Brian Holmes on Sun, 1 Jun 2003 05:42:49 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Fascism in the USA? |
A clarification: I have used the word fascism to describe the slow drift of a democratic society toward acceptance of the increasing use of violence without any need to legitimate it through public debate or legal process. My aim was to ask the question, of all those living in or closely involved with the USA (and I must add that although residing abroad, I am a US citizen), whether this drift can now be measured in the country, and if so, through what specific signs. The point of the word "fascism" was to underline the seriousness of the question. I don't think we have a word in our language to correctly describe what has not yet taken place. But one would have to be gifted with a very weak imagination not to fear the consequences that can arise when a powerful nation begins to use its military force preemptively, on the basis of its leaders' intuitions, backed up by the flagrant manipulation of public opinion. One would have to blind to the power of propaganda, to think that Fox News is another anodyne version of infotainment. One would have to have little respect for the social functions of legal process, to think that the prisoners in Guantanamo Bay are just a detail. That all of this reflects the will of a minority is something of which I'm well aware; the question is, will the minority be successfully opposed? To be confident on principle in the American democracy's capacity to overcome its current backslide, and to claim utter incomparability with the political responses to the inextricable economic problems of certain European countries in the 1930s, would seem a refusal to even think about the potential outcomes of the present situation. Which today seems like a very good recipe for allowing the present situation to get worse. For years I have been as serious a critic as possible of American economic policy and of its consequences on the global scale. It never occurred to me to use the word fascism. But after September 11, and in the protracted aftermath of the speculative economy's collapse, what I see emerging is a new political baseline of manipulated fear and media-driven jingoism to replace the former baseline of self-congratulatory greed. Politically, I think this can be a winning formula in an otherwise inextricable situation, and this, beyond the USA itself. In response to someone's question about anti-Semitism in France, there isn't just anti-Semitism, there's anti-Arabism and anti-Africanism and anti-Gypsyism too, and the right has made its gains from all of them, while the institutional left has come out as weak as the democrats in the US. As the overconfident business leaders have lost their mesmerizing force of conviction, almost everywhere we are seeing a powerfully conservative reaction to the acceleration of social change in the globalizing 1990s. Almost everywhere means: in the US, in Europe, in the Arab world. It is the American right, however, that has the ideological broadcasting power to invent the winning formula of political reaction (the one to match and justify the Revolution in Military Affairs). I don't say they will do it, or that they have done it, but that they may do it. Before we have the dubious intellectual pleasure of inventing a new word to describe the original and sophisticated forms of callous cynicism, bootstamping and cowering fear that only our networked era can produce, I think we would do better to ask what is happening now, why, at what levels and through what channels, and how to effectively oppose it. Thus my question. best, Brian Holmes # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net