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The Tyranny of the Politically Correct

Page 14

by Keith Preston


  What functions do female members fulfill in your organization/tribe?

  What I try to do is gather around myself a collection of superior individuals who can become the foundation of a future revolutionary movement inspired by the ideas of National-Anarchism and overlapping or allied tendencies or movements. I don’t approach this is a gender-specific way. I favor an aristocracy based on individual merit that is gender-neutral. The people who have come into my circle have been overwhelmingly male thus far. I think a lot of that has to do with the particular stage of development our groups and movements are at right now. I think more women will become involved over time as we are able to expand our range of activities and the issues we address. But the women in my political orbit tend to be extraordinarily impressive individuals, and I think we will likewise attract many more such women over time.

  13

  Reply to a Left-Anarchist Critic

  A left-anarchist posted this critique of American Revolutionary Vanguard/Attack The System on another forum. I’ve included the critic’s comments in italics followed by my own comments in response.

  Really analyze the mission statement in its totality. First and foremost it constructs the Anarchist movement in a particular manner, like the most vulgar An-Caps and Libertarians, Preston cites “anti-statism” as the defining aspect of Anarchism.

  From Webster’s Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary: Anarchism /’an-er-,kiz-em/ noun (1642) 1. a political theory holding all forms of governmental authority to be unnecessary and undesirable and advocating a society based on voluntary cooperation and free association of individuals and groups. 2. the advocacy or practice of anarchism.

  But this is no surprise given that Preston was a contributor to anti-state.com, the Anarcho-Capitalist website, so it’s not difficult to understand where he draws his reasoning on this one. His assertion is incorrect, as has been said more than once here, Anarchism has never been reducible to “anti-statism” and is much broader, having declared its opposition to all forms of rulership. This is what, apparently, allows Preston to adopt the label with such zeal. If anyone objects, he and his supporters can start the “I’m more hardcore than you” debate about his interpretation being more “pure” than yours.

  From the Oxford Dictionary: ruler 1. a person or agent exercising government or control. The critic offers no explanation of how “rulership” is to be differentiated from “the state” or “government.”

  In almost the same breath, Preston attempts to distinguish himself from both the Left and the Right, by rejecting the labels of “Third Positionism and White Nationalism” while rejecting the Left and its goals of a fair society for all, in its entirety.

  I do indeed distinguish myself from both Left and Right in that I oppose the reactionary, conservative, or bourgeoisie manifestations of the Right, while borrowing selectively from strands of “rightist” thought such as those I recognized in my exchange with Paul Gottfried: natural inequality of persons at both the individual and collective levels, the inevitability and legitimacy of otherness, the superiority of organic forms of human organization over social engineering, rejection of vulgar economism, and a tragic view of life. As for the Left, I consider the classical liberal and classical anarchist strands of the Left to be among the primary influences on my own thinking, while rejecting the Jacobin, Marxist, or Marcusean manifestations of the Left. While recognizing what I consider to be the legitimate issues raised by white nationalists and attempting to incorporate these into my own paradigm, I reject white nationalism as an ideological system, as it is essentially a form of egalitarian collectivism (“racial Marxism”). But then I do the same with black nationalism, American Indian nationalism, Puerto Rican nationalism, Palestinian nationalism, Tibetan nationalism, etc. Third Positionism is a term for ideologies that reject both capitalism and communism and which advocate a “third position” between these two. These include many different ideologies from all over the world. It has its roots in systems of thought like old British distributism and today it’s an umbrella term that includes all sorts of unrelated philosophies, ranging from Peronism to Ba’athism to the ideas in Qadaffi’s “Green Book” to the political and economic aspects of Ghandi’s satyagraha philosophy to strands of Islamic economic thought. Some neo-fascists in Europe have also latched onto the term which is the obvious source of the leftist hysteria over it. Here’s a good way to look at it: Libertarianism is neither left nor right in that it opposes both conservative as well as leftist forms of statism. There are also anti-capitalist and pro-capitalist forms of libertarianism. Likewise, Third Positionism is neither left or right in that it opposes both capitalism and communism, and there are statist and anti-statist variations of third positionism. So a technically proficient application of political language would indicate that I am both a libertarian and a third positionist, given my radical anti-statism and my free-market syndicalist-mutualist-distributist-communitarian economic outlook.

  The idea that the Left is merely about a “fair society for all” is lunacy. This ignores the authoritarian and totalitarian strands of the Left. It ignores the bloody history of the Left in some countries. There’s also the question of how “fair” is to be defined in the first place. Nor do I reject all goals normally associated with the Left. A comprehensive review of Attack the System and my various published writings will reveal that I have incorporated the great majority of the conventional left-anarchist program into my own paradigm, including a lot of issues that are shockingly radical even by conventional leftist or liberal standards (e.g. prison abolition, abolition of compulsory education, drug user and sex worker rights). My critics who have anything beyond a peripheral familiarity with my work are no doubt well aware of this. Their attacks on me are nothing more that willful and knowing lies and slander, because they don’t want my arguments to be heard.

  A first principle of anarchism is that we should be freethinkers above all. This means that we do not simply approach issues on the basis of what the party line of the Left is at present, or what our PC professors told us, or what we pulled off of Infoshop.Org. Instead, it means that all issues and matters of controversy must be evaluated on their own terms, with an attitude of civility towards all but those devoid of incivility, and a fair hearing for all contending points of view, on which no one is to have the last word. Further, it means that issues have to be examined within the context of their relationship to anarchism, not leftism. For instance, when members of the racial minority, feminist, and “LGBT” communities or other conventional constituencies for the Left raise claims of oppression, by all means we should give their arguments a fair hearing. But we should do the same for all other demographic and political interest groups. We then need to evaluate whether claims of oppression are legitimate within the context of the anarchist political and philosophical paradigm. Much of the time they are. Sometimes they are not. For instance, sexual minorities who claim they are oppressed by sodomy laws, legal repression of gay-oriented businesses, or violent crimes by private individuals who target them on the basis of their gender or sexual identity are legitimate within the anarchist paradigm. Neo-Nazis who claim they are oppressed by the mere existence of Jews are not legitimate. Racial separatist whites (or of any other race/ethnicity) who claim their rights of property and association are being violated by discrimination prohibition are legitimate. Feminists who would legally require churches to accept women into the ranks of the clergy are not as this violates the associational and religious liberties of others. At the same time, there would be nothing inherently un-libertarian about feminists within a church organization agitating for altering church policy regarding gender exclusivity in the clergy if they so desired.

  There are a lot of issues where there is much gray area. These include the familiar issues where there is no clear agreement among anarchists and libertarians such as abortion, capital punishment, animal rights, children’s rights against their parents, the limits of self-defense, the handling of predatory criminals,
the precise definitions of property rights, the use of the environment, and so forth. There are other issues as well. For instance, if private discrimination against particular demographic groups (races, religions, cultures, genders, sexual orientations, occupations), even if not legally required, is so pervasive as to severely undermine the economic, social, or even physical health of those on the receiving end of such discrimination, then what sorts of remedies may be in order? These may be situations where the Ghandi-MLK paradigm becomes applicable, e.g. people using their liberties of speech, assembly, association, trade, boycott, etc. as a means of opposing or at least reducing such discrimination. There is also the issue of how to apply anarchist theory in societies like our own where the state and state-protected institutions dominate much of the society. With regards to discrimination, for instance, it would seem reasonable enough that government, service providers with a state-protected monopoly, or mass corporations created by the state should not be able to deny services or protection to individuals and groups for arbitrary or irrelevant reasons. For instance, the US Postal Service should not be able to provide mail delivery only for whites but not for blacks, and public schools should not be able to provide admission only to Protestants but not to Catholics. Nor should General Motors be able to refuse to hire Mormons or gays simply because they are Mormons or gays.

  There may be some instances where there are simply irreconcilable differences between those making claims of oppression and where both sides present valid and compelling arguments. One of these is the traditional tension between left and right wing anarchists over the “right to work” versus the “right to strike.” To what degree are employers legitimate in replacing striking workers with “scabs”? To what degree are workers legitimate in preventing scabbing? Right-anarchists are typically “pro-scab” while left-anarchists are usually “anti-scab.” The former will argue in favor of freedom of contract, freedom of movement, property rights, freedom of association, etc. The latter will argue against the employer’s claims that its position is legitimate and that workers are the rightful owners of their jobs. I find both sides of this issue compelling and my guess is that a libertarian legal code would largely reflect prevailing regional and local ideological currents on this question, e.g. the degree to which scabbing is legally tolerated or the degree to which scabbing is prohibited, and the degree to which extra-legal means of preventing scabbing are tolerated (e.g. civil disobedience). Immigration is another such issue. I’ve made my criticisms of some of the “open borders” libertarians and anarchists known in the past, but not all issues raised by proponents of “immigrants’ rights” are foolish or illegitimate, either. Again, this is why I’ve suggested that in an anarchist polity with a libertarian legal code matters of immigration and naturalization would likely be a local matter with varying degrees of restrictiveness or permissiveness on this question. I myself would likely prefer some degree of moderation on this question.

  He simplifies the politics of the “New Left” and “Old Left” and places them into a dichotomy.

  This is a standard practice of historians of the Left from all sorts of ideological perspectives. It did not originate with me.

  Anyone who responds to or criticizes ATS or Preston can then be labeled a “Leftist” or “Leftoid” which dismisses the criticism without actually having to make a meaningful response.

  The term “leftoid” was one I coined about twenty years ago as a derivative of “Stalinoid.” I have always used it to describe the reflexive dogmatism and cultic psychology common to so much of the Left. I have indeed made many a “meaningful response” to my critics. They’re just not listening. Instead, they hear what they want to hear.

  It’s a duck and weave and all those who openly espouse discriminatory attitudes and behaviors can cheer from the sidelines.

  The critic gives no explanation of what he means by “discriminatory attitudes.” I presume he’s not describing left-liberals who wish to discriminate against gun owners or Communists who wish to discriminate against small property owners or militant secularist or gay rights activists who wish to discriminate against religious believers or “anti-racists” who wish to discriminate against ethnic Europeans, or academic leftists who discriminate against conservative student groups who wish to form organizations on college campuses. Clearly, none of these classes of discriminating individuals are fans of my work. Therefore, it is unclear why this critic would say that “all those who openly espouse discriminatory attitudes and behaviors” are cheering me on from the sidelines.

  More to the point, Preston claims that populism determines class identities.

  No. What I argue is that Anarchism tends to identify class struggle in terms of “the people versus the elite” while the Marxists see class struggle in the more reductionist manner of wage laborers versus employers, property owners, or holders of capital. This insight is not original to me. I picked it up from Larry Gambone, whose left-anarchist credentials are impeccable. The populist struggle against the elite transcends class identities in that it does not rely on a single class as a principal agent (like the Marxists do with their deification of the proletariat). That said, I have indeed identified particular class identities that I describe as the “vanguard classes” in an anarchist struggle in a contemporary society.

  according to Preston and every Third Positionist out there, “the Left are in power”, therefore the Right are anti-establishment and a more legitimate fighting force for “freedom”.

  The present day ruling class paradigm is a synthesis of classical bourgeoisie liberalism and socialism (i.e. a capitalist/social democratic hybrid) and the institutionalization of the values of the cultural revolution of the 1960s and 1970s. Therefore, the Left is indeed “in power.” The Right is anti-establishment in the sense of opposing the dominant liberal-left paradigm. As to whether the Right is “a more legitimate fighting force for freedom,” that depends on which strands of the Right we are talking about. Some strands of the Right are flagrantly anti-freedom. Some are stridently pro-freedom (e.g. the Rothbardians). Most are a mish-mash of pro-freedom and authoritarian ideas (just like the different strands of the Left).

  In doing this Preston represents his views, and by extension, the views of others on the Right as being consistent with the views of the people, or alternatively, being on the side of “ordinary people”, which works as an attempt to justify or legitimate his ideas. Apparently, anyone who declares “Fight da powa!” is a class warrior, a representative of the people, and their ideas are justifiable no matter the content or ramifications.

  No. The “views of the people” are probably closer to the center than anywhere else (that’s why it’s called the center). Most research shows that “ordinary people” are to the right of the elites on cultural and social issues, but to the left of the elites on economic issues, and more inclined towards foreign policy non-interventionism that the elites. There’s no inherent relationship between populism and Fascism or Nazism, as the critic tries to suggest with his link. Populism can be used towards any end, from fascism to communism to religious fundamentalism to nationalism to anarchism.

  He then goes on to develop the idea of “anti-statism” saying, as a strategic goal that the existence of the State is the first and foremost priority.

  An anarchist suggests that opposition to the state should be first priority of anarchism? Geez, who would have ever thought?!!

  He rejects all other forms of oppression. As has been said by others, according to Preston, all other forms of oppression can wait until after the revolution. However this shows a shallow understanding of and Anarchism; if you are Anarchist and you oppose all forms of rulership, you oppose all forms of rulership, everywhere, consistently. Oppression is interconnected and can all be related back to authoritarianism. You have to keep the bigger picture in mind.

  No. An honest reading of the full volume of my work would indicate that I have incorporated a wide assortment of issues of resistance to oppression into
my broader ideological and strategic framework. These include the struggle for self-determination for indigenous ethnic minorities in the US (e.g. African-Americans, Natives/American Indians), opposition to American aggression against other peoples all over the world, opposition to oppression inflicted on a broad array of marginalized populations that even conventional leftists typically ignore, and struggle by and on behalf of the lowest socio-economic elements in the class system. There is the wider question of how to approach these questions in a way that is strategically feasible.

  ….‘revolution is not driven by White Hetero Men who sit around drawing up plans about how to throw off the state (smoking, probably) while the women are out the back making the coffee, LGBT people are beaten in the street out the front, the KKK is erecting crosses in your neighbours front yard and those living across the street are arming themselves to the teeth in order to kill those “Islamo-fascist-Muslim-terrorists”.’

  This is so silly that it merits the dignity of a response only because these comments are fairly representative of the outlook of the leftoid cult. Someone who thinks that this is representative of American society, let alone general Western civilization, at the present juncture is simply a deluded nutcase who’s stuck in a time warp where it’s always 1968. Get with the times, dude! In a libertarian legal order, burning crosses on the front yards of other people without their consent would constitute the crimes of trespassing, vandalism, intimidation, probably arson, and a good number of other things. Violent physical attacks on “LGBT” people would constitute the crimes of murder, assault, robbery, and the like. Preferably, neighbors would be “arming themselves to the teeth” for the purpose of resisting ordinary criminals, government functionaries and, if necessary, external invaders. And suffice to say that the circles of alternative anarchism are comprised of much more than “white hetero men” (with even some of us evil white hetero guys, like myself, being non-smokers!) and that the women in our circles contribute much more than simply “making coffee” (I hate coffee!).

 

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