“Was not their mistake once more bred of the life of slavery that they had been living?—a life which was always looking upon everything, except mankind, animate and inanimate—‘nature,’ as people used to call it—as one thing, and mankind as another, it was natural to people thinking in this way, that they should try to make ‘nature’ their slave, since they thought ‘nature’ was something outside them” — William Morris


Thursday, March 6, 2025

Somebody, Anybody, Everybody Scream

Marx had it right with his image of ideology as a camera obscura, a mirror that presents things upside down. 

The Specter of Whiteness 


Now that I'm not reading magazines, newspapers, listening to opinionating, watching it, and so on, hardly at all, I feel fresh and open and so was genuinely hurt and disturbed and angered by a piece Jamelle Bouie just brought to my attention in the Atlantic today--definitely never reading them again. 

It was about the response to the State of the Union address. The person who made the response (Slotkin) had decided to draw a line between "normal" (and therefore implicitly "abnormal") opposition thought and practice. To disavow the spectacular politics in the name of kitchen sink issues. 

It hit me so hard that THIS is the spectacular politics. THIS is the mirror world where "normal" "kitchen sink" "regular" issues and people equates to pure, deaf, blind, stupid whiteness. That appealing to this mythical whiteness in the name of not sounding "weird" (yes she used the word) or extreme was the spectacle. This image of a non-image, of a transparent being somehow hallucinated, conjured into existence by the knowing, cynical prose and the "no-nonsense" rhetoric. 

I got angry with Steve Schmidt, Republican operative turned Trump hater. He's great when he's hating on Trump. He's terrible when he's supporting this spectacular myth of the white specter of normal. Just terrible. He berated Al Green for standing up at the State of the Union, definitely the best thing about it. 

My attitude is like Tim Snyder's: at this point, whatever floats your boat, whatever makes you feel connected and warm and engaged and hopeful and awake and active and activist is good. All of it. Wear a pink blazer. Shout. Talk calmly. Anything. Somebody, anybody, everybody scream. 

This is FAR different from saying that the "center is evil" along with the boring old Trotskyists. You're going to read it and think that, aren't you, another way of deflecting from what's going on, another kind of mirror world. Ideology is a mirror world. 

Slotkin did nothing but create a terribly diluted specter of a white working class man, and talk to that specter. THIS is what is wrong. 

Timothy Snyder Real State of the Union (watch)

Wednesday, March 5, 2025

I'm in an Essay about Butoh

 Paul Miller (DJ Spooky) very kindly shared this essay with me, which uses some of my ideas. It's about Butoh, very close to my heart. My idea for the Hyperobjects cover was a  Butoh dancer--a reaction shot, if you will. I've written about Butoh in a number of places. 

Sankai Juku


Tuesday, March 4, 2025

The Phantom of the Present (me and Rupert Sheldrake, video)

 ...at the IAI festival, How the Light Gets In, last September

Watch This. NOW (and beat the State of the Nation address by the "president")


 State of the People, a 24-hour marathon: 

a 24-hour livestream featuring leading Black activists, journalists, and elected officials, will take place from March 3rd at 11:59 PM ET to March 4th at 11:59 PM ET. Organized in response to the State of the Union, the event aims to offer a perspective on the country’s current challenges and the impact of recent policies on communities of color.

The livestream will feature a wide range of speakers, including Joy Reid, Rep. Maxine Waters, Rep. James E. Clyburn, Ibram X. Kendi, Ben Crump, Don Lemon, Angela Rye, and Tamika D. Mallory, among others. Discussions will cover issues such as economic equity, civil rights, and the social and political landscape.

Organizers say the event was created to provide a more direct conversation about the country’s condition, focusing on policies affecting marginalized communities. The State of the People is being held in partnership with Native Land Podcast and will include input from legal scholars, journalists, and advocates who will discuss both challenges and potential solutions. (source)


Monday, March 3, 2025

Patreon Podcast on English as "Official Language"

 Didn't take long did it? 

English Is Not a Language

 I was waiting for the current "administration" to make English the "official language" of the USA. 

This was the idiot idea of an idiot white taxi driver in New York City circa 1994. I have been dreading since he told me the day when someone institutes the policies he barked at me in that car from the Village to Penn Station. That day has come. 

In the UK, English is not the official language. There IS NO official language. 

Furthermore...

English is not a language AT ALL. 

It can't be official anything. 

Don't argue with me about this. I'm the author of fifty one books in translation into twenty languages. Real ones. 

I'll make a podcast. 

Sunday, March 2, 2025

Resurgence

 I must say, I'm hugely enjoying the resurgence of interest in this blog. 

When I started, I began to get about 2000 hits a day during the heady OOO blogging years. 

Things have waxed and waned since, with a massive spike when it was announced that I had written a book with Bjork. 

Things got a bit slim in the later 2010s. I was rushing around and curating things and writing an opera and it was really hard to keep up with regular life, let alone blogging. It's my fault. 

Then Hell started to happen and I must say, the blog has NEVER been as healthy as this. It's a plump luscious thing. Love it. Massive amounts of interest in Hell. I posted some stats recently so I won't bother with that just now. But truly, 7000 hits a day is a LOT. That's more than three times the heady times. 

Thursday, February 27, 2025

The Lucifer Effect: How to Act in a Bad Barrel

 As we are seeing, I hope, evil is not simply a case of "bad apples," it's a bad barrel. Evil is banality, just going along with the situation, which defaults to white supremacy and patriarchy. 

Milgram's experiments demonstrate that two thirds of people will do an evil act all the way up to murder if it is socially sanctioned. 

Zimbardo's Stanford Prison experiment turned psych evaluated Stanford grad students into Abu Ghraib torturers in 36 hours. 

We are witnessing abuse of immigrant prisoners in Gauntanamo Bay (see what Dick Durbin has said about this). 

We witnessed Theresa Borenpohl being dragged out of a town hall meeting in Idaho by fake fascist police. 

Watch and learn. Teach someone. 


Monday, February 24, 2025

Great Graduate Students

One thing's for sure. The graduate students this term are INCREDIBLE. I'm very lucky when it comes to my job. I had the privilege of being on the graduate committee and determining who would come and study with us these last couple of years, and it's been a wonderful thing to do. The students in my ecology and culture and philosophy class are just fantastic. 

Friday, February 21, 2025

Well Isn't This Interesting

Hell continues to be the most important event of my career, if interest in this blog is a metric. 

This in itself is interesting because Hyperobjects, if you need to know, vastly outsells everything else, still. Even the most recent stuff. And Hell is actually one of the slowest selling books! 

But people who are into it, are really into it. I get correspondence all the time about it. 

If you haven't already, give it a try. The area under the Hell spikes is now so much more than that of the moment at which I was working with Björk. 











Thursday, February 20, 2025

The Nightmare Vision 2

 For those of you who have been following for years, it's beyond irksome how some daft ideas in supposed posthuman and accelerationist philosophy got weaponized. Several of us (the OOO ones) were trying to warn people. Here's the plan: 


The Nightmare Vision

 A friend of a friend writes: 

"One way to think about the Trump-Musk-Putin project is that it is Neo-Barbarism. The old left critiques of ‘Neoliberalism’ actually assumed the horizon of a liberal democratic order (credit John Gamey). In other words, however ‘radical’ critics of Neoliberalism thought they were being, they were attacking the established order from within a framework which assumed the existence of nation states, international trade, intergovernmental organizations, civil society organizations and liberal democratic institutions in at least many of the most important states. 

"What the Trump-Musk-Putin axis does, is to blow this all up (credit Nancy Ries). They are not only destroying the old order, but also rendering standard critiques of Neoliberalism irrelevant. In their new world , instead of nation states there will be billionaire barons allied with armed garrisons; instead of international trade, coerced resource extraction; instead of social participation and welfare provision, massive repression and individualised struggle for survival. 

This explains why Trump can talk so freely of seizing Canada, Greenland, Panama: he no longer assumes any of the external or internal constraints on power holders that have, however unevenly, developed over the last 200 years. This is not about going back to 19th Century colonialism or further developing 20th Century Neoliberalism. Rather, this imagined future corresponds most closely to something like the western part of the Roman Empire in 500s and 600s: magnates with armed hordes swirling across ill-defined territorial boundaries, slaughtering and seizing resources, while production falls off a cliff and the standard of living of the mass of the population falls to unfathomably low levels."

Now...

You know, the way to see the nightmare dystopian vision of these dark ages late late Roman Empire tech bros is, 

Once you get over the shock, 

IT'S STUNNINGLY UNIMAGINATIVE

It's out of Gladiator slash Alien 

IT's CRAP

Monday, February 17, 2025

Sunday, February 16, 2025

When Texas Had a Democratic Governor

Editor’s Note: The Observer published this column in its April 11, 1997, edition under the headline: “Texas: Laboratory for Lunacy.” That year’s private school voucher proposal narrowly died at the Lege.


Three strikes and you’re out? Watch Texas spend more on prisons than it does on schools. Thinking of making your tax structure more regressive? Come to the Lone Star State and see how it’s done. 

The latest brainstorm to afflict our friendly pols in Austin is school vouchers. Consider the beauty of this nifty scheme as it might eventually be worked out under the guidance of the Texas Lege. To improve the public schools (I swear, that’s how the advocates are advertising this lunacy): 

■We give vouchers to all the students who are already in private or religious schools around the state. Right there, before anybody else even gets a voucher, we will have taken, say, $1 billion out of the budget for our public schools. Shrewd move, eh? 

■We also give all the kids now in public school a voucher, thus theoretically enabling these children to attend the schools of their parents’ choice: Unfortunately, private schools might find themselves under no obligation to accept any of our kids; they could be rejected because of their religious affiliation, their disabilities, on the grounds that they’re not bright enough, because the school administrators don’t like their looks—any reason not specifically excluded by law.

The Texas Freedom Network, a normally sensible group of good guys, is running around like Paul Revere, trying to alert the citizenry to this dread downside of the school voucher idea. “Proposed voucher legislation would allow private schools to recruit the best athletes and students at taxpayer expense.” Folks, we’re talking football now! I knew you’d be concerned. Quel horrifying thought: The whole high school football tradition is in dire peril. Stop the madness now! 

On a more sober note, the good private schools we’d all like to send our kids to already have waiting lists a mile long. No public school kid is going to St. John’s in Houston or St. Mark’s in Dallas with a voucher clutched in his or her little hand; those schools cost $10,000 a year, and our little school voucher won’t cover half the cost. 

Now maybe, just maybe, some upper-middle-class folks might be able to afford a fancy private school with a voucher to help, but working-class and middle-class kids are going to be stuck just where they always were. Why should we spend public money to help just that one thin slice of the population when it won’t improve the public schools? 

The rural kids are really going to get burned by this idea. As you may have noticed, almost all private schools are in cities. Hundreds of rural school districts don’t have a single private school, but because of the way state education financing works, they’d still lose thousands of dollars from their budgets for the public schools without a single kid going to private school. 

I realize this means nothing to our Legislature, but it should be mentioned that the whole idea is rankly unconstitutional. 

All in all, this concept is so bad that it has an excellent chance of passing the Legislature. Much as we would like to help the rest of the nation by demonstrating once more just how stupid ideas work out in practice, couldn’t we give this one a miss? 

In case you’re wondering who is pushing this dingbat notion, it’s the religious right, the same charmers who helped elect the right-wingers who now grace the state Board of Education. If you haven’t checked in on the state board lately, you really should. It’s a lot of fun—fruitcakes unlimited, flat-Earthers, creationists, all manner of remarkable specimens. In fact, it’s gotten so bad that there’s even a bill in the Lege to replace it with an appointed board again. 

You may recall that we’ve had this fight before. In keeping with my Theory of Perpetual Reform, I now favor an appointed board. Last time, I favored an elected board. What I really favor is the idea that no matter what we try, in about ten years, it’s always a mess again and we need to try something else. 

Speaking of matters educational, let me take on a sacred cow that is long past its prime: local control. Have you noticed that the people who consider local control of the schools a sanctified arrangement are the same people who are always complaining about how terrible the schools are? If local control is such a great idea, then how come the schools are so bad? Have we considered the possibility that maybe local control is the problem? 

A truism of the everlasting education debates is that someone somewhere has already solved whatever the problem is. Someone somewhere is always doing a brilliant job of teaching physics to inner-city kids, or teaching music to a bunch of rural kids in the 4-H who have heretofore considered Loretta Lynn classical music, or getting bored suburban brats excited about Herman Melville. 

The problem is that we can’t seem to replicate the successes in the schools across the board because there is no across the board. Instead, there’s local control. Sometimes it’s superb, granted. But often, it’s hopelessly knot-headed. Ask the folks in Dallas—they’ve had some lulus lately. It seems to me just possible that maybe what we need to do is take education out of the hands of insurance salesmen, Minute Women and other odd ephemera of the electoral process and put it in the hands of… well, educators. 

IN.CRED.IB.LE