Posts Tagged ‘social category theory’

Identity Politics IV

October 27, 2018

More people seem to be independently coming around to acknowledging right wing identity politics or the politics of social categorization.

In The Atlantic Adam Serwer writes:

among those who claim to oppose identity politics, the term is applied exclusively to efforts by historically marginalized constituencies to claim rights others already possess. Trump’s campaign, with its emphasis on state violence against religious and ethnic minorities—Muslim bans, mass deportations, “nationwide stop-and-frisk”—does not count under this definition, but left-wing opposition to discriminatory state violence does.

Right wing identity politics is used to build following for a party who’s main aim is to “to slash the welfare state in order to make room for more high-income tax cuts” and to support plutocracy generally. Free market politics is generally about removing the historical constraints on big business which might benefit less powerful people, and restraining ordinary people from having any political impact on business, no matter what is being done to them.

Let’s face it. Big Business is dominant. In Australia, where the rightwing government has a similar drive, we have a situation in which almost daily we are hearing about crimes from powerful financial institutions which are rewarded by the system at the expense of ordinary people. We also hear of employers fraudulently underpaying their workers. The government, in its wisdom, is attacking unions as a threat to democracy and the process of the free market. It is talking about boosting Christian liberty to deny the rights of others, and engages in discussions about “fair dinkum power” ie poisonous coal.

In the US we have a government, whose main achievements, apart from the taxcuts for the wealthy, seem to have been to wreck healthcare for most people, and to allow corporations to pollute with joy.

People, while willing to sacrifice for the greater good are probably not that willing, if they realise it, to sacrifice for the benefit of those who are already benefitting, and its good for the plutocrats to be able shift the blame onto migrants – especially non white migrants.

Serwer again:

Republicans have taken to misleading voters by insisting that they oppose cuts or changes to popular social insurance programs, while stoking fears about Latino immigrants, Muslim terrorists, and black criminality. In truth, without that deception, identity politics is all the Trump-era Republican Party has.

If people get indignant about this identity politics, without explaining what is happening, then it gives those identity politics more publicity and more of a boost.

To make the point again: the reason this is conservative identity politics, is that it supports the dominance of a group that identifies as predominantly white male and straight, who see themselves as being under threat (which they are from plutocracy). However, even if these people are kicked by their own party and the rich, they can still manage to be “better” than other groups of people, and help suppress them.

it looks back to an imagined past when they were doing well

Underlying the American discourse on identity politics has always been the unstated assumption that, as a white man’s country, white identity politics—such as that practiced by Trump and the Republican Party—is legitimate, while opposition to such politics is not.

The way things have been is under challenge, and the old way must be reinforced. Hence this form of identity politics is almost invisible.

few of the pundits convinced that identity politics poses a threat to democracy have displayed alarm as the president and his party have built a second nationwide campaign around it.

see:

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2018/10/gop-mid-term-campaign-all-identity-politics/573991

Climate change is an ethical and justice challenge: consequently it will never be solved

October 14, 2018

Climate change and ecological destruction are often framed as ethical challenges, to be solved by a new ethics or a better notion of justice. While I agree that ecological destruction is an ethical challenge, I suggest that this means it will not be solved in the time frame available.

This occurs for four reasons. First there is no basis for ethics which is not already ethical; therefore it is highly improbable we can have an agreed ethics take form across the globe in the needed time frame. Second, we live in complex systems which are unpredictable and not completely knowable, so the results of ethically intended actions are uncertain. Third we influence the meaning of what is good or bad through the context we perceive or bring to the events; given complexity and given cultural variety, the chances of agreeing on a context for these acts and events is small. Four, because context is important and caught in group-dynamics, ethics always gets caught up in the politics between groups, is influenced by those politics and their history, and there is no non-political space in which to discuss ecological destruction.

I prefer to talk about ‘ecological destruction’ rather than ‘climate change’ because, while people can disagree about climate change, there is less chance of disagreement about ecological destruction: it is pretty obvious, almost everywhere, with new highways, new dense housing, destruction of agricultural fields, destruction of forests, accumulation of waste, pollution of seas and over-fishing. We face far more ecological challenges than just climate change. Climate change is a subset of the consequences of ecological destruction and the dumping of products defined as waste, into the air, the ocean or vital water tables. The fact that we live in complex systems also means that deleterious effects in one system, spill out into others, and eventually cannot be kept local; we all interact with each other and the rest of the ecology. Everything is interdependent. Without plants we cannot survive. Without drinkable water we cannot survive. Without breathable air we cannot survive. These are basics for almost everything on earth.

However, given climate change is a moral issue, this decline in human liveability is not necessarily a bad thing. You have to already take the moral position that human survival, or that not harming fellow humans (in some circumstances), is good or the basis of virtue. You could decide that humans should be eliminated for the greater good; that they (or a subset of humans) are destructive parasites who should be exterminated. You might decide that only those humans with some qualification (intelligence, religious purity, dedication to the party, or wealthy, for example) should survive as they are ‘the best’ and the exemplification of what is moral. This is not unusual, most ethical systems do discriminate ethically between different people. Children do not have exactly the same ‘rights and responsibilities’ as adults. People defined as immoral or criminal usually face sanctions, and lessened ethical responsibility from the virtuous – indeed the virtuous may have be said to have the responsibility to harm the immoral.

No moral basis
If human survival is not a fundamental part of morality, then what is? ‘Care?’ why should care be thought of as good? Some moralities argue that care is a corruption, that care encourages bad habits and laziness, or that true care involves violently correcting behaviour defined as ‘bad’. Care is already a moral proposition, not the beginning of a morality. ‘Obedience to God’s rules?’ Assuming that we could agree on what God’s rules were, then why is obedience to God good? Could it be that God is a tyrant and we need to disobey to discover moral reality? Could it be that God expects us to solve problems ourselves, as the rules presumably have a basis other than the mere whim of God – if not why should we assume that whim is good? The idea that we should obey God is already a moral proposition. ‘We should do our best?’ Sounds great, but what is ‘best?’ Is our version of the best, actually the best? what if someone else says it is not the best, or their best contradicts ours? Why does following our inner guide/instincts lead to the best – what if it does not? Should we bring ‘the greatest good to the greatest number?’ leaving aside that this does not resolve what is good, then why is it good to consider the greatest number? Perhaps some minorities need a good that conflicts with the good of the greatest number? Again the proposition assumes the moral position that the more people gain the good, then the better it is – which could be ethically challengeable. Some other people think that taking good and evil as undecidable and therefor not worrying about it is the root of virtue, but who decides this is good? What evidence is there that personal peace is better than personal indecision? Valuing personal peace above all else, is already a moral proposition. Some people may even define what appears as ecological destruction as ecological improvement, partly because it is bringing the natural world under human control. What is destructive or not, is in itself an ethical question which runs into this problem of ethical presuppositions.

There is no way of resolving these dilemmas that I am aware of, and the presence of differing moralities and irresolvable questions, seems to demonstrate this. Moral uniformity, historically seems to depend on violence, and why should we accept that as good?

Complexity
In complexity we have multitudes of interactive systems which interact with each other. Nodes in these systems are constantly being modified by other nodes and events in the systems, or they are modifying their own behaviour and responses to events in the system. Sometimes the modifications are successful, or relatively harmless, and the new shape continues, sometimes they fail and it dies out. This is the basis of evolution, which happens all the time – there is no stability to ecologies.

The multitude of these links between nodes, are usually beyond full comprehension or enumeration by humans. Such systems are constantly in flux, often around recurrent positions, but they are open to sudden, rapid and unexpected change.

Complexity means that we cannot always predict the result of specific actions, especially when other people (and their reactions, and their attempts to ‘game’ the system) are involved, and when the situation is constantly changing and old points of balance are shifting. This change is something we face with ecological destruction. Patterns cannot remains stable. We can predict trends such as the more average global temperature increases, the more unstable the weather, and the more likely that violent weather events will occur. Similarly, the more destruction the more the unstable the ecology will become, and the more pollution the more unstable the ecology will become – unless it reaches the temporary stability of death.

Because so many events occur, are connected and are simultaneous, it may be impossible to tell what the full results of any particular action are. This is often expressed in the metaphor of the butterfly’s wing flaps eventually leading a major storm. Normally we would expect the multitude of butterfly actions to cancel each other out, and they may well do this most of the time, but not always. The reality is that small events can have major consequences, and we probably cannot tell which small events are significant until after the results have occurred. This lack of predictability means that we never have full control over complex system, we always have to adjust our actions given what occurs, should we try and work with the system.

This has particular consequences for ethics, in that the results of ethical actions, and ethical rules will not be predictable. The actions may be well-intentioned, but unexpected consequences are normal. If the consequences of an ethical action cannot be predicted, then how can it be guaranteed to be ethical? You can state that an ethical action is ethical irrespective of its results, but this is already an ethical position, and most people would probably not be completely indifferent to the results of their actions. The flux also means that propositions like the “categorical imperative” do not work, because we cannot assume situations are ‘the same’ or similar even in principle. Complexity means we cannot behave as we would want all others to behave in the same situation, because the situation could be unique. Besides perhaps different classes of people should behave with different intentions and different ethics. Why should ethics be uniform? Uniformity is already a moral decision.

Arguments about the results of actions and the similarity of situations are more or less inevitable.

Context
What this last statement implies is that the context of an event influences our understanding of the event. This is particularly the case given that we do not know all the connections and all the possible responses that parts of the system may make. We cannot list them all. We are always only partially understanding of the world we are living in, and this is influenced by the context we bring to those events. Possible contexts are modified by peoples’ connections to the events, and the cultural repertoire of possible responses and languages they have available. Given the 1000s of different cultures on Earth, and the multitude of different ways people are connected to the events and the people involved, then the possibility of agreement is low.

Politics
One important context is political conflict. One way of giving an ethical statement, ethical decision making, or an event, context is to frame it by your relationship to the people involved. If they are people you identify with, or consider an exemplar of what humans should be, then their statements are more persuasive and they are more likely to seem ethically good to you. If they seem outsiders or people you don’t identify with, or seem to be an exemplar of an out-group, then the less persuasive they will appear to be. Consequently ethics in always entangled in group conflict and group politics. This politics pre-exists and the groups involved may have different relationships to ecological destruction, and so have different politics towards that destruction, and towards other groups involved. Thus we frequently see people in favour of fossil fuels argue that developing countries need fossil fuels to develop, and that preventing the ecological destruction which comes with fossil fuels, prevents that development, and retains people in dire poverty and misery. What ethical right do already developed countries have to do that? What makes this poverty good? in this case developed countries may be considered evil for being concerned about ecology. Similarly developed countries may argue that most of the true destructiveness comes during development, and that while they are stabilising or reducing destruction, the level of destruction from developing countries will destroy us all. In this context, developing countries are wrong, or provide an excuse for inaction. The situation is already caught in the struggles for political dominance and safety in the world, as one reason for development is military security and a refusal to be dominated by the developed world again. There is a history of colonial despoliation involved here – although again to others, the despoliation can be defined (ethically) as bringing prosperity and development.

‘Climate Justice’, does not solve these problems because, in practice, justice involves defining some people as evil (which automatically sets up politics), it cannot limit contexts, and the machinery of justice depends on violence or the threat of violence. If a person is defined as a criminal and either punished or forced to make recompense, that occurs because of the potential of the powerful to use violence to enforce the sentence. In the current world system, there is no organisation or collection of organisations, which can impose penalties, or generate a collective agreement on what justice is in all circumstances, for the kinds of reasons we discussed above. Climate Justice is simply likely to encourage more blame allocation and conflict.

Recap and conclusion

Ecological destruction is embedded in ethical interpretations. These ethical interpretations are influenced by, and undermined by:

  • The difficulty of establishing a universally agreed ethical basis for actions. Ethics problems are essentially irresolvable, and yet all action involves ethics.
  • The complexity which means we cannot predict the results of all actions, we cannot control the system and we cannot understand the system completely.
  • Context, or the meaning which influences meanings, mean that different people will bring different contexts to events and understand them differently, and treat them differently ethically.
  • Context includes politics between groups and the different ethical systems belonging to different groups. Ecological destruction is already tied into different interpretations and different developmental (and other) demands and conflicts.
  • Thus it is extremely unlikely that we will spontaneously develop a universal ethical system which will allow us to decide what actions to take to resolve ecological destruction, or stop ecological destruction. Indeed the ethical conflicts will probably further delay our ability to respond.

    Ethics may well be the death of us.

    Protecting Christian Liberties?

    October 10, 2018

    We are continuing to hear a lot about protecting “Religious liberties” (which seems to mean Christian liberties) but we are still not hearing much evidence that these liberties are under threat.

    So let me go by responses to articles in newspapers and articles I’ve read in favour of new ‘protective’ legislation. These are the liberties people seem to be talking about.

    1) People no longer automatically genuflect to people who claim they are preaching the word of God. Given the massive differences in interpretation of that word over history, then even if the Bible did result from the exact dictation of God to various humans, then we still don’t know that the preaching is correct. Secondly, not everybody nowadays genuflects to the word of Marx, Mises, Morrison, Science or whatever. If you have a case put it forward and expect some people to disagree, or not listen. Don’t expect that if you say some group of people are subhuman or will burn in the eternal flames of hell, you will receive automatic praise. Do expect to be able to speak, but don’t expect protection because you think you are saying something vital.

    2) Christians should be powerful because they have the truth, and everyone should live by their words. Sorry this is not an argument. This is an assertion.

    3) Christians do a great deal of good in society, and should not be discouraged from doing good. Do people really need special privileges to do good? If you really want to help people go and help them. But don’t always expect praise for it. If you want to help people because they should obey you, or your word, then expect to be criticised as anyone else would be. Jesus was not complimentary to those who performed religious duties to gain social status.

    4)Some schools are asking people to opt in to participate in Christian festivities like Christmas or Easter plays. This does not stop those interested in Christian tradition from participating, or setting up their own Church based festivities. What it does stop, is Christians assuming that they have the right to impose their views and ceremonies on others unless those others explicitly opt out. This supposed imposition on liberty, is an imposition on Christian dominance, and again Christians by objecting seem to be seeking the right to dominate others by default.

    5) Some people are rude to them online. Well that is what online life is like. Try giving a reasoned and heavily documented argument against Trump in a Republican group on Facebook and see how you go. We may not like people being rude, but we cannot stop it for one group of people alone. And besides some Christians are rude to other people, but usually people being rude cannot see their own rudeness. What they are saying seems fair to them.

    6) Some people refuse to agree that Christians should be able to persecute other groups of people, even if that group is other Christians. Little case is made as to why Christians should be able to persecute, except they think it is their right because they are always right. But on similar grounds, others have the right to disagree. And note persecute means more than disagreeing with someone. Its means disagreeing with their right to exist or speak at all. You are not being persecuted if you are told your views are rubbish. In many countries where Christians are persecuted, they would probably relish this kind of rubbish persecution.

    7) Some TV comedy shows occasionally mock Christians. Some TV shows mock politicians, business people, academics, gays, bogans and so on. Why should all Christians have the privilege of being exempt, even if particular Christians appear corrupt?

    8) Religion is good for people and society, therefore religions should not be criticised. The first part of this statement may be true, but if those good effects come about through harming and persecuting others, or scapegoating people who don’t belong to their denominations, then we have a moral dilemma. Can people be religious without condemning and persecuting others, without using violence and exclusion? I would hope so. What happened to the idea that you should set an example to the world, and convince people by your virtues rather than your cruelties?

    From a theological point of view, there is nothing Christian about these arguments for privilege. I am not aware of Jesus being reported as saying “Come to me. I will give you social power, material wealth, respect and obedience from your fellows. No one will ever dare object to whatever you say.”

    Let’s push this further. The thing Christians have gained the most fame for over the last 20 years is child abuse within Christian organisations. Let’s not be imprecise, and decide to avoid the term ‘child abuse’ as that might suggest the odd blow in anger, or verbal abuse, something anyone might commit on a bad day; we are talking about child rape. Clearly not all Christians were involved in this, and many had exactly the same response to it as non-Christians. However their organisations protected people who had raped children while attacking the victims and trying to silence them. Protecting the reputation of their Christian organisation was more important than protecting children. In this campaign of silence and denial they were usually supported by right wing commentators and politicians who dismissed the allegations, or diminished the numbers of allegations, or pretended that it was not happening. We know that when it all came out, one Church underestimated its fortune by billions, to try and avoid compensating its victims. We have just heard (the truth is not confirmed) that some schools have been sending gay students to organisations who strapped electrodes to their genitals to torture them into being straight. Should we preserve their liberty to do this?

    This is corruption.

    Sadly, these actions seems to have been acceptable until recently. Most Christians do not seem to have pressed their organisations to uncover the truth and stop the abuse (certainly there were no reports of such mass movements), even though Jesus seems pretty clear that people harming children are not the best people. Most Christians seem to have ignored the issue, even if it was their own children at peril.

    If religious liberties legislation had been in place and if people were not allowed to dispute truth with Christians or dismiss the platitudes of their organisations, then the Royal Commission could probably not have happened, and the state of institutional child rape would be preserved. Can you imagine Tony Abbott or Scott Morrison instigating such an inquiry and risking the liberties of the Churches? The whole right wing machine would be devoted to persecuting those who said there was a problem, and the law would be there to help them stop any inquiry. People would be unable to publish accusations. It took an atheist Prime Minister to set up the inquiry. Not a Christian one.

    Yes, this is an extreme example, but do we need to protect Christian liberties to attack people, persecute people, not receive disagreement, hide their crimes, and not receive any mockery? What good does it do? What real liberties need preserving? So far there is no case that liberties are curtailed for Christians any more than for other people. There are no examples being given of Christians being stopped from worshipping in their Churches (except by other people in those Churches), reading their Bible, trying to convert other people, or preaching the good news. Christian organisations already get massive privileges in matters of tax, financial reporting, influence on politics and so on.

    What the people who are pushing this idea seem to want is not liberty, but guaranteed privilege and immunity.

    Identity Politics III

    September 30, 2018

    Peter Hartcher, the political correspondent of the Sydney Morning Herald, has made a similar argument to the one I made a few weeks ago about identity politics, so I’m just going to explore the points of difference and similarity. He also refers to Francis Fukuyama’s new book Identity: The Demand for Dignity and the Politics of Resentment. Obviously, this is an argument which is timely.

    Quotes from Mr. Hartcher’s article are in italics.

    He begins:

    Politics since World War II has been dominated by the ideological struggle along Marxist economic lines. The working class versus the capitalist class.”

    He implies this is now over because of identity politics. I’m not sure about that, I think class war helps drive certain types of identity politics. As Warren Buffett, the great investor, said in 2006 “There’s class warfare, all right but it’s my class, the rich class, that’s making war, and we’re winning.” In 2011 he said more firmly, “there’s been class warfare going on for the last 20 years, and my class has won.” This seems correct, given the lessening of wages and increase in profit as percentages of the national income in many states, and the ease with which donors and industries threaten governments.

    According to the right of politics, it’s the left that’s guilty of playing identity politics, fomenting the resentment and anger of minorities. In truth, the right plays it just as hard. The difference is that the right foments the resentment and anger of the majority.

    This seems basically correct, although the right also foments the resentment and anger of minorities as well. They do this to support their class war on ordinary people. I also agree that the Right pretends it is not doing this.

    From a time when power resided only with kings and warlords, the rights revolutions have, over centuries, extended recognition and power to ordinary citizens, to slaves, to women, to indigenous peoples, to the disabled, to homosexuals, to children and, increasingly today, to animals. The Australian philosopher Peter Singer has pictured this force as an “expanding circle of empathy.”

    Being a Humean in terms of ethics – that is asserting that ethics is based on what Hume called ‘sympathy’, or what we today call ’empathy’ – this also seems to be an accurate statement. We have, at least in some places in society, been extending the range of humans and creatures we feel are like us. Some people have argued that this extension is an accidental consequence of reading novels, as you may have to understand people who are not like you, to read one. Good novels teach us that other people and sometimes animals are human too. I’m not saying this argument is true, but it seems to me that empathy requires imagination; in a novel we imagine the other as like us, or as capable as feeling as we might if we were in their situation.

    ‘Fascism’ also requires imagination, the ability to imagine that our next door neighbours are not human, or that they engage in dastardly, inhuman, or subhuman, acts that you, yourself, would never do. The imagining is usually visceral, fascists imagine their neighbours are disgusting, and they try to make those they hate physically repulsive to them, and completely different. That helps prevent other kinds of thinking and imagining. There is nothing inherently good about imagination, but its vital for real ethics.

    But the way identity politics is being played today is not a quest for equality. It is about asserting not equal rights but superior rights“. Emphasis added.

    True, if you modify to read, “but the way identity politics is being played today, by the right in particular, is not a quest for equality. It is about asserting not equal rights but superior rights…”

    It is an intolerant impulse that claims greater rights for one favoured group over others. Members of outgroups are even denied the right to be heard.

    We can see this sometimes in the left, but they are usually trying to prevent specific occasions of speech, rather than speech in general. After all there are right wing TV programs and papers who will allow the expression of almost anything if it supports them, and will prevent, or attack, anything being said if it does not. The right has an advantage here as the winners of the class war own most of the mainstream media. The right often seems to try to prevent speech in general. They, for example, identify people who may hold them to account, as leftists, and try to prevent visible account holding happening at all. This is the basis for much criticism of the ABC, and it is worrying because sometimes, in Australia, the ABC is the only organization that holds them to account or asks difficult questions.

    Hartcher points to a ‘left’ example by saying “the activists in the Black Lives Matter movement fume against anyone who says “black and white lives matter”“.

    The point here is not that activists are denying that white lives matter, just that the number of black people imprisoned, beaten up, or shot by white people especially cops is far greater than the other way around (especially per head of population). Official society looks, and acts, as if black lives really don’t matter. Saying “all lives matter” can seem like an attempt to diminish the crisis faced by black people, even if its innocently intended. Saying all lives matter, can be a way of saying “we don’t really have a problem”. Its like saying candidates should be selected on merit, not because they are women. The point is that if there is no effort to have female candidates, then male dominance will ensure most candidates continue to be men. If we say ‘all lives matter’, then it may appear ok for black people to be harassed and shot in proportionally much larger numbers, as they are now.

    Trump, of course, is the high priest of the low order of angry right-wing identity politics. Muslims are terrorists and must be banned from entry; Mexicans are rapists and must be sealed off behind a wall; women are objects that can be grabbed by the pussy; and the Ku Klux Klan aren’t really all bad.”

    This comes back to class war. Trump and the Republicans, probably can’t win support for their policies enabling corporations to maim workers, poison people, kill endangered animals, and pollute with ease. They can’t win many votes in dismantling the Affordable Health Care Act, especially given that many Republicans seem to think that Affordable Care was different from Obamacare, or was the Republican improvement of Obamacare. It may be hard to convince people, who have been continually warned about the dangers of big government surpluses, to support massive tax cuts for wealthy people which increase the surplus, or that the military needs more spending which increases the surplus.

    Focusing on right wing identity politics is helpful to the right, and they ask for special rights to be able to diss other people, especially precarious people who most likely cannot fight back with the same force, and to exclude them.

    Apparently Francis Fukuyama has a new book, in which he argues that left “political correctness” is responsible for this, as it removed the ability of white males to complain about how bad things were for them. “You are not listening to what’s been happening in the last few years if you think there’s no connection between the two.

    This is obvious bullshit. White people, and white working class people, could always complain and have complained. The problem would only occur for white people if they complained that their problems came from ‘niggers’, ‘towelheads’, ‘poofters’ or whatever, and that these minorities should be shot or expelled or whatever. In other words the left were trying to shut down fascist imaginings. This may have been counter-productive, but it was not oppressive. ‘Political correctness’ as used by the left often functions as a request for both politeness and sympathetic imagination directed towards the relatively powerless. Politeness was at one time a conservative virtue, but not any more. The term “political correctness” is often used by the right to help stop thinking, as in: “Perhaps we should not cut down every tree in the country,” “Oh stop being politically correct”, “Perhaps we should have an inquiry into Church abuse of children” “Oh stop being politically correct”. In other words the division between people was already established, partly because of class war, and the engineered shift of attention.

    Fukuyama says about the economic crash of 2008 onwards, “But people’s reactions were expressed in identity terms, not economic terms. If it was an economic reaction they should have lined up behind the parties of the right and left” on income or class grounds.”

    This is precisely the point. In modern neoliberal economies, you don’t have a majority living on high incomes. Those truly benefitting from the order are a tiny percentage of the population. You may need a fascist kind of identity politics to get people to support the neoliberal wealth elite and keep voting for the interests of that elite, and that is what the right (on the whole) agitates for.

    It’s the nature of right wing populism to demonise elites, plus an out-group. It doesn’t matter which out-group. Jews, Muslims, Chinese, any minority will do to fill the vacancy.”

    The issue is that not all elites will be demonized by the Right. The corporate elite are largely spared in rightwing identity politics. “The wealthy are like us, and we can aim to be like them.” The Right can even elect billionaires who have inherited most of their wealth – you can’t get much more elite than that.

    This is a careful anti-elitism. Anti-professors, anti-science, anti-knowledge, anti-art, not anti-wealth. Australian right wing members of parliament, or right-wing media propagandists on huge incomes, often pretend that they are not an elite, but that those criticising them are.

    To date, the major parties [in Australia] are flirting with identity politics. But only flirting.”

    No, not true. What else is the anti-refugee policy and the “Christian religious freedoms,” the “aboriginal life style choices”, the “bludgers on the dole, taking your money” and “more money for private schools” stuff?

    Fukuyama again:
    The retreat on both sides” – left and right – “into ever narrower identities threatens the possibility of deliberation and collective action by the society as a whole. Down this road lies, ultimately, state breakdown and failure.”

    No, again. The left is still visibly trying to work with the idea that women are equal to men, that black and white should have equal rights, that gays should have equal rights, that transsexuals are people, that we should not kill all koalas for profit and so on. They are still following the expansive nature of their identity politics.

    So we have identity politics on both sides. No question. However, we do have a destructive identity politics on the right apparently built up to support the victors in the class war. The right nearly always pretends that its vices are universal rather than engineered for the benefit of dominant elites.

    To reiterate:
    Left wing identity politics wants more people to be recognised as having a legitimate and relatively safe place in the public domain. Right wing identity politicians want to have a safe space to declare that they are superior and have the right to supress other people of less favoured categories.

    https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/the-destructive-american-fad-australia-needs-to-avoid-20180928-p506mg.html

    Identity politics 2

    September 15, 2018

    We are having a lot of announcements from our government that religious freedoms must be protected. There is no doubt that there are areas of the world where religious freedoms are under threat. It is increasingly difficult to be Christian in many Islamic countries, and Muslims in many Christian countries can face daily abuse – in particular women in hijab. Fundamentalist Hindus in India seem to be attacking everyone else. Buddhists in Myanmar are behaving with apparent brutality to Muslims who have lived in the country for centuries. While this level of religious intolerance and violence should not be accepted, there is no evidence I have seen that suggests that Christians in Australia face anything remotely resembling this level of attack or that they are remotely likely to face this level of attack in the future.

    The evidence presented does not seem that persuasive either.

    The prime minister has mentioned that kids have been stopped doing Christmas plays. He does not present evidence for his statement. He says that Christians have been prevented from discussing the real meaning of Easter. No evidence is presented again. We are told that boards of directors may stop people from being members because of incompatibilities of belief. No evidence is presented, and the PM even seems to think the lack of evidence for it happening now, is evidence for it happening in the future.

    If indeed Church groups have been prevented from preaching to their members, or prevented from putting on Christmas plays in the Church, then we do have real problems. But nobody seems to be claiming this. Likewise Christians and others have discussed the meaning of Easter in public with me, with no apparent hinderance. The local newspapers usually have meaning of Easter articles, and editorials, and summarise the various Easter messages from the main churches. There is no one screaming in the papers that Christians should not be allowed to talk about Easter – nothing like the screaming against various right or left wing speakers that seems a regular feature of contemporary debate. Sure people commenting on articles with a Christian slant may be abusive or more likely dismissive, but facing abuse online is a regular event for everybody, and there is often abuse from Christians in return, suggesting atheists are subhuman or deserve to burn in Hell for eternity and often expressing joy at this hypothesis.

    We also have continuing tax exemption for religious organisations, even if they seem run for profit or for the income of the leaders. Taxpayer subsidy of religious schools, public money spent on Chaplains to council school children who don’t need any qualifications in counselling, and a total lack of funding for qualified counsellors who are not approved by the local denominations. We still effectively have compulsory religious instruction in public schools – as the NSW government does not allow schools to reveal if they have the substitute ethics courses available. We allow religious schools to sack people if they find them incompatible with their beliefs (ie they are gay, feminist, or the wrong form of Christianity) – oddly this is one area that people say is not strong enough for religious liberty! We have politicians and right wing commentators who have defended the clergy from accusations of child abuse. We have politicians claiming their religion as a matter of course. No one has persecuted them in any effective manner. There is not any movement to curb much of this.

    I am absolutely open to counter evidence for impingement on Christian liberty.

    All of this, along with the lack of concern for the religious freedoms of Muslims or Buddhists, suggests that there is a level of fantasy in these allegations and they are really about identity politics of a specific group that seeks privilege over others.

    Now it is true that the secular state has stopped human sacrifice, religious torture and persecution of other religions. It has tried to stop child abuse by churches, it has recognised rape in marriage, it has allowed women to claim equal rights, and not be beaten in marriage as a matter of religion. It does not allow people to sell their children into slavery, or have them wedded by the age of 12. It has failed to stop male genital mutilation, but that failure is an example of religious power. I would suspect that most Christians and other religious people, can live quite happily with these restrictions.

    However it was notable during the debate on whether the State’s category of marriage could be extended to homosexual relationships. No religion was being forced to carry out marriages, just recognise them, as they do other marriages not held in their churches. Many religious people seemed to consider that the attempt to stop them discriminating against others was a threat to their freedom. They naturally did the suggesting that homosexual people were subhuman immoral and deserved to burn in hell line, and seemed surprised that other people responded strongly to these suggestions. Is it that only they should be allowed to abuse others, or that they don’t they see these comments as abuse? Later in the debate when the ‘burn in hell’ lines did not seem to work amongst the general population who don’t think gay people are any worse than other people, they decided to attack heterosexual and Christian marriages as illegitimate if there was no chance of producing children. Naturally they did not put it that way, but that was the logical consequence of arguing that marriage was solely for the production of children. They also kept imagining gay couples will deliberately go to Christian bakers for wedding cakes to upset them. Such are the stands Christians have to take nowadays.

    The suggestion of all this, seems to be that Christians should not have to live under the same conditions as everyone else. They demand protection from debate, from having to justify their positions, and from any opposition, even opposition that they have provoked. This campaign, does not seem to be about freedom, but about privilege, and fits the general pattern that right wing identity politics differs from left as it is not about recognising more people’s rights to participate in public life with their full personal identity, but about saying “we are special, and better than others”. It represents an attempt to shut others down. Given Christian history, Christians from minority sects, those who try to live with love rather than condemnation, people from other religions, agnostics etc, should all be worried by this movement.

    What would Satan do?

    September 8, 2018

    Let us imagine that there is an incredibly powerful evil being who has influence over the earth, and was free for some time to do as he could, for whatever reason.

    Well, what would he do?

    Well one obvious answer is that he (and let’s be traditional and say he is male) would not try and tempt people one by one. That is a terrible expense of time and effort, for very little result, and he would probably think most humans are contemptible, so why spend time with them? My guess, as to the answer, is that he would try and confuse and corrupt whole civilizations, because its easier – humans reinforce each other’s behavior.

    For this purpose he might try to set himself up as the one true God. He could tell his followers that if they obeyed him they would be virtuous and successful, and only they would be virtuous, as everyone else was following false gods. Followers should support each other, and would be rewarded with material prosperity as well. Sounds good, and it reinforces group boundary lines and group loyalties. Then he might ask them to go and kill some people he didn’t like (perhaps they had rejected his claims) and take their land. His followers might object, so he might say he would punish them, so they then decide to go ahead with it, and occupy the land and slaughter the original inhabitants. They would probably not think, “Satan claims to be omnipotent – why can’t he just provide us with unoccupied land, or change some piece of desert into a land of milk and honey for us. Why did we have to slaughter people?” After all obeying Satan is good, by definition, and those who don’t obey him must be evil, so slaughtering these people is permissible.

    Satan tells them what they are doing is just. Genocide becomes virtue. Maybe he tells them to kill the men and rape the women. That’s good too, by definition. So Satan gets a war machine. His chosen people, or true believers, can murder, steal and rape with impunity, as long as they keep it under control with each other. He tells them they are surrounded by evil, and they must not associate with non-believers (unless to convert them to be his followers). They should not share food with them, as this is a good way of maintaining boundaries. Non-believers are corrupt and frightening – anything can be said about them, and it is probably true. This further reinforces both group boundaries and the assumption that other people are evil, and deserve persecution.

    Some time later he gives up the rewarding followers thing, because well he is evil and its boring, and he tells people he will generally reward them after death. No one will ever find out and bring the real news back. But people now know if the rewards don’t come immediately, with Satan testing their faith, rewards will come in the afterlife, and you should not struggle against Satan’s will, or you might not get the rewards.

    However, when things go wrong, he can tell them he is punishing them, perhaps not for their disobedience but for the disobedience of some other people nearby. As the rules are contradictory, or difficult, it is not too hard to find someone (or yourself) to hate and sacrifice to appease Satan’s wrath. That’s good as it produces more terror, although most believers don’t object to terror being the aim, because terror is the beginning of wisdom, or so Satan says.

    He then tells people he is a loving and compassionate being. This can confuse people, and as they emulate him, it also shows murder and so on must be compassionate, as long as it is not against fellow true believers. if they worry about that, well Satan is a mystery beyond human understanding. Eventually a few people do think this is incoherent as well. So he responds by telling people he is loving and compassionate and has people who disagree with him tortured for eternity. That can be really confusing. But you had better believe or else you face a dire fate, and you might decide you need to please Satan, and send people to hell to prove you are on his side. If the people you kill are really virtuous, then you can be sure Satan will make it up to them after they are dead. So no worries. If you think hell and compassion don’t go together that well, you must be allied with the forces of real evil, because if you were good, you would have no problems with this teaching, because Satan is good and truly compassionate. He tells us so.

    Because they know that by following Satan they are as good as it gets, believers know they are better than non-believers and should rule over them. If they don’t rule over heathen infidels, then they are being oppressed and should strike back. Likewise, men are better than women and should rule over them. Older people should rule over their children. This creates more bad temper, friction and murder. There are few families which are not rent inside, spurring on those evil, vicious and cruel acts, which are (not that) secretly pleasing to Satan.

    Perhaps some people come to think that people can be moral without obeying Satan, and that he does not show a very good example anyway. Those people are told that there is no basis for morality other than Satan’s word, and so they are without morality, and should not be listened to, or should be persecuted until they know better. Whatever Satan says is right, and the basis for a good virtuous life. If believers are not allowed to follow Satan’s word exactly, then they are oppressed. Believers also know that rebels against Satan always fail, and are always cursed, because he is the source of everything – so he says. And Satan says he cannot lie, or be mistaken. So that is the end of that. Unbelievers demonstrably have bad morals, as you can see by looking at any society run by non-believers, and they will not be saved – they are not righteously human.

    Followers really try to please Satan and even end up fighting other Satan worshipers, over massively important factors of doctrine or history (which look pretty trivial to ignorant non-believers), to preserve the real purity of belief and teaching which is necessary for rewards, and Satan is pleased.

    He sits back in his mighty throne and smiles…. It all worked well.

    Identity politics

    August 25, 2018

    There is a lot of bad press being given to left wing identity politics at the moment, but strangely right wing identity politics seems to be ignored, or people pretend it does not exist, even while it is particularly virulent. Perhaps the right wing media use this identity politics in an attempt to get people on side with right wing policies which are not popular….

    Now as far as I understand it, left wing identity politics is people saying something like “I’m gay, black, working class and redneck and I demand respect on all counts, stop disrespecting me, or excluding me for being any of these things.” Sometimes it sounds a bit incoherent, but if you accept the idea that we are all equal in principle, then its pretty straightforward: “Yep that’s ok. I’ll do my best.” This is not to say people on the left are universally tolerant (who is?) but that the movement of Left identity politics is expansive and aims at recognizing people who are usually ignored or actively repressed as worthwhile human beings.

    Right wing identity politics, on the other hand seems to go something like “everyone who is not like me is inferior, and they should shut up and listen to my wisdom and worship”. In general it seems the hard right will not tolerate any difference from their own position, which ever one it is they have chosen at this time. If anyone is different, or says anything different, then they must be expelled, or silenced as they are overtly inferior and corrupt.

    Despite commentator Jordan Peterson’s optimistic proposition that the Right excludes racists, being the same ‘race’ as them is often important – although they may say that ‘whites’ are discriminated against, presumably for not being approved of for slurring blacks or Muslims or whatever… (Muslim is not a race, they say, so if they insist all Muslims are evil, its not racist). Sometimes it seems that right wing Christians claim they are discriminated against because they can’t burn people at the stake any more, and expect applause for that act.

    This kind of identity politics almost automatically appears to makes most of the right inclined parties seem more and more deeply intolerant and self-involved, especially when they have the support of right wing media. This media also tolerates no difference and tells them how those on the Right are oppressed by, say, leftwing gay people wanting equal rights to marry or to hold hands in public. It was interesting that during the anti-gay marriage campaign, the right often argued that marriage was about children and therefor no marriage which could not have children was legitimate – thus narrowing the number of people (even heterosexuals) who should marry even further. The Right appears to believe that those who are not joined to them are sinful and should not be heard.

    In Australia, this kind of identity politics is why the Australian Liberal party (Liberal in the sense of pro-capitalist Victorian liberalism) is moving away from being what it used to claim was a ‘broad church’. The hard right appears to be trying to get rid of anyone who does not believe in exactly the same set of policies they believe in, even when both sides are happily ‘neoliberal’ in terms of the economy. Neoliberalism, involves nannying and protecting the corporate sector, and ignoring wage theft, pension theft and financial fraud from the corporate sector if it can, while trying to prosecute unions and cut wages and conditions for ordinary folk. Hence they were outraged at the last Coalition prime minister Malcolm Turnbull, because he admitted that climate change might be a problem, and that politicians should occasionally listen to the concerns of other people – even when he consistently yielded to their concerns. Yielding was not enough, he should never have thought otherwise in the first place. This refusal to accept him was effectively a form of violence towards Turnbull, and any Australians who might have agreed with him.

    While at the moment some people may vote for the Liberal and National Coalition out of habit or out of fear, there is a risk that it will become a minor authoritarian collection of parties driving off everyone who might question the identity that their hard right promotes.

    After all, how big is the intersection between those people who want to promote climate change, kill off gay marriage, incarcerate people fleeing tyranny, and lovey up corporations at the expense of ordinary people? Probably not that many.

    So in terms of social category theory, left wing identity politics seems to be trying to expand the categories of what is considered equal humanity, while right wing identity theory seems to be trying to narrow the categories of what seems human, and increase the strength of their identity boundaries and distinctions from others. The higher and harder the barriers they erect, then the more they will probably feel persecuted by the others (‘we-categories’ rarely recognized themselves as persecutory) and the more ruthless and potentially violent they will likely become to preserve that purity.

    The path to social disaster and fragmentation becomes clearer.

    Modern Politics

    June 8, 2018

    For the last 40 years, in the English speaking world, we have been told that “free markets” and putting business first would bring us liberty, opportunity and prosperity.

    It hasn’t done that, and can’t do that. All it does is bring liberty, opportunity and prosperity for the wealthy. Ordinary people’s prosperity is a cost and should be cut. Any attempt by people to get the State to help others in misfortune is a cost and to be opposed. Every virtue which does not generate a profit for the established powers, is a cost to be eliminated. Wealth buys politics, laws, regulations and so on. “Getting the government off people’s backs” has been used as an excuse to regulate ordinary people, give corporations more power and wreck the environment. There is no longer any hope. Wages (for ordinary people) do not increase like they used to. Social mobility is dead. Education is declining. and so on.

    Given the failure of the so called free market neoliberal project, the only way that its benefactors can get people to vote for them, is through fake news, and stirring up nationalism and hatred. If you hate your opponents, then you can’t co-operate with them and you won’t learn from them, and you won’t team up against those oppressing you. You will vote for the people oppressing you because of your loyalty to something else, and you won’t get any real information….

    There are some who think this is an aberration of the market or the state, but the problem is that a capitalist market nearly always seems to generate the same structures. The people who succeed and accumulate wealth and leave it to their offspring, eventually create a class society and succeed in buying the government – so the rich have a dominating say, and have (in a vaguely electoral political structure) to lie to people and deceive them to keep their support. In a free market there are no values other than profit, so its hard to object to this, or get your objections heard.

    There was a time in the 60s and 70s (and still in some parts of Europe) when workers were organised and collaborative and there was a market which was regulated favourably for the people, and business sometimes had to compete against State owned companies and so found it hard to found unofficial cartels. The system was not perfect by any means, but most of us did not seem to have the problems we have now. There is also no doubt that if we had been aware of looming ecological catastrophe and climate change with the same kind of organisation, that attempts to deal with the problem would have proceeded much more rapidly than in an era of corporate dominance and belief in ‘free markets’. Everyone would have been better off. The truth is that humans are a cooperative and competitive species, they do not like hierarchies of the type capitalism generates, and they like organising together to carry out projects.

    Conclusion: Some free market is good, lots of free market is bad and unfree. We need a balance. No one should be able to make vast profits destroying our future and that involves restraining ‘the market’.

    The dominant political and economic forces in the Anglo-capitalist world generate destruction, and their political tactics involve distorting the truth to stop people from doing anything about it.

    They aren’t the only destructive people on the planet of course, but they are the ones we can do something about.

    Share

    Commercial in Confidence

    April 12, 2018

    Commercial in-confidence is when a government makes an agreement with a private company either to outsource work which could be done by the government or sells off public property to a commercial concern, and at least some details of the contract are not to be revealed to tax payers.

    Usually commercial in-confidence is used to hide details the public might object to such as: exit fees the government might have to pay if the work is not done on time; agreements that freight has to pay extra charges if it is landed in another port; tax and royalty concessions; changes of a road’s route so the toll charges can make more money; or simply paying more than is necessary to friends and donors. Yes this all refers to real cases…

    In terms of social category theory the government identifies with the private sector and judges them with a friendly eye and aims to support them, while it sees tax payers as a hostile other who are ignorant.

    Let’s be clear. If Taxpayers’ money is involved then commercial in-confidence should not exist after the contract is signed. It is our money, and we should know how it is being spent and what we are giving away. If companies don’t want to participate under these conditions, then that is their business and we probably don’t want them to participate.

    Commercial in-confidence is simply a cover for commercial incompetence.

    So far privatisation has failed, and it is largely because of these confidences, and sometimes because public servants do a better job.

    Minorities rule….

    April 12, 2018

    The interesting thing about Australian Coalition Government’s policy which has been revealed by the so called “Monash group” (which is pro-coal), is that policy appears to be dictated by the fear of not offending five non-cabinet MPs.

    This means our climate and energy policies, in a lower house of 150 people, is being decided by less than 10% of the members (I’m adding extra people to their cause out of generosity). This is not remotely democracy in action – this is rule by the miniscule; the fleas controlling the dog.

    How does it come about? Firstly because those 5 people have the support of the Murdoch Empire and the Minerals Council of Australia, which have helped make resistance to the idea of climate change, a hallmark and definer of conservative politics. Indeed they supress discussion of climate change to make everything about an ‘economics’ that is concerned with the profit of established corporations. Mass protests against climate change just don’t get reported, while tiny protests against the left do. Even those radical conservatives like One Nation who think international corporations are destroying local customs and culture, and need to be checked, support fossil fuel companies who are as international and destructive as they come. Any right winger who breaks on this issue will be misinterpreted, seen as a traitor, seen as losing nerve, and punished. Any right winger with principles, fears they will lose selection.

    This is polarized information group dynamics in action, and stopping discussion. These groups can be created for this purpose, and are reinforcing it. The 5 people become exemplary examples of a right wing ‘us’ group – while possibly moderate people like the Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull become outsiders, who have to continually demonstrate their group loyalty, by not steering too far away from the extreme, and by refusing to challenge that extreme. In this situation the so called ‘centre’ suffers – even when the official ‘left’ move further rightwards to capture its shifting point, and even if ‘the people’ show their commitment to renewables by plopping them on every available rooftop.

    The dedication of the far right is reinforced because they stick with the Murdoch Empire and do not see contrary evidence, or have it explained away for them well enough. They are hung up on being just and fair (so if anyone is doing less to mitigate climate change than them, they can always argue it is just for them to support even less action) and they suffer the Dunning Kruger effect, were they do not realise their ignorance in the field and subsequently cannot recognize competence in the field – and they reinforce their ignorance out of group loyalty and the sense of persecution which comes from being wrong.

    And so it goes. It could be combatted by strong leadership which stood up for principles and argued against them for the good of the country. But we are probably not going to get that. All we can hope for is that the people themselves get on with the business of lowering carbon emissions, reducing their pollution, getting their workplaces to reduce emissions, protesting against government sell outs to corporations and doing anything else they can no matter how small. While voting Labor and Green is useful, it will not be enough either, because they continually move to the right, to keep on side with the powers that be.

    It is up to us to do we what we need to do to survive, and to take government back should we want.