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Cancers of the left.
by By Stephen DeVoy. Thursday January 29, 2004 at 11:29 AM

The "Lefter Than Thou" mindset is a manifestation of the human tendency to rank individuals according to some standard of values. While ranking of this sort is seen as a form of a meritocracy, the reality is that it is anything but meritocracy. The motivation for ranking individuals within the left according to some ideological standard is not an attempt to encourage virtue within the ranks but is, instead, an attempt by individuals to derive a sense of worth or to acquire power through the denigration of others.

Author: Stephen DeVoy
Date: January 27, 2004

In my previous article, Anti-Bodies of the AmeriFascist Memeplex, I enumerated some of the primary memes deployed by the dominant memeplex which act to undermine the left. This article delves into a similar subject: the self defeating memes of the dominant leftist memeplex. Our inability to wage an effective resistance against the dominant memeplex is rooted not only in the effective defense mechanisms of the dominant memeplex but in flaws of our own memeplex.

As someone attempting to stand back and propose a theory of struggle that stands in an abstract relationship with all of the underlying theories of struggle, I often find myself targeted by other members of the left who either fail to understand what it is I am attempting to accomplish or who feel threatened by the emergence of a new level of struggle. It is in the context that I've had the benefit of being one of the targets of these cancers of the left and thus find myself in the position to write about them.

Anyone that is both a left leaning activist and a free thinker has shared the experience of disharmony within the left. The self defeating tendencies of the left include the "lefter than thou," "politically correct," sectarian, leveling, self deprecating, hyper-collectivist and utopian mindsets. We will examine these.

Lefter Than Thou

The "Lefter Than Thou" mindset is a manifestation of the human tendency to rank individuals according to some standard of values. While ranking of this sort is seen as a form of a meritocracy, the reality is that it is anything but meritocracy. The motivation for ranking individuals within the left according to some ideological standard is not an attempt to encourage virtue within the ranks but is, instead, an attempt by individuals to derive a sense of worth or to acquire power through the denigration of others. The same mental cancer that led white Americans of the pre-emancipation South to support slavery is behind the "Lefter Than Thou" mentality. Those that have accomplished little of value derive self-esteem by denigrating others. I would go so far as to say that the value of a leftist is actually inversely proportional to the amount of effort he or she puts into instigating the denigration of fellow leftists. Those that sling mud at their comrades are more often those that have accomplished little or nothing. Moreover, spending energy on slinging mud at comrades decreases the energy available for allocation towards tasks that would benefit the left and/or diminish the right. Thus, from a resource allocation perspective alone, it should be easy to prove that those engaged by the "Lefter Than Thou" mindset expend less energy struggling against the right than those that abstain from infighting.

I've seen many examples of this on self publishing media. Often the antagonist is anonymous (usually a sign of cowardice). For example, I've seen many attacks against Noam Chomsky challenging his dedication to the left, on the argument that some position of his is not sufficiently pure or radical. Such comments are often followed by ad homonym attacks, speculation about the cause of the "deficit," and often accusations such as co-option or cowardice. The cowards that post such things, as I pointed out, remain anonymous, thereby avoiding a counter attack. The correct interpretation of such behavior, I believe, is that the attacker is frustrated by his or her own lack of accomplishment and derives a sense of self worth by attacking someone that has accomplished something.

In Tsarist Russia it was not uncommon for men to make a name for themselves as masters of the duel. Young men and unsuccessful men often sought fame by challenging a master of the duel in the hope that killing the master would elevate their own rank, thus taking a short cut to importance. When one activist targets another, whether in an argument or a smear campaign, the goal and form of the struggle is often the same as the duel. What cannot be accomplished through hard work and talent, the lazy and ineffective attempt to accomplish through the assassination (in spirit) of those that are accomplished.

We should reject from our ranks those that engage in the instigation of attacks against our comrades. They consume our energy, provide fodder for our enemies and decrease the pleasure that should be derived from anti-authoritarian struggle.

Politically Correct

Fortunately, political correctness if on the wane. However, it still exists and must be addressed. Political correctness is nothing new. It it is a recurring theme within human history. Its dominance manifests itself in the form of a dark age. When Christian political correctness took hold, Europe plunged into 500 years of stagnation. Much of the Islamic world is currently suffering from Islamic political correctness. Judaism within the US is infected with Zionist political correctness. Each form of political correctness fixes a people on a course much like lemmings running in one direction until they encounter a cliff and march off to self destruction.

The American left is currently the victim of its own dark age brought about by political correctness. There are strong signs that this period of darkness is coming to end. I point to the rise of anarchism as a political philosophy within the US as evidence that political correctness is on the wane within the left. However, even amongst anarchists, especially those of the platformist variety, political correctness still holds sway.

During the 1970s though the early 1990s, political correctness within the left destroyed the vibrant and progressive counter culture of the 196os. Its static nature made it easy for the right to evolve strategies that effectively ridiculed the left, giving rise to the negative connotations of the term "liberal." The left held fast to its static course and was derailed by the right, giving rise to the fascism of the current day. The left is as much a party, due to its closed mindedness and fear of self change, to the rise of the right as the right itself. The left can blame itself for the rise of Bush for it did not provide realistic and appealing alternatives to fascism. This failure is not inherent in leftist ideology, but is a product of a self defeating meme that was embraced by the left in the false belief that it would strengthen the movement by demanding strict loyalty and conformity to its ideals.

The left should have learned from Buddha's story of the man and the raft. Upon crossing a river, the man was left with the decision to carry the raft with him for the rest of his travels or to leave it behind, thereby lightening his burden. Buddhism uses this metaphor as a means to explain why attachment to a philosophy is self defeating. The logical thing to do is to abandon the raft, unless you know with certainty that you will quickly need it again. Since we usually do not know what we will need again, it is better to let go and cross the next river when we get to it. By holding on to static strategies and ideological concepts that emerged from conditions that no longer held, the left increased its own burden and became less effective.

Meanwhile, not bound by political correctness, the right shed its ideology and morphed, as was needed, to defeat the left, thus giving rise to fascism. Static targets are easy to defeat. The key to success is to constantly evolve.

Sectarianism

Sectarianism is not essentially negative. There is a good side to sectarianism, provided the goal is not to destroy other sects but to evolve in competition with them. Coalition building is one of the hallmarks of successful movements on the left. Those that join coalitions for the specific purpose of forwarding common goals are examples of good sectarianism. However, those that either refuse to join coalitions under the false belief that they benefit by standing apart and those that join coalitions only to use them as recruitment grounds are examples of bad sectarianism. Bad sectarianism encourages infighting within the left. Good sectarianism encourages evolution within the left. Bad sectarianism is analogous to cannibalism and good sectarianism is analogous to symbiosis.

The most negative forms of sectarianism manifest themselves in "meeting invasions" (when one sect sends members to another sect's events for the purpose of disruption) and ad homonym attacks (character assassination) on individuals within other sects. Some Trotskyite sects engage in this behavior as do some platformist anarchist sects. One of the most pathetic examples of this phenomenon can be seen in accusations within the anarchist community where specific individuals or groups are smeared with the term "Fake Anarchist." According to the definition of "anarchism," an anarchist is an anti-authoritarian anti-hierarchicalist. Yet, for some anarchists, economic theory is thrown in and used as the yard stick by which to measure an anarchist. While it is true that conventional employment based capitalism is hierarchical, it is not true that self employment which excludes the employment of others is hierarchical. Therefore, anarchists that reject all anarcho-capitalists as "Fake Anarchists" are not only mistaken but are engaged in bad sectarianism. Anarcho-capitalists and anarcho-communists, when employment is eliminated, have more in common than they have in difference. An individualist anarcho-capitalist is proposing nothing more than a collective of one. For some forms of productive activity, this makes sense. The platformist insistence that all productive organization derives from a syndicalist model is anachronistic. Most knowledge workers and intellectual property creators do not work collectively. Insistence upon collectivism automatically excludes a significant portion of the productive population, thereby making anarcho-communism a non option if applied on a universal scale. The Rational Anarchist philosophy that I promulgate is based on the belief that anarcho-communism and anarcho-capitalism must coexist exactly because collectivism and individualism must coexist.

It is time to embrace the notion that no one has a monopoly on the truth and that the universe has a temporal component wherein what is true at some time T1 may not be true at some time T2. In a dynamic universe all systems must remain dynamic or perish. Bad sectarianism promotes static ideologies and must lead, therefore, to self destruction.

Leveling

There is no doubt that most socialist ideologies began with the idea that society should encourage the absolute equality of all individuals. Systems that have attempted to accomplish the goal of leveling have, in all cases, failed. Indeed, the belief that leveling is desirable is based on the idea that our personalities and our abilities are largely a function of environment. Over time, science has demonstrated that many personal qualities pre-exist in the form of dispositions that are encouraged or discouraged by environment. Thus, some of us are more likely to be successful at some things than others and this is not always a product of environment alone. To handicap individuals with talent in order to ensure the success of those without is counter productive. It frustrates the lives of individuals for no reason other than their natural gifts and denies humanity the benefit of the creative ability of its brightest. Moreover, you cannot get blood for a stone and attempts to make the untalented successful usually fail.

However, there is no doubt that meritocracy tends to encourage the accumulation of power among the successful and this accumulation of power increasingly serves, over time, to crystallize the meritocracy into a static plutocracy where rank is no longer a function of talent and/or hard work but a product of past talent and/or hard work. Therefore, true meritocracy requires a constant destruction of accumulated power in order ensure that all relations are based on merit alone. This is largely unworkable as it sets society against the individual for no reason other than success. Negatively rewarding success discourages creativity and, subsequently, denies society the benefit of that creativity. Therefore, some kind of leveling is necessary.

These contradictions between the virtues of leveling and meritocracy are an illusion. As often happens in philosophical discourse, differing concepts are sometimes conflated. Those that believe in leveling often mistake access to resources with ownership of resources. Therefore, those that engage in activities that are expensive are seen as more powerful and those that engage in activities that are cheap are seen as oppressed. When ownership is removed from the equation, none of this needs to be true. "From each according to his ability and to each according to his need," does not imply a transfer of ownership. What it does imply is that one should contribute one's talents freely and have access to that which is needed to make the contribution. This implies a level of inequality in resource consumption and production but it does not imply inequality with respect to power or self actualization. Therefore, we do not need to be the same to be equal. When sameness and equality are conflated, the individual is destroyed.

All of this is more than theoretical. It has an actual impact on real activists. Let's take Michael Moore as an example. Michael Moore is a very successful man. He is well known. His books are widely read and his movies are widely enjoyed. We all benefit from the work of Michael Moore, even if we do not agree with everything he has to say and everything he does.

What Michael Moore does, requires a large amount of resources. He generates those resources from his labor and talent. If Michael Moore were "leveled" in the sense that conflates sameness and equality, he would no longer be Michael Moore, his work would be unknown and he would have little effect on our world. Despite this, there exist activists that take Michael Moore to task for his success. I find this counterproductive and indicative of envy. If Michael Moore requires greater resources to do his job and to be Michael Moore, then I, for one, have absolutely no problem with Michael Moore's consumption of more resources and his higher profile. Neither should you.

Even my own humble effort to produce bumper stickers has been targeted with similar criticism, though I am neither wealthy nor do I have a high profile. The fact that even a moderate amount of money is needed to produce and distribute bumper stickers has attracted some level or derision. Are we so in need of self esteem that we must attack even those among us engaged in the humble production of materials? If we are then we are a sorry lot.

We should embrace self promotion if the result of it is reaching a wider audience, bringing our issues to the table and making members of our movement happier and more fulfilled individuals. There is nothing wrong with earning a name. No one seems to have trouble with the ubiquity of names such as Bakunin and Luxemburg. Why do we have trouble with the high profile of names like Michael Moore or Noam Chomsky? Do we prefer the dead over the living? If we do, what does that say about us?

Self Deprecation

Self deprecation is the internalization of leveling. Activists attempt to minimize the significance of their accomplishments either because they wish to avoid being leveled by other activists prone to sniping or because they truly underestimate the significance of their contribution. There is little or no profit in dissent (though I believe there should be, after all, it is an important contributor to progress). Absent reward, are we not robbing ourselves of a major pleasure in life by downplaying our own accomplishments? Not only should we proudly herald our accomplishments, but we should encourage others to proudly herald their own. What would a revolution be without the image of Che Guevarra? There is value in the making of heroes, provided they are not bestowed special rights. Heroes spark emulation. I don't know about you, but I'd like to see more children grow up wanting to be like Che or Bakunin. Let's encourage the creation of heroes. Legends play an important role in inspiration. Inspiration is essential to recruitment.

Hyper-Collectivism

No one should be afraid to tread their own path. I've seen criticism of various individuals based on the assertion that he or she "is not part of the movement," "is not seen at meetings," "does not hang out with the rest of us," and "has done nothing for the rest of us." Get off your collectivist high horse! Quite frankly, some of us are too busy to hang out with you. Some of us also do not wish to be redundant. We have our own ideas and seek to throw them out into the universe and watch them evolve or die. It's OK if you don't agree with us. We're fine with that, but don't waste our time and energy babysitting your need to snipe at those different from you.

I doubt Bakunin was just one of the guys. I doubt Luxemburg was just one of the "guys" as well. And many of us that go our own way will not become the next Bakunin or Luxemburg, but for new creators of more advanced forms of current ideologies (or even new ideologies) to come into being, there must be some pool of individuals that do not conform from which the successful innovators will emerge.

Utopianism

Like most other cancers of the left, there is a non cancerous form of utopianism and a cancerous form of utopianism. The two may even be ideologically identical. The difference, however, usually rests in the process by which they are deployed. Idealism is good, provided it is used as a yardstick by which to measure success or as a platform for a value system that forms a goal to which productive activities strive. However, nothing created by man or woman has ever been perfect. Societies, as human creations, conform to the same principle. Neither will we ever reach perfection nor will our concept of perfection remain stable over time. We must reject perfectionism.

The struggle is a path and not a destination. What we learn along the way causes us to change our goals and our values. No final state is ideal and no ideal is achievable. The best we can do is to improve and to make improvement our constant goal. Unless we, as individuals, are enjoying the path, nothing has been accomplished, for there will be no final destination where the perfect joy of a future generation outweighs the unnecessary suffering of the present.

All societies, all struggles and all movements should be evaluated in terms of how they benefit their members and not in terms of what they might, at some magical future time, achieve. As Emma Goldman said, "If I can't dance, I don't want to be a part of your revolution!"

Conclusion

If the left wishes to succeed, it must not only reject the ideas and tendencies that invade it from the right, but it must prune from its memeplex those memes that lead to self defeat. The politically correct, utopian memeplexes that rendered us ineffective must be replaced by better memeplexes -- those that encourage evolution of our methods and reward our comrades for their work. The first step to accomplishing this goal is to open your mind. We don't all have to be the same, we just need to work together.

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Worth a read.
by John. Thursday January 29, 2004 at 11:40 AM

Interesting article,especially if you think about the left in Melbourne.Obviously these problems plague the left and weaken it.

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Lol.
by Jake. Thursday January 29, 2004 at 01:35 PM

The "lefter than thou" left are really just the same as the religious "holier then thou" organisations.

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Funny
by spinifex Thursday February 05, 2004 at 04:53 PM

Funny...
housewife2.jpg, image/jpeg, 280x413


Funny?

No much debate of this sort seems to go on in the North Korean media.

Must have solved it somehow.

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Cancers of "the so called ''leftist''"
by Zion in the House Sunday February 08, 2004 at 12:32 AM

  ALP fights to find a sense of middle ground

By Alan Ramsey
October 26 2002

Parliament won't sit for the next two weeks. When it resumes on November 11 - appropriately, Armistice Day - the House of Representatives is set to debate an issue it has not debated, as an issue in itself, for at least 20 years, more likely far longer. That issue is Israel's military occupation in 1967 of what used to be Palestine and what the UN might do to help restore Palestine's borders and guarantee Israel's security.

In the context of all the misery and murder lately in the Middle East, not least in Israel and the occupied territories, you might think such a debate timely. Not so, say some people. One politician in particular is incensed that the "shocking" notice of motion is going ahead. He has sought to have it withdrawn and the debate killed. So far he has failed.

The politician is Labor's Michael Danby, MP for the marginal inner-city seat of Melbourne Ports, with its big Jewish vote, and unarguably the Australian Parliament's most unambiguous and insidious defender of the Israeli Government. Danby's Sydney colleague, Julia Irwin, who has one of the safest Labor seats in the country, thinks Danby is a "bully". She said yesterday: "I won't be stood over by him."

It is Irwin who gave notice, a month ago, of her private member's motion that Danby thinks so shocking. That was September 25. Last Monday Irwin's proposal was selected, by the usual cross-party committee that decides such things, for parliamentary debate on November 11. Danby knew nothing of this until next morning. That's when he went, as was later described by Labor's chief whip, Janice Crosio, as "ballistic".

As one of Labor's two deputy whips in the House, Danby should have been at the Monday selection meeting. Instead he was at lunch with Richard Butler, once chief of staff to Gough Whitlam, the Keating government's UN ambassador in the mid-'90s and, in the late '90s, former head of the UN special commission on Iraqi disarmament. Thus Danby missed the committee's discussion on Irwin's proposal. There were, and have been, several unseemly scenes since.

What Irwin's motion says would seem unremarkable. "That this House: 1) notes the continued occupation by the state of Israel of the West Bank and Gaza Strip in contravention of UN resolution 242 passed on 22 November, 1967; 2) supports the right of Israel to exist within secure borders; 3) calls on the UN to insert a peacekeeping force into the occupied territories of the West Bank and the Gaza and the unconditional withdrawal of Israeli forces; 4) calls for the recognition of the state of Palestine based on the pre-1967 borders of the West Bank and Gaza; and 5) calls on the international community to encourage and support the resolution of outstanding differences between the state of Israel and the state of Palestine based on the Oslo and Camp David agreements."

It is this proposition the House will debate - for all of half an hour! That's all the time the House can spare, in the push by MPs to get their various causes and proposals up for debate in the very limited time the Government allows each week for private members' business. Some MPs wait months. Others might never get the call. Yet in the half-hour set aside after Question Time on November 11 for Irwin's motion, six MPs will each be allowed to speak for five minutes. That's it - just five minutes each for six MPs in a House of 150 members. It is a process hardly likely to alter the cause of history.

But Danby wouldn't have it. He fronted Crosio in her office on Tuesday. He demanded the motion be withdrawn. There was an exchange of "descriptive language" in which Crosio, a formidable woman, got very angry about earlier remarks by Danby to her staff. Danby kept asserting that the motion was "inflammatory" and "divisive". Then he should get up in the Parliament and speak against it, Crosio said. She'd ensure he was one of the three Labor speakers in the debate. Danby ignored the offer. He persisted that the motion had to be withdrawn.

Danby did not take his complaint to Irwin. But he did call on Ian Causley, the National Party's Deputy Speaker. Causley agreed yesterday that Danby had seen him on Tuesday afternoon and had asked if the motion could be withdrawn. "I said, 'No, it couldn't. I believe we're a free society in this country and we're entitled to debate these issues."' Later, in a second meeting between Crosio and Danby in front of two other Labor MPs, Harry Quick (Tas) and Kim Wilkie (WA) as witnesses, Crosio challenged Danby as to whether he'd gone outside the Opposition to Causley. When Danby said he had, there was, said sources, "a row".

Curiously, in a move that will not endear him to his Labor colleagues, Danby also approached the Liberals' Chris Pyne, who by Tuesday morning already was listed as one of the Government's three speakers to the Irwin motion on November 11. Pyne confirmed yesterday Danby had spoken to him about this "shocking" motion, asking if perhaps the Government might give him one of its speaking slots in the debate, even though Crosio had already given him an assurance of an Opposition place in the speaking list. Pyne was unresponsive to Danby's request. Danby later approached the Liberals' Tony Smith (Vic), also listed to speak in the debate. Smith, a former staff member to the Treasurer, Peter Costello, is a strong Israeli supporter. That night, Smith and Pyne exchanged views on Danby's approach.

When Parliament adjourned on Thursday until November 11, Danby and his lobbying against the Irwin motion was getting an airing among Government backbenchers as it was all week within the Opposition. There already has been a great deal of angst within the Opposition over the parliamentary debate on Iraq some weeks ago and Danby's complaints against the vigorous sentiments voiced about Israel's Sharon Government by some Labor colleagues, not least Sydney's Tanya Plibersek and Melbourne's Maria Vamvakinou.

Then there was Tim Palmer's email.

Palmer is the former ABC correspondent in the Middle East who is now in Jakarta. Earlier this year, after complaints to the ABC's board by board member Michael Kroger, a former Victorian Liberal Party president, Palmer wrote a letter to all board members asking for an apology from Kroger for what Palmer felt were attempts by Kroger to influence the ABC's Middle East coverage. Board chairman Donald McDonald wrote to Palmer expressing the board's full support and dismissing negative imputations against him, but Palmer insisted on Kroger's apology. He didn't get it.

And the email? It was one Palmer sent to Danby last May 25 concerning the ABC's Middle East coverage and said, in part:

"Dear Michael,

"As suggested in my last email I wanted to examine a little more closely the work of Sayed Anwar, the journalist from The Washington Times whose work in Bethlehem so impressed you. Unfortunately, it is my duty to inform you that Mr Anwar is no longer with us. In fact, he never was. Mr Sayed Anwar, intrepid Arab reporter dispelling the myths about Bethlehem, simply doesn't exist. In other words, the person you would like the [ABC's] Jill Colgan and myself to imitate in our coverage of the Israeli invasion of Bethlehem is a fictional character.

"Let me explain ..."

And Palmer did, telling Danby that The Washington Times normally relied on an Englishman named Paul Martin to file stories on the Middle East, generally from London. However, with the suicide bombings and the Israeli hardline military response escalating, the newspaper wanted more than a London dateline. That's when it engaged to services of "Mr Sayed Anwar who, in recent weeks, has provided the kind of on-the-spot objective reporting from the West Bank that has so appealed to your sense of the truth." However, Palmer, in Israel, did some basic investigation and discovered nobody in Bethlehem had ever heard of Sayed Anwar, the Israeli press office had never issued "him" press accreditation, and The Washington Times foreign desk had eventually admitted, after further investigation and persistent phone calls, that "Sayed Anwar is the same man they normally have writing on the Middle East - Paul Martin".

Wrote Palmer to Danby: "I'm somewhat amused you think Jill Colgan and I should aspire to write as well as Mr Anwar - in reality Mr Martin [is working] in the far more comfortable surroundings of London. It's rare I get told by a former editor such as yourself that the gold standard in journalism is set by a fictional character ..."

All things considered, the November 11 debate on the Irwin motion could be a wonderfully lively event. If only Danby will take up Crosio's offer and actually take part in it out in the open, rather than operating from the sidelines on behalf of his beliefs.

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Does it exist?
by Australian "left"? Tuesday February 10, 2004 at 11:53 AM

The Australian "left" appears to be divided between a bunch of bible bashing preachers and the pathetic pretence of a labour left.Hopefully someone appears to fill the vacuum.

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