Conspiracy culture as radical disempowerment

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Conspiracy culture as radical disempowerment

Postby nashvillebrook » Sat May 25, 2013 6:08 pm

I don't post here much, but I read all the time, and every once in a while I come across an essay that can/should be shared no where else but here. This is one such essay.

It's not perfect. It rambles a little, but I've not seen any critique of conspiracy culture that so closely matches my own unorganized thoughts on the matter. I'd love to know what if anyone sees anything in here that's useful, interesting, or new.

The problem isn't that conspiracies don't exist. The problem is that they do indeed exist, but if we allow ourselves to wax mystical about them, it makes it impossible to change things. Whereas, when you recognize that money and greed are always conspiring against us, there's something you can do about it. You can name and shame the powers in play. You can endeavor to take their power away legally, politically or culturally. You can at least avoid participating in commerce that empowers them.

And, I think this is what the author here has a grip on. Enjoy.

http://thenewinquiry.com/essays/i-want-to-believe/

I Want To Believe

Just because we can hear the black helicopters doesn’t mean they don’t exist

My old co-driver Nick and I would pass the time on interstate furniture deliveries by assessing the incipient mass movements taking off around the world. We debated the potential of the Arab Spring, Occupy, anti-austerity strikes in Europe, daily wildcats in Chinese factories, and other tantalizing glimpses of working class self-activity. And before long, we always reached the same impasse.

“I agree with you” he’d object, “but how can you expect everyday people to get behind all this?”

“Well, you’re just a truck driver” I’d reply with a smile, “and you seem to know what’s up.”

One day a new co-worker sat grumpily wedged between us, saying nothing as our usual debate took shape. He grew increasingly agitated as we argued, and at long last became unable to stifle his perplexity.This essay appears in TNI Vol. 16: New World Order. Subscribe to TNI’s monthly magazine for $2 and get it today.

“You guys do know that the world is controlled by a dozen families, right?” he asked us. “Ever hear of the Rothschilds? They run the economy and tell all the governments what to do. Experts agree.”

Nick and I learned that the global political order is coordinated by a tiny cabal whose tentacles extend to every aspect of society—political power, the production of cultural goods, and especially commerce, their center of activity. Centuries of war, social upheaval, euphoric boom and cataclysmic bust have all unfolded at the behest of this shadow government. Never mind the pageantry of national sovereignty; never mind the illusion of government by the people; and never mind the wiles of particular captains of industry. A hidden structure prefigures these institutions and fixes their course. The perpetrators of this worldwide coterie are a nefarious group of billionaire bankers with untold powers, before whom heads of state cower and fortunes are made and dashed. They are the notorious Illuminati. And nothing anyone, especially a few penniless truck driving nobodies, could ever do could possibly change this.

Familiar as Nick and I were with this tired old canard, and especially wary of the xenophobia and anti-Semitism with which it typically comes packaged, we were still intrigued—and slightly appalled—by the amount of this narrative with which we could actually agree.

Begrudgingly, we conceded that in the present, human events unfold within a limited set of possibilities, and that there is in fact a tenuous global order. We admitted that the actions of sovereign states, the decisions of participatory democracies, and the interplay of “free” enterprises are in fact predetermined by a logic which they cannot defy in their present form, lest it undermine and ultimately destroy them. And while we of course recognized that individuals or groups may wield immense power, take actions with beneficent or disastrous consequences, and create vast masturbatory displays of their own wealth and power, they can only do so under the compulsion of a power higher still. And among the world’s poor, individuals acting as such are powerless, with their powerlessness’ apotheosis in misguided martyrdom or impotent political violence.

As a point of divergence, however, we insisted that this higher power is ultimately not human, no more than it is divine. It has been called many names over the years, but it’s simply the necessity for capital to accumulate, and for capitalism to expand, destroying all barriers which stand in its way, and incorporating all extant social forms into its own reproduction or else wiping them out. Beheading the king, as they say, we maintained that this process is not exactly executed by, but more specifically through humans, whom it forms as subjects through their daily work and behind their backs. As such they are subjects who do not determine this rationality, but only serve to make it function more effectively, and reproduce its material existence. The prefigured roles for humans to act out their will in the world fix them within strict parameters which do not challenge capital. Outside of this is outside of the law, and in the minds of many, outside of the imaginable.

In short, we informed our friend, there are no Rothschilds necessary, nor even possible. At this stage in its historical development, the conspiring businessmen and heads of state are merely vectors through which capital expands, expropriates, and encloses. Particular human actors have a choice to play by these rules or be cast aside, to be replaced by others just like them. Shadowy cabals meet in broad daylight at international summits, as Chomsky is apt to remark, and their meetings are terrifically boring. And the symbol of this “New World Order” is emblazoned on the dollar bill alright, but there’s no need for symbolic decoding.

For maximum effect we set about prodding the rawest nerve of the modern mind’s bad conscience–the destruction of our ecosystem. A conspiratorial shadow government, Nick and I maintained, would never allow for the planet to destroy its potable water, poison its air, destabilize its climate, and harken an age of flooded coastal cities and apocalyptic super-storms. After all, what is a throne but a plank with red velvet? Even the Rothschilds need air and water.

To face the possibility, we concluded, that the international ruling class is nothing more than the wealthiest representatives of a species dominated by forces outside of its control, is to admit that there’s no way out of eminent catastrophe without collective action capable of radically altering the very structure of society. Individuals, we conceded, are powerless as such. But classes are not. And like good conspiracy nuts, Nick and I added, “we know it sounds crazy,” but our version of events has the advantage of being the truth.

“You guys have a depressing view of the world” our new friend concluded, returning to silence.

***

The modern conspiracy theory is a mythologization of capitalism. That humanity writhes in the grip of a power alien to itself is so palpable that the expression of this reality assumes countless forms in the popular imagination, permeating pop culture, politics, and the persecution anxieties of our booming psychiatric industry. Films like The Adjustment Bureau and television programs like Burn Notice capture the zeitgeist with the laughable simplicity of its most trite tropes, trench coats and all. The novels of Dan Brown append cheap noir to rich cultural pseudo-histories in order to make them more entertaining. The wildly popular television program Ancient Aliens became a cash cow for the History (!) Channel by attributing the greatest historical achievements of scientific discovery and collective activity to little green neo-Calvinist deities from outer space. And never mind the “9/11 Truth Movement” and the shocking contention by some of its leading ideologues that the Federal Emergency Management Agency could organize a poker game, let alone a secret network of underground internment camps in which Art Bell and Alex Jones will soon argue over the top bunk.

In all these expressions, which blur entertainment and information in a manner consistent with the present cultural imaginary, human or extraterrestrial agents are depicted as consciously directing world events behind the backs of those who live them. Though countless colorful theories fall under the umbrella of “New World Order,” and this canon has enjoyed a febrile explosion since the election of the suspiciously other Barack Obama, their basic structure is largely universal. Most importantly, any good conspiracy theory proceeds from empirical premises which are manifestly true. In the vein of Dan Brown, stray facts are woven into vast interconnected webs by tenuous strings of causality and barbaric modus ponens proofs. Historical and social phenomena which are in fact intimately intertwined by the total social relation of capital are instead linked superficially by cheap literary devices.

It is no coincidence that the actual Illuminati, by most accounts short lived and powerless, dates back to 1776. As revolutionary fever gripped the Continent and the colonies, the small group was founded as a secret society of Bavarian intellectuals possessed by the spirit of Enlightenment liberalism and laissez faire social and economic policy. Its erudite members opposed religious superstition and absolutist sovereignty, promoted internationalism through free scientific inquiry and open philosophical debate, and promoted the equality of men and women under the law of liberal states. Evoked as a bogeyman by royalists and reactionaries long after it ceased to exist, the secret society which counted the venerable Goethe among its members was the perfect metaphor for the rise of the European bourgeoisie, a cosmopolitan world driven by Enlightenment values, and the corresponding rise of global capital.

Though the Illuminati itself was disbanded in 1785, the class whose values it embodied was on an irreversible course to achieve world dominance. Particular groups such as the Illuminati were only an expression of this zeitgeist, not its cause. Since the late 18th century, and in plain sight, the entire world has been quite violently molded into one expansive international market and playground for the European bourgeoisie. Nation states have increasingly come to exist solely for the benefit of the markets which function through them, developing vast apparatuses of population management, security technologies, and militarized police forces, which serve the needs of production here and repression there. It is no coincidence that these spectacular agencies of surveillance and population management figure so prominently in conspiracy culture. We may be able to see and hear the surveillance helicopters, but they still exist.

The irony of the increasing rationalization of society toward some mythic equilibrium is the intensification of paroxysm, of violent crisis, of catastrophe on a heightening scale which it has ensured. The crises inherent in the capitalist cycle now grip the entire planet, leaving destitution in the wake of periodic booms, leaving entire regions to starve, evacuating capital from entire cities and letting them rot while the local ruling class throws up their hands. In the major developed countries, the transition from hulking welfare state apparatuses to militarized police forces maintaining order indicates the increasingly reactionary tendency of states, faced with simply containing the results of a disordered market by brute force, rather than even pretending to curb the causes of destitution and hopelessness among the poor.

When market “experts” discussing the flow of capital sound like meteorologists groping to account for the weather, this is not a coincidence, nor are they’re being disingenuous. Chaos rules the day, though it is backed by the forces of “law and order,” a “hybrid monster” as the bald man remarked, the former referring to legal statutes aimed at responding to crime, and the latter aimed at extra-legal (and often illegal) intervention preventing hypothetical crimes and generally molding the social terrain. The chaos underlying modern life and the scrupulous social order which protects and enforces it appears as a vast global intrigue against those who reproduce it with their daily work. And in a way, it is.

In short, somebody would have to be bat shit crazy not to develop a conspiracy theory about the centralized interconnectivity of these conditions.

The appeal of conspiracy theories is simple. Whether its Lizard People, Ancient Aliens, Freemasons, Occupy’s “1%,” or the poor maligned Rothschilds, the conspiratorial mind clings to the comforting notion of a world controlled by a rational agent capable of exerting its will to guide human events. Somebody is driving this thing … anybody. To the conspiratorial mind we are not alone with ourselves, left to our own devices, which can be the most terrifying prospect of all. The conspiracy fills the seeming vacuum at the center of society, the paralyzing abyss beneath our flimsy facades of order, with a reassuring rational kernel. Beneath the purported chaos of a modern world seemingly driven inexorably toward its own destruction, a secret logic hums away, unseen, yet steering with the circumspection of a protective father. In this way the conspiracy theory is a secularized monotheism which replaces our dearly departed God with an equally shadowy intelligence serving the same omniscient function. Sometimes it even lives in outer space and knows what we’re thinking.

Tempting though it may be to dismiss outright, the modern conspiracy theory moves beyond the illusions of liberal democracy, and in its broad strokes can be more sophisticated than the theology of “progress” through the free market, democratic elections, and the litigious acquisition of rights. Discounting these as fetish concepts prefigured by forces which set their activities within parameters acceptable to an overarching global order, the average viewer of Ancient Aliens may be in a better position to understand capital than an Obamaniac with a PhD in Political Science. Accordingly, it is tempting to imagine these conspiracy theories, which often attract young, energetic, subversive minds, as a short-lived stepping stone between the dead forms of the past and the class consciousness of the future. Indeed, the conspiracy theory might just be a final moment of theology among a class becoming aware of itself and its historic power. In the very least, to evoke a favorite argument of conspiracy theorists, this claim cannot be proven untrue.

In a world determined by an advanced and globalized mode of production, everything is in fact connected. The confusion arises when these connections are posited as the result of an exceptional conspiracy, without which they would be disparate social phenomena. This is the last gasp of liberal ideology, which has ceased to believe in itself but still refuses to concede that the world is not a series of isolated atoms which relate to one another only through exchange. Conceding a commonality which transcends mere commensurability, the conspiracy theory is willing to look in the most exotic and improbable places for its cause, anywhere but where it actually lives: the banal mechanisms of daily work, production, circulation, social reproduction, and the promotion and expansion of private property. As in Dr. Langdon’s absurd hermeneutics, the banal truth is actually much more interesting than fantastical narratives which overestimate the power of isolated individuals to make the world, and underestimate the power of a united people to remake it.This essay appears in TNI Vol. 16: New World Order. Subscribe to TNI’s monthly magazine for $2 and get it today.

Far from “depressing,” the alternative we face is radically empowering. If in fact the core of our supposedly rational society is a great vacuum, if its present arrangement precludes any contestation to the Thanatos-fueled expansion of capital, then the seizure of power by the working class becomes a necessity for the continuing survival of the species. If the myths we have ceased to believe in are being replaced by those more absurd still and equally fated to unbelief, perhaps the challenge becomes crafting better myths; more convincing myths, myths grounded in the material reality of daily life, of daily work and life in common; myths which smash the artificial divisions between us, myths which know that the past cannot be recaptured but that the future remains unwritten. Or, to invoke a word blasphemous to the relativistic mythology of our time, do we have the courage to offer the truth?

Facing the imminent threat of ecological ruin and unprecedented human suffering which capitalist states are powerless to reverse, the stakes of the proletariat’s historical mission become even higher than its 19th century prophets could imagine. As we cast aside illusions and face the sobering reality that it’s either us or nobody at all, “everyday people” will discover that the biggest conspiracy of all is the one which has undermined their power as a class for so long. Experts agree.
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Re: Conspiracy culture as radical disempowerment

Postby Canadian_watcher » Sat May 25, 2013 6:54 pm

Seeing as the author of the piece condemns as ridiculous the 9/11 Truth movement, I will put it this way:
The Muslim terrorist organization which brought down the Twin Towers was merely a vector of rampant capitalism?
Maybe. Maybe what the government has said has been right all along: They hated 'us' for our freedoms - freedoms which he could only have meant were purchased via the riches afforded us through capitalism. After all the Towers were 'symbols of finance' and that's why they were targeted, so goes the story.

Then this article goes on to make approximately the same argument that was given as the manifesto of the terrorists in the first place - capitalism and the Western version of it is the cause of all the world's problems! It is evil and must be stopped. Granted the article calls for a lawful worker's revolt of sorts and not violent or illegal acts. But - if I may be so provocative - other than that, it puts the workers on the same ideological 'side' as the terrorists: there's only one thing to blame here, and that's Westernized Capitalism.

Granted, people do many evil things in the pursuit of money, but what makes them continue to do evil now that a historically disproportionate amount of the world's wealth and power is already in the hands of the top 1%? They print more and more of it every day, and then put in into the pockets of those same 1% and they don't have to do *anything* whatsoever to amass even larger piles of dolla dolla bills.

And, there is a decided difference between "money" and "capitalism." I can see, for example, how capitalist opportunists might want to patent breast milk - but I can't see how capitalism itself would allow it to happen. For it to move from opportunistic dream into capitalist reality all kinds of people who are not in positions to benefit from that immoral patent would have to agree to allow it to happen. Legislators, patent lawyers, judges if challenged, state lawmakers, who knows who else. Money in the form of bribes and payoffs could and likely does grease the wheels - but that's not capitalism - that's (ahem) conspiracy. Conspiring to circumvent rules and procedure in exchange for secret favours.

Many things work this way - people pay to get away with breaking the law, the law which would work quite well if it were applied equally to everyone - and that's why I don't see our current state of instability and inequality as a purely the fault of capitalism. A worker's revolution would not route out the underlying problem as I see it. As I see it the capitalist system doesn't kill people - immoral, corruptible, cowardly, selfish, shady soulless people kill people.
Satire is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally discover everybody's face but their own.-- Jonathan Swift

When a true genius appears, you can know him by this sign: that all the dunces are in a confederacy against him. -- Jonathan Swift
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Re: Conspiracy culture as radical disempowerment

Postby seemslikeadream » Sat May 25, 2013 7:16 pm

:wave:

nashvillebrook

The problem isn't that conspiracies don't exist. The problem is that they do indeed exist, but if we allow ourselves to wax mystical about them, it makes it impossible to change things. Whereas, when you recognize that money and greed are always conspiring against us, there's something you can do about it. You can name and shame the powers in play. You can endeavor to take their power away legally, politically or culturally. You can at least avoid participating in commerce that empowers them.



"You can at least avoid participating in commerce that empowers them."


They can't win...they can't beat you if you're not playing their game...

I'll be dreaming, dreaming...
Dreaming...





Oh they tell me
There's still time to save my soul
They tell me
Renounce all
Renounce all those material things you gained by
Exploiting other human beings


when you play their game you are exploiting other human beings...
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Conspiracy culture as radical disempowerment

Postby Simulist » Sat May 25, 2013 7:26 pm

nashvillebrook » Sat May 25, 2013 3:08 pm wrote:I don't post here much, but I read all the time, and every once in a while I come across an essay that can/should be shared no where else but here. This is one such essay.

It's not perfect. It rambles a little, but I've not seen any critique of conspiracy culture that so closely matches my own unorganized thoughts on the matter. I'd love to know what if anyone sees anything in here that's useful, interesting, or new.

The problem isn't that conspiracies don't exist. The problem is that they do indeed exist, but if we allow ourselves to wax mystical about them, it makes it impossible to change things. Whereas, when you recognize that money and greed are always conspiring against us, there's something you can do about it. You can name and shame the powers in play. You can endeavor to take their power away legally, politically or culturally. You can at least avoid participating in commerce that empowers them.

And, I think this is what the author here has a grip on. Enjoy.

http://thenewinquiry.com/essays/i-want-to-believe/

I Want To Believe

Just because we can hear the black helicopters doesn’t mean they don’t exist

My old co-driver Nick and I would pass the time on interstate furniture deliveries by assessing the incipient mass movements taking off around the world. We debated the potential of the Arab Spring, Occupy, anti-austerity strikes in Europe, daily wildcats in Chinese factories, and other tantalizing glimpses of working class self-activity. And before long, we always reached the same impasse.

“I agree with you” he’d object, “but how can you expect everyday people to get behind all this?”

“Well, you’re just a truck driver” I’d reply with a smile, “and you seem to know what’s up.”

One day a new co-worker sat grumpily wedged between us, saying nothing as our usual debate took shape. He grew increasingly agitated as we argued, and at long last became unable to stifle his perplexity.This essay appears in TNI Vol. 16: New World Order. Subscribe to TNI’s monthly magazine for $2 and get it today.

“You guys do know that the world is controlled by a dozen families, right?” he asked us. “Ever hear of the Rothschilds? They run the economy and tell all the governments what to do. Experts agree.”

Nick and I learned that the global political order is coordinated by a tiny cabal whose tentacles extend to every aspect of society—political power, the production of cultural goods, and especially commerce, their center of activity. Centuries of war, social upheaval, euphoric boom and cataclysmic bust have all unfolded at the behest of this shadow government. Never mind the pageantry of national sovereignty; never mind the illusion of government by the people; and never mind the wiles of particular captains of industry. A hidden structure prefigures these institutions and fixes their course. The perpetrators of this worldwide coterie are a nefarious group of billionaire bankers with untold powers, before whom heads of state cower and fortunes are made and dashed. They are the notorious Illuminati. And nothing anyone, especially a few penniless truck driving nobodies, could ever do could possibly change this.

Familiar as Nick and I were with this tired old canard, and especially wary of the xenophobia and anti-Semitism with which it typically comes packaged, we were still intrigued—and slightly appalled—by the amount of this narrative with which we could actually agree.

Begrudgingly, we conceded that in the present, human events unfold within a limited set of possibilities, and that there is in fact a tenuous global order. We admitted that the actions of sovereign states, the decisions of participatory democracies, and the interplay of “free” enterprises are in fact predetermined by a logic which they cannot defy in their present form, lest it undermine and ultimately destroy them. And while we of course recognized that individuals or groups may wield immense power, take actions with beneficent or disastrous consequences, and create vast masturbatory displays of their own wealth and power, they can only do so under the compulsion of a power higher still. And among the world’s poor, individuals acting as such are powerless, with their powerlessness’ apotheosis in misguided martyrdom or impotent political violence.

As a point of divergence, however, we insisted that this higher power is ultimately not human, no more than it is divine. It has been called many names over the years, but it’s simply the necessity for capital to accumulate, and for capitalism to expand, destroying all barriers which stand in its way, and incorporating all extant social forms into its own reproduction or else wiping them out. Beheading the king, as they say, we maintained that this process is not exactly executed by, but more specifically through humans, whom it forms as subjects through their daily work and behind their backs. As such they are subjects who do not determine this rationality, but only serve to make it function more effectively, and reproduce its material existence. The prefigured roles for humans to act out their will in the world fix them within strict parameters which do not challenge capital. Outside of this is outside of the law, and in the minds of many, outside of the imaginable.

In short, we informed our friend, there are no Rothschilds necessary, nor even possible. At this stage in its historical development, the conspiring businessmen and heads of state are merely vectors through which capital expands, expropriates, and encloses. Particular human actors have a choice to play by these rules or be cast aside, to be replaced by others just like them. Shadowy cabals meet in broad daylight at international summits, as Chomsky is apt to remark, and their meetings are terrifically boring. And the symbol of this “New World Order” is emblazoned on the dollar bill alright, but there’s no need for symbolic decoding.

For maximum effect we set about prodding the rawest nerve of the modern mind’s bad conscience–the destruction of our ecosystem. A conspiratorial shadow government, Nick and I maintained, would never allow for the planet to destroy its potable water, poison its air, destabilize its climate, and harken an age of flooded coastal cities and apocalyptic super-storms. After all, what is a throne but a plank with red velvet? Even the Rothschilds need air and water.

To face the possibility, we concluded, that the international ruling class is nothing more than the wealthiest representatives of a species dominated by forces outside of its control, is to admit that there’s no way out of eminent catastrophe without collective action capable of radically altering the very structure of society. Individuals, we conceded, are powerless as such. But classes are not. And like good conspiracy nuts, Nick and I added, “we know it sounds crazy,” but our version of events has the advantage of being the truth.

“You guys have a depressing view of the world” our new friend concluded, returning to silence.

***

The modern conspiracy theory is a mythologization of capitalism. That humanity writhes in the grip of a power alien to itself is so palpable that the expression of this reality assumes countless forms in the popular imagination, permeating pop culture, politics, and the persecution anxieties of our booming psychiatric industry. Films like The Adjustment Bureau and television programs like Burn Notice capture the zeitgeist with the laughable simplicity of its most trite tropes, trench coats and all. The novels of Dan Brown append cheap noir to rich cultural pseudo-histories in order to make them more entertaining. The wildly popular television program Ancient Aliens became a cash cow for the History (!) Channel by attributing the greatest historical achievements of scientific discovery and collective activity to little green neo-Calvinist deities from outer space. And never mind the “9/11 Truth Movement” and the shocking contention by some of its leading ideologues that the Federal Emergency Management Agency could organize a poker game, let alone a secret network of underground internment camps in which Art Bell and Alex Jones will soon argue over the top bunk.

In all these expressions, which blur entertainment and information in a manner consistent with the present cultural imaginary, human or extraterrestrial agents are depicted as consciously directing world events behind the backs of those who live them. Though countless colorful theories fall under the umbrella of “New World Order,” and this canon has enjoyed a febrile explosion since the election of the suspiciously other Barack Obama, their basic structure is largely universal. Most importantly, any good conspiracy theory proceeds from empirical premises which are manifestly true. In the vein of Dan Brown, stray facts are woven into vast interconnected webs by tenuous strings of causality and barbaric modus ponens proofs. Historical and social phenomena which are in fact intimately intertwined by the total social relation of capital are instead linked superficially by cheap literary devices.

It is no coincidence that the actual Illuminati, by most accounts short lived and powerless, dates back to 1776. As revolutionary fever gripped the Continent and the colonies, the small group was founded as a secret society of Bavarian intellectuals possessed by the spirit of Enlightenment liberalism and laissez faire social and economic policy. Its erudite members opposed religious superstition and absolutist sovereignty, promoted internationalism through free scientific inquiry and open philosophical debate, and promoted the equality of men and women under the law of liberal states. Evoked as a bogeyman by royalists and reactionaries long after it ceased to exist, the secret society which counted the venerable Goethe among its members was the perfect metaphor for the rise of the European bourgeoisie, a cosmopolitan world driven by Enlightenment values, and the corresponding rise of global capital.

Though the Illuminati itself was disbanded in 1785, the class whose values it embodied was on an irreversible course to achieve world dominance. Particular groups such as the Illuminati were only an expression of this zeitgeist, not its cause. Since the late 18th century, and in plain sight, the entire world has been quite violently molded into one expansive international market and playground for the European bourgeoisie. Nation states have increasingly come to exist solely for the benefit of the markets which function through them, developing vast apparatuses of population management, security technologies, and militarized police forces, which serve the needs of production here and repression there. It is no coincidence that these spectacular agencies of surveillance and population management figure so prominently in conspiracy culture. We may be able to see and hear the surveillance helicopters, but they still exist.

The irony of the increasing rationalization of society toward some mythic equilibrium is the intensification of paroxysm, of violent crisis, of catastrophe on a heightening scale which it has ensured. The crises inherent in the capitalist cycle now grip the entire planet, leaving destitution in the wake of periodic booms, leaving entire regions to starve, evacuating capital from entire cities and letting them rot while the local ruling class throws up their hands. In the major developed countries, the transition from hulking welfare state apparatuses to militarized police forces maintaining order indicates the increasingly reactionary tendency of states, faced with simply containing the results of a disordered market by brute force, rather than even pretending to curb the causes of destitution and hopelessness among the poor.

When market “experts” discussing the flow of capital sound like meteorologists groping to account for the weather, this is not a coincidence, nor are they’re being disingenuous. Chaos rules the day, though it is backed by the forces of “law and order,” a “hybrid monster” as the bald man remarked, the former referring to legal statutes aimed at responding to crime, and the latter aimed at extra-legal (and often illegal) intervention preventing hypothetical crimes and generally molding the social terrain. The chaos underlying modern life and the scrupulous social order which protects and enforces it appears as a vast global intrigue against those who reproduce it with their daily work. And in a way, it is.

In short, somebody would have to be bat shit crazy not to develop a conspiracy theory about the centralized interconnectivity of these conditions.

The appeal of conspiracy theories is simple. Whether its Lizard People, Ancient Aliens, Freemasons, Occupy’s “1%,” or the poor maligned Rothschilds, the conspiratorial mind clings to the comforting notion of a world controlled by a rational agent capable of exerting its will to guide human events. Somebody is driving this thing … anybody. To the conspiratorial mind we are not alone with ourselves, left to our own devices, which can be the most terrifying prospect of all. The conspiracy fills the seeming vacuum at the center of society, the paralyzing abyss beneath our flimsy facades of order, with a reassuring rational kernel. Beneath the purported chaos of a modern world seemingly driven inexorably toward its own destruction, a secret logic hums away, unseen, yet steering with the circumspection of a protective father. In this way the conspiracy theory is a secularized monotheism which replaces our dearly departed God with an equally shadowy intelligence serving the same omniscient function. Sometimes it even lives in outer space and knows what we’re thinking.

Tempting though it may be to dismiss outright, the modern conspiracy theory moves beyond the illusions of liberal democracy, and in its broad strokes can be more sophisticated than the theology of “progress” through the free market, democratic elections, and the litigious acquisition of rights. Discounting these as fetish concepts prefigured by forces which set their activities within parameters acceptable to an overarching global order, the average viewer of Ancient Aliens may be in a better position to understand capital than an Obamaniac with a PhD in Political Science. Accordingly, it is tempting to imagine these conspiracy theories, which often attract young, energetic, subversive minds, as a short-lived stepping stone between the dead forms of the past and the class consciousness of the future. Indeed, the conspiracy theory might just be a final moment of theology among a class becoming aware of itself and its historic power. In the very least, to evoke a favorite argument of conspiracy theorists, this claim cannot be proven untrue.

In a world determined by an advanced and globalized mode of production, everything is in fact connected. The confusion arises when these connections are posited as the result of an exceptional conspiracy, without which they would be disparate social phenomena. This is the last gasp of liberal ideology, which has ceased to believe in itself but still refuses to concede that the world is not a series of isolated atoms which relate to one another only through exchange. Conceding a commonality which transcends mere commensurability, the conspiracy theory is willing to look in the most exotic and improbable places for its cause, anywhere but where it actually lives: the banal mechanisms of daily work, production, circulation, social reproduction, and the promotion and expansion of private property. As in Dr. Langdon’s absurd hermeneutics, the banal truth is actually much more interesting than fantastical narratives which overestimate the power of isolated individuals to make the world, and underestimate the power of a united people to remake it.This essay appears in TNI Vol. 16: New World Order. Subscribe to TNI’s monthly magazine for $2 and get it today.

Far from “depressing,” the alternative we face is radically empowering. If in fact the core of our supposedly rational society is a great vacuum, if its present arrangement precludes any contestation to the Thanatos-fueled expansion of capital, then the seizure of power by the working class becomes a necessity for the continuing survival of the species. If the myths we have ceased to believe in are being replaced by those more absurd still and equally fated to unbelief, perhaps the challenge becomes crafting better myths; more convincing myths, myths grounded in the material reality of daily life, of daily work and life in common; myths which smash the artificial divisions between us, myths which know that the past cannot be recaptured but that the future remains unwritten. Or, to invoke a word blasphemous to the relativistic mythology of our time, do we have the courage to offer the truth?

Facing the imminent threat of ecological ruin and unprecedented human suffering which capitalist states are powerless to reverse, the stakes of the proletariat’s historical mission become even higher than its 19th century prophets could imagine. As we cast aside illusions and face the sobering reality that it’s either us or nobody at all, “everyday people” will discover that the biggest conspiracy of all is the one which has undermined their power as a class for so long. Experts agree.

Hi Nashvillebrook.

I, for one, do find this article important and, essentially, I agree with what the author is trying to say: conspiracy culture IS a form of radical dis-empowerment, just as the article's title declares.

This is one reason that I find the handful of voices here so frustrating as they pretend to "uncover" alleged "conspiracies" lurking seemingly beneath every current event. Yes, the current explosion of conspiracy theories is terribly dis-empowering; it is also an embarrassment to an otherwise intelligent forum and, worst of all, this behavior keeps real conspiracies — the ones that actually matter — from being taken seriously by covering them with a ubiquitous cloud of air-born bullshit.
"The most strongly enforced of all known taboos is the taboo against knowing who or what you really are behind the mask of your apparently separate, independent, and isolated ego."
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Re: Conspiracy culture as radical disempowerment

Postby Canadian_watcher » Sat May 25, 2013 8:32 pm

Simulist » Sat May 25, 2013 6:26 pm wrote:
This is one reason that I find the handful of voices here so frustrating as they pretend to "uncover" alleged "conspiracies" lurking seemingly beneath every current event. Yes, the current explosion of conspiracy theories is terribly dis-empowering; it is also an embarrassment to an otherwise intelligent forum and, worst of all, this behavior keeps real conspiracies — the ones that actually matter — from being taken seriously by covering them with a ubiquitous cloud of air-born bullshit.


ha ha! conspiracy snobbery. :D
reminds me of the fights within feminism. (which I guess were instigated by cointelpro according to some.) !!
Satire is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally discover everybody's face but their own.-- Jonathan Swift

When a true genius appears, you can know him by this sign: that all the dunces are in a confederacy against him. -- Jonathan Swift
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Re: Conspiracy culture as radical disempowerment

Postby Simulist » Sat May 25, 2013 8:44 pm

Canadian_watcher » Sat May 25, 2013 5:32 pm wrote:
Simulist » Sat May 25, 2013 6:26 pm wrote:
This is one reason that I find the handful of voices here so frustrating as they pretend to "uncover" alleged "conspiracies" lurking seemingly beneath every current event. Yes, the current explosion of conspiracy theories is terribly dis-empowering; it is also an embarrassment to an otherwise intelligent forum and, worst of all, this behavior keeps real conspiracies — the ones that actually matter — from being taken seriously by covering them with a ubiquitous cloud of air-born bullshit.


ha ha! conspiracy snobbery. :D
reminds me of the fights within feminism. (which I guess were instigated by cointelpro according to some.) !!

Calling out conspiratorial idiocy isn't snobbery.
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Re: Conspiracy culture as radical disempowerment

Postby Canadian_watcher » Sat May 25, 2013 8:50 pm

Simulist » Sat May 25, 2013 7:44 pm wrote:
Canadian_watcher » Sat May 25, 2013 5:32 pm wrote:
Simulist » Sat May 25, 2013 6:26 pm wrote:
This is one reason that I find the handful of voices here so frustrating as they pretend to "uncover" alleged "conspiracies" lurking seemingly beneath every current event. Yes, the current explosion of conspiracy theories is terribly dis-empowering; it is also an embarrassment to an otherwise intelligent forum and, worst of all, this behavior keeps real conspiracies — the ones that actually matter — from being taken seriously by covering them with a ubiquitous cloud of air-born bullshit.


ha ha! conspiracy snobbery. :D
reminds me of the fights within feminism. (which I guess were instigated by cointelpro according to some.) !!

Calling out conspiratorial idiocy isn't snobbery.


you didn't call anyone out - you didn't specify. I just think it's hilarious.
Satire is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally discover everybody's face but their own.-- Jonathan Swift

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Re: Conspiracy culture as radical disempowerment

Postby Simulist » Sat May 25, 2013 8:53 pm

Canadian_watcher » Sat May 25, 2013 5:50 pm wrote:
Simulist » Sat May 25, 2013 7:44 pm wrote:
Canadian_watcher » Sat May 25, 2013 5:32 pm wrote:
Simulist » Sat May 25, 2013 6:26 pm wrote:
This is one reason that I find the handful of voices here so frustrating as they pretend to "uncover" alleged "conspiracies" lurking seemingly beneath every current event. Yes, the current explosion of conspiracy theories is terribly dis-empowering; it is also an embarrassment to an otherwise intelligent forum and, worst of all, this behavior keeps real conspiracies — the ones that actually matter — from being taken seriously by covering them with a ubiquitous cloud of air-born bullshit.


ha ha! conspiracy snobbery. :D
reminds me of the fights within feminism. (which I guess were instigated by cointelpro according to some.) !!

Calling out conspiratorial idiocy isn't snobbery.


you didn't call anyone out - you didn't specify. I just think it's hilarious.

Then laugh yourself silly.
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Re: Conspiracy culture as radical disempowerment

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Sat May 25, 2013 9:09 pm

OP was fucking fantastic, that was a very tasty read. Very thought-provoking and much appreciated. One of my own recent favorite reads, in terms of a New Signal, was this Fabius Maximus piece whereby the author argues there is nothing broken with the american republic so much as the american electorate - I am not unaware of how that can be dismissed as "right wing craven capitalist bootlicking disinformation propaganda" -- just a for instance -- but I thought this was pretty excellent, cheesebag ending Matrix metaphors and all:

http://fabiusmaximus.com/2013/05/16/ref ... ica-50093/

Edit: also, given the recent comment about RI ejecting non-Leftists, I'd like to point out that while I enjoyed this piece, I find the premise of "Fighting Capitalism" as a solution to be absurd. Any political system currently known to the species has proven itself capable of sanctioning foreign aggression and domestic oppression, and we have fundamental, evolved behavior level problems with Power that need to be addressed before mammalian politics is even viable.

For all the absurd Invisible Hand hype that markets have received, despite the hollow promise of capitalism giving all people a better life, centralized state control of industry is just as devastating and doomed as centralized corporate control. There's a lot to be learned from the failure of the Soviet System, both in Russia, and the UK. The Rockefeller / Morgan vision plan fails the same way for the same reasons.
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Re: Conspiracy culture as radical disempowerment

Postby KeenInsight » Sat May 25, 2013 9:10 pm

Depends on what "conspiracies" we would like to refer to. A conspiracy can be a real thing, and they are, and they are crimes. When it comes to asking, "Is my government capable of killing its own people, to sway public opinion or further an agenda?" that is the rabbit hole that always brings up anyone's defense mechanism of a perfect picture being shattered.

It is a control mechanism and a defense mechanism of the mind. People are too afraid to believe that a government, their own government, is capable of crime. It is safer to believe in a picture that someone's environment is in their control and that it is safe. When people that are so entrenched in these mechanisms realize that there really are out of control and corrupt powers at the highest level, they break down emotionally as the loss of what they were told becomes untrue.

JFK, RFK, MLK, Oklahoma, MKULTRA, 9/11, Anthrax, 7/7. The patterns are there. Most governments and their agencies are already in a pre-fascist state.

*We have CIA, that are above the law and already operate on U.S. soil, which is against their original mandate, with agents in state governments and in the media and infiltrating peace organizations.
*CIA colluding with MI6, ISI, and Mossad.
*We have elements of the FBI being interlinked with terrorism directly and indirectly.
*Terrorists organizations created by these agencies are used to disrupt and create upheaval in other countries. A War On Terror that involves Supporting Terrorism? What a terrible and complicit double standard with an obvious agenda.
*Politicians are bought by banksters and corporations.
*War is waged for profit and acquiring the resources of nations.

And most of all, this has happened throughout history. It is not new.

So I ask, how are those things not "conspiracies" ? Conspiracies that often lead to wars or abuse of law or crimes against humanity.

"Since the corporate mainstream media and the foundation-funded pseudo-alternative media have refused to report the facts about 9/11, roughly 100 million Americans consider the media moguls pathological liars. Even among the almost 200 million Americans who are not up-front 9/11 skeptics, the vague sense that something is wrong, and that the media and the politicians are lying, is widespread. A recent Pew Research poll, for example, showed that Americans' trust in government has fallen to an all-time low: Fewer than one-third of Americans trust the government, while more than two-thirds do not."
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Re: Conspiracy culture as radical disempowerment

Postby Jerky » Sat May 25, 2013 11:33 pm

ClapClapClapClapClapClapClapClapClapClapClapClapClapClap

For pretty much every post on this thread. Almost.

Jerky
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Re: Conspiracy culture as radical disempowerment

Postby Joe Hillshoist » Sun May 26, 2013 6:56 am

Jerky » 26 May 2013 13:33 wrote:ClapClapClapClapClapClapClapClapClapClapClapClapClapClap

For pretty much every post on this thread. Almost.

Jerky


Yeah me too.
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Re: Conspiracy culture as radical disempowerment

Postby Joe Hillshoist » Sun May 26, 2013 7:48 am

Canadian_watcher » 26 May 2013 08:54 wrote:Seeing as the author of the piece condemns as ridiculous the 9/11 Truth movement, I will put it this way:
The Muslim terrorist organization which brought down the Twin Towers was merely a vector of rampant capitalism?
Maybe. Maybe what the government has said has been right all along: They hated 'us' for our freedoms - freedoms which he could only have meant were purchased via the riches afforded us through capitalism. After all the Towers were 'symbols of finance' and that's why they were targeted, so goes the story.

Then this article goes on to make approximately the same argument that was given as the manifesto of the terrorists in the first place - capitalism and the Western version of it is the cause of all the world's problems! It is evil and must be stopped. Granted the article calls for a lawful worker's revolt of sorts and not violent or illegal acts. But - if I may be so provocative - other than that, it puts the workers on the same ideological 'side' as the terrorists: there's only one thing to blame here, and that's Westernized Capitalism.


Its the end of the world cos of Western Capitalism, in case no one had noticed. And while its not a thing per se with feelings or whatever, what the article describes is an egregore that goes with it.

And while we're on the subject, was it actually wrong of me to think the destruction of the twin towers was a good thing. Fuck you Wall St and everything you stand for. On the other side of the world, watching fuckers from NY drive profit above everything, enabling among other things the patenting of fucking genes FGFS, was it really that wrong to think "Good!! About time someone took you fuckers down a peg or two!!" (And yes it is possible to feel this way and still be appalled at the loss of life and the callous disregard for everyone who was killed that day.)

Capitalism, as we've experienced it for the last 200 years, and probably forever, is all about theft. People get rich from stealing the hours of peoples lives (and their stuff). Sometimes they pay decent wages. Sometimes real innovation drives real change in peoples lives. Mostly not. Most of the wealth of the west has come from free labour by slaves, indentured workers and down trodden indigenous people or the working class, screwed over by thugs and ruch feckers. That is a fact and if you earn more than $35K or thereabouts you are in the 1%, globally. It might not seem like it, but you are. And the only reason you might be in the 1% if you live in the west (if you weren't born into it) is cos for the last 100 years there was oil (which we basically nicked) so we could indulge the oiks and let them think they were in on it. (Because russia, so we kind of had to.)

The 9/11 truth movement does deserve ridicule. Not only did it achieve fuck all of nothing, it did so loudly and vocally while ignoring shit like the Patriot act, the dismantling of democracy and all the rest cos "if only we could prove 9/11 the rest would come down in a heap." by magic. Well no, not magic. By magical thinking. For the rest of Bush's terms it sucked energy out of actually challenging his admin on the grounds it should have been challenged. Instead of stopping an incompetent and corrupt regime by not banging on about 9/11, but actually doing something useful, it banged on about 9/11.

And, there is a decided difference between "money" and "capitalism." I can see, for example, how capitalist opportunists might want to patent breast milk - but I can't see how capitalism itself would allow it to happen. For it to move from opportunistic dream into capitalist reality all kinds of people who are not in positions to benefit from that immoral patent would have to agree to allow it to happen. Legislators, patent lawyers, judges if challenged, state lawmakers, who knows who else. Money in the form of bribes and payoffs could and likely does grease the wheels - but that's not capitalism - that's (ahem) conspiracy. Conspiring to circumvent rules and procedure in exchange for secret favours.


Yeah maybe

As I see it the capitalist system doesn't kill people - immoral, corruptible, cowardly, selfish, shady soulless people kill people.


Again - yeah maybe. Everyone is all of those things at some point tho.

And my answer to both those points is that capitalism is a mechanism that enables psychopaths and nasty behaviour. It not only enables it, it rewards it more than any other behaviour. Sure it rewards innovation, but it rewards taking other peoples innovation more. It also rewards stifling other innovation to maintain market dominance. the things you called "conspiracy" in the para above are only conspiracy because of the state and the rule of law and the laws that prevent the things you describe.

That in itself has nothing to do with capitalist-ism and everything to do with generations of people trying to limit power.

The laws and rules etc don't exist because of capitalism, despite what propagandists try and tell us.
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Re: Conspiracy culture as radical disempowerment

Postby nashvillebrook » Sun May 26, 2013 9:18 am

Wombaticus Rex » 26 May 2013 01:09 wrote:OP was fucking fantastic, that was a very tasty read. Very thought-provoking and much appreciated. One of my own recent favorite reads, in terms of a New Signal, was this Fabius Maximus piece whereby the author argues there is nothing broken with the american republic so much as the american electorate - I am not unaware of how that can be dismissed as "right wing craven capitalist bootlicking disinformation propaganda" -- just a for instance -- but I thought this was pretty excellent, cheesebag ending Matrix metaphors and all:

http://fabiusmaximus.com/2013/05/16/ref ... ica-50093/

Edit: also, given the recent comment about RI ejecting non-Leftists, I'd like to point out that while I enjoyed this piece, I find the premise of "Fighting Capitalism" as a solution to be absurd. Any political system currently known to the species has proven itself capable of sanctioning foreign aggression and domestic oppression, and we have fundamental, evolved behavior level problems with Power that need to be addressed before mammalian politics is even viable.

For all the absurd Invisible Hand hype that markets have received, despite the hollow promise of capitalism giving all people a better life, centralized state control of industry is just as devastating and doomed as centralized corporate control. There's a lot to be learned from the failure of the Soviet System, both in Russia, and the UK. The Rockefeller / Morgan vision plan fails the same way for the same reasons.



I'd go one step further and say that you can't really fight a "system" of anything b/c you can't motivate people to "fight the system." There's no target. There's no "there" there. It's disempowering. You can fight a politician. You can fight a corporation. You can fight a clear cut, a bank and a sprawling residential development that threatens your watershed -- but you can't fight something that has no name, no body, and no clear boundaries. This is one of the areas where I think the author got out in the weeds.

I believe that in cases where we've been told that folks "fought the system," if you look closely you find that people were really fighting something more concrete. Perhaps someone's life was taken, and so people fought a corrupt police force. Perhaps someone was silenced, and people fought a regressive speech policy. No one is going to show up to your revolution if you're simply "fighting the system" because everyone knows that the system can't be fought. That's how it got to be "the system." To say you're "fighting the system" is to invite apathy.

The struggle we face isn't so much with capitalism, as it is with banks which have boards of directors, CEOs and political allies. The people are the targets, and the goal is to change policy to create more economic justice.
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Re: Conspiracy culture as radical disempowerment

Postby bks » Sun May 26, 2013 9:31 am

Many strong insights in the OP, but ultimately it offers a bit of a strawman version of the conspiracy theorist and, more importantly, remains lodged in a set of fairly orthodox Marxist assumptions about what's needed to alter the course of things.

The author hasn't adequately theorized either global capital nor the shift in labor practices that has been ushered in during the informational/affective turn in capital production. What power is there to seize? Power is not primarily centered in nation states any longer; as the author admits, the vast global capitalist assemblage lays over and is imbricated with the most potent political forms the world over. Nor are most workers recognizably "working class" any longer. Much of the work in post-industrial society is what Maurizio Lazzarato calls "immaterial labor": it produces products that are themselves immaterial and not consumed in the process of their consumption, value that capital (or Empire, in Hardt and Negri's coinage) then seeks to capture and reproduce. Think for instance of how Facebook works, and who does the work. It's just a platform for the capture of unpaid immaterial laborers who willingly submit to it, and it's worth more money than God has. There's a book called Games of Empire about the political and intellectual economy of the production and playing of MMO video games, which details the struggle of various kinds of video game-centric immaterial labor to depart form the logic of Empire, and Empire's effort to recapture it. It's a dance of attempted escape and attempted capture.

As is the situation facing the rest of us. Many theorists of capital and Empire think the only solution is exit from the capitalist system, not overthrow. Or at least: overthrow will become much easier and imaginable once Capital is weakened by the departure of its labor force. But we now live in a world where everything people do, and including their bodies themselves, are resources for potential value capture. Simply seeking to not participate in Empire, where this non-participation takes organized form, will be viewed (is already viewed) as terrorism.
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