent statement, ITS elaborates further, regurgitating
without irony the governmentâs talking points about the space:
[D]id you know that one of our groups placed a bomb at the âChe Squatâ?
That was done mainly because they were defaming us and we shit on those
anarcho-rock star ex-con politicians and drug addicts who hang out
there, because the auditorium is supposedly so legendary: a symbol of
âautonomyâ and the âcombativeâ student movement of the â90âs.
So along with their tirades and death threats against individual
anarchists, one can see that they have actually attempted to kill or
injure anarchists en masse and cause damage to anarchist spaces. In
preparation for this article, I reached out to anarchists in Mexico to
attempt to document other ITS threats. They indicated that numerous
threats from ITS have been directed against anarchist individuals and
projects, but no one felt comfortable going on the record.[7]
In replying to Mexican anarchists in particular, ITS wrote the following
in its Thirty-Third Communiqué:
We ask ourselves, are not the people who the federal government sent to
infiltrate your anarchist spaces more important than ITS, who arenât in
those spaces? And speaking of, did you know that one of our groups
placed a bomb at the âChe Squatâ? That was done mainly because they were
defaming us and we shit on those anarcho-rock star ex-con politicians
and drug addicts who hang out there, because the auditorium is
supposedly so legendary: a symbol of âautonomyâ and the âcombativeâ
student movement of the â90âs. Now itâs just a den of slimy journalists,
a place where the Cisen and Mexico City Investigative Police plant their
informers to gather information no matter how irrelevant. From there the
press has gathered names, nicknames, photos, addresses, etc. of
âcomradesâ in 2014 after various âslaps,â from there you get the Pegasus
malware that infected the personal cellphones of anarchists that year
and at that site. Let it be noted that we are not saying this to portray
ourselves as âdefenders of anarchists,â of course not, that ITS group
placed the bomb at that squat because inside was a person who was trying
to pass himself off as one of us. He foolishly deceived a bunch of young
anarchists and dazzled them with his guns, with his threats, his made-up
stories, and supposed connections with us to gain popularity and be
âthat guyâ. With that bomb we got him out of the scene and we started to
hunt him. Only with the help of anarchists who he had deceived (who you
should try to âeliminateâ instead of posturing as the ânew people who
will deal with ITS,â which is apparently now in style). That person
returned to his police barracks and we lost track of him. This isnât a
lie, you can investigate it with your sources and you will see that itâs
not part of our âpathological lying.â Ha![8]
Since this event, there has been much back and forth, mostly one sided
in terms of actual harm done against either side. In the 39th
Communiqué, ITS in Chile stated that it tipped off the family of a
person murdered by the anarchists some years back, apparently the victim
of a botched incendiary attack:
So now that it is all the style to threaten an anarchist war against the
Eco-extremist Mafia, snitching included, we gave some clues about these
nuns to the friends and family (some of them criminals) of Sergio
Landskron, so that theyâll know who to shoot and stab to get even.
Theyâre looking in freed squats around the site of the indiscriminate
attack and theyâll know who took their son-uncle-brother from them.
Theyâre squats full of shitheads who have gotten out of the explosives
game because of this anarcho-Christian sin, but we know that they have
this hidden sin on their chest and it wonât be forgotten anytime soon.
Do the moralists consider this snitching too? Itâs all the same to us,
itâs not for nothing that we are egoists, criminals, and amoral. But let
it be known, what we have just stated is just one demonstration that we
know quite well those behind certain things, we know where the campaign
in Chile against eco-extremism comes from. We thus state that if they
continue with this pathetic campaign they shouldnât be surprised when we
respond.[9]
Eco-extremists have also insinuated that there is a link between the
beating of an anarchist in the University City in Mexico City and ITS,
though no direct responsibility is taken for this attack. In the 44th
Communiqué, which takes responsibility for the destruction of an
electrical tower, ITS mentions this most recent violent incident against
an anarchist, ITS explains:
These kids, have they forgotten from where anarchist groups in Mexico
have gotten their explosives from 2015 onward? If they forgot, we remind
them than in many cases these explosives have been acquired from the
aforementioned eco-extremists with the intent of causing more
destruction without regard for the political differences that divide us.
We arenât going to name those groups with âanti-authoritarianâ leanings
that have bought explosives from our contacts so that they wouldnât have
to put their asses on the line. They know full well who they are. Why is
it that (with the exception of old insurrectionary groups) none of these
ânewâ groups of anarchists say shit against the eco-extremists?[10]
Here we recall that, while the initial polemic against ITS by old
members of the FAI / CCF in Mexico issued a vigorous condemnation, it
did not deny a former collaboration:
Although ITS were one of the few clusters with which we did not directly
coordinate when undertaking joint actions, we were in solidarity with
them, in the same way that some of the comrades that made up our
affinity groups obtained monetary resources for them to solve specific
difficulties when requested. That has been (and is) the basis of
practical co-ordination between the new anarchic insurrectionalism and
eco-anarchism.[11]
To think that there is an absolute wall between anarchists and
eco-extremists in the countries where eco-extremists operate is a bit
silly, especially since overlap between these groups has been
documented.[12] In places of relative peace and legality (i.e. most of
the places from where condemnations of eco-extremism come), people can
afford to morally pick sides according to unsullied principles. In the
realm of illegality and violence, oneâs allies and enemies are not as
clear. We are speculating of course. To expect that people involved in
that way of life will take as authoritative the words of anarchists far
away in comfortable situations seems a bit delusional, especially if
just for the crime of planting a bomb at an âanarchistâ squat named
after Che Guevara (an authoritarian Marxist). And as for subsequent
actions, we are not sure what anarchists expect from the eco-extremists:
that they are supposed to treat them with kid gloves because theyâre
âcomradesâ? The anarchists have already made clear that this isnât the
case, so they shouldnât be surprised when people who like attacking
human beings start attacking them.
To us it seems that a particular group of âThird Worldâ anarchists are
asking âFirst Worldâ anarchists to come to their rescue. An interesting
spectacle but we donât see how this goes anywhere. This is a family feud
and not one side deciding to âgo fascistâ. Perhaps some anarchists on
the ground canât afford to be as moral as Scott Campbell, the pirates,
the veterans of the CCF, or others. We end this section with an excerpt
from an eco-extremist text entitled, âThe Anarchist Mythâ:
Who knows, maybe new generations of anarchists will know how to turn
this decadence around and take other paths, more dangerous for the
existent. We donât know one way or the other and, contrary to what many
people think, we would be glad if this happened since more tension, more
attacks, more bombings and fires, assassinations and alterations of
normality of any kind; in short, extremist and destructive criminal
activity (of whatever kind) adds chaos and destabilization to a
declining civilization.[13]
In order to proceed further, we have to address the red herring of âITS
Before the 29th CommuniquĂ©â vs. âITS After the 29th CommuniquĂ©â. Like
most hyper-civilized, even those interested in eco-extremism had a hard
time moving past the death and destruction reported in that communiqué
and their significance. There was no schism in these events, and if one
is perceived, it was due mainly to the difference in rhetoric /
reasoning behind the actions as reported in that communiqué. To give a
more faithful interpretation of events, we will of course have to enter
the realm of speculation, but we think the following is a more accurate
interpretation of events.
In addressing the 29th Communiqué, we must keep in mind that
eco-extremism is not a doctrine or even an ideology. It is a tendency:
that means that it mainly indicates the inclinations of its adherents
and not their actual positions. For example, eco-extremists have been
characterized as âreligious fundamentalists,â when certain members of
the Tendency have been explicit that they do NOT have any religious
beliefs or spiritual practices.[14] The nihilist terrorist tendency in
Europe does not seem to have any religious inclinations at all, or even
explicitly ecological ones for that matter. This is a broad tent, but
instead of an ideological position holding these groups and individuals
together, the binding position is one of attack: violent,
indiscriminate, and misanthropic. Beyond that, it is up to each
eco-extremist / nihilist individualist to determine their reasons for
doing things.
In that sense, the 29th CommuniquĂ© does not come from the âmainstreamâ
of eco-extremism, at least in Latin America where it is most active.
Though co-signed by an ITS cell, the main author of the communiqué was
the Grupo Indiscriminado Tendiendo a lo Salvaje (GITS), the
Indiscriminate Group Tending Toward the Wild. While it is safe to assume
that there is a solid strategic union between ITS and GITS, their
reasoning and actions have been somewhat different, as have been their
results.
GITS surfaced first last year as the GrupĂșsculo Indiscriminado or
Indiscriminate Faction that claimed responsibility in early 2016 for the
murder of a computer science student in Mexico State. The police caught
the supposed assailants of this attack and sentenced them in 2017,
though the Indiscriminate Faction stated that they were the real
culprits.[15] They were also part of coordinated actions with ITS in
2016 and early 2017, including bombings and sabotaging a rail system in
Mexico State. In the 18th Communiqué, they issued the following ominous
threat:
Weâd like to state to all those people who are attracted by ânatural
beautyâ that you too are in our sights. Just like the list of
scientists, the list of âforest loversâ who we will attack is quite
long. Donât be surprised if one day while youâre out camping the âDevilâ
shows up. This time you wonât be offered as a sacrifice, youâll just be
fertilizer for the trees. âThe coyotes descended from the mountain, now
they return to them.â[16]
In a communiqué in March 2017, the Indiscriminate Faction announced its
merger with an ITS group to form GITS. In this communiqué, they took an
explicitly extinctionist line regarding humans, renouncing terms such as
âwild natureâ and making explicit that their reasons for omnicidal
attack were completely secular:
Our position now is to attack the human being, killing and mutilating,
now that the human being is the principal culprit for the changes that
Planet Earth has suffered. Among these are the changes in the
biogeochemical cycles that the planet has suffered in the last few
years. These include cycles of N, P, C, CH4, H2O. We donât deny that the
whole system is in constant change but this change has accelerated
considerably after the Industrial Revolution (we donât have to go into
detail here, whoever wants can study this, whoever doesnât can call us
crazy.) Why do we say this? Many leftists, ecologists, anarchists,
hipsters, pseudo-intellectuals, and the rest spit out the same thing:
âthe human feels like god in modifying natural systems.â We speak here
of the use of GMOs, which industry paints a rosy picture of. âThey do it
for the good of humanity,â so that there can be better quality, more
productivity, where they canât produce or there is a lack of production
of this or that crop. So why is it so bad to isolate a specific protein
in âXâ species and put in a bacteria (Thermophilus aquaticus) to
synthesize the protein? At the end of the day it doesnât seem too âbad,â
since the human being consumes proteins, synthesizes proteins, and
requires essential amino acids. Maybe the use of GMOs isnât so bad to
additionally benefit âXâ species⊠Wait, what about the biogeochemical
cycle of N? What about the nitrates and nitrites of the Earth? You
already have an example of how the biogeochemical cycle is altered and
the consequences that come with it. Anyone with knowledge of the above
would tell us weâre right. They would stoop down and say that we
(humans) are a danger for the Planet Earth. Others will call us crazy.
But the changes are there, more evident than ever. Some hope that
so-called âwild natureâ will end it all, others hope to enjoy life,
others struggle for equality of the human being, and the vast majority
lives as a mass on the planetâŠ[17]
While this was the first explicitly extinctionist text in the
eco-extremist canon, the position has been adopted by most in the
Tendency as far as we can tell. Nevertheless, few eco-extremist groups
are keen on scientific reasoning, and some even criticize it.
A couple of months after the release of the 18th Communiqué the murders
of the two hikers and Lesvy Berlin Osorio took place, as well an
attempted bombing of the UNAM. At the risk of satisfying no one, we will
point out a few things:
the beginning of the essay;
months earlier, so that might make the story of GITS âsettlingâ for the
hikers instead of illegal loggers not as plausible;
afterthought at the end of the communiqué.
This is not to say that the communiqué is not telling the truth, but
Berlin Osorioâs boyfriend was arrested for her murder and is currently
being tried for it[18] (as was the case with computer science student).
Again, we do not know for sure, but these are the only two actions that
an eco-extremist group has taken responsibility for internationally
where others were caught and charged with the crimes. (It should be
pointed out that the murder of the hikers remains unsolved.)
What unsettled many about the 29th Communiqué was its randomness and
seemingly absurd justifications for the discussed actions. We should
remember that the groups that carried out these attacks envisioned them
well in advance, and the venues were not at all random. Also, in
comparison with all of the other eco-extremist actions in 2017, these
remain a bit of an outlier. Most other attacks have been against
biotechnologists, executives, academics, etc. There have also been a
disproportionate number of attacks on the Catholic Church and its
faithful. As we saw above, to think that the 29th Communiqué was some
sort of âwatershedâ moment does not conform to the character of most
attacks carried out in the last calendar year.
Eco-extremism haunted the latest issue of the LBC paper, Black Seed,
published last year. While there were some articles that mentioned
eco-extremist themes in a positive light and would not have been
entirely out of place in Atassa or similar publications ( with honorable
mentions to âMurder of the Civilizedâ and the âErotic Life of Stonesâ),
there are two articles in particular that were explicitly critical of
eco-extremism, namely Bellamy Fitzpatricksâ âRevolutionary Dissonance:
Why Eco-extremism Matters for Those Who Most Hate It,â and
âEco-extremism or Extinctionismâ by John Jacobi. While OIAWR offered its
own critique of Black Seed, we will ignore it in this section because
their criticism amounted to little more than upbraiding the Black Seed
writers for not being moral enough in their critiques.
Fitzpatrickâs article was balanced in places, but its critique seems to
be little more than nihilist one-upmanship. Also, in spite of having
footnotes, his reading of eco-extremist texts is careless to the point
of negligence. For example, his main critical section is entitled,
âAjajemaâs Holy Warriors,â and later in his essay he characterizes the
events of the 29th CommuniquĂ© as ââsociopathicâ people who have killed
hikers and an intoxicated woman in the name of an unfamiliar, long-dead
god.â Only, as we have seen above, that is NOT why GITS allegedly killed
those people. Their reasoning is actually more along the lines of his
own when he speaks of cyanobacteria. Indeed, there have been
eco-extremists or individualists who have been explicit about their own
lack of religious motivations in carrying out their attacks:
Here in Europe there are also groups of nihilist terrorists,
individualistic criminals and extremist misanthropes who are alive and
kicking, and we remind you again that some of these groups were until a
while ago close to you and your rotten environment, we know who is who
and where they hang out each other, violence and the attack for us is
not something new, but a practice that has become an extension of our
own being, since it has been part of our life for years already⊠we do
not have âpagan godsâ what we have are weapons, explosives and
information⊠So watch your words, your internet bravery can be expensive
in real life.[19]
So alright, maybe that is a minor slip-up. And maybe we can state
instead that ITS sent a bomb to the CEO of one of the largest mining
companies in the world[20] in the name of a âlong-deadâ god, which is a
sensible conclusion because the Ajajema journal most likely is published
out of Chile and not Mexico. We have seen that some eco-extremists are
âspiritualâ, and some are not. But never does a personal belief within
eco-extremism become an exclusionary confessional barrier. The enemy is
the human, and the reason to attack is entirely your own.
In condemning theology, Fitzpatrick ignores the critique that
eco-extremism has of such humanist concepts as âliberation,â which he
un-reflexively accepts and takes for granted in his essay. For example,
he cites an article on the Wandering Cannibals blog but only in passing.
Allow us then to cite a selection relevant to this conversation:
For the eco-extremist, indiscriminate attack against the hyper-civilized
is a cultic offering to the Unknowable which breaks the anthropocentric
ambition of techno-industrial society. It is an attack on the supposed
stability and bliss that law and order seeks to bestow on its adherents,
a blood offering to Wild Nature. It is a religious act, not a political
one, even if religion is understood very loosely here (as it had been
before the emergence of modern Western civilization). It is a blow to
the ascetic ambitions for a better tomorrow of both priest and
scientist. It is the affirmation that only the Inhuman can defeat the
idea of Human Power as Its Own End, only it can break apart all ambition
for control and artificiality. The shedding of the blood of the
hyper-civilized is a prophetic act that foreshadows the final destiny of
techno-industrial society, and perhaps of humans themselves: a descent
into Chaos, that fecundity that births and destroys beings without
measure, and of which techno-industrial civilization is only a farcical
imitation.[21]
And if we can beg the readerâs indulgence, we will cite another passage
from an article on this blog that is pertinent to the conversation:
Perhaps the real ethical problem behind indiscriminate attack isnât one
of assigning guilt, but of discerning if innocence even exists in this
context. Seven billion people donât live their lives being innocent or
guilty of anything. Their default mode is âminding their own businessâ.
Theyâre fodder, they know not what they do. At that level, their lives
are mostly devoid of discernible ethical content. And even in situations
where people âcareâ, they often rob Peter to pay Paul: they live part of
their life unethically to sustain an ethical veneer elsewhere in their
lives. The bottom line is: if you donât want that forest cut, or that
ocean floor drilled, or that river polluted, you donât have to look far
to see who is at fault. You are, your friends are, those you love are.
Or do you and they eat only air and live in thatched huts made from the
branches of native trees? Or do you treat yourself with local plants
when you are sick, or check your email using only a wooden bow drill? If
(by your actions, not your words) you donât care about Wild Nature, why
should it care about you? Why should anyone?
Human life is not and can never be heroic, ethical, noble, or anything
else it aims to be. You can expect little from it, and it is not
eternal. Those who continue to defend humanism only wish to circle the
wagons and defend Human Power as its own end by any means necessary, but
they are defending the material means by which that species supremacy is
upheld. The eco-extremist has come to the conclusion that the only way
to attack Human Supremacy is to attack humans in any capacity in which
they are capable. They do this not out of some inverted sense of
morality, but out of the realization that morality is impossible, or
rather, it cannot do what it says it does: sift the wheat from the
chaff, the sheep from the goats, and the innocent from the guilty. Their
attack is a refusal of the premise that the human ideal can govern life
on a universal ethical level. It is a launching out into the Inhuman in
the Name of the Unknowable, with little expectation in terms of human
achievement.[22]
So while it is of passing interest that Fitzpatrick compares humans to
cyanobacteria in terms of ethical responsibility and moral weight, what
better way to take the argument a step further than killing some humans
for no other reason than itâs Tuesday or cloudy outside? If human beings
really arenât that significant, then killing a few of them should be no
big deal, right? And of course, eco-extremists admit every time they
mention human extinction that their efforts are rather insignificant in
terms of bringing it about.[23] The problem is ultimately quantitative
and not qualitative: it is not one of innocence or guilt, but one of
mere existing and taking up space. Whether Fitzpatrick wants
âliberationâ for a particular group or his own circle of friends is
neither here nor there in this regard. As the eco-extremist writer Zupay
states in his âReflections on Freedomâ:
We cannot state it emphatically enough: freedom is an illusion. Nature
is not our mother, she is âcruel,â âmercilessâ, and yes, âoppressiveâ.
Or at least that is how the hyper-civilized would see it. But for us,
all this merely is, and what has always been. We donât tremble at the
movement of the tectonic plates, or when the tsunami makes a particular
eco-system disappear. Nor are we taken aback when a crocodile eats its
young or a tribe of savages strangles its babies. We got rid of our
civilized prejudices, we killed our moral being. We blew to pieces those
who sought to domesticate our bodies and minds. We accept reality, we
look our truth in the eyes and we are NOT afraid.[24]
And as we have stated above, perhaps to Fitzpatrickâs relief,
eco-extremism isnât prescriptive. It doesnât tell him or anyone else
what to do. It has no plan for him other than being another
hyper-civilized for whom it has no reason to care about. All the same,
Fitzpatrick seems to think that the eco-extremist way of life entails
living âascetically and dangerouslyâ, which is out of the question for
him. Rest assured, the mentality of the eco-extremist is more like that
of a criminal, and, dare I say it, a serial killer, and less like that
of a monk or a Bolshevik. Yes, it is dangerous, but no more dangerous
than for anyone else who decides to live a double life. There is
difficulty in it, but all ânormalâ people live double lives at work, in
their homes, and certainly out in public. So it is no more âasceticalâ
than what most people experience in their normal lives on average.
As for the whole ânot getting caught,â one can think that here is the
rub. Fitzpatrick thinks that since their activity is âdangerous,â of
course eco-extremists must be fanatics on par with Che Guevara and
Vladimir Lenin, displaying the same revolutionary âtrappings.â What he
forgets is the actual joy of harming and killing oneâs enemy: a
particular pleasure that we hyper-civilized donât often experience, or
if we do (say in the context of modern warfare or ârevolutionaryâ
violence) we are asked to feel guilty about it. As the last article of
RegresiĂłn no. 7 stated:
I recommend to the individualists who are ready to take a life to choose
their target wisely, commend themselves to their ancestors, sharpen
their knives, and be cold at the moment of committing the deed. They
should also enjoy it: nothing compares to the moment when you hear the
last breath of a hyper-civilized person and seeing the blood spurt forth
from the body of your victim. Let us decide the fate of the lives of
others with guile, remembering the acts of previous murderous
warriors![25]
If we are going to be truly amoral and nihilistic, perhaps the acts of
eco-extremists carry no more ethical weight than stamp collecting or
taking up the accordion. After all, humans basically have the same
metaphysical significance as cyanobacteria and stones. Why make a big
deal out of humans killing other humans, especially if they seem to be
able to get away with it? All human activity requires effort, from
killing people with bombs to creating a permaculture homestead somewhere
in the countryside. That doesnât make any of it âasceticalâ.
John Jacobiâs essay in Black Seed no. 5 is a public repudiation of his
dialogue with eco-extremism due to its embrace of extinctionism. Though
Jacobi has had very public relations and even sympathetic exchanges with
eco-extremism, up to writing a rather informative article in Atassa no.
1 concerning eco-extremismâs ideological pedigree[26], he now feels the
need to break ties since eco-extremism has lapsed too far into
theological and nihilistic inclinations. This newfound aversion to
eco-extremism brings up the question: if eco-extremists were not
extinctionist before, what were they? Did they hope that a certain group
of humans would be able to make it out of civilization and start anew?
If so, Jacobiâs reticence to endorse indiscriminate attack would be
justified: if you accidentally kill one of the Chosen with enough of a
âWild Willâ to make it out of civilization, are you not diminishing the
chances of ultimate victory, i.e. a fully feral, wild humanity?[27]
Clearly, eco-extremists have never thought this. Their hopelessness and
pessimism toward all of hyper-civilized humanity (i.e. the only humanity
left for all intents and purposes) has never been in doubt. The
hypothetical positing of a âsmall group of people who are willing to
embrace the wild,â does not bring such a group into being, and neither
does the existence of the peoples of such places like the Amazon or the
Andaman Islands whose entire existence is due to the âconservationistâ
impulse to âleave them aloneâ. The exception proves the rule, and if
techno-industrial civilization and the rule of law collapsed tomorrow,
such isolated peoples would no longer be protected.
The real issue with Jacobi has always been his intransigent belief in
the human as a closed system, no matter how much recourse to âthe wildâ
he has at times. He canât but spout such Enlightenment dogma as âthe
source of human values is human beings themselves,â as if all âhumansâ
have been equal throughout history, as if to predicate âhumanâ in both
the civilized and uncivilized resolves the issue at the level of first
principles. As if the object of human cognition continues to be the
continuation of the actually existing human genome, even if only within
the circle of those who have an adequate affinity with the âWild Will.â
But even if eco-extremists posit a âhuman natureâ that is corrupted by
industrial society, they neither posit a clear idea of its essence, nor
a way to âfixâ that nature by creating an âoutsideâ of civilization.
Such an âoutsideâ does not exist, and there is no feral future, nor is
one possible.
So to Jacobiâs question, whether eco-extremists carry out their action
because of their hatred of humanity or their love of the wild, they
would reply that this is not an âeither/orâ dilemma. One can, and
probably should, have both points as motivation. There is no natural
âoutsideâ that the hyper-civilized can take refuge in, as we are all
products of civilization itself. But as techno-industrial civilization
is neither a well-defined nor stable phenomenon, the ultimate object of
hatred is the idea of human power and control as their own end, which
can only be countered by attacking the human as both product and agent
of that control. In this sense, extinction is like a wish more than a
practical program: it is like the anarchists who wish for a âsociety
without domination,â though they know that this is probably not
attainable. There will probably be homo sapiens well into the distant
future, but one can act as if they should simply not exist.
In the end, this difference between Jacobi and the eco-extremists may be
scholastic, at least on the surface. In terms of action, Jacobi and
other wayward disciples of Theodore Kaczynski will continue to go about
seeking the right theory and conditions under which to act, sinking
deeper into ineffectiveness and sectarian bickering. Individualists, on
the other hand, will act in the here and now, within the only life that
Wild Nature has bequeathed to us, with the imperfect tools that we have
both theoretically and practically. Though the embrace of human
extinction may be more of a provocation than a real possibility, it does
more starkly define what is important in our context, and what is
secondary.
We return to OIAWR to address the issue of fascism and eco-extremismâs
supposed role in political discourse in the United States and beyond.
Even if eco-extremists eschew political action and intentions in their
attacks, the pirates attempt to graft eco-extremists into the leftist
narrative (though the places that OIAWR most speaks about in this regard
are not places where actual eco-extremists are active). If the
eco-extremists wish to be excluded from that narrative, itâs too late:
for the pirates, individualists are already useful stooges of the
reaction, patriarchy, 4chan, and a host of other ominous enemies.
The pirates assert that, pace Scott Campbell, there is no âeco-fascism,â
but this is far from letting eco-extremists off the hook. Eco-extremists
obviously do not share many of the essential characteristics of fascism,
which they define succinctly as âpopulist ultra-nationalism fixated upon
the rebirth (following a period of perceived degeneration or decay) of
the Nation or the People as conceived, usually, as a racial entity.â
Nevertheless, like a pestilence in the air, eco-extremists have caught
the fascist contagion, and are already proto-fascists. This small
secretive cabal of individuals is doing the work of the State by
attacking anarchists and giving the anti-civ movement and ideology a bad
name. Or to put it in the piratesâ words:
...The fact of the ever-shifting content of the ITS ideology bespeaks a
political opportunism that is indeed reminiscent of the early italian
fascists and their figurehead Mussolini, whose superficial,
chameleon-like qualities as a theoretician were among his hallmarks. One
can imagine current ITS positions, like prior ones, being thrown over in
short order in favor of more fascistic ones. The resemblance could
conceivably prove to be something more than incidental.
So the fact that eco-extremism is a developing Tendency and not a
defined ideology means itâs a loose cannon without principles just
waiting to go fascist at any moment. Not only this, but they give
âcomfort to the enemy,â and that enemy could readily sympathize with the
ethos of eco-extremism at some point:
Similarly, we can imagine new combinations for our enemies, the
formation of an equivalent bridge or web connecting the opportunistic
apocalyptic ramblings of the ITS to a more explicit fascist populism. We
can imagine new ranks of fascists inspired or informed by their own
homegrown supervillains. We can even imagine (quite easily) white nazis
who think these homicidal subversives are pretty cool, potential allies
even if they are Mexicans, or insurrectionary white boys gleefully
seizing upon these role models to gloss over or christen their own lack
of commitment to fighting against rape culture. It is the formation of
such a bridge that must be prevented. It is the beginnings of this
formation that we may be glimpsing in the recent turns of this
situation.
So the accusation stands: if ITS and those who dialogue with it arenât
âeco-fascistsâ, they might as well be. Their lack of commitment to the
humanist egalitarian values that the pirates defend means that, âif they
are not with us, theyâre against us.â These âsuspicionsâ and
âimaginingsâ must be taken seriously by the whole anarchist,
anti-authoritarian, and radical community because the OIAWR authors have
studied the issue and have come to the conclusion that, mirabile visu,
the anti-civilization and anti-fascist agendas are one in the same. The
best way to fight civilization is to double-down on fighting for
egalitarianism (which for the pirates is practically an Eternal Dogma
written in the heavens via cherry-picked anthropological data[28]),
against patriarchy, transphobia, and the whole host of Neo-Christian
talking points that enshrine the Victim as the Supreme Object of
veneration. They can call ITS and LBC âproto-fascistsâ because they know
history, and they know these groups better than the groups know
themselves (in spite of their getting very basic facts wrong).
We counter such a specious reading of what eco-extremism means in the
current moment by pointing out the piratesâ true tactic: throwing a lot
of things at eco-extremism and hoping something sticks. Rape apologists?
Thatâs clearly not a thing. Misogyny? Eco-extremists hate all humans
equally, and attack on that basis. Proto-fascists? Well, they share some
characteristics if you use your imagination and squint rather
vigorously⊠ITS is like the new Freikorps ready to stick another rifle
butt in Rosa Luxemburgâs head. Never mind that the circumstances in
which fascism arose in the 20th century, with rising working class
militancy and increased labor actions shaking the capitalist system,
look nothing like what âfascismâ is today, at least in the United
States: social lepers live-action role playing in the streets and
hitting each other with sticks. This is still fascism, trust us. (So say
the pirates.)
If this accusation is clearly not sticking to eco-extremism either, what
is eco-extremism on the social level? Really, not much. Nor does it aim
to be much. ITS has stated the following concerning the possible
grafting of ex-leftist cadres with some training in arms into the
criminal element:
The FARC have also given up their arms (and the ELN is on the same
path). Even though some groups are determined to continue in the jungle
as they have for decades, the organization itself has signed a peace
accord with the Colombian government. This has generated different
reactions. Some members of the paramilitary groups (that fought to the
death against the FARC) have dedicated themselves to hunting down
ex-guerrillas, now disarmed and mere vulnerable civilians.
On the other side are the ex-guerrillas who refuse to give up their
arms. They donât want to be easy prey, and even though they know the
ârevolutionâ failed, they canât really return to civilian life after so
many years of war. So they contract themselves out as mercenaries for
strong criminal groups like the PCC (Primeiro Comando da Capital, a
criminal organization with its origin in Brazil but with strong presence
in Paraguay and Argentina, which is dedicated to drug and arms
trafficking.) This was seen in the âRobbery of the Centuryâ in Paraguay
in April of this year, where different decentralized groups lit various
cars on fire to serve as a distraction for the main mission. At the same
time, the principal body of heavily-armed commandos detonated a large
explosive that blew apart one of the walls of a transport company, and
after a firefight the bandits entered the company and robbed ten million
dollars. On top of this, they had the nerve to escape on a boat that
passed through the Itaipu Reserve in Brazil. This act, totally different
from the usual methods of the PCC, could not be realized without
military expertise, and without the technical and strategic help of the
ex-guerrillas of the FARC now working for the PCC.
For some time these types of criminal actions have pleased us more than
the acts of political guerrillas. This is sufficient to allow us to say
with pleasure that the era of ârevolutionâ has passed and the only thing
left is to commit oneself to the individualist struggle for survival,
leaving behind weak and disgusting humanist values.[29]
It is thus either extreme negligence or opportunistic intellectual sloth
that leads the pirates to think that ITS will âbreak badâ (or âbreak
worseâ?) and become a bunch of brown Mexican Nazis, along with the
entire editorial board of Little Black Cart passing over into fascism
(Little Brown Cart? They wouldnât even have to change the acronym). The
Enlightenment / secular Christian prejudices of the pirates canât
possibly fathom the chaotic future before us, thus they have to resort
to labels from early last century to assess social phenomena that have
little to no resemblance to those of the past. ITS arenât a bunch of
ex-anarchists tending toward fascism, but rather ex-radicals tending
toward anti-social criminality.[30] Maybe one could make the argument
Karl Marx makes in The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Napoleon concerning
the lumpenproletariat being a fertile breeding ground for reaction, but
why then single out the eco-extremists who make up a minuscule blip when
compared to the vast numbers of slum dwellers in Latin America who are
low-hanging fruit in terms of recruitment into criminal gangs? Will the
pirates begin policing them as well?
Perhaps ITS is cannon fodder for the reaction, a front for reactionary /
police forces in the countries in which they operate. But if this small,
individualistic terrorist project in the periphery of capitalist
civilization is somehow part of the vanguard of the neo-Fascist wave, I
would say that fascism could certainly do a lot better. Not that
individualist eco-extremists are incompetent: they have evaded capture
so far to the point that perhaps some government actors still think they
donât exist, or are not a priority (which is not the case for the high
priests of the CCF, et al. who think ITS is some sort of cancerous
menace) Rather, in terms of societal change, they have made no impact
outside of their own pleasure at attacking people. Very little
âstrategyâ is involved, at least from the point of view of accomplishing
some transcendent interpersonal goal. A group of dangerous and somewhat
competent individuals a neo-fascist menace does not make.
But if we are going to armchair psychoanalyze eco-extremists from behind
computer screens, as the pirates and others have done, it is appropriate
that we return the favor, especially since OIAWR is so explicit
concerning the beautiful vision of hope that it advocates. Namely, its
view of anti-civ primitivism is that of a deeper critique of this
society whereas previous versions of green anarchism âfailed a lot of
peopleâ. In attacking hierarchy in the name of equality, this critique
must pick up allies in the feminist and anti-colonial struggle, engaging
with such new trends as Afro-pessimism that seek to uncover the chains
that previous green anarchism has left on oppressed peoples in their
quest for total liberation. Within this process, eco-extremism and LBCâs
nihilism are temptations in the desert, the sin of despair against the
Egalitarian Holy Ghost. And as we know from catechism class, the sins
against the Holy Ghost cannot be forgiven in this life or in the next.
The urgency that the pirates believe is needed for their agenda is clear
in their disappointment that others donât see things as they do:
At a time when hard-hitting and practical analyses of both civilization
and fascism could serve as direly-needed interventions in post-election
discourse and on-the-ground struggles marked by the talking points of
corporate media, alt-right, white nationalists, tankies, social
ecologists, and syndicalists, they think a crucial use of their access
to resources is to clearcut another field in order to publish their 35th
title on egoism.
As the world burns to cinder and bleeds out from the wounds inflicted by
civilization, and as white nationalists enjoy a resurgence on the way
down, consolidating power, influence, and initiative, the nihilists
believe that one of the most pressing issues of our time is the precise
contour of the religiosity of conventional primitivist thought. This
religiosity is evidenced primarily by a belief that a qualitatively
better life could be had by humans which would necessarily accord with
some aspects of our deep past, but most importantly it is revealed by a
refusal to endorse the femicidal rape theology of ITS and Atassa.
If those who deviate fail to fall into line concerning âwhat is to be
done?â, shame them and name call, just as Stalinists called those
outside of their sphere âsocial fascistsâ in the âoriginal antifaâ. The
time to strike is now! Or so the pirates declare. The wind is at our
back and the masses are open to the anti-civ Gospel:
We, too, remember the words of Tecumseh and the burning of forts[31]. We
remember the visions and sacrifices of the members of the MOVE
organization who took aim at their enemies manifested as Science,
Medicine, and Technology, who fought for a wild and untrammeled
existence right in the heart of the un-living beast, advocating for a
life based on hunting and gathering. We recall the positive reviews of
anti-civilization literature written by Mumia Abu-Jamal, Howard Zinn,
and others who set us on our path of resistance. We share the love and
the rage of those for whom white power and fascism are faces of the
absolute enemy.
So itâs all one love, one cause, one struggle⊠except for the Fight for
15 or Medicare for all or free college education, or every other leftist
cause that the pirates, with their penchant for anthropological texts
and anti-tech rhetoric, simply cannot endorse. But they have gotten
âpositive reviewsâ. The Great Primitivist Awakening is probably just
around the corner.
And of course, there is the question of racism:
Anarchists are not the first nor the most intimately knowledgeable of
the problem to identify white supremacy as the key to power on this
continent. If any of our enemies can be defeated, it will not be without
defeating this enemy as well. As the lynchpin to the rotten schema of
civil society, there is a corresponding panoply of social institutions
and cultural scripts at work day and night to make matters of race and
whiteness invisible and uninteresting, obscure and menacing. As the
elephant who has lived in the room with us since birth, it is the issue
nobody wants to talk about.
Whether intentionally or not, there is a certain antiseptic critique of
identity politics to be found in the post-left and nihilism that is
consonant with this imperative, consigning matters of race, white
supremacy, and fascism to secondary importance at best, perhaps
affording them the stock response of silently collapsing them into a
general critique of hierarchy.
As non-white people, perhaps people who have been âvictimsâ of racism in
the U.S. context, our lack of faith in anti-racist politics is not due
to failing to acknowledge racism as a problem in our lives. It is,
rather, an acknowledgement of the complete failure of anti-racist
politics to be anything other than reformism in favor of a small sector
of already middle class individuals within an âoppressed community,â as
well as a tool for smooth talkers who can work their way into the
academic or government bureaucracy. At least this is what we have seen
with our own eyes, in Ethnic Studies Departments and other places where
this dreck is peddled. The endgame of the anti-racist critique is the
neoliberal Barack Obama, the endgame of anti-sexist politics is the
greedy imperialist harpy Hillary Clinton. There is no way to separate
the meat from the fat on that decaying, maggot-strewn carcass of New
Left politics. So we have walked away from it.
Subverting the culture of civilization doesnât mean never trying
unprecedented things. If certain social innovations can be seen as
species-wide or species-effective experiments (like, say, those that
involve pronoun usage, gender presentation, or other retooling of the
conventions of language and custom), there is no more reason to oppose
them than there is to curse the first tree dwelling shrewâs descent to
the forest floor, or the first following of the game into unknown
territory.
With this passage, it is appropriate to discuss why anti-civ and
nihilist readers might still distrust the pirates at the end of the
text. It is precisely due to where this confluence of antifa and
anti-civ politics leads: the conviction that the fascist menace appeared
ex nihilo on November 9th, 2016, when half the country determined that a
white nationalist coup was just around the corner, and every single
âdecentâ person in this country entertained the possibility that a riot
might be in order.
Except some of us have seen this film before know and how it ends. We
remember that the largest marches in history failed to prevent the
invasion and sacking of Iraq, which brought about such horrible fascist
things as the Islamic State. We remember the âGeneral Strikeâ of May
2006 when many Latino and other immigrants marched in the streets for
their right to remain in the United States, only to be given the same
President Obama who deported more people than his predecessor in the
office. We remember all sort of âpromisingâ social movements that arose
when the Democratic Party was not in power, the universal disdain for
the âIdiotâ missing from a village in Texas, etc. etc. We remember
liberals turning into radicals overnight, only to turn back into
liberals once they performed the mandatory kabuki theater motions of the
âLesser of Two Evils,â again leaving radicals holding the bag of
fanaticism and irrelevance.
That is not to say that things are not as bad as the pirates say they
are. Really, the glaring omission from their essay is their failure to
engage anything that a particular author actually wrote, even though
they send much âexquisite venomâ his way elsewhere. For example, in
their invective against Black Seed, they fail to mention that another
ârape apologistâ wrote an essay for that publication. Perhaps this was
an oversight; perhaps they were not impressed with the essay. But at
this juncture, a passage from that essay, âThe Catalog of Horrors,â can
shed some light on the piratesâ possible motives:
The categorical imperative is simple in this case: give people the
information, all the information, and they will act on it. This is what
birthed the Green Movement, anarchist or not. Show the people how much
the environment is hurting, how much civilization hurts people, how
awful civilized life is, and they will wake up and oppose it. Ideologues
cite trends such as increased recycling, emissions regulations, electric
cars, and the like, as examples that this approach works. Just a few
more campaigns to enlighten and inform, and maybe, just maybe, weâll
save the Earth and destroy civilization. Just one more issue of the
Catalog of Horrors will finally get people to rise up, never mind that
this tactic seems to date to the dawn of civilization itself.
I donât completely blame the average person for going about their day
while the world falls deeper and deeper into environmental crisis. But I
donât let them off the hook either. The leftist wants to have things
both ways: he or she wants to place all power in âthe People,â yet blame
all ills on a tiny minority that the People could easily defeat. Which
one is it then? Could it be that people arenât the knowledge machines
that modern activism expects them to be, that they just want to get
through the day and not be bothered with questions above their pay
grade? Could it be that not everyone can be bitten with the bug of
concern for the Future, that such a preoccupation is by no means
universal? Could it be that even those who are driven to make a better
Future for their children have only a dim and partial conception of what
that could possibly look like?
Here then we can make our definitive judgment on OIAWR: it is an
intellectually lazy interpretation of eco-extremism veiled in grad
student verbosity. With the quote that ended the last section, their
motivation appears to be to âsheep dogâ wayward anarchists and nihilists
back into the fold, or rather, back into the vicious cycle of the
leftwing of Capital. âYOU MUST CARE! YOU MUST BE MORAL! YOU MUST WORSHIP
THE VICTIM!â The ârapeâ and âmisogynyâ emphases aim to appeal to the
common human desire to save the âdamsel in distressâ. Itâs the pitch of
the snake oil salesman or weight loss guru of the magical result despite
all odds: âYes, things look bad, but thereâs still hope. DONâT YOU WANT
A BETTER WORLD?!!!!â Itâs âgreen anarchism 2.0: This time, itâs
different.â We are reminded of the vicious cycle of the racket that
Jacques Camatte once described in his essay, âOn Organizationâ:
In its external relations, the political gang tends to mask the
existence of the clique, since it must seduce in order to recruit. It
adorns itself in a veil of modesty so as to increase its power. When the
gang appeals to external elements through journals, reviews, and
leaflets, it thinks that it has to speak on the level of the mass in
order to be understood. It talks about the immediate because it wants to
mediate. Considering everyone outside the gang an imbecile, it feels
obliged to publish banalities and bullshit so as to successfully seduce
them. In the end, it seduces itself by its own bullshit and it is
thereby absorbed by the surrounding milieu. However, another gang will
take its place, and its first theoretical wailings will consist of
attributing every misdeed and mistake to those who have preceded it,
looking in this way for a new language so as to begin again the grand
practice of seduction; in order to seduce, it has to appear to be
different from the othersâŠ. The inability to confront theoretical
questions independently leads the individual to take refuge behind the
authority of another member, who becomes, objectively, a leader, or
behind the group entity, which becomes a gang. In his relations with
people outside the group the individual uses his membership to exclude
others and to differentiate himself from them, if only â in the final
analysis â so as to guard himself against recognition of his own
theoretical weaknesses. To belong in order to exclude, that is the
internal dynamic of the gang; which is founded on an opposition,
admitted or not, between the exterior and the interior of the group.
Even an informal group deteriorates into a political racket, the classic
case of theory becoming ideology.[32]
The edelweiss pirate, the primitivist, the ânihilistâ poser, etc. cannot
live without their safety blanket of Enlightenment humanist values, and
even though they espouse principles that undermine those values, they
have recourse to claiming to possess a âgrown-upâ critique as opposed to
the new kids in town who are just out to be edgy. The thoughtful reader
may still be taken aback by the moralizing fatwas of insurrectionary
anarchists who are themselves demonized as âterroristsâ by government
agencies and most normal people. âArenât you guys supposed to question
everything?â These neo-Christian humanists masquerading as âanarchistsâ
have to jam the square peg of eco-extremism into the round hole of an
illusory rising fascism, but no one really buys it. âWhy not just call
them crazy psychopathic misanthropes?â Indeed, that is what we are, but
it just doesnât have the same ring to it as âmisogynist rape
apologists.â
Besides, letting misanthropy come to the forefront, even in its most
illegalist and anti-social form, might reveal the self-hatred at the
core of each hyper-civilized person in terms of their own meaningless
life. It is best to not lead them down that rabbit hole, they just might
surprise us. It would then be harder to recruit them into a racket or
commune or whatever mysterious scheme anarchists happen to be running
this week.
If the pirates had read the titular essay of Atassa no. 1 with better
intentions, they may have noticed the very first paragraph:
It has been over 150 years since Karl Marx in The Eighteenth Brumaire of
Louis Napoleon reflected on how events occur in history, as it were,
twice: the first time as tragedy, the second as farce. Yet it is
arguable that to differentiate between the two (tragedy and farce), one
has to assume that history tends toward a particular direction. An event
that is similar to a past event, so the logic goes, somehow failed to
learn âthe lessonsâ of its unpleasant predecessor. This idea makes
assumptions concerning humans in a particular context acting in groups:
that they have agency, that they have complete transparency in realizing
what they are doing, that certain lessons can be learned after the fact,
etc. If, on the other hand, we appreciate the blindness and resolve
needed for heroism in an endeavor, any act can appear to be foolishness
to the observer looking on in hindsight. All that the actors see in the
middle of things is necessity. Our struggle may not be one of âlearning
the lessonsâ and breaking the cycle of tragedy and farce. It may simply
be an issue of returning to the âheroismâ of tragedy. That is to say,
perhaps we must return to the tragic as an escape from progress: to
realize that things must be thus, and it is our own reaction that is
most important when faced with an inevitable outcome. Itâs an issue of
whether we fight or lay down our arms because we are blind to an elusive
âfuture.â
The pirates cannot admit the tragedy at the heart of human endeavors,
especially collective ones. If they did, the gig would be up, the
Emperor would have not clothes, they would have no carrot to use on the
hyper-civilized along with their stick of inter-group stigma.
Hopelessness is reactionary, hope is revolutionary, and the
condemnations will continue until morale improves.
Eco-extremists are not the friends of humanity. We donât want to save
you, and we donât really care if you live or die (honestly we would
prefer that you werenât here.) All the same, weâre doing you the solid
favor of pointing out the humanist trap that the edelweiss pirates are
placing for you to get you back into the cage of hyper-civilized
political logic. Eco-extremists would do what they do in a fascist
society, a bourgeois democratic society, a communist society, an
anarchist society, and so on and so forth. We donât care about your
political calculations or prejudices, the âsocial significanceâ of this
murder or that bomb doesnât matter to us. The point is that those who
carried out these things enjoyed themselves, and the only social
significance is in transgressing those humanist Christian values that
would condemn those who assert âMY will be done.â You can consider that
fascist, egoist, civilized, it doesnât matter to us. Your elections
donât matter, your victims donât matter, and your social justice doesnât
matter. We have no faith that you could destroy civilization, or even
pose a threat to it. We have no faith in your collective solutions, or
visions of a brighter future. If you built your impossible âother
world,â we would want to burn it down as well.
Itâs okay to have lost, to be a loser even. We werenât given very much
to work with in the first place, and deceiving ourselves otherwise does
no one any favors. The issue now is: do you want to go out in a
dignified manner, do you want to make it interesting at least, or are
you going to stick to the script that made us lose in the first place?
There is no use complaining, and you canât withdraw from the game now.
Your move.
-Los hijos del Mencho (FracciĂłn anti-pirata)
by Aragorn!
I believe I am like most people who write. When I sit down to write I am
not quite sure what I am going to say. I have a couple points in mind
when I sit down but donât have an organization to what Iâm trying to do.
When Iâm lucky, I make my points and find a couple of other things along
the way. A thesis, argumentation, and supporting evidence comes out of
the momentum of the writing process. I recognize Iâm not lucky often.
This book is the opposite of that. Bellamy Fitzpatrick (BF) demonstrates
how to make a clear, full- throated argument. Here he is not restrained
by the word count of a magazine (a much shorter version of this book
exists in a prior issue of Black Seed), or the ad hoc nature of the
audio format (Bellamy is best known as a podcaster on both The Brilliant
podcast with me and the Free Radical Radio podcast with Ry- dra Wrong).
The thesis of this book is to demonstrate a âcorrosive consciousness: an
orientation that, in each lived moment, dissolves reification, an
anarchist form of life as a way of unmaking civilization within yourself
and your relations.â This demonstration is mostly as critique, and here
Bellamy excels. This book succeeds as critique in exactly the way I wish
were more common with anarchist (and personal) disagreements with each
other.
Critique, in my view, is always implicitly complimentary: its mere
existence validates the importance of its target, regardless of how
harsh it may be. As someone who fell in love with the nonhuman world as
a child and found the human one nauseous, Anarcho-Primitivism drew me to
anarchism in a way that the Humanistic Left-wing or Right-wing versions
never could have, and so Iâve lavished it with a good deal of this
praise. Barring a sea change in the discourse with the Anarcho-
Primitivists, what follows is a sincerely fond farewell.
If personal experience is any indication this critique will be treated
like the attack of an enemy but any honest reader will be shocked at the
generosity and willingness of BF attempts to improve the Anarcho-Prim-
itivist perspective. To put it a different way, BF was surprisingly
eager to participate in the project that we understand as AP but is
largely the work of two authors, John Zerzan (JZ) and Kevin Tucker (KT).
Bellamy wanted to be on the team; this is that story, and it is far more
friendly than I would have been given the same circumstance.
As a sidebar, I am not an innocent bystander to this engagement. I have
been in something like a public feud with the AP for a number of years,
since I publicly asserted that âwe (Black Seed) will also develop space
distant from anarcho-primitiv- istsâ tendencies towards fetishizing
indigenous cultures, uncritical rewilding, appropriated spirituality,
and reliance on anthropology.â Mostly this feud has been comprised of
offhand dismissive comments on JZs weekly radio show but itâs also
included dismissive essays conflating all enemies (ie those who disagree
with any aspect) of AP as egoists who can now be ignored due to the
irrelevance/wrongness of their position. My ambivalence with the AP has
resulted in a lack of engagement with the silliness of this disagreement
(what seems to be mostly a spectator sport). This is not to say Iâm
donât have opinions about AP or their statements, but I didnât consider
myself equipped, or particularly interested, in engaging with the AP on
the level necessary to be heard past the FUD of JZ's radio show, KT
podcast (!!!), or their shared publication.
To put it differently, this review of Corrosive Consciousness is not a
critique. While I am not in lockstep with BF (especially with regard to
his views on anthropology and forest gardening), I believe he did a
great service to the modern green anarchist space in this work. Full
stop. This is the kind of writing and critical analysis anarchists need
to get past the ways we are bogged down in our own, and in the broad
left's, toxic pattern of assertion as argumentation. End sidebar.
The strongest point that BF makes here is a denunciation of what KT
considers his strongest theoretical contribution to AP thought,
domestication. In a sequence that fills about half the book (p34â92) the
complex of ideas, theories, and values that comprise the AP ideology are
itemized and evaluated. This includes an incendiary attack on
KT-as-theoreti- cian that weâll return to, but mostly the purpose of
this denunciation is a kind of clearing of the decks. Namely, AP is
called out for claiming to argue from the mainstream of anthropological
thought but instead holding a conservative, and largely discredited, set
of anthropological ideas as the basis of its truth. AP (mainly KT) has
developed some new terminology that is, to say the least, highly
specious. He uses domestication, wildness, nature, human nature, and
other terms to lay out a taxonomy of good and evil, pro and con, us and
them.
Perfectly paralleling domestication, wildness refers at once to the
genetic, the metaphysical, the social, and the spiritual, effectively
bleaching it of any clear meaning and theoretical relevance. It is yet
another margarine-word, a word for moral posturing, rhetorical
bludgeoning, and subcultural positioning. If one is âFor Wildnessâ, they
are one of the good guys; not for it?âGet Fucked.â
These are arguments youâve seen before if you have paid any attention to
good-faith criticism of AP prior to Corrosive Consciousness. The
difference here is that the argumentation is literally supported by
chapter and verse citations (219 footnotes in all), is as complete as is
reasonable to expect, and comes from someone from the inside, not a
hostile actor.
The carefulness of BF's reasoning is demonstrated not only in the
extensive notes, but also in his understanding and naming of rhetorical
devices that are even more important to recognize in their ubiquity. For
example, one takeaway from the book is about certain kinds of
argumentation techniques. Here again BF does us a fantastic service. He
introduces the argumentation technique of Motte- and-bailey, which I am
sure our readers will recognize from themselves and others.
Motte and bailey (MAB) is a combination of bait-and-switch and
equivocation in which someone switches between a "motte" (an
easy-to-defend and often com- mon-sense statement, such as "culture
shapes our experiences") and a "bailey" (a hard-to-defend and more
controversial statement, such as "cultural knowledge is just as valid as
scientific knowledge") in order to defend a viewpoint.
AP purports to be both a source of wisdom about the world we come from,
and an indicator of where we should be headed, an answer to âwhat is to
be done.â Corrosive Consciousness has points to make about AP's
usefulness in both these endeavors. BF defends AP from the unfairness of
the attack that any world other than our own is impossible to defend. He
then goes on to list and consider some things that could be done,
including insurrectionary subsistence, perma-culture, forest gardening,
etc. and discusses APs ambivalence toward these strategies. This
ambivalence is particularly poignant in the case of a discussion of
violence, since AP famously defended Ted Kaszinski and his anti-social,
redemptive violence, which injured innocents and grandfathered
eco-extremism. JZ was specifically brought to public attention
(specifically in The New York Times) because he was running the
Unabomber for President campaign. Twenty years later, eco-extremist
groups (especially ITSâIndividu- als Tending towards the Wild) have
declared their brand of ecologically fueled war against civilization as
one where âindiscriminate attackâ will happen (as was also the case for
TedKâs mail bombsâand all bombs) and all of a sudden the AP are
declaring that such tactics are fascist and anyone who would not
unequivocally reject them are at least quasi-fascists.
Around eco-extremism, AP takes the easy route of arguing in synch with
the popular refrain of the day, which posits indiscriminate attacks as
fascist and fascism as the crisis at hand. Aside from the shift in
perspective from the days and actions of TedK to today, it is fair to be
critical of violence, as it is fair to be critical of non-violence. It
is true that no one knows how to get from here to there. Whether it is
called The Revolution, The Collapse, the Great Insurrectionary
Something, or the wild popularization of GoodTM ideas over Capitalism
and the State, it is impossible to know how transition will happen. When
you participate in the game of this prediction you will always fail,
frequently sound like a fool, and probably be incoherent in your
thinking. This puts active dreamers of any stripe into the uncomfortable
role of advocating for things they like while trying to sound like they
have a plan. AP doesnât have a plan but that puts them into good company
(everyone else). It doesnât make them particularly incoherent, it makes
them as incoherent as everyone else. The issue is less that they sound
like they know the answer, and more the rigidity and dogmatism that they
bring to the topic, and the bad faith attacks that they make on other
arguments and arguers.
Over the years, BF has engaged in many back and forths with the AP, and
the funniest part of this book records BF trying to get the AP writers
to talk about the question of ants. BF asks how the behavior of ants and
other nonhumans could be measured to humans with regard to
domestication. After several exchanges this question was dismissed as a
demonstration that BF did not understand that domestication was a
distinct phenomenon from evolution. Here is a great quote from KT on the
matter
As far as we might know it, ant âagricultureâ is an evolved trait,
ostensibly one they could always have had (likewise, it could be
recent). Domestication by/of humans is historical, it represents a
change in subsistence and evolutionary trajectory.
There are many things to value about Corrosive Consciousness, from its
carefulness to its humor. Among those things, my favoriteâ which might
take on too much signif- icanceâis the chapter that goes into the
question of wildness. Wildness is obviously a bridge term representing
the crossover from a spiritual understanding of what nature is, to an
objective, scientific understanding of what nature is. Itâs both. Itâs
neither. âWildness is our genetic stateâ but also âWildness, at least
how I experience and conceptualize it, is sacred; that word is an
indicator, not an encapsulation... â Couple this thinking with KTâs
relationships to the spirit world and the totemic animals that
personally deliver him messages and itâs not unfair to name KT as a
mystic.
A retrospective reading of all of Tuckerâs work as mysticism thus
becomes possibleâhis whole oeuvre becomes much more comprehensible. Like
Zoroaster and Mani before him, Tuckerâs belief structure is founded on a
revelatory spiritual experience that transformed him. That much of his
writing is peppered with ardent paeans and urgent assertionsâ âWildness
exists,â âI believe in human nature,â âmy spirit knows this. My spirit
feels this. The spirit of all life knows this. It has always known this.
Iâve only begun to listen,â âWhen we learn to open ourselves to wildness
and chaos, the organic anarchy of our beings will flowââcan suddenly be
read in an entirely different light.
As compelling as I found this book it likely will not matter to the AP
fan base. In an online discussion I had with another reader of Corrosive
Consciousness they attacked BF for what they saw as his personal attacks
on AP, but more for not understanding that the facts, or details, of
what the AP write isnât important. What is important is the âgreater
pointâ of AP, which is that it is somehow deeper in its analysis than
other forms of green anarchist ideas. This isnât on the pages from the
AP writers, it is, perhaps, in the cries to connect spirituality to AP.
If you canât see it in the words, itâs because you canât feel it in your
soul/heart. If you can't feel it, itâs probably because you are
disconnected from your body and have a bad case of the civilizations.
Some readers will hate the chapter and verse citations, the use of
logical fallacies to tear apart arguments, and the footnotes, but as far
as Iâm concerned this is as complete a demolition of AP as is necessary,
and maybe more than necessary. If the best response AP has to this book
is a blow off 10 minute discussion on Johnâs radio show about how
postmodern and philosophical it is then I think the time for these AP
writers has passed. They are not participants in an ongoing discussion
about how green (ecological, based in the earth) ideas should inform our
anarchism but a religious doctrine based in a bizarre interpretation of
anthropology. As such they would no longer be the kind of content Iâd
like to see in any of the projects I host.
[1] All references from OIAWR are taken from the version on Anarchist
Library:
https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/edelweiss-pirates-of-indiscriminate-attacks-wild-reactions
[2] http://cnu.edu/publichistorycenter/about/
[3] http://maldicionecoextremista.altervista.org/they-took-their-time-already-wild-reaction-responds-to-destruye-las-prisiones/
[4] âEco-extremism and the woman part 1â Found here:
http://maldicionecoextremista.altervista.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/Revista-Extinci%C3%B3n-1.pdf
[5] http://prmlkuddink.torpress2sarn7xw.onion/
[6] Cf. http://www.excelsior.com.mx/comunidad/2017/07/26/1177661
[7] https://itsgoingdown.org/its-attacks-anarchists/
[8] https://atassa.wordpress.com/2017/07/20/thirty-third-communique-of-the-individualists-tending-toward-the-wild/
[9] https://atassa.wordpress.com/2017/09/19/thirty-ninth-communique-of-the-individualists-tending-toward-the-wild/
[10] http://maldicionecoextremista.altervista.org/mexico-cuadragesimo-cuarto-comunicado-its-grupo-7-se-posiciona/
(our translation)
[11] https://325.nostate.net/2017/08/03/its-or-the-rhetoric-of-decay-joint-statement-of-insurrectional-groups-in-mexican-territory/
[12] Cf.
http://maldicionecoextremista.altervista.org/chile-la-ciudadania-espero-que-le-explosen-infinitas-bombas/
[13] https://atassa.wordpress.com/2017/07/15/the-anarchist-myth/
[14] http://maldicionecoextremista.altervista.org/es-en-it-unas-notas-sobre-las-recientes-difamaciones-y-breve-aclaracion/
[15] http://www.milenio.com/policia/estudiante-poli-upiicsa-muerto-iztacalco-gabriel_ramos_millan-sentencian-milenio_0_911308918.html
[16] http://maldicionecoextremista.altervista.org/mexico-eighteenth-communique-of-the-individualists-tending-toward-the-wild-indiscriminate-faction/
[17] https://atassa.wordpress.com/2017/03/18/communique-of-the-indiscriminate-group-tending-toward-the-wild-gits/
[18] https://lasillarota.com/metropoli/novio-de-lesvy-berlin-osorio-sera-juzgado-por-feminicidio/183672
[19] http://maldicionecoextremista.altervista.org/es-en-it-unas-notas-sobre-las-recientes-difamaciones-y-breve-aclaracion/
[20] https://atassa.wordpress.com/2017/01/15/twenty-first-communique-of-the-individualists-tending-toward-the-wild/
[21] https://wanderingcannibals.wordpress.com/2017/04/14/of-angels-and-cyborgs/
[22] https://wanderingcannibals.wordpress.com/2017/08/20/notes-on-extinction/
[23] For example, Jeremias Torresâ âNotes on extinctionist violenceâ,
found here, in Spanish:
http://maldicionecoextremista.altervista.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/Textos-Pensamientos-de-un-ecoextremista.pdf
[24] http://maldicionecoextremista.altervista.org/reflexiones-respecto-a-la-libertad/
[25] http://regresando.altervista.org/revista-regresion-n-7/
[26] âApostles and Hereticsâ
[27] For more on this position, cf. âOn Wildism and Eco-extremismâ,
found at this link:
https://ia801902.us.archive.org/20/items/AtltlachinolliEcoExtremistDialogues/Atltlachinolli%3A%20Eco-extremist%20Dialogues.pdf
[28] For a discussion of this topic, see Bill Finlaysonâs work:
https://www.academia.edu/2024993/The_Complex_Hunter-gatherer_and_the_Transition_to_Farming
[29] https://atassa.wordpress.com/2017/07/09/thirty-first-communique-of-the-individualists-tending-toward-the-wild/
[30] Cf. http://regresando.altervista.org/n-5-en/
[31] Except for the rape-y parts that probably didnât even happen - our
note.
[32] https://www.marxists.org/archive/camatte/capcom/on-org.htm