Lazy rascals, spending their substance, and more, in riotous living

The vast right-wing conspiracy

There was an exciting blogosphere controversy a little while ago, when John Edwards let himself be forced by some right-wingers into sacking some people from his campaign team because of stuff they’d said on their blogs. As Adam rightly says, this is a depressing but predictable example of the willingness (one might even say eagerness) of the supposed American left to capitulate to pressure from the right, even when the complaint being made is one that only makes sense in right-wing terms (see also Barak Obama, passim). Read more↴

Build your own big Other

She took off her T-shirt, then her bra, then her skirt, and as she did she pulled the most incredible faces. She twirled around in her skimpy panties for a few seconds more and then, not knowing what else to do, began getting dressed again.

— Michel Houellebecq

A poster in Sproul Plaza says: 'Make Change. Act Now. Serve!' Read more↴

The Iraq War is not taking place

I don’t mean this in the Baudrillardian sense; although Iraq post-2003 exemplifies Baudrillard’s ideas more even than the first Gulf War did. Where that war presented us with a mediated war in the sense that the war as it was constructed for Westerners (missile cameras on “smart bombs,” “eyewitness” reports from journalists in neighboring countries) wasn’t what was really happening, in Iraq right now what is really happening is already mediated, whether that be embedded journalists following soldiers through the streets, or the filming of torture in Abu Ghraib.

But, as I say, I mean this in a simpler sense: there is no Iraq war, because what is happening in Iraq isn’t a war. Orin Hatch was on C-SPAN the other day, telling us that if American troops left Iraq, “the enemy” would “win.” But who exactly is the enemy at this point? And what would it mean for them to be defeated, for America to win? America is not fighting against some discrete entity that could be defeated, its target is the entire population of Iraq, and it is fighting not to achieve anything but simply to remain where it is. What’s happening in Iraq is an occupation of a curiously pure sort: not a war of conquest, like Vietnam, or a conventional sort of imperialism, because there’s no ability, and as far as I can tell, no desire, to produce a stable puppet regime. What the ideologues tell us is that we must “stay the course”: a course to a destination now so perpetually deferred as to be no destination at all, just a course that stretches onwards forever.

And here, I suppose, the Baudrillardian point returns. If this is not a war at all, but something incessantly presented as one, an image-war producing image-corpses that are no less dead than real ones, how do we oppose it?

Happy international women’s day

Militant political struggle, in all its forms, is not just for men. Neither is intellectual struggle.

What if they called an apocalypse and nobody noticed?

It is said of Babylon that its capture was, two days later, still unknown to parts of the city.

The Politics

A striking parenthesis in Aristotle, a propos the recent suggestions at I cite, Poetix, and k-punk that the world has already ended.

Dawkins’s apologia

The most recent of them have found the correct expression for their activity when they declare they are only fighting against “phrases.” They forget, however, that to these phrases they themselves are only opposing other phrases, and that they are in no way combating the real existing world when they are merely combating the phrases of this world. The only results which this philosophic criticism could achieve were a few (and at that thoroughly one-sided) elucidations of Christianity from the point of view of religious history; all the rest of their assertions are only further embellishments of their claim to have furnished, in these unimportant elucidations, discoveries of universal importance.

Marx, The German Ideology

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