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Title: Against “Legalization” Author: Hakim Bey Language: en Topics: authority, legalization, marijuana, Peter Lamborn Wilson, spectacle Source: Retrieved April 18th, 2009 from http://www.hermetic.com/bey/legalization.html. Notes: No publication date found at source.
As a writer, I am distressed and depressed by the suspicion that
“dissident media” has become a contradiction in terms — an
impossibility. Not because of any triumph of censorship however, but the
reverse. There is no real censorship in our society, as Chomsky points
out. Suppression of dissent is instead paradoxically achieved by
allowing media to absorb (or “co-opt”) all dissent as image.
Once processed as commodity, all rebellion is reduced to the image of
rebellion, first as spectacle, and last as simulation. (See Debord,
Baudrillard, etc.) The more powerful the dissent as art (or “discourse”)
the more powerless it becomes as commodity. In a world of Global
Capital, where all media function collectively as the perfect mirror of
Capital, we can recognize a global Image or universal imaginaire,
universally mediated, lacking any outside or margin. All Image has
undergone Enclosure, and as a result it seems that all art is rendered
powerless in the sphere of the social. In fact, we can no longer even
assume the existence of any “sphere of the social. All human relations
can be — and are — expressed as commodity relations.
In this situation, it would seem “reform” has also become an
impossibility, since all partial ameliorizations of society will be
transformed (by the same paradox that determines the global Image) into
means of sustaining and enhancing the power of the commodity. For
example, “reform” and “democracy” have now become code-words for the
forcible imposition of commodity relations on the former Second and
Third Worlds. “Freedom” means freedom of corporations, not of human
societies.
From this point of view, I have grave reservations about the reform
program of the anti-Drug-Warriors and legalizationists. I would even go
so far as to say that I am “against legalization.”
Needless to add that I consider the Drug War an abomination, and that I
would demand immediate unconditional amnesty for all “prisoners of
consciousness” — assuming that I had any power to make demands! But in a
world where all reform can be instantaneously turned into new means of
control, according to the “paradox” sketched in the above paragraphs, it
makes no sense to go on demanding legalization simply because it seems
rational and humane.
For example, consider what might result from the legalization of
“medical marijuana” — clearly the will of the people in at least six
states. The herb would instantly fall under drastic new regulations from
“Above” (the AMA, the courts, insurance companies, etc.). Monsanto would
probably acquire the DNA patents and “intellectual ownership” of the
plant’s genetic structure. Laws would probably be tightened against
illegal marijuana for “recreational uses.” Smokers would be defined (by
law) as “sick.” As a commodity, Cannabis would soon be denatured like
other legal psychotropics such as coffee, tobacco, or chocolate.
Terence McKenna once pointed out that virtually all useful research on
psychotropics is carried out illegally and is often largely funded from
underground. Legalization would make possible a much tighter control
from above over all drug research. The valuable contributions of the
entheogenic underground would probably diminish or cease altogether.
Terence suggested that we stop wasting time and energy petitioning the
authorities for permission to do what we’re doing, and simply get on
with it.
Yes, the Drug War is evil and irrational. Let us not forget, however,
that as an economic activity, the War makes quite good sense. I’m not
even going to mention the booming “corrections industry,” the bloated
police and intelligence budgets, or the interests of the pharmaceutical
cartels. Economists estimate that some ten percent of circulating
capital in the world is “gray money” derived from illegal activity
(largely drug and weapon sales). This gray area is actually a kind of
free-floating frontier for Global Capital itself, a small wave that
precedes the big wave and provides its “sense of direction.” (For
example gray money or “offshore” capital is always the first to migrate
from depressed markets to thriving markets.) “War is the health of the
State” as Randolph Bourne once said — but war is no longer so profitable
as in the old days of booty, tribute and chattel slavery. Economic war
increasingly takes its place, and the Drug War is an almost “pure” form
of economic war. And since the Neo-liberal State has given up so much
power to corporations and “markets” since 1989, it might justly be said
that the War on Drugs constitutes the “health” of Capital itself.
From this perspective, reform and legalization would clearly be doomed
to failure for deep “infrastructural” reasons, and therefore all
agitation for reform would constitute wasted effort — a tragedy of
misdirected idealism. Global Capital cannot be “reformed” because all
reformation is deformed when the form itself is distorted in its very
essence. Agitation for reform is allowed so that an image of free speech
and permitted dissidence can be maintained, but reform itself is never
permitted. Anarchists and Marxists were right to maintain that the
structure itself must be changed, not merely its secondary
characteristics. Unfortunately the “movement of the social” itself seems
to have failed, and even its deep underlying structures must now be
“re-invented” almost from scratch. The War on Drugs is going to go on.
Perhaps we should consider how to act as warriors rather than reformers.
Nietzsche says somewhere that he has no interest in overthrowing the
stupidity of the law, since such reform would leave nothing for the
“free spirit” to accomplish — nothing to “overcome.” I wouldn’t go so
far as to recommend such an “immoral” and starkly existentialist
position. But I do think we could do with a dose of stoicism.
Beyond (or aside from) economic considerations, the ban on (some)
psychotropics can also be considered from a “shamanic” perspective.
Global Capital and universal Image seem able to absorb almost any
“outside” and transform it into an area of commodification and control.
But somehow, for some strange reason, Capital appears unable or
unwilling to absorb the entheogenic dimension. It persists in making war
on mind-altering or transformative substance, rather than attempting to
“co-opt” and hegemonize their power.
In other words it would seem that some sort of authentic power is at
stake here. Global Capital reacts to this power with the same basic
strategy as the Inquisition — by attempting to suppress it from the
outside rather than control it from within. (“Project MKULTRA” was the
government’s secret attempt to penetrate the occult interior of
psychotropism- — it appears to have failed miserably.) In a world that
has abolished the Outside by the triumph of the Image, it seems that at
least one “outside” nevertheless persists. Power can deal with this
outside only as a form of the unconscious, i.e., by suppression rather
than realization. But this leaves open the possibility that those who
manage to attain “direct awareness” of this power might actually be able
to wield it and implement it. If “entheogenic neo-shamanism” (or
whatever you want to call it) cannot be betrayed and absorbed into the
power-structure of the Image, then we may hypothesize that it represents
a genuine Other, a viable alternative to the “one world” of triumphant
Capital. It is (or could be) our source of power.
The “Magic of the State” (as M. Taussig calls it), which is also the
magic of Capital itself, consists of social control through the
manipulation of symbols. This is attained through mediation, including
the ultimate medium, money as hieroglyphic text, money as pure
Imagination as “social fiction” or mass hallucination. This real
illusion has taken the place of both religion and ideology as
delusionary sources of social power. This power therefore possesses (or
is possessed by) a secret goal; that all human relations be defined
according to this hieroglyphic mediation, this “magic.” But
neo-shamanism proposes with all seriousness that another magic may
exist, an effective mode of consciousness that cannot be hexed by the
sign of the commodity. If this were so, it would help explain why the
Image appears unable or unwilling to deal “rationally” with the “issue
of drugs.” In fact, a magical analysis of power might emerge from the
observed fact of this radical incompatibility of the Global Imaginaire
and shamanic consciousness.
In such a case, what could our power consist of in actual empirical
terms? I am far from proposing that “winning” the War on Drugs would
somehow constitute The Revolution — or even that “shamanic power” could
contest the magic of the State in any strategic manner. Clearly however
the very existence of entheogenism as a true difference — in a world
where true difference is denied — marks the historic validity of an
Other, of an authentic Outside. In the (unlikely) event of legalization,
this Outside would be breached, entered, colonized, betrayed, and turned
into sheer simulation. A major source of initiation, still accessible in
a world apparently devoid of mystery and of will, would be dissolved
into empty representation, a pseudo-rite of passage into the
timeless/spaceless enclosure of the Image. In short, we would have
sacrificed our potential power to the ersatz reform of legalization, and
we would win nothing thereby but the simulacrum of tolerance at the
expense of the triumph of Control.
Again: I have no idea what our strategy shall be. I believe however that
the time has come to admit that a tactics of mere contingency can no
longer sustain us. “Permitted dissent” has become an empty category, and
reform merely a mask for recuperation. The more we struggle on “their”
terms the more we lose. The drug legalization movement has never won a
single battle. Not in America anyway — and America is the “sole
superpower” of Global Capital. We boast of our outlaw status as
outsiders or marginals, as guerrilla ontologists; why then, do we
continually beg for authenticity and validation (either as “reward” or
as “punishment”) from authority? What good would it do us if we were to
be granted this status, this “legality”?
The Reform movement has upheld true rationality and it has championed
real human values. Honor where honor is due. Given the profound failure
of the movement however, might it not be timely to say a few words for
the irrational, for the irreducible wildness of shamanism, and even a
single word for the values of the warrior? “Not peace, but a sword.”