On Sun, Dec 6, 2020 at 5:23 PM Kurtz, Steven <sjku...@buffalo.edu> wrote:


> The reason knowledge is so important is that it can function as a virtual
> glue to build community and a way for many members to say I may not be
> educated like the members of the demiurge, but I am more intelligent and
> better informed, but most importantly, the goal is transformation—to be a
> part of a constellation that gives you the power to transcend the limits of
> a false given. Take the red pill and emerge anew.
>

This is the heart of it. The quest to overcome alienation is the spiritual
mainspring that calculating politicians have learned to bend and release at
will.

At the level of common people, the alienation is easily understandable and
has many identifiable causes. On the one hand, every aspect of the
communitarians' symbolic order - and by order I mean hierarchy in the
sacred sense, the order of human relationships in the great chain that
extends from creaturely Earth to the Divine - every aspect of this order is
threatened by rapid change, whether you're talking gender roles,
institutional authority, inclusion/exclusion boundaries, even property
ownership (perceived as "under attack" when government regulators come in).
To this you can add a materialist perspective: it's obvious that a large
amount of working-class people are losing the opportunities and advantages
of the old Fordist-extractivist economy, without any replacement that can
be seen. Elite knowledge says all this change is inevitable - so if you
don't want it or couldn't survive it, you had better find new knowledge,
otherwise you are simply invalidated and left for dead. This is why more
and more people on the right are finding new knowledge somewhere outside
the mainstream, and sharing it with others who recognize it as the truth.
Trump won by a landslide - do you know?

What Steve says is spot on and matches all the testimony I've read. What's
important is not the quality of the gnosis, its internal coherence, its
validation by outside sources, its verifiability - but instead, what's
important is that others recognize it. That recognition restores the old
hierarchical order and defends it from caustic sophistry. It makes America
great again, in the flesh, as a unified community.

Religion is the central theater for this reaffirmation of identity. It
always has been, since the days of the Roman empire when the church taught
the faithful to be "in, but not of this world." For sure it did not take
long for the Christian community, educated in this way, to go back outside
and take over the empire. Which they may well end up doing again, in short
order.

No one wants to hear about this stuff because it's too banal on the surface
- and too threatening underneath. Rightwing churches are like Rotary Clubs,
but with a lot more emotional range because you've got women, children,
elders and the Sermon on the Mount involved, in addition to the dudes
talking politics and making deals. Variations on the basic pattern extend
throughout the different social classes, of course it can get much more
sophisticated. What we should understand at the heart of it is the
intensity of the alienation, and the corresponding need for new, secret
knowledge that can rebuild the threatened community. When apocalyptic
political knowledge comes in the door, the boring Sunday service becomes a
petrol bomb. Bannon and Trump threw it into downtown Washington and set the
world on fire.

The thing is, alienation is coming for everybody. Imperial breakdown
combined with climate change is going to destroy the old middle class
privileges. The twenty-somethings are seeking secret knowledge in a big way
right now, because liberalism has nothing to offer them but a scorched
future. In the past, capitalist progress had its cosmological symbols:
atomic energy, the moon shot, the World Wide Web. All of that tastes like
ashes for the younger post-left generations who see climate change on the
horizon. But the cosmological knowledge that is sought by these younger
people has no unity, no connection to power of any kind, and therefore no
politics. Which means we're sitting ducks. The next incarnation of Trump
will come to office with clear doctrines, organized forces, and an
effective strategy. At that point, "secret knowledge" for right-wing
America will mean being in on the plan.

I think that the only way to turn this story around is to come up with an
industrial program that serves cosmological ends. Something like "Rebuild
the energy system for Gaia." It has to be an industrial plan because it has
to offer people a chance, not to preserve the old world, but to build a new
one, with work and money and material progress involved. It has to be
practical and logical and feasible, but above all, egalitarian enough to
bring in new people. At the same time it has to be cosmological because
only those who can see a further star will find the courage and energy to
fight against the bitter realities that are staring them in their face.

It's true that the Christian right can be subverted in many different ways,
as Steve suggests, and it would be urgent for the government itself -
acting through the media, the educational institutions, the police etc - to
carry out this subversion. Such battles between Church and State were
fought out in France for over a century, and it is well known that Durkheim
advised the transformation of the Republic into a kind of secular religion
(which was done - go check out the Pantheon in the 5th arrondissement for
instance). Durkheim and his contemporaries saw that you could not simply
dismantle the old gods - you have to raise new ones in their place. It's
very clear that we need to pull down all the Columbus statues, and create
new ones in which the most advanced scientific ideas about symbiosis and
biogeochemical cycles are but graven ornaments for tellurian deities.

OK, most of you surely think I've gone off the deep end. You don't come
from Australia or California, where the Pyrocene has already begun. You
haven't yet seen - or indeed, experienced - what the damaged Goddess is
getting ready to do to us. You don't yet realize the vulnerability of the
capitalist world, the elite world, your world. You have not sought new
knowledge. You think the system works. You're sitting ducks.











> I don’t want to play down the former two reasons for becoming a part of
> the Gnostic front. They are significant. For Evangelicals and other
> conservative Christians the breaking of the spiritual consensus in the West
> in the 60s was traumatic, and the erosion of a national spiritual life has
> continued ever since. From their perspective, Gnostic revelation could
> bring back the consensus. The fact that yoga and wellness can commune with
> evangelicals through Qanon or anti-vax seems to be an indication of this
> possibility from a Gnostic point of view. For the greater Trump cult, being
> viewed as ignorant rubes by their educational superiors (now more than ever
> as Trump continues to loot and grift this class) has been a source of
> aggravation. Gnosticism proves their greater intelligence and their
> superior knowledge that in turn acts as a real power lift to their pride
> and well-being. The elite of the Republican Party understand this desire
> and are taking advantage of it. In part, this is why the Republican Party
> is becoming the working class party in the US.
>
>
>
> We do need a new ecological aesthetic (CAE just did a book on that), and
> we do need a new political theology. I can’t help but think of the anti-vax
> motto—“You have data, but we have stories.” But none of that does any good
> if it is not accompanied by a massive intervention campaigns into the
> Gnostic networks of alternative reality. This is such a significant site in
> the lives of millions, and we ignore it at our own peril.
>
>
>
> *I want to make clear that with the exceptions of Qanon and anti-vax I am
> not indicting every person who participates in these various groups—only a
> variable subsection is a part of the Gnostic front. Membership tends to
> happen in spiritually-oriented groups since they are most of the way there
> already.
>
>
> ------------------------------
> *From:* nettime-l-boun...@mail.kein.org <nettime-l-boun...@mail.kein.org>
> on behalf of Brian Holmes <bhcontinentaldr...@gmail.com>
> *Sent:* Friday, December 4, 2020 8:29 PM
> *To:* Max Herman; a moderated mailing list for net criticism
> *Subject:* Re: <nettime> Fw: Has the right gone full Alt_?
>
>
>> The new aesthetic for the conservative base can be reasonably
>> well-understood as a cooptation of the alt_ or insurgent aesthetic.  It
>> offers something like the liberating euphoria which progressives felt about
>> 20 years ago.  Conservatives can like, tweet, dox, spam, hack, and
>> everything else which formerly were chiefly the playground of the other
>> side.  The surge of dopamine delivered by these aesthetic behaviors can be
>> understood as a delayed version of the 1996 internet, specially branded and
>> targeted at those who were not part of the earlier phase and resent both
>> its participants and their value system.
>>
>>
> This is totally true for the alt_right, and the survivors of those heavily
> dopamined days of the 90s should know it better than anyone else (unless
> they're still doped out on Intel, or just stuck wherever they landed). In
> my case I felt this turnaround with all the bitterness of the culturally
> displaced, starting four years ago.
>
> You're right Max, this kind of thing always happens and one has to move
> on, that's the personal lesson.
>
> However, the alt-right is only a hipster suburb of ultra-conservatism, and
> I think its aesthetics are a detail. Just as the big mistake of the
> dopamine binge was to think that everyone was about to join your wild high
> (precarious cognitarians as the leading edge of class consciousness!), so
> in our day, the alt-right is just another bunch of nerds with attitude. It
> looks big when you stumble into one of their chat rooms, or cafés if they
> actually have such things (maybe in the Milwaukee suburbs?). It's not
> really so big though, just as the counter-globalization movement wasn't.
>
> I've moved on to different questions.
>
> Here's one of them. It turns out that on closer examination, what has
> really metastasized over the past 20 years is the corporate capitalist grip
> on the sprawling, palpitating world of religious communitarianism. This is
> the cancer you can see in Mitch McConnel's eyes, this is what Amy Coney
> Barret embodies to extremes of smug pathology, and this is the only
> explanation for the kinds of insanities that have come out of Donald
> Trump's mouth over the last few days in particular. Only people who judge
> their daily lives by what some pastor tells them concerning God and the
> Devil could possibly accept the concocted drivel of pro-life, pro-gun,
> leader-cult nationalism that is now served up, to overwhelming effect, by
> the cynical pols of the so-called evangelical movement. It's not really a
> movement, though, but an exactingly constructed motivational machine, by
> far the most dangerous political technology in the world. White supremacy,
> neonazism, extreme libertarianism and the alt_right are just feeder streams
> that swell this foaming current and give it the complexity and power to
> dominate a declining imperial order, which it is still doing in the US
> despite Joe Biden's win. I think the old liberal/progressive hegemony has
> been all but overwhelmed by religious nationalism. We better fight for our
> worlds, folks, because if not we are going to lose them all.
>
> On the left, we have always wanted to believe that the rapaciousness of
> monopoly capital would drive the workers and peasants to our side. "The
> real enemy is the Koch brothers and their dark money," we'd say, "and the
> rest of the confusion will disappear once that becomes clear." Now it's
> urgent to identify, not just the leaders and their aims, but the entire
> cultural/political complex that is giving the present its twisted and
> disheartening character. Because as conditions get worse, the veil doesn't
> fall. No, the religious fervor grows. Katherine Stewart has written what
> seems to be the best book on this stuff, and she puts the growth dynamic in
> a nutshell:
>
> "That’s the way inequality works. On the one hand, it creates
> concentrations of wealth whose beneficiaries are determined to manipulate
> the political process to hold on to and enhance their privileges. On the
> other hand, it generates a sense of instability and anxiety among broad
> sectors of the wider public, which is then ripe for conversion to a
> religion that promises authority and order."
>
> That's Karl Polanyi's double movement. The alienation of globalized
> capitalism grows by leaps but bounds - but the powers that emerge to stop
> it prove much worse than the disease they were supposed to cure.
>
> On that basis, a gang of monopoly capitalists have created a national
> popular religion, and right now they hold the Senate, the Supreme Court and
> the Presidency of the United States. These folks have global reach, and
> anyone who was justifiably worried about Opus Dei a few years ago, has not
> seen anything yet. The cosmological battle is already three-quarters won,
> and we hyper-educated godless anarchists from the cities have barely even
> noticed it was happening. To fight back, we need something a lot more
> powerful than another tech-driven euphoria. Without a transcendent sense of
> cross-racial, multigendered community to match the horrid archaisms of the
> right - and without some new version of the Messiah, I'd say - we are
> cooked.
>
> Walter Benjamin understood this kind of thing very well, but his
> categories are far too out of date to help us. It's time for the
> contemporary left to develop, not just a new ecological aesthetics, but
> even more, an updated version of political theology.
>
>
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