Posts Tagged ‘ethics’

Religious Freedom again

September 2, 2019

There was yet another article in the SMH today about protecting religious freedom. We still have not seen any evidence that religious people are being persecuted in Australia beyond occasionally facing questioning, and having their assumptions of moral superiority challenged, but the debate goes on – and its about the “information mess”, that I often write about, so here we are again.

And at the moment these comments, and presumably others, seem to have been suppressed at the SMH.

The “pro-freedom” author asserts:

“Religious freedom…, is not about a group of entitled, God-bothering zealots insisting on their civic privilege”.

The problem is that nothing in his article contradicts this imagined position.

Lets begin by accepting the reality that religion is important to many people, and that religion will always be important to many people. Following a particular religion, or not, may be one of the most important decisions in a person’s life; it may be the most frightening depending on their society or if their God is one of the threatening ones.

So let us be clear, Religion is important and should be protected – just like discussion and difference.

The author lists all the things the legislation would protect: such as a person’s right to remain employed, to have accommodation, education, or engage in sport. Doctors would not be personally forced to perform abortions, or commit euthanasia, etc. This is fine, good even.

However, the author objects to the proposed Bill because the bill only makes religious belief a “protected attribute” of individuals “akin to age, sex or sexual orientation,” and does not recognise religion as a “positive good” for everyone.

While religion may be a positive good for me, I’m not sure absolutely everything which can be classified as religion is a positive good for everyone. Mass human sacrifice? Religious terror? Religious war? Religious discrimination? Fear of eternal torture? These acts and ideas can be important to religious people, but why should they be protected?

Then the author slides into demands for the freedom of religious people to discriminate against others on the grounds of sexuality, gender, or marriage and what looks like a request to be able to offend, humiliate, intimidate, insult or ridicule other people on religious grounds. Offense might be fine, but these things can slowly shift into violence.

He wants Religious people to be able to *ensure* a person dies with huge suffering if religious people have any control over the sufferer’s body. He wants freedom for organisations to sack people if they marry someone of the same gender. Religious businesses should be able to break the law about discriminating against religion, by being able to sack people on grounds of their religion, and to refuse to serve customers because of their religion or other grounds. He presumably wants religious schools to be able to dismiss children on religious grounds as that keeps coming up from other religious people.

It is hard not to see all this as primarily about entitled religious people wanting privilege, and refusing to act with the general community. He gives no grounds for making exceptions to this position. If someone declares that truly religious people should be able to kill or assault people because they are of the wrong religion or gender, where does he stand and why? If people insist that their religion requires them to genitally, or otherwise, mutilate their children or other people’s children, where does he stand and why? If religions want to excommunicate or burn up businesses that deal with gay, black, people, or women, where does he stand and why? No limits are even suggested.

The lack of limits apparently stems from the idea that

Christianity and other religious traditions aspire through public outreach to strengthen communities. They need protection to conduct their public work in an authentic manner. To ignore the communitarian dimension of religious faith – as this bill does – strikes at the heart of the personal identity of believers.

But, the bill clearly does not stop people doing good works in the community, but if those good works involve discrimination, assertions of superiority, or attacks on the community, then perhaps they are not good works?

Perhaps the Author should read Matthew 6

“1: Be careful not to perform your righteous acts before men to be seen by them. If you do, you will have no reward from your Father in heaven. 2 So when you give to the needy, do not sound a trumpet before you, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and on the streets, to be praised by men. Truly I tell you, they already have their reward.”

Jesus does not seem to expect that Christians should seek out flattery and recognition for Good Works – they should just do them.

The bill also does not recognise the social benefits of atheism, in atheists’ attempts to prohibit burning of heretics, enslavement of non-believers, wife beating, and so on. More sadly, the bill does not recognise the rights of atheists to exist. This is a problem – after all its easily possible to imagine that religious people will discriminate and persecute atheists as well as people from other religions or sects. We can repeatedly see how religious people accuse atheists of not having morals… even when the atheist is clearly holding a moral position such as “gay people should not be persecuted simply because they are gay”. But then if the mainstream Christian demand is that they should have the right to discriminate against Christians from other denominations, we can assume that atheists will get less protection than Cthulhu worshippers.

The bill is certainly not perfect, but it appears that some religious people will demand the privilege to harm others, and will not be satisfied until they can do this with impunity, simply because they say their religion (whatever it is) requires this, or justifies this.

Jordan Peterson’s ‘modes of silencing’

August 28, 2019

Having briefly discussed a lecture by Jordan Peterson on Foucault, we can now look at the way that the talk functions as an attempt to silence, or annihilate Foucault or anyone who might mention Foucault. Whether or not this lecture is absolutely representative of Peterson’s techniques is irrelevant. The techniques are present and apparently used effectively.

I suspect the reason these techniques are not immediately visible is that similar techniques are used across right wing discourse to suppress thinking, and people are so used to them that they become invisible. The main aim of the technique is to create a boundary between the in-group (us people who follow Jordan Peterson or the right in politics) and an outgroup of post-modernists and leftists. The in-group are good, and the out-group are bad. You need only listen to the in-group and despise the out-group. The out-group have nothing whatever worth listening to. President Trump is a master of this technique as well, although I’m not claiming his methods to achieve this are exactly the same as Peterson’s.

Technique 1: Accusations of moral turpitude and evil in the out-group. These accusations are unspecified, but severe. Perhaps the vagueness about the accusations inflates the possible evil, as it is absolutely unclear what it is, in the way the best monsters first appear as vague shadows, troubling hints or violent movements in the dark – things we had best not know. In this case, the aim of the lecture seems to be to keep the ingroup from curiosity, familiarity or discussion. Let’s keep ‘the others’ vague and messy. The more uninformed the audience is, and the more unformed the opposition are allowed to be, the more scary ‘the others’ are.

Technique 2: Accusations of incompetence and impracticality. Foucault is held to be an example of a person whose mendacity and stupidity would bring any structured organisation to its knees. This is, perhaps, why we have to be told later on that competence is vital to modern society. Something which might otherwise appear obvious. If we learn about these people in the out-group, or become contaminated by them, we too might destroy the hierarchy we belong to and are accepted by; we will certainly be rejected by our current in-group as incompetent or impractical or something…..

Technique 3: Guilt by association. Foucault is a Marxist (whether he was or wasn’t), he is thus responsible for mass-death, or for ignoring mass death. This man is clearly, at best, a hypocrite, but most likely evil. We don’t even really need to bother to find out what he, or Marx, thought, as people who claim to be Marxists. or who are claimed to be Marxists, are evil. Clearly Foucault is no better. You don’t really need to understand this person or the out-group in general, and everyone who says you do is simply a fellow traveler. By the same argument, clearly, every Christian is Torquemada.

Technique 4: Suppression of the out-groups ethical concerns. Peterson suppresses any audience awareness of the moral concerns of Foucault and other post-modernists, again to make it seem the out-group is composed of evil people. As they have no morals, again they can be dismissed.

Technique 5: Refutation by name-calling Peterson refutes by abuse, and establishes his ethics and authority by slander – which is disappointing as he has interesting remarks on ethics elsewhere, but here post-modernism becomes deployed as a category of abuse. “You postmodernist, you”. There are things people cannot discuss or defend without a high probability of reflexive abuse from those influenced by the authority of Peterson. He acts as an authoritative exemplar, for others to follow, of argument by abuse. Those put in the outgroup are only worthy of abuse. This helps separate the groups, generate mutual fury, and helps to prevent any real discussion occurring.

Technique 6: confusing the differences and making a mess. Peterson messes different thinkers together, saying different idea-sets are the same. This act turns his audience’s awareness of “post-modernism,” as a category, into an incoherent mush, which does not make any sense. This reinforces the idea that anything he can classify as ‘post-modern’ is not worth investigating, engaging with, or discussing. The techniques means what he is discussing does not make sense. Any people categorized as belonging to the post-modern out-group must be equally incoherent.

Technique 7: Lack of references and isolation. Peterson gives no references to texts by Foucault or anyone he is criticising. This helps to keep people away from the texts, by making it hard to find them or read them, and keeps the audience within his framework. People are much less likely to go and even look at something sympathetic to Foucault, or which tries to explain his ideas. They won’t come out of the lecture with a curiosity which might lead to questioning. They will, most likely, stay within the hierarchy and hear the teacher, obeying his authority by default and by lack of knowledge, and of not knowing where to go to check the teacher’s teaching.

All these steps hide and justify Jordan Peterson’s essential step which is not to expound or criticise Foucault in any detail. Foucault is clearly so messy, evil and incompetent, that making an effort to engage with his ideas would be a waste of time. It might even be corrupting in itself. Its dirty and filthy, lets avoid it like we might bypass a dead and decaying rat on the street. It is lazy, at best for someone who claims to be an academic.

Technique 8: Ignore any common faults or failings; blame them on one side alone . Peterson might make reference to a common fault like “science denial” but he only references the denial on the one “side” to condemn that side alone. He also does not explain the differences, between the two forms of “denial”. Some post-modernists could assert that there is always a social and historical aspect to scientific practice which influences what can be tested, theorised or accepted as true. Others might show how science has been embedded in social power structures and relations and been influenced by that embedding. To me, such ideas seem almost truisms. How would we be able to make knowledge outside of social processes and with total objectivity? This does not happen, or is difficult to ensure, but we might be able to become more or less involved in those processes. We can become aware of some of these ‘unconscious’ processes which guide our thought and possibly weaken some of them. Possibly that idea is threatening to his deliberate, or accidental, construction of in-groups and out-groups, and embedding his audience in them.

Technique 9: Relentless negativity. There is apparently nothing interesting or good in Foucault or any thinker who can be classified as post-modernist at all. This is almost certainly improbable for any group of thinkers. Even under Stalin and Hitler, with terrifying punishments for thinking ‘wrong thoughts’ there were still some interesting thinkers. For example Vygotsky, Bakhtin, & Bukharin under Stalin and Junger, Heidegger & Schmitt under Hitler. However, the technique helps silence Foucault and other post-modernists; they are simply made not worth listening to.

Technique 10: Refutation by unpleasant consequences. Part of the relentless negativity, is the repeated use of the argument that if some set of propositions (which apparently never need to be given precisely), appear to have unpleasant consequences, or disrupt our common sense, then they must be wrong. However, if thinking reveals possible unpleasant consequences, then perhaps we should think about, ot deal with, those consequences?

Technique 11: Avoidance of unpleasant consequences. This follows on from the previous technique. There is no sense that we might have to face up to the unpleasant consequences, we just avoid them by denying their possibility. This reinforces many kinds of right wing denial – not only of climate change or ecological destruction, but of the finitude of humanity on this planet, the effects of coal burning and pollution, the possibility that great tech will not arrive in time, the growth of plutocracy and the failure of ‘free markets’ to deliver liberty, good government, and unbounded good results for all. Through this technique, we can all live by asserting good things will happen if we don’t question the real hierarchies we belong to and the beliefs they encourage.

Technique 12: Always imply our hierarchies are good and necessary. Defending existing Western capitalist hierarchies seems to be important to Peterson. Hence, while many things can be good and bad, there is no sense in which the in-group’s hierarchies can be both good and bad. The implication is that because hierarchy might be necessary for the in-group’s functioning, the hierarchy is good and only questioned by evil and incoherent people in the bad out-group.

Technique 13: Our Good, is unchallengeable, because its Good. Finally, he implies that the outgroup can attack what the ingroup holds to be true and good, and thus should be ignored as this proves they are evil. For example, the out-group may attack Western Civilisation, or capitalism. But there is no attempt to understand why they might think like that. He can just be stunned by these propositions, as they are so obviously stupid. This is yet another example of the idiocy of these thinkers and another implicit explanation of why we should not even bother to find out what they say. We should just stay with our common sense and allow our teacher to tell us what we know to be truth.

Technique 14: Bold assertion. Peterson expresses no humility, or even doubt that he understands what he is talking about absolutely perfectly, even if he does not expound the thought he is supposed to be criticising. I presume if he were to mention that Foucault and Derrida can be difficult thinkers, this would be considered a fault in them, and further evidence they had nothing to say, presumably like Kant and other difficult thinkers have nothing to say. He cannot admit difficulty, because he aims at intellectual authority and, perhaps, admitting difficulty might suggest he is not superior. Personally, I prefer clear thinkers, but that does not mean I understand all difficult thinkers easily or completely. As I said, I’m not sure I always follow Peterson’s thinking, and I know he is more complex than is coming over in this lecture, but we are dealing with this lecture (which appears to be an excerpt from a longer lecture), and whether or not it is typical we can still learn from it.

Conclusion
His main message to his audience seems to be that “you guys already know Foucault is rubbish, I’m just about to confirm that for you.” He appears to perform a process of letting his audience think they are thinking, rather than encourage them to engage in actual thinking or discussion with other people who might disagree with them. Indeed, he appears to be saying, “such discussion is absolutely fruitless; stay here with me in our superiority and you will understand.” He creates the conditions of self-satisfaction and refusal to engage with others, other than through name-calling and dismissal. This is a form of silencing those put into the out-group category.

I suspect that the out-group is unbounded, there are no limits as to what can be placed there and messed together, while the in-group is pretty demarcated and cut off from the real world. One problem with this, is that all groups have interactions and permeations with their outgroups, and even with processes and things that are not recognized as in or out group. As a result, attempts to limit the cross-over, and make firm categories, are basically destructive of our ability to perceive reality. This is not a good habit to acquire.

If this analysis is correct, then Peterson appears to mesh well with the normal processes and techniques of right wing media and debate.

Jordan Peterson and Foucault

August 26, 2019

Some one suggested that I explain what was wrong with a Jordan Peterson lecture on Foucault. The lecture is here. In a further article I will try and do a semi-Foucauldian twist and explain how Peterson uses authority, hierarchy and rhetoric to functionally silence Foucault and postmodernism.

First off let us remember that Peterson appears to be giving a university lecture. Such lectures should have much higher standards than blog posts. What we can possibly excuse here as a matter of not having enough time, should not be acceptable in a university. I should also state clearly that I am not an expert in Foucault or in Peterson, and that I am lazy enough to only refer to the lecture referenced above. If you want more detail, then please go elsewhere.

Although I have watched quite a number of his videos, I have yet to see any evidence that Jordan Peterson has read Foucault or, for that matter, any of the so called “postmodernists” he criticises. There is certainly no evidence that he has read these texts closely or carefully. I’ve yet to see, in any of his multiple lectures and talks, any quotations in context, page references, or any attempt to explain what the person being criticised is actually on about with proper documentation.

That does not mean such talks or papers do not exist, but that I have not seen them, and I would have expected to be recommended them. He largely seems to rely on his listeners not knowing anything other than rumor about the people he criticizes, and of them probably being predisposed to rejecting those thinkers in the first place because of the listener’s pre-existing political loyalties and the media they attend to.

[As a footnote, I’d point out that, although it is ambiguous, in the debate with Žižek, Peterson seems to be suggesting that he had just read the Communist Manifesto for the first time since he was 18. This is rather odd for a person who regularly dismisses and criticizes Marx. In that debate, Peterson provided no evidence that he had read any of Marx’s mature works at all, or any other Marxists whatsoever. Which is, again, odd for a person who presents as an intellectual authority on Marxism, but it does suggest a proneness to criticizing without familiarity.]

Please note that I am not saying that Peterson never says anything worthwhile – his first book for example Maps of Meaning is definitely worth a look, if you are interested in Jungian Psychology (which I am). It seems to be of a completely different level to his contemporary work.

So on to the lecture.

Peterson starts by stating a theme he will reiterate. Foucault is the most reprehensible individual you could imagine. You could not dream up anyone worse.

He gives no evidence for this accusation. We could suggest that Peterson appears to be making the charges simply to support his established ‘right wing’ bias and discredit the victim. There is no academic impartiality or quest for truth being shown here.

Later on he will argue that Foucault was a bitter and treacherous person, who aimed to undermine the presumably virtuous structure that would not accept him. One problem with this suggestion is that you could also criticize Foucault for being hyper-successful – which he was. For example, he had a professorship created for him at the College de France, which can be described as one of the most prestigious universities in France. He also wrote and had published an extremely large number of well-selling books. Peterson continues by saying that no structure could function with people as peculiar, bitter and resentful as Foucault. Presumably the College de France did. No evidence of Foucault’s mysterious sins are given, but it is possible that Peterson is referring to Foucault’s homosexuality and interest in sado-masochism. I presume Peterson’s idea is that, if he finds someone unpleasant, then their ideas must be incorrect or, perhaps, that if he does not like the ideas the person must be reprehensible.

The talk does not appear to be about uncovering the truth of Foucault or his ideas, but refusing him and his ideas because he is declared to be inferior, by the great judicial authority that is Jordan Peterson. In other words, by his example Peterson appears to be arguing that ethics is about power and slander. He would almost certainly deny this, of course. But let us set these ad hominem arguments to one side, and get on with the other arguments.

Peterson states Derrida and Foucault were avowed Marxists in the 60s and early 70s. As usual he gives no evidence for this. I don’t know if there is any particular evidence for this. They were influenced by Marx, and argued about Marx, but then again few thinkers of the period were not either influenced by Marx or attempting to argue against Marx. So it is not surprising they could have discussed Marx, even if they disagreed with him, and thought society could be improved. We might declare that Hayek was a Marxist by the same logic.

If Peterson could have been bothered to read the Wikipedia article on Foucault, instead of following his own knowledge entirely, he would have learnt that Foucault “left the Communist Party in 1953” being “appalled by the anti-semitism exhibited during the 1952-1953 ‘Doctors’ plot’ in the Soviet Union” and having experienced directly the bigotry of the party. The same article claims that Foucault refuted “core Marxist tenets such as class struggle” and later said “Marxism exists in nineteenth-century thought as a fish exists in water; that is, it ceases to breathe anywhere else.” In other words Marxism, for Foucault, was not a significant innovation, it was rooted in the 19th Century Western way of thinking and thus completely superseded in the present day.

Judging by what follows, the point of bringing in Marx is to reinforce the ad hominem argument, and to discredit Foucault and Derrida without having to argue against them, or exhibit much knowledge of their works.

Peterson states that even Sartre was not a Marxist by then. Well that is convincing. Unfortunately he appears not to know much about Sartre either. Sartre was writing against the Soviet Union from the 1950s from a Marxist point of view. He considered it important to protect Europe’s autonomy from the Soviet Union and from the US, and not be torn to pieces between either of them. Sartre later called himself an anarchist, and opposed the corporate take over of media, but he considered his Marxist oriented Critique of Dialectical Reason, to be one of his most important works.

The problem is that Peterson confuses Marxism with support for the Soviet Union or Maoist China. Marxism is a theory of social processes, it is not support for a particular State, indeed Marxism promises the State will wither away after the Revolution – obviously something that did not happen in any Marxist Revolution. And if Peterson had the slightest knowledge of Marxism he would have realized that Trotsky, who is usually considered to be a Marxist, was also against Stalinism. It is, however, not unreasonable to point out, that people who have proclaimed themselves Marxists have been murderous, just as have people who have described themselves as Christians or Muslims.

We could also say to Peterson, that by the late 60s no one with any moral integrity supported unconstrained capitalism – because everyone knew how it went; rampaging colonialism, exploitation of workers, destruction of environment, plutocracy etc. This does not mean that US capitalism is as bad as the Soviet Union, but it does not mean that it has to be essentially good. The US was, at that time, attempting a large scale undeclared war against ecology and life in Vietnam and Cambodia; the people of which were not remotely equally equipped or wealthy enough to defend themselves – which they did remarkably.

What postmodernists did, says Peterson, is that they transferred the conflict of rich vs poor into oppressed vs oppressor. The conflict in Marx is not between rich and poor, but between different classes with different imperatives. Is it not reasonable to assume that different groups do not always have the same aims, especially if one is supposed to dominate the other? Can we always assume harmony between groups?

Peterson seems to be trying to deny this. He seems to be trying to argue that those at the top of the hierarchy always have your interests at heart…. I may be wrong, but that may be why he needs to discredit Foucault and Marx.

He states, Foucault’s aim is:
a) to resurrect Marxism under a new guise
b) to justify that it was everyone else’s problem that he was an outsider.

Point ‘a’ is only true if you stretch categories so that whatever different ideas you select are the same, despite their differences. In other words, he seems incapable of recognizing difference and blends everything he does not like into a mess.

The second point seems to be another “I, Jordan Peterson, find Foucault, and what I understand of his ideas, unpleasant, so his ideas are not worth considering” argument.

Peterson classifies Foucault’s position as “The rise of the marginalised against the centre.” This is apparently, clearly bad.

He states Derrida’s thinking was the same… but adds another one of his slap down arguments that Derrida is even more treacherous, than Foucault. Yes the argument Derrida supposedly deploys must be really bad in that case. As you may expect he presents no evidence for this, or no account of their arguments; we have to take him on faith. At some moment he reveals that Foucault and Derrida did not like each other and disagreed with each other. He makes a joke. But apparently they are the same, even if they disagree. Does Peterson make an argument for this similarity? Not that I can see. Does he tell you what they argued over? Not that I can see. However, this just might be important for understanding what they are saying.

He asserts that the post-modern argument (it is not a Marxist argument, but they are blended anyway), is that there is a Political centre and then there are people outside those central categories.

Peterson admits this is true…. to categorise you have to include and exclude things from categories. So categories involve inclusion and exclusion. Rather dramatically he says that without this you just die. He gives no evidence for this over-dramatic position, and then says that schizophrenic people’s categories break down – but, assuming this is true, and again he gives no evidence for what is a reasonably contentious position, we all know that schizophrenic people exist – they don’t die immediately….

He appears to ignore the fairly obvious idea that categories can be more or less accurate, and perhaps more or less oppressive: we don’t have to exclude gay or female people from being able to discuss politics, simply because they are gay or female, or whatever. Making our categories fit their task better, could be considered one of the primary tasks of philosophy.

So I don’t understand his point here. But perhaps it is to suggest that people who don’t accept Jordan Peterson’s preferred categories, perhaps like Foucault or Derrida, are insane (or can be classed as schizophrenic). In which case we have another ad hominem argument, this time by a very tenuous association, and I’m starting to get tired with this style of thinking.

We are then told that this is an incredibly crooked part of their thinking, because category systems exclude, political systems exclude, any hierarchy of value excludes. So far, if he is correct about what they are arguing, he is agreeing with them. He then asserts they think that the reason those hierarchies of value are constructed is to maintain the hierarchy of power. While he does not explicitly argue that such a position, can never be true, it would seem to be implied; he is not exploring when it might be true and when it might not be true. But unfortunately for him, the position that hierarchies of value are sometimes about power is plausible.

The wealthy can construct a hierarchy of value which asserts that wealth is a mark of virtue, of hard work, of ‘talent,’ of God’s favour, etc. and that those who are not wealthy are not virtuous, not hardworking, not intelligent enough to become wealthy, or not favoured by God – they are implicitly inferior, and should be guided by the wealthy because the wealthy have demonstrated the right virtues. In reality, they might add, those few of the wealthy who argue for the rights of the poor are corrupt and don’t have the normal set of wealthy virtues.

I think I’ve seen hierarchies of value like that on all sides of politics.

As a side point, the French thinker most associated with this kind of position is Pierre Bourdieu, who is not Foucault, and not a post-modernist in any meaningful use of the term, but let us all keep blending everything together to make ideas less clear.

Peterson adds that this claim that hierarchies of value maintain hierarchies of power, is an incredibly crooked claim. He does not explain why, but he does assert there are hierarchies everywhere and perhaps continues to imply that they are all unproblematic. He does not argue that hierarchies may be both necessary and may distort, or act as tools of power.

His example is that in order to laud musical genius we have to exclude those musicians who are crap. He does not discuss the fact that people may disagree quite vehemently about this. I know people who don’t appreciate Bach, and others who can’t understand any techno. I personally don’t like much Beethoven other than the late string quartets. Wagner bores me. Some people prefer Eric Clapton to Jimi Hendrix. There is, as we say, “no accounting for taste”. Music is not really an area of social compulsion in our society, so opinions can be varied. However, liking the ‘right music’ could become a marker of status. We can easily imagine statements like “No one who dislikes Wagner could possibly be high class. We don’t have to listen to such a person.” Or “people who don’t like blah are just not up to date” or whatever, because most of us have experienced how hierarchies of value can be primarily about power, status and exclusion….

Peterson claims this is the postmodernists’ essential claim but makes no reference, yet again. He does not explore the issue. Maybe his aim is to condemn rather than explain? I don’t know for sure, but it is starting to look that way.

Peterson remarks that for Hobbes people in the state of nature fought – this is the chaos of individuals, so people had to be organized by force. So is he justifying violence in politics? Its not really clear, but it looks like it.

I agree with his remarks that people and social structures can be good and evil – and that we don’t like having this pointed out. So can we assume hierarchies (a social structure) can be good and evil at the same time? Apparently not.

He continues arguing that postmodernists added a collective element, in which groups of individuals struggle for power. Most political theorists talk about groups, classes, etc. not just postmodernists, so I don’t get the point again. To me, most people are individuals who exist in [categorizable] groups, and are shaped by the relations within and between those groups. Very few humans have survived without groups. This is another paradox, the individual may require groups to learn to be individual, and to be recognized as an individual. This is not Peterson’s position here. Later on he dismisses the idea that people can belong to identity groups and find it hard to discuss with each other across the borders. I’m not sure why. After all, postmodernists appear to find it difficult to talk with Petersonites and vice versa.

I’m not sure this stuff about identity groups is in Foucault, by the way, but I’ve already asserted I’m no expert, and the idea of ‘identity groups’ (other than right wing or suppressive identity groups), has become one of those slur terms used to discredit people’s politics when they suggest that some people might be excluded, as a group, from the wholesome righteous vision of society. (There is a series of posts on Identity Politics, on this blog).

Peterson asserts that in the postmodern Marxist universe there is nothing but power. Which, if true, implies that postmodernists are not Marxists, because Marxism is materialist. There is the world, its resources, what we call ecology. There is social organisation. there are ideas that grow out of actions in the world etc.

He then asserts that postmodernists don’t admit any standards, don’t believe in the real world, or science. He makes jokes about science denialists using mobile phones. He does not extend the joke to right wing climate change denialists who use mobile phones and dismiss climate science as ‘socialist’. Perhaps it is only relevant to criticize those identified as leftist. I don’t know enough about Peterson to wonder if he is one of those people who deny climate change because he does not like the politics of it, and is thus the subject of his own jokes? I guess you might have to do the research if you want to find that out.

He asserts that for Postmodernists there is no such thing as ethics or high order value.

I would say that Derrida and Foucault actually seem to be obsessed with ethics. Perhaps the problem is that they may think ethical problems are difficult, and cannot be resolved by an appeal to authority, even though that is routine and perhaps necessary? But I’m not claiming to be an expert.

Peterson appears to simply deny their ethical concerns and asserts that postmodernism is self defeating (apparently if an argument appears to have unpleasant consequences it cannot be true). He concludes by saying that postmodernism is obviously a mask for the continuance of Marxism because Marxism has an ethic and involves struggle even if its ungrateful… This is not remotely logical in my view; postmodernism does not have an ethic and does have an ethic. I cannot follow the argument. So I might be missing his point.

He suggests that postmodernists suggest that Western culture is pathological, and responds by apparently saying that as pathological as Western culture is, its less pathological than everything else. His only argument for this is that people are said to immigrate to the west in greater numbers than go in the opposite direction. Even if this is the case, it may mean that Western propaganda is good, not that Western culture is good, or accepting of migrants. I don’t know, the level of argumentation and documentation is not high.

He remarks that there is an argument that the only reason the West functions is because it has raped the rest of humanity and the planet. There is an awkward pause as he apparently cannot think of anything to rebut this position – and he concludes the less said about that the better. Which is, I suppose, another slam-dunk argument. Who could wonder about incoherence being an effective argument. This is perhaps very postmodern or zen or something.

He then says that postmodernists don’t believe in grand narratives. He could point out this was an argument made by Lyotard, not Foucault but, by now, we should be used to this merging of different thinkers, and different thought, into a mess. Again Peterson employs the argument by unpleasant consequences: If there are no grand narratives then there is no meaning. However, his argument does not mean grand narratives such as the ending of capitalism in workers revolution are true because they are grand narratives, no matter how nice it might be to think with that.

Peterson suggests we need an ethic. He again appears to ignore the ethics of postmodernists. He argues that postmodernists are demolishing the fictions that unite us as people, and that we cannot cooperate without these fictions. In other words, the unpleasant consequences of non-cooperation mean that their argument (whatever it is) can be dismissed.

Consequently, he appears to be suggesting that we should just accept these fictions and they should not be challenged. This is an ethical position, but it is not one we have to accept. Indeed the normal “Western position” might be that “noble lies” should be undone, and that our grand narratives should have some relationship to truth or accuracy. We should at least be able to discuss these narratives. If we accept this position, then surely postmodernists are carrying on this tradition, while Peterson is shifting it to one side – perhaps in the interests of established power? I don’t know.

He then asserts that it is unbelievably corrosive, to assert hierarchy is about power. He argues brutal people don’t establish stable hierarchies. Hopefully this is true, but we are not given many reasons to think this is correct, other than some discussion about chimps, who generally don’t organize armies very well, and how on earth does this mean that hierarchies are never about power?

He asserts that stable hierarchies are about relationship. This also may be correct. I would like to think so, but Foucault, if known for anything, is known for the assertion that power is in relationships, it is not something exerted by one person who has it, on another who does not – where there is dominance there is resistance. Foucault appears to assert that power is not just about brutality, it is necessary to exist humanly – it can be what is needed to uncover and cultivate one’s self. Relations of power can also hide their brutality. So while it appears that Peterson uses Foucault without acknowledgement, he does not use him in his complexity.

Peterson then talks about hierarchies of competence, which again is plausible, but has little to do with Foucault, that is, if you are not going to ask how ‘competence’ is socially decided.

One problem Peterson ignores, and it may not be relevant for him, is that hierarchies can tend to hide mistakes, and to hide the past, in order to justify their behavior in the present. That this might be disconcerting does not mean it is incorrect. Indeed anyone might learn this from Foucault.

For example, we often think we treat mad people better than they used to, but we might find out through study that in the early modern period they did not lock up, drug or punish mad people or abandon them to poverty in the streets. They may have thought of them as different rather than inferior or incompetent. The ‘moon struck’ might even have wisdom useful to others (the fool for example). In these societies, some poorer people could live outside of a total labor hierarchy (The History of Madness).

Foucault might also lead us to wonder if medical hierarchies have tended to dehumanize us, breaking us down into isolate parts rather than be considered as a whole people, or persons with emotions, fears and relationships. Indeed some doctors might have listened to some of this, and be attempting to improve practice (The Birth of the Clinic)

Different historical periods might have different patterns of thought, that strongly influence what can be argued successfully and taken as true. This suggests we might not be improving in knowledge, simply changing our patterns of thought, and if we want to understand the past, or other cultures, we have to be willing to accept the presence of other patterns of thinking (The Order of Things).

The contemporary prison system might support or reinforce the social hierarchy by isolating people and hiding the cruelty they experience away from sight of others, who might come to empathize. The prison might well have become the model of the factory, and hence the office, where the workers are under constant surveillance by their superiors, and have to exist for their superior jailers. Indeed the prison might become an ideal factory in which employees are under-paid, or not paid, supported by the tax payer, and without the power to resist. Control can exist without overt violence (Discipline and Punish).

We may well have medicalized sex, or have subjected it to a confessional process, both of which could be considered hierarchical submissions, rather than learnt how to cultivate the pleasure of it for ourselves and partners….(History of Sexuality Vol.1)

Peterson does not discuss any of these major writings of Foucault but after reading Foucault, it may be harder to just assume we are better than we used to be, or better than other societies, just because it is pleasant for us to think so…. This might be a good thing.

Peterson’s final argument seems to be that contemporary processes are incredibly complex so you want disciplined people who are super smart to make it work, and to rise to the top. Yes we do, but that does not mean we will always get them.

We often get incompetents who appear brutal and stupid – for god’s sake he was talking about Stalin ten minutes ago! The Peter Principle should be well known to him, and other people – it is about how hierarchies undermine themselves by promoting people who were competent to their levels of incompetence. Is it not, at least, conceivable that an undisciplined, not very clever, or coherent person, could become US President and take down all the competent machinery of government? Apparently not.

Peterson argues that competence must be everywhere. Yes, there must be a lot of it about or everything will fall down, but that need does not mean we will get it, or we are not falling down. It merely means it would be nice to get it, and we should perhaps guard against dangerous incompetence. The niceness of something does not mean it is inevitable. He then asserts that postmodernists were after both the destruction of competence, and the idea of the world. He refers to Derrida. There is some awkwardness here, because Peterson is aware that we interpret the world as Derrida states, but he asserts there is more than just that. Of course.

Then lecture ends…. Perhaps it gets better in the part we have not seen.

The point is that Peterson attacks Foucault, Derrida, post-modernism and Marx, without giving any references, without any quotations, without any attempt to give them a decent exposition. He does not even seem to have read Foucault for Dummies or whatever. He just attacks them and relies on the ignorance of his audience for the attacks to work. It also seems important for him to justify a particular kind of hierarchy, without saying why it should be justified. Could you justify any hierarchy and its violence in this kind of way?

As I said earlier, maybe Peterson does a better job elsewhere. I’ve not read it or seen it, but it could the the case. However, my point remains. If you are watching Jordan Peterson as a philosopher, please ask him for evidence and please don’t think you can learn about people he has declared to be his enemies from him alone.

If you want to understand someone, read them, don’t listen to Peterson or me. There are also many introductory books and articles to Foucault, or other postmodernist thinkers, which are far better documented than anything I’m going to bother to write for a blog, and which would give you a better idea of what Foucault, or other postmodernists are about than anything I would have time to write, or Jordon Peterson can be bothered to explain.

The second part of this blog tries to list and explain, the modes of silencing of discussion, that Jordan Peterson uses in this lecture

Other possibly relevant blogs:

An approach to the politics and economics of coal

August 19, 2019

1) Coal usage and burning is the problem, not coal itself.
People often write as if coal has imperatives in itself. If this was so, then everywhere with coal would have the same trajectory as happened in the UK. This did not happen independently, but as a matter of emulation and conflict. Taking coal as having imperatives, may move us into technological determinism, and coal useage is political at many levels.

2) If a post-coal future is to arrive, it will arrive through political struggle
Politics, to a large extent, is about people in struggle using narratives and scripts, where scripts are semi-automatic formulations and associations of ideas and actions.

Politics involves persuasion – whether this is through words and ideas, through force, or the imposition of risk for dissent.
Various groups argue about the meaning and value of coal. In other words the value of coal is tied to the meaning of coal, which is tied to a family of scripts or narratives which are being used to change, or reinforce, that meaning.
Without reinforcement of established meaning and action, there would be no struggle.

3) In considering the politics of coal, we are exploring how the meaning and value of coal can be challenged and change.
This ongoing political struggle is why commodities are not “stable entities.” For example, ivory, slaves, uranium. Commodities are unstable in capitalism anyway; very few people buy typewriters nowadays – and if they do, they do so because the typewriters are ‘collectable’ not high-tech.

Coal is not inherently valuable, useful or whatever. For example, it can be classified as dirty, poisonous, dangerous, and old-fashioned.

An item only becomes a commodity in a particular type of pattern of social action.

4) Coal is burnt because of:

  • a) Its association with scripts and narratives of ‘development’ largely based on the history of ‘development’ of ‘the West’, ‘First World’, or ‘North’.
  • The established economic and other power or influence of various fossil fuel companies in the State (which has come about largely through previous acceptance of scripts of development).
  • c) Existing scripts about “needs” for (increasing) profit in capitalism.
  • 5) This recognition implies that: Economic relations are fundamentally political and about meaning.

  • a) Markets involve struggles (often about the shape of the markets, and who should succeed in them). Not all markets are capitalist.
  • b) The State supports particular scripts about markets, and attempts to give those scripts legitimacy, and force in law – this includes capitalist markets which depend on the State to guarantee private property, contracts and the subservience of workers
  • c) Legitimacy comes about by violence, AND through reinforcing these scripts and other scripts and narratives. De-legitimacy comes from people actively weakening established scripts and reinforcing new ones.
  • 6) The State is not monolithic.

    There is struggle in the State, as elsewhere, which is why scripts, policies, and markets, can change. The state is a site of legitimate conflict. It gains its power like everything else gains power, through a combination of violence, wealth, persuasion, organization, communication etc.

    7) Developmentalism can be a tricky term. Not all developmentalisms are the same. However, the type of developmentalism we are describing, means aiming for material prosperity, economic growth, emulation of Western nation-states in terms of power and prosperity, ‘modernity’ and military power/security.

    Those forms of life which are classed as traditional which impede this ‘progress’ are classified as obstacles to be sacrificed for the greater good.
    Cheap and plentiful energy is at the heart of development, as is steel production. Hence importing, production and burning of coal has been a key developmentalist operator.

    8) Relationships between developmentalist states spur developmentalism.

  • a) From a desire for military security and defense against the capacities of other developed states.
  • b) From importing, building or exporting developmentalist products like coal, steel etc. to, or from, other states. Or from accepting investment projects and monies from developed states which use developmental scripts (which usually do not have the interests of local people at heart, who are sacrificed).
  • c) Competitions for status and influence and role in the world.
  • 9) The expansion of thermal coal production and burning occurs in response to these scripts, and relationships, of development.
    Reducing thermal coal apparently could leave people in life-threatening poverty, unhinge the eternal increase of development, and weaken the State with respect to other States.

    10) The main conflict or struggle is between:

  • a) Groups that demand coal burning for development (which often involves industrialization, military security, and competition with other countries) and/or profit.
  • b) Groups trying to defend local modes of life, land use, and to resist dispossession. And
  • c) Groups against climate change, and for transition to a new economy of some sort.
  • There can be alliances between b and c, but not necessarily.
    Groups in c, can lift local struggles into the national and even international field.
    Alliance between b and c, is potentially useful, unless people in b feel it alienates them from the holders of State power, or attracts State hostility or State support of the mining companies.

    11) The force in ideas arises because people use them, or because they reinforce, or challenge, a way of life or way of dominance.
    People often write about things like the contradiction between ideas of coal use and climate policy, as if the ideas have force.
    But the force in ideas comes from struggle between people with different ideas. These ideas were developed or utilised in that struggle, or in the politics before the struggle.
    For example, arguments do not become ‘anachronistic’ (this is an evaluation which assumes that the change is happening), they become challenged by other people.

    When making an analysis, reported statements should be anchored in the groups making them. Statements do not exist without context or makers.

    12) That climate change is happening could be irrelevant to coal use, without the idea of climate change being used by politically active groups opposed to coal use.

    In other words coal supporters do not have to necessarily worry about pollution or climate change; they can just keep burning and denying, or not recognizing, the problems. Just as renewable energy people do not have to see the problems that come with particular organizations of renewable energy.

    People who are opposed to coal “in their backyards”, do not have to care about climate change. So people who do care about climate change, need to be careful not to make everything about climate change, and alienate these people. Both groups are opposed to more coal mining and/or burning.

    13) Climate change often seems used as a mode of ‘Framing’ arguments and attempting to change meanings.
    While climate change is real, it is also part of the mode of scripting used by some of those opposed to coal.

    ‘Pro-capitalist or neoliberal economics’ and ‘Development’ are also ways of framing the argument. These framings are used to favour coal use, the profit of particular groups of companies, and reinforce the established meanings of coal as commodity and useful resource.
    People who use these economic or developmental framings tend to suppress awareness of the destructive parts of actual developmental and economic processes as part of their politics and framing.

    Hence it is useful for opponents to emphasise those necessarily destructive parts: ‘sacrifice of the less powerful for the general good’, or more theoretically, ‘accumulation by dispossession’ ‘capitalisation of nature,’ Luxemburg’s vision of capitalist ‘primitive accumulation’ as ongoing, etc.

    14) There is no apparent consensus on climate change and policy.
    This is despite the science and political necessities of survival appearing clear.
    That is why there is struggle going on.
    If there was consensus, there may well be no need for struggle.

    I think it is clear the Australian government does not worry about climate science as a reality, only as an argument it needs to dismiss, and as pointing to people it would like to suppress.
    Likewise I’m not sure that the Australian government recognises transition as a necessity or is arguing that transition should happen later on, when we are ready. it may well prefer to stop transition. Likewise, in Australia Labor seems to be moving to a ‘do little’ and support coal mines position.

    While some coal mines have been stopped, not all mining has been stopped. The Adani mine is being speedily approved. New coal mines are opening in NSW and QLD for example, despite water problems, and the Australian Resources Minister Matthew Canavan is aiming to promote the sale of an additional 37 million tonnes of coal. He said:

    That is the equivalent of three or four new Adani Carmichael–sized coal mines. If this investment occurred in the Galilee Basin, it would open up a new, sustainably-sized coal basin in Queensland.

    Villages seem to be continuing to be destroyed in Germany to make way for coal.

    Trump is actively encouraging pollution, ostensibly for economic/developmental purposes. He does not accept any climate consensus, unless the consensus is “burn away and be damned”

    China is actively encouraging coal power in the rest of the developing world.

    Coal, itself, has probably not been ‘discredited’ in India by the corrupted privatisation process. Some people may have utilised this position in political struggles. Others used it to redistribute coal licenses to other companies – and the second process seems to have been more effective.
    Forests are still being cleared for coal, and villagers thrust into heavy pollution or complete loss of land.
    India would, at best, seem to be ambiguous. Sure they have a good renewables programme, they also have an increase coal programme.

    It is pretty clear by now, that IEA recommendations for a decline in coal consumption by 2020 will not happen in most of the world.

    We cannot ignore this if we want to understand what is going on, and the stakes involved. Yet many people opposed to climate change talk as if there was a real and universal consensus. This is not correct.

    15) The fight is not won.
    It is not inconceivable that the appeal of known scripts of development and profit will win out over the appeal of survival until it is way too late.

    16) The politics of waiting works both ways.
    While the strategy of delay has been used by coal protestors, in the hope that the mine will become uneconomical, as the problems of climate change become clearer, the politics of waiting work both ways. Companies can wait until protest becomes unfocused, or people assume that no one can be crazy enough to open a mine, and then move in and open up those mines or whatever. We have been waiting for climate action for decades. Waiting is not just an anti-coal strategy.

    17) Solar and wind power use is small throughout the world
    When people are discussing transition to renewables they need to be careful, as biofuels are often classed as renewables, although they are not as clearly beneficial, and this hides the low level of progression towards transition to solar and wind.

    For example in the Key World Energy Statistics for 2017 the IEA points out that only 1.5% of World total primary energy supply by fuel is “geothermal, solar, wind, tide/wave/ocean, heat,” 2.5% is hydro and 9.7% is biofuel.

    If you look at ‘Electricity generation by source’, in the same publication, then, 7.1% of Electricity is generated by “non-hydro renewables” – this includes biofuels – it is not just solar and wind.

    Elsewhere they say: “Modern bioenergy (excluding the traditional use of biomass) was responsible for half of all renewable energy consumed in 2017 – it provided four times the contribution of solar photovoltaic (PV) and wind combined.”

    So the percentage of low GHG renewables is tiny. It could appear that currently there is no significant move to solar or wind throughout the world, only in certain places.

    This makes the struggle even more important, but it does not make it easy.

    On ‘Cultural Marxism’?

    July 2, 2019

    Some people, usually on the Left, deny the existence of ‘cultural marxism’, while some critics claim it exists, and some of them claim it exists as a movement.

    Looking at what the critics actually discuss when they refer to cultural marxism, then it seems they are pointing towards people who criticise contemporary Western culture and capitalism. Such people definitely exist and always have. There are some major conservative political thinkers who also criticise their contemporary Western culture and capitalism: Coleridge, Burke, Ruskin, and innumerable religious thinkers etc. So there is nothing necessarily Marxist about such criticism, although Marx does criticise aspects of Western culture and obviously criticises and analyses capitalism.

    Gathering from what I have read those criticising cultural Marxism tend to object to objections to:

    • fixed gender roles and male authority
    • the authority of wealthy people and corporations
    • the authority of religion
    • patriotic violence
    • the authority and superiority of ‘white culture’
    • compulsory heterosexuality
    • being polite to people who are different to yourself

    and so on.

    To simplify the critics of ‘Cultural Marxism’ object to challenges to forms of authority and customs they approve of. They themselves challenge forms of authority and customs they don’t like, but they don’t call themselves “cultural fascists” or even “cultural capitalists”. So the name would appear to have the rhetorical function of trying to get people to dismiss what is being challenged before any argument is made, rather than any form of clarification. It may rely on an expected automatic negative reaction to the name of Marx, by people in their in-group.

    One slightly weird thing, if we were to take the critique seriously, is that many of these critics do not deal with specific thinkers they identify as cultural Marxists. For example after listening and reading quite a lot of Jordan Peterson, it seems to me that he frequently makes sweeping statements, but I have never heard him give any evidence that he has read the people he might name (like Foucault) in any depth, or even have read a book like ‘Foucault for Beginners’. He does not seem to think any real engagement is necessary – and this in university lectures. Ok people may not have the space to do this in blog posts, but in university lectures they should. While I cannot guarantee that he does not have a serious discussion about particular ‘cultural marxists’ somewhere or other, it is not obviously apparent, and suggests that his criticism is not based upon much thought, understanding or work. The critique seems to be politically motivated by a need to defend certain types of authority – for Peterson this seems to be primarily male authority, and occasionally religious authority, although his relation to religion seems complicated or inconsistent.

    However, rather than something dreadful I would continue say that the criticism of Western culture, capitalism and other forms of authority has been a long standing and continuing part of the Western tradition involving both Protestantism and enlightenment. We could easily push it back to Heraclitus or Plato, if we wanted to.

    Protestantism almost begins with the assertion that the worshipper should not accept the authority of the Catholic Church to tell worshippers the details of the Christian religion. Protestants claimed individuals should have to power and ability to challenge the teachings of the Church based upon their reading of the bible, their direct experience of God and the power of their own mind. The declarations of the pope and the Doctors of the Church were largely irrelevant. Sometimes this went as far as the free spirit antinomians who may have argued that being saved by faith you can commit no sin, and all is permissible.

    Protestants in many cases then came to accept the authority of their own Churches and leaders, but they had challenged authority, and they constantly broke apart from each other over differences of doctrine. They often also challenged the authority of aristocracy, and the sins of culture (art theatre etc) especially if they were merchants. They also often broke the socially sanctioned ties between rich and poor, deciding that charity had to involve discipline of those who received charity, or that people who needed charity were sinners and thus should not receive charity. This breaking of demands may have helped the acquisition of capital, and other people attacked that. Whether intended or not, this created a tradition of ‘free thinking’, which allowed attacks on Protestantism itself.

    In the enlightenment supposedly irrational forms of authority were also attacked, again primarily focusing on the Church, but also on wealth. The idea took root that people should be able to govern themselves to the extent that was possible. Authority should be acceptable, rational and ideally non-repressive. This is expressed in the American Revolution, the abolition of slavery, further challenge to the aristocracy, the formation of worker’s unions, the growth of science as a middle class activity, the promotion of religious freedom, the acceptance of less orthodox religious people into politics and so on.

    The enlightenment both promoted and attacked capitalism. Adam Smith is a good example. He points to the benefits of capitalism, how merchants conspire to defraud the public, how the organisation of labour corrupts people, and how military activity defends merchants interests at the cost of the general taxpayer. John Stuart Mill likewise has a complicated attitude towards capitalism, being heavily aware of how it can further oppress those who have to labour.

    Karl Marx uses the labour theory of value to argue that capitalist’s profit is stolen from the workers, that capitalism is incoherent and inevitably self destructive, and that capitalist culture and ideology is all about supporting the ruling class and crushing opposition to that rule. According to Marx, the culture that gets spread is that which the ruling groups promote and help spread and which fits in with social organisation and experience. Famously Marx declares religion to be equivalent to opium, at best a distracting fantasy – not something all Marxists believe – see ‘Liberation Theology’ and the people around the young Paul Tillich….

    Later on, Marxists will allege that the workers are not that passive with respect to ruling class culture, they can transform it and use it for their own purposes. People can discard the distortions of reality produced by ruling culture and come to see the truth of their oppression and work towards liberty through revolutionary action. Ultimately, the Marxist position, is that all culture comes out of ‘material’ action or ‘praxis’.

    Currently some people recognise further oppressions other than that of the capitalist dominant class, that stem from the irrational oppressions of the past. They ask, why should women be considered as secondary citizens, badly represented in areas of official power, subjugated by male violence, mocked for being female, considered to have less of the right intelligence, and so on. They ask why should homosexual people be threatened or attacked because of their sexual/romantic preferences, condemned to hell, unable to marry and so on. Why should poor people be treated like dirt and ruled by those who can make money or have inherited money. Why are the monied considered to be better human beings and more entitled to rule, when clearly there are things they do not know about most people’s lives. Why should we have to cheer or face exile when our country goes to war with another that has not attacked us, or is so much less powerful than us that we shall be responsible for massive death, and undesired abortions? Why should we not try for something better? Why should capitalists have the force to poison workers or destroy the environment and people’s futures?

    All these kinds of questions are part of the Western tradition, and to me much of what is labelled as ‘cultural Marxism’ seems to be part of the search for liberty. Both the liberty from interference and restriction, and the potential liberty to act. Of course, for those who support restriction of the liberty of others, it can seem that their liberty to restrict is being removed, and that therefore they are not being respected as much as they should, or that they are being constrained.

    Perhaps we could think that the Cultural Marxists are the defenders of that tradition while their attackers are those who ally with authority and attempt to fossilize that authority, or increase that authority as when they promote the extension of capitalist power, through winding back the checks and balances which have evolved to balance out that power.

    At the least, they appear to want to shut discussion down by lumping the critical western tradition along with something they think should be despised.

    Trip to the Hunter Valley

    June 9, 2019

    I spent several days last week in the Hunter Valley, visiting various community groups, with colleagues.

    I saw that the Hunter is covered with huge coal mines, most of which are hidden from the road by scenic barriers; mounds of earth with trees growing on them, or by metal panels stuck on stilts. It is almost as if the mining companies were not proud of what they were doing, and did not want people to observe it.

    I also learnt that open cut coal mines tend to have two, or even three parts. There is the mine pit, which destroys the land it occupies and much of the land around it, and there are the waste mountains which are composed of the rocks and soil covering the coal and separating the coal seams. That also destroys the land it is piled on and around it. The third place is where the finished coal is dumped for transport.

    Several of these processes require heavy water use. The coal dust is apparently damped down to keep it from flying around, although excavation through explosives cannot be damped. The coal at the “holding for transport place” is supposed to be damped down, again to stop it from flying about, although we watched for quite a while at one mine without any evidence of this damping happening. The air was heavy with clouds of coal dust. The truly massive trucks involved use lots of diesel which is also polluting, and poisonous to breathe, but they get the tax removed on diesel usage, so its all good.

    People who live near mines tell us that coal dust covers everything, and the general suspicion seems to be that coal is not damped down at night. So everyone is breathing coal dust. The mine waste also produces dust. Its dumped from the big trucks and clouds of dust rise up. The ground and trees around the dumps are covered in white/grey powder. The growth is not healthy looking.

    Mining companies are supposed to do rehabilitation of the mines. This apparently means filling the pits with water, which then leaches poisons from the coal and sinks into the land taking the poisons with it. The process not only poisons rivers and bore wells but deprives the areas of water flow, on top of the water the mines get to appropriate for their own purposes. I’m not sure why the pits are filled with water, but the obvious suggestion is that it is cheap for the companies. There is some evidence of seedling planting but this mainly on the mounds that are shielding the mines from tourists, or on the sides of the dumps facing the roads. Apparently areas away from vision are largely untouched, although clearly I cannot confirm that. Most of the growth you see covering the sides of the rubble areas looks random, or natural, and very sparse. It is probably at least as unhealthy as the areas covered in the white or grey powder from the dumps.

    We did not see many people working the mines or the dumps. The huge trucks, conveyor belts and mining by blowing ground up and using huge digging implements to scoop up the rocks, means few workers are needed. We were also told that most of the workforce is now contracted out, so the workers earn much less than they used to and have no sick or holiday pay or pension funds other than what they put aside out of their diminished pay. The aim of business is nearly always to decrease wages where possible.

    People of course fight new mines and mine expansion, because it endangers their health, their communities and the countryside they live in. Mining companies buy up property, but this always comes with a non-disclosure agreement, so people cannot find out what the prices being paid are, and so don’t know what to hold out for; this amounts to suppression of the market for profit. People who protest might find that their houses are not bought while the rest of the village is destroyed. Sometimes companies were told to destroy the houses because the areas was too dangerous or too uninhabitable, but they would rent out the houses instead, further poisoning their workers who rented them.

    People who protest can suffer from death threats in the streets from pro-mine people, which the police take seriously, and they can similarly be threatened by government agents although, so far, not with death. Under new laws they can be imprisoned for up to seven years, and if they protest about these laws can be told they are for their safety, as protesting on mines can be dangerous. If the court rejects a mine because of its destruction, then the laws can be changed retrospectively to get that mine through. It also seems to matter who you are in terms of successful protests. So far more mines seem to have been stopped to protect horse studs than farms or villages. As one person said “Horses are more important than people”.

    It can sometimes seem like the main reason for the mines going ahead is the pleasure of destruction. In one place where a mine was stopped, the fertile ground, attractive hills and Aboriginal sacred sites were clear. It would have been a loss for very little long term gain.

    People have argued that agriculture could make more for the local economy and the State (mining companies pay very little in royalties for our minerals, and generally avoid tax), and that farming would continue a lot longer that mining with fewer health side effects, but even that is not enough to persuade the State not to support miners. One group was told by a government official that “wherever there are resources we will harvest them” – clearly fertile land is not a resource which can be harvested.

    We were taken to one site were a well known company had spent considerable amounts of money building gas storage facilities, only to find that the company prospecting for that company had neglected to inform them that the plain flooded regularly, and that the ground was so honeycombed that any gas bored out would leak into the air. The Government office relied entirely on documents provided by the company to do the approval and did not know about either point. They did no further research.

    Some people alleged the government and its committees had been stacked with people from the fossil fuel industry or chosen by that industry, so there was no possible objections to the conduct of the industry or what it could destroy. This appears standard throughout most of the capitalist world.

    Quite a number of people suggested that the process was so biased towards the mining industry that there was no point engaging with the State, actions had to be taken outside it to have any effect. However, there is no doubt the courts can be useful, if the situation is aligned, and pro-mining evidence can be shown to be wrong. Ultimately gains are precarious, but it seems necessary to participate.

    One group was trying to get people to think about the future of the Hunter beyond coal. They were told by a representative of the industry that diversification was suicide. The stupidity of this statement, if reported correctly, is unbelievable. Focusing on one industry is a recipe for disaster. All eco-systems including economies, benefit from diversity.

    There was only a little talk about renewable energy. Although some people suggested that the coal heaps could be covered in solar, as they were not fit for anything else.

    All the people we met were inspirations. We need to join with them to preserve the earth from destruction for profit and from joy of destruction.

    Climate justice is not the answer

    May 26, 2019

    Climate justice is a framework that is commonly used to conduct political campaigns for reform which are trying to help people adapt to, and mitigate, climate change.

    The problem for me, is that the framing is not clear, and that I suspect it is not constructive.

    Firstly, it appears that nearly all contemporary refusals to act on the ecological crisis depend on ‘justice’ or ‘fairness’ arguments.

    For example, people often say that Australia issues just over 1% of all emissions, therefore we have negligible effect on the world and it is not ‘just’ nor fair to ask us to do anything. People can also say this will put up the cost of electricity, cause social processes to collapse and so on. why should ordinary Australians pay all the cost? Sure we can answer that Australia has much less than 1% of the world’s population, that it has a very high emissions rate per head, and that it exports lots of fossil fuels which are not counted in this total, but the argument can still stand: it’s not ‘just’ to act, especially given the bad consequences of action are not known in detail.

    People in India and China, or other developing countries can argue that while it is true their emissions are likely to tilt the globe over the edge, it is ‘just’ to let them continue. The West had years of unconstrained growth, so should the developing nations so they can catch up. Attempts to stop them from polluting are evidently attempts to stop poverty reduction, and attempts by the West to maintain their world domination. Allowing this pollution is a matter of justice. The West should cut back to zero first, otherwise it is unfair.

    Given that China and India are not cutting back, then people can argue that the US should not cut back, because where is the justice or fairness in crippling their economy and hurting their people, to allow others to pollute massively?

    ‘Justice’ means finding someone to blame, and people will reject the blame when it hits them: “we are not criminal, we are just acting as we have always done. Other people are worse than us.” People will usually deny there is a problem long before they will admit that they are the problem, and so it delays their action even further if they think they might actually be behaving badly, and others they don’t like disapprove.

    Justice, as it is normally practiced, depends on a system of violence. People who are ‘convicted’ are forced to accept punishment, and there is enough respect for the violence deployed that sympathetic people will not actively object to the sentence. There is no ideal to justice that does not depend on this kind of violence. There is no international violence that is respected in that way. If Country x is convicted of climate injustice by other countries, then we have no way of enforcing the decision except for war, or possibly trade sanctions, but given history, it is unlikely that either will work, and they will disrupt the apparent virtue of the justice format.

    In other words, justice does not motivate people to act, leads to people providing excuses for not acting, and for waiting until others act and acting becomes fair. It primarily implies a rhetoric for keeping things as they are and very few countries do anything.

    Wanting a purely ‘equitable’ and ‘just’ situation to arise will take for ever. It is a mode of exchange which does not work while people do not trust each other.

    However, there are other ways of proceeding.

    It might be better to agitate for “Climate Generosity”. This is the idea that we give to others, we act without waiting for fairness, we act because it is the way we do things to get things done.

    This is pretty standard human behaviour. Parents give to children without demanding equal return immediately. People in many societies give generously to others in order to persuade the others to give in return. Sometimes the deal does not work; sometimes no obligation is built up, sometimes people break the deal, but mostly it works and works well.

    In seeing others acting, people come to think they can act themselves. Generosity is usually defined as good, hence people may tend to emulate those being generous, and add to the climate gifts that are becoming available and solving the problem.

    Yes some people will attempt to take advantage of generosity, but if you are in a generous frame of mind this does not stop you, or bother you that much – things are happening. You might give more carefully in future, but you keep giving, keep getting the emulation, keep getting the status, and keep getting the results you are aiming for.

    With justice you have to wait for a framework for justice, but with generosity you just go out and do what you need to fulfil the aim. If you give solar panels or wind turbines, nobody loses, everybody benefits including yourself. The idea we don’t need harmful pollution to live becomes more common and acceptable, and eventually it seems odd not to support it.

    Climate justice digs a pit, climate generosity builds a way out.

    Questions about ‘nature’ and geological time

    April 6, 2019

    A friend responded to the last post on nature. I understood them to be essentially making three points:

    Point one: The division between human and nature is similar to the division between body and soul, essentially ficticious.

    Point two: As Humans are natural phenomena, everything they have done is natural. So nature is damaging itself.

    Point three: Any act has unforeseen consequences and the world exists in geological time, consequently we have no hope of a political solution to climate change or ecological degradation.

    This is my attempt to deal with these issues.

    Point 1: The idea of ‘nature’ is a human construct. Like Bateson and others I prefer to think of ecologies and systems. These ideas do challenge ideas of separation, but I’d also like to suggest that the conceptual differences between ‘mind and body’ and ‘human and nature’ are different. The degrees of separation and independence are not the same.

    Firstly, there is a non-human world which has, in many senses, little to do with me. I am not it, and it is not me. It has gone on for billions of years without me. It will go on, hopefully for more billions of years, without me. Currently, humans cannot survive without the non-human, and they have emerged out of it – yet once emerged, humans are no longer just a non-reflective part of the rest of the ecology. They are never the whole of the system, and could even be thought of as having a potential to differ from the rest of the system.

    However, my body and me do not exist separately in this sense. I can only learn and act with this body. If one dies the other dies. My body is not non-human. It is what makes me human. There is no sense of independence of one side from the other, unless you believe in immortal souls – and that is probably the basis of the idea of separation. There is nothing obvious in the idea of the two being potentially separate or independent.

    This takes us to point 2.

    Point 2: This potential to be different may not be unique to humans, but there are human constructions which would not exist without humans. Just as there are destructions of ecological systems which would not happen without humans.

    It seems to me, there is a problem with dismissing the term ‘nature’ and then keeping the word ‘natural’ to apply to everything which happens on earth and take a position in which human acts and decision become irrelevant, or perfectly in keeping with the rest of the eco-systems. Without this somewhat indiscriminate application of the idea of ‘natural’, there is a sense that humans are ‘extra’ to nature, despite emerging from nature.

    Paving a forest is not ‘natural’, as in the world without humans, or human equivalents, this could not occur. Again it emerges out of an ecology, but is destructive of the ecology in a way that the ecology could not achieve without humans. Humans are special, but they are not so special they are above nature. This seems hard for people in the west to grasp. People seem to want humans to be either above nature, or just another bacteria of no real consequence.

    To restate: while humans emerge from an ecology of ecologies, the consequences of their acts and decisions can be destructive to the rest of the ecology, and they can be aware of this. In that sense they can be contra-‘natural’ or contra-ecological. This is not a purely human phenomena, other organisms have changed the world’s ecology, but those organisms do not appear to have decided to do this, and have done it slowly enough for other life forms to evolve to deal with, and take advantage of, the transformation. The change has been ecological. Again this is not saying humans will destroy the world, eventually new life will arise, but possibly human life will not survive the rapid changes we are inducing in our ecology, and I personally would find that sad.

    Point 3: While it is true that many other creatures seem intelligent or self-aware, it also seems that humans are both intelligent and self-aware to an extent which is unusual. This does not mean that humans are intelligent or self-aware without limits, but it does mean that we have a greater degree of responsibility for our actions. If a bacteria developed which ate everything in its path, then we would probably try and defeat it, but we would not hold it morally culpable. If humans destroy everything in their path then, most humans in their path would say the destroyers should, and perhaps could, have made a different decision. Indeed it appears to be the case that humans, and many creatures, can make decisions.

    Finding the right time scale on which to live and make decisions, is likely to be vitally important for life in general. Some decisions or reactions have to be made immediately if you are to survive. Some decisions reflective creatures have more time to make, and for some decisions the creatures may need to think about the time frame for the effects of that decision, whether it is hours, days, months, years, centuries and so on. Thinking either in too long time frames or too short time frames can be deleterious to effectiveness.

    Looking at making political or ethical decisions within a time frame of geological time is a good way to achieve demotivation. This is probably why many of the people who embrace climate do-nothingness, or those few non worried scientists, appear to prefer thinking in geological time frames. In terms of geological time, human lives do not matter, creatural lives do not matter, even species survival does not matter. The rocks go on. Life goes on, and it is way outside our sphere of activity.

    Nothing matters so we don’t have to make decisions, we don’t have to struggle, we don’t have to worry, we do not have to take any responsibility for any of our own actions in geological times. We can, inadvertently, just let powerful people get on with destroying life chances for everyone, for their temporary benefit – because you can be sure the rulers of the world are not thinking in geological terms. Indeed it seems a common complaint that business does not think beyond the next quarter, which is probably too short a time frame for long term social survival, and increases the risks of any climate change….

    One thing that seems to happen regularly when people discover complexity theory, is the assertion that because you cannot control everything in fine detail, you cannot influence anything, or make any decision that is wiser or better than any other. As a consequence, some people argue that complexity theory is wrong, while others argue that politics is wrong. In both cases people seem to be saying that because we cannot do everything perfectly, we can do nothing. This seems silly, and we make decisions and act in our lives all the time despite the fact that these decisions don’t always have the expected consequences. Indeed, most of us might be bored if they did.

    It then seems strange to argue that human oppression of other humans is nothing new, and that some humans suffer disastrously because of this. This again seems an abdication, a demand for perfection of complete non-oppression, or a refusal to deal with difficulty. We may not remove hierarchies completely, but that does not mean that some hierarchies are not better than others, and we should not strive for better hierarchies. It also seems odd to tie this in with geological time, as in geological time, these kinds of destructive human hierarchies are extremely new. They are probably at most 10,000 years old, which is nothing.

    As a side note, it seems to me, that the so-called hierarchies found in ecological systems are not the same as hierarchies in human systems, it is just a metaphor being taken for reality; ecological hierarchies don’t deliberately oppress in an attempt to generate their own benefit.

    Humans are capable of living without mass destruction of global ecological systems, if they learn to adapt to systems or discover how change those systems in beneficial ways, that continue in human time frames. We know this. Some complex civilisations have lasted for considerable periods of time. This means that it is possible to live with ecologies. Difficult, but possible. It is partly a matter of choosing the right frameworks.

    Making all human behavior ‘natural’ and thinking in geological time frames are probably not the right frameworks.

    The Mueller Report is presented

    March 29, 2019

    I find the media response to the summary of the Mueller report extraordinary.

    They largely seem to be falling over themselves to say President Trump is in the clear. That is, they are gladly supposing that an appointee of Trump, who has already implied the President cannot obstruct justice, is going to give an honest unbiased account of the Mueller report.

    I’m simply asking people what they would think if Hillary Clinton had:

    1) publicly asked the Russians to hack Republican emails and the Russians did,

    2) secret business dealings with Russians during the campaign and lied about it,

    3) invited those Russians to her inauguration party,

    4) members of her campaign committee with secret dealings with Russians who paid them,

    5) members of her campaign who knew in advance of leaking of Republican emails,

    6) her daughter, son-in-law and campaign chair attend a secret meeting with Russians to get dirt on the Republican candidate and lie about it,

    7) her designated national security advisor engages in secret talks with the Russian ambassador about removing sanctions and lies about it to the FBI,

    8) large numbers of her campaign team had been accused of, and in some cases convicted of, criminal offenses,

    9) repeatedly tried to stop the inquiry,

    10) as president reveals classified information to Russian government representatives including the foreign minister,

    11) has secret meetings with Putin as President, and

    12) there was evidence that Russians had supported her in the election along with other shady elites who had exploited loopholes in Facebook, and other forms of social media, to manipulate discussion and promote their interests.

    If so, would you think there was a problem?

    How to tell if climate crisis is unlikely

    January 13, 2019

    I’m sometimes asked what would convince me that global warming was not getting worse and that we did not need to do anything. This is easy. There are straight-forward observations and trends which, if present, would indicate we are not heading for climate disaster.

  • Average global temperatures returning to mid 20th Century levels or below.
  • The increase in temperature to reverse so that most of the hottest record years were not in the last 20 or so years.
  • Ocean temperatures to decline, rather than apparently warm faster than predicted.
  • Glaciers to start re-appearing on mountains
  • Ice shelfs to start thickening and stay thickened.
  • It would also be nice if we saw:

  • Fish populations start rising, with tropical fish moving back to the tropics.
  • A decline in pollution and deforestation (because if they don’t decline then you will have other problems).
  • Measurements of CO2 concentration declining back to mid 20th Century levels, rather than increasing, because the theory highly suggests that too much CO2 will increase temperatures and acidify the oceans leading to massive die-off.
  • A solution to the loss of phosphorus problem.
  • The halt of increasing numbers of species going extinct – as that is not a sign of a healthy ecology. (Really climate change is just one symptom of massive ecological destruction and we need a healthy ecology to prosper.)
  • Some common sense from denialists, and those who wish to increase pollution.
  • But I’m not holding my breath for any of these events.