Iain Boal on Sat, 10 Nov 2018 05:50:41 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Fascist "trolls" and back on track |
Frédéric: You say "To be a rightist is the opposite way: me first; then, maybe, the world (I heard on France Info (French radio) someone in Texas saying: First, the USA, then the planet; "it's like parents in a plane: first;, they put on the oxygen mask; then, they can take care of children"- that's the essence of the right)." Putting on an oxygen mask is, surely, not a case of ‘me first’ but simply the condition of possibility of taking care of the children. I’ve rejected positing this kind of scenario - favored by Jesuits and other specialists in situation ethics - even since I was required to argue, in a ‘balloon debate’ at school, the case for throwing overboard one of the following: the Archbishop of Canterbury or the Queen Mother or Mahatma Gandhi. In general, I don’t believe we get to the essence of human nature or political allegiance by studying - or imagining - people’s reactions in extremis. In any case the remarkable story of the Chamonnais under Nazi occupation, told by Philip Hallie in Lest Innocent Blood be Shed: The Story of the Village of Le Chambon and How Goodness Happened There, offers a profound challenge to any glib account of the relation between politics and morality, and attests to the power of deep intergenerational transmission of a culture of resistance. Iain ------------------------------------------------ Hi Dan, hi Angela, Thanks for your posts. Just an idea about morals and politics: - When the most important thing is me, myself, my identity, my job, my work, my resentment, my religion, etc., we are in the realm of morals and revenges and trials (and lawyers and money and punishments) reign; - I would say that politics begins when I speak about a situation that does not concern me first, but someone else, a stranger, a foreigner, an embodiment of gender or sexuality that is not exactly mine (it has not to be completely other, of course). So politics begins with an impossible identification, and it is this impossibility that is the proof that a real plurality, not a homogeneous community but an heterogeneous assemblage, is at stake. It is also the proof that I don't speak for but with someone else. I try to remember what Spivak says about the subalterns, it's something like: speaking instead of subalterns is maintaining the voiceless, but considering that their situation is their business only is also a way to maintain oppression. A double bind that has to be negotiated, and undone, in every specific situation. Another recollection: Deleuze saying that to be a leftist is to begin with "le lointain," the world, the horizon, what is far away, and then, only in a second moment, we can see how that concerns my situation. To be a rightist is the opposite way: me first; then, maybe, the world (I heard on France Info (French radio) someone in Texas saying: First, the USA, then the planet; "it's like parents in a plane: first;, they put on the oxygen mask; then, they can take care of children"- that's the essence of the right). In solidarity, Frédéric On Fri, Nov 9, 2018 at 7:13 PM Angela Mitropoulos <[email protected]> wrote:
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