It is hard to make the case that the Occupy Wall Street
movement is fully reasonable, I think, given some of their strange ideas about
economics and their strange behavior – yet they are tolerated. It’s worth noting there has been fighting,
vandalism, rape, and even a shot taken at
the White House amidst the Occupants’ activities. You have to doubt any of this would have been
tolerated if the Tea Party did it. (Judith
Weiss pointed out a recent National
Review article about the
Southern Poverty Law Center’s complete lack of interest in violence among
the Occupants.)
Still, even Occupy has some good points, and here’s video of the fairly
civil dialogue I had with a couple Occupy activists (plus less-radical CNBC
and Google+ commentators) three weeks ago today (the tech wizards at Google+
finally figured out how to have me enter the dialogue at the 7 minute mark, then lost me again about
fifteen minutes before the dialogue ended).
Careful observers will notice I deploy the same cowboy hat
and “V Guy” mask I wore at the beginning of last week’s Dionysium event in
Williamsburg (of which I hope our videographer will have footage next week that
I can link).
I don’t always talk to Occupy radicals and anarchists,
though, and you can also see a photo nearby (by Doug DeMark) of me at this month’s
conservative-filled Phillips Foundation gathering (flanked by Rachel Currie and
Laura Vanderkam), and tonight at 7:45pm I’ll attend NYPD terror-tracker Hannah
Meyers’ album release party at Fontana’s (admittedly after a quick 7pm stop at
King’s Head Tavern to see a bunch of anarcho-capitalists). I’m thanked in her liner notes.
And speaking of liner notes, it looks like the most prolific
female writer of album liner notes, Dawn Eden, will join Hannah onstage at our
next Dionysium (June 21, 8pm, in Williamsburg) – but Dawn is by some measures
even more conservative than Hannah and instead of rocking will in this case be
discussing her new book My Peace I Give
You about the Catholic saints and psychological healing. More soon.
•••
I think I can safely say I have some handle on how the
Occupants actually think after the dialogue above, a few trips to Zuccotti
Park, and reading issues of the journal n+1’s
spun-off Occupy! Gazette, plus the
essay collection Occupy! from Verso
Books, written by numerous Occupants themselves (indeed, I was the one who
likely boosted the book’s sales at the release party by suggesting they make a
prominent “only $5 per copy” sign, which they did).
I’ll take a closer look at the Occupy! anthology below – but first, a final word about
left-anarchist anthropologist David Graeber, who is affiliated with the
movement and about whose book Debt I blogged
earlier this month (he is also, by the way, a former Yale anthro colleague
of anarchism-sympathizing James C. Scott, author of Seeing Like a State and the forthcoming Two Cheers for Anarchism).
I have repeatedly complained (including in the CNBC chat
above) that Graeber is not merely opposed to student loan debt or Third World
debt but to all debt-recording, accounting, and in the end even math itself (gotta give him points for
consistency and radicalism, though I assume he’s opposed to points-awarding as
well). I will grant him this: Constant
calculation can make people
cold.
One study suggests that even being a utilitarian (as I am) –
that is, someone who wants to calculate how best to maximize other people’s
happiness – may be
correlated with rather cold-hearted, sociopathic
tendencies. But there’s no getting
around the fact that calculation and rationality will be needed to make wise
decisions in a complex world where gut instinct or “heart” alone won’t always cut
it.
In the end, I think we need people empathic enough to want to
calculate how to make people happy –
which is really how I think. But maybe
it’s a frighteningly rare combo.
Still, I would not want us all to just throw in the towel
and start thinking like anti-rationalist Frankfurt School types, who think
(much like some traditionalist conservatives!) that science and economics have
robbed the world of its magic. And some
of the latter-day Frankfurt types one encounters, especially among artists and
the like, certainly do seem eager to engage in magical thinking.
I think I’ve noticed a subtle increase lately in the number
of them who say things like “I’d like to imagine a world where we don’t need property rights” – and then I
assume they proceed to imagine it right there in front of you, though they
never articulate how this world could function, so it’s best to smile, nod, and
move away at that moment. Articulating
details of what it is they’re imagining is not
their job, apparently. Voting for
Democrats and hating property owners is.
•••
I will say this for Graeber: I share his desire to see all
of life characterized by what he calls “mutuality,” a broadly-shared assumption
of kindness and beneficence in everyday interaction that we more-capitalist
types often call mutually beneficial
exchange. It’s the key to
understanding life’s good points, from business to love to friendly
conversation. Without an awareness of
mutually beneficial exchange, all of life seems like exploitation – since
someone must always be winning or losing.
I now think the darkest parts of our animal psyches are always primed to
start thinking in that brutal way under sufficiently chaotic, violent, or paranoid
circumstances.
Because of that, socialists, labor unions, sexual
sadomasochists, religious authoritarians, common pickpockets – even in some
(aesthetic/psychological) sense Ayn Rand with her Nietzschean assumption that
the only alternative to self-abasement is self-aggrandizement – will always
think, anxiously, as if it’s “exploit or be exploited,” predator or prey. But in truth, everybody can interact in a
positive, happy, cooperative way that ends up benefiting everyone – while
respecting property rights – and there’s no reason not to aim for that, except
cowardice.
Everyone from “communality”-praising Graeber to
sanctimoniously self-sacrificing altruist-Christians needs to learn that we do
have a choice besides “hammer” or “anvil.”
Kindness is the very foundation of civilized life, and we must not let
it seem uneconomical, unphilosophical, or
unhip to say so.
I meant to mention in my prior entry about him that, as if
Graeber’s basic argument weren’t weird enough, there were a few brief tangents in
Debt that were so stereotypically
lefty it was a bit embarrassing, and unworthy of even his odd academic standards,
such as when he suggested at one point that radical Islamic women’s groups in the
Middle East might be the richest current fount of economic ideas and the
potential source of an alternative to finance capitalism.
Well, maybe, but
you have to at least suspect he would
not think they were geniuses if Bush hadn’t dropped bombs on them, so to
speak. Maybe war raises IQ scores (if I
can be forgiven for trying to quantify things again).
Given the origins of Occupy Wall Street in Canada’s
Adbusters magazine, its support from labor unions, and its visits from
minstrels such as Jeff Mangum, I am inclined to blame Canada, the workers, and
alternative rock for the whole thing, but the real roots of the problem may
have been captured by a graffito I saw on the men’s room wall at Café Loup during
a meeting of the book club with whom I read and discussed Debt: “HEGEL IS AN ASSHOLE.”
•••
Graeber himself may not be an asshole, and as a libertarian,
I certainly have to enjoy his radical skepticism about the idea that the state
is a natural representation of our vast, unpayable “debt to society.”
Indeed, all sorts of existentialist ideas flood in once one
accepts libertarian or left-anarchist ideas instead of the usual socialist and
nationalist appeals on which we’ve been raised for a century or so. Graeber goes too far in wanting to abolish
even private, voluntarily-assumed debts, but his skepticism is not bad as a Max
Stirner-like exercise in dispensing with ghostlike imaginary social
obligations.
And though he is wrong to try indicting capitalism simply by
showing that historically it was so
often entwined with the state (why not liberate it instead of killing both?),
his book is a reminder that instead of gradualism, we might do well to try the
ambitious method of tearing out religion, state, and other coercive relations
by the roots all at the same time, as parts of a single bad idea, dangerous as discovering
the alternative may sound.
I will sound too radical to some – and some will think it’s
crazy I spent the past year praising the Ron Paul presidential bid – but the
existing system is not exactly sane itself, and down at Occupy, they always
seem to have multiple tents and stations set up to cope with all their members’
literal mental illnesses. I may in the
end be the sanest option you’ve got.
One of the many
photos of Occupy supporters in the Occupy!
essay anthology that gives you an idea how culturally tone deaf the activists
can be shows a woman holding a written “I am the 99%” statement that
says she has “three diagnosed mental illnesses” and needs help. Who better to restructure the economy and
reinvent democracy, her kind or mine?
•••
Gawker noted an early-morning
April 30 raid of a New Jersey Occupy organizer’s apartment in which cops broke
down the door and rushed in, ostensibly to arrest the organizer’s roommate on a six-year-old open-container
charge. And that’s the sort of thing
that can make even a very moderate citizen think, “I don’t care what crazy
thing the protesters are protesting about – the cops are jerks.”
Still, one can sympathize with the earnest efforts of the
Occupiers without agreeing with their beliefs.
I notice that several essays in the anthology are by Astra Taylor (the
sister of the even more hippie-named Sunaura Taylor and the wife of the
aforementioned ex-Neutral
Milk Hotel singer, Jeff Mangum). She
once even managed to piss off my left-leaning old philosophy professor Martha
Nussbaum by sticking her in a
documentary that implied that the purpose of philosophy is left-wing political
activism. Small world!
Taylor also made a documentary praising the vapid and
vaguely anti-Semitic yet dangerously popular left-fascist philosopher Slavoj
Zizek, who is beloved by the kind of males who can’t articulate the reasons for
their anger but are pretty sure they’re entitled to smash a Starbucks window or
something while they’re figuring it all out.
No matter how weird the people behind it, the Occupy! anthology is a neat glimpse
inside a historic movement, though. Some
moments from the book:
•Revelation: people have pointed to the New York Times changing that bridge
headline about whether the protesters were lured onto the Brooklyn Bridge by cops as evidence of pro-police chicanery, but in fact one essay here notes the protesters were
proud of blocking the bridge and getting arrested for it and were not duped.
•Co-editor Sarah Resnick confesses at one point, “I
experienced a moment of paranoia: Was it possible the police were behind the drum
circle[?...A] more brilliant plan couldn’t have been devised: Drive everyone to
irritable madness!”
•At messy Zuccotti, “This camp is not Burning Man!” was
repeatedly shouted.
•More serious criticism is leveled against the Black Bloc
anarchists, who would sometimes instigate fights with police and then leave
other, non-violent – even disabled – protesters behind to do the fighting.
•One contributor to the anthology mentions seeing Lars Von
Trier’s Melancholia (described by
comedian Angry Bob as the worst film he’s ever seen) during a break from
protesting.
•Another describes the painful process of ousting the
homeless.
•Resnick notes rumors and conflicting reports within the
Occupy camps about things like whether schizophrenics were showing up of their
own accord or being dropped off by police.
She reprints a series of tweets about whether or not one protester had
been fatally run over by a car.
•“Safe spaces,” including group tents, would eventually be
created for people who “identified as female.”
•Zuccotti had a huge General Assembly debate over whether to
release $3,000 to do laundry.
•The Alternative Economies Working Group had a printing
press run by people who hadn’t done printing before. I hope all the Occupants learned within weeks how hard it is to rebuild
civilization instead of taking seven decades to learn that lesson like the
Soviet Union.
•But any leftist book that insults NPR can’t be all
bad. Contributor/activist Keith Gessen
notes feeling insulted by OWS’s depiction on NPR’s Wait Wait...Don’t Tell Me!, which he confesses he’s begun to find
irritating over the past couple years.
I know the feeling – they got some crucial details of a
story about me wrong, and then they laughed about it (specifically, that
incident in which I argued on C-SPAN2 with an ex, with whom I’ve since quietly buried
the hatchet, now that she seems to be sincerely reassessing her life and
planning her next, likely very cool, career move). I should probably sue NPR, but I’m busy
enough just writing long blog entries and worrying about the collapse of the
global economy.
2 comments:
You have the same haircut as an eight-year-old.
You've ruined your career. You're never going to get a book published - the female-dominated publishing industry won't touch an abusive creep like you.
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