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Consciousness Rising, World Fading
Our stories of awakenings -- whether moral, intellectual, religious, artistic, or sexual -- are tricky. Honest self-reflection doesn’t come easy, and self-satisfied accounts are the norm; we love to be the heroes of our own epics.
That’s true of accounts of political awakening as well, especially for those of us born into unearned privilege as a result of systems of illegitimate authority. Not only do we love to tell stories in which we come out looking good, but we know how to decorate the narrative with the trappings of humility to avoid seeming arrogant. We use our failures to set up the story of our transformation; even when we speak of our limitations we are highlighting our wisdom in seeing those limitations.
So, when I got a request from a researcher to tell my story about how my political consciousness was raised, I was hesitant. I don’t like feeling like a fraud, and something always feels a bit fraudulent about my account, even when I am being as honest as I can. But, like most people, I feel driven to tell my story, mostly to try to explain myself to myself. So, here I go again:
As a teenager coming of age in the 1970s in mainstream culture in the upper Midwest, I missed the United States’ radicalizing movements by a decade and several hundred miles. I developed conventional liberal politics in reaction to the conventional conservative politics of my father and his generation. But in a more basic sense, I grew up depoliticized -- like most contemporary Americans, I was never taught to analyze systems and structures of power, and so my banal liberal positions seemed like cutting edge critique to me. After college I worked as a journalist at mainstream newspapers, which further retarded my ability to think critically about power; reporters who don’t have a political consciousness coming into the field are unlikely to develop one in an industry that claims neutrality but is fanatically devoted to the conventional wisdom.
The raising of my consciousness began when I started a journalism/mass communication doctoral program in 1988, a time when U.S. universities were somewhat more intellectually and politically open than today. After years of the daily grind in newsrooms, I felt liberated by the freedom to read, think, and talk to others about all the new ideas I was encountering. My study of the First Amendment led me to the feminist critique of pornography, which at the time was an important focus for debate about the meaning of freedom of expression. My first graduate courses were taught by liberal defenders of pornography, who were the norm in the academy then and now. But I also began talking with activists in a local group that was fighting the sexual-exploitation industries (pornography, prostitution, stripping), and I realized there was a rich, complex, and exciting feminist critique, which required me to rethink what I thought I knew about freedom, choice, and liberation.
As a result of those first conversations, I started reading feminist work and taking feminist classes, and I kept talking with folks from the community group, which led me to get involved in their educational activities. I didn’t make those choices with any sense that I was constructing a radical philosophical and political framework. I was just following the ideas that seemed the most compelling intellectually and the people who seemed the most decent personally. Those ad hoc decisions changed my life, in two ways.
First, they opened up to me an alternative to the suffocating conventional wisdom, in which liberals and conservatives argue within narrow ideological boundaries. This exposure to feminist thinking, especially those people and ideas most commonly described as radical feminist, allowed me to step outside those boundaries and ask two simple questions: Where does real power lie and how does it operate, in both formal institutions and informal arrangements?
Second, they helped me realize the importance of always having a political life outside the university. Instead of putting all my energy into my teaching and research, I was anchored in a community project and connected to people who weren’t preoccupied with publishing marginally relevant research in marginally relevant academic journals. Although I had to publish scholarly articles for my first six years as an assistant professor, once I got tenure and job security I immediately returned to community organizing and ignored the pseudo-intellectual pretensions that dominate in most of the so-called scholarly world in the social sciences and humanities. I had developed respect for rigorous and relevant scholarship but had come to realize how little of it there was in my fields in the contemporary academy.
From those first inquiries into the sexual-exploitation industries and the role of a pornographic culture in men’s violence, I continued to think about how power is organized and operates around other dimensions of our identities and statuses in the world. After opening the gender door, it was inevitable that I would have to open the race door. From there, questions about the inherent economic injustice in capitalism and the violence required for U.S. imperial domination of the world became central. Finally, I began thinking more about how human domination of the living world is destroying the ecosphere’s capacity to sustain life as we know it.
All of those inquiries led me to the same conclusion: We live in a world structured by illegitimate hierarchies and based on a domination/subordination dynamic. For those of us with unearned privilege, the rewards for ignoring this conclusion are whatever status and money we can squeeze out of the system, while the cost of capitulation to power is a surrender of some essential part of our humanity. More than 20 years after embarking on this investigation, I can see that clearly. But when I first started confronting these issues, I only knew that the conventional wisdom seemed inadequate, that the platitudes uttered by people in power seemed empty, and that the rationalizations offered by the intellectuals in the service of power seemed self-serving. I didn’t know what I wanted, but I knew I didn’t want that kind of career or life.
All that seems clear to me now, but it wasn’t at the start. The researcher’s query that prompted this essay asked about my “earliest consciousness-raising memory.” I have no simple answer, because my awakening was such a gradual process. But there were some moments along the way, such as the day I read Andrea Dworkin’s 1983 speech entitled “I Want a Twenty-Four-Hour Truce During Which There Is No Rape,” in which she asked men for “one day in which no new bodies are piled up, one day in which no new agony is added to the old.”[1] In that speech she pointed out that feminists don’t hate men, but instead “believe in your humanity, against all the evidence.”[2]
I also remember the crucial role of one friend in the anti-pornography group, a white man who was older than I and was a part of not only the feminist movement but the civil-rights, anti-war, and environmental struggles. He provided me with a model for how someone with privilege could contribute to radical politics in a principled fashion. In my book on pornography, I wrote about one particularly important moment with Jim Koplin, when we talked about my motivation in volunteering with the group:
“If you want to be part of this because you want to save women, we don’t want you,” he said. At first I was confused -- wasn’t the point of critiquing the sexual exploitation of women in pornography to help women? Yes, Jim explained, but too many men who get involved in such work see themselves as knights in shining armor, riding in like the hero to save women, and they usually turn out not to be trustworthy allies. They are in it for themselves, not to challenge masculinity but to play out the role of heroic man in a new, pseudo-feminist context. You have to be in it for yourself, but in a different way, he said.
“You have to be here to save your own life,” Jim told me.
I didn’t understand exactly what he meant at that moment, but something about those words resonated in my gut. This is what feminism offered men -- not just a way to help those being hurt, but a way to understand that the same system of male dominance the hurt so many women also made it impossible for men to be fully human.[3]
Jim challenged me to ask myself why I was there and what I hoped to gain, and I came to understand that my interest in feminist politics was driven in large part by my own alienation from traditional definitions of masculinity. For me to tell a simple story about doing the right thing, implying nobility on my part, wasn’t going to cut it.
More than 20 years later, I’m still wrestling with these questions about why I make the choices I make. I am a man who is part of a feminist movement and a white guy who critiques the white supremacy deeply embedded in mainstream culture. I am an American who opposes U.S. imperial foreign policy and a middle-class academic working with a local group that organizes immigrant workers. For these efforts, I get attention and praise that is disproportionate to my effort and ability, a fact I point out as often as possible. People sometimes listen to me not because I’m smarter than feminist women, but because I am a man. My writing on race is not better than the work of non-white authors, but I’m appreciated because I’m white.
This is the tricky part of my awakening story. I was lucky to learn to see the world from the point of view of those who struggle against power, and I’m rewarded in many ways when I speak, write, or act in public in these movements. But I recognize that those rewards are unfair, and so my professed humility becomes another mark of my alleged sophistication. Yet if I were to refuse to use my privilege -- if I dealt with this angst by fading into the background -- I would be throwing away resources that come with my position in the world and which I can offer to these movements.
I am trapped, yet I am trapped in a system that makes my life relatively easy. Even when there is some threat of punishment for my political activities, such as during the fallout from critical essays about U.S. war crimes that I wrote after 9/11, I have so much support from outside the power structure and so much privilege as an educated white guy that I never really felt threatened. Even if I had been fired from my university position after 9/11, I likely would have landed on my feet.
I realize not all who adopt a critical perspective, even those in privileged categories, fare as well as I have. But in recent decades in the United States, in which dissent by people who look like me is mostly tolerated, there has been no widespread repression of people in the privileged sectors. People in targeted groups (particularly immigrants, Muslims, Arabs) have had to be careful, and there’s no guarantee that a more widespread repression won’t return to the United States, especially as U.S. power continues to decline around the world and elites get nervous. But for now, white men with U.S. citizenship are pretty safe. We may risk losing a job, but that’s trivial compared with the fates suffered by radicals in other eras in U.S. history or in other places today.
So, here’s my consciousness raising story summarized: I wandered through the first 30 years of my life mostly oblivious to the workings of power, protected by my privilege. For the past 20 years I’ve been struggling to contribute to a variety of movements for social justice and ecological sustainability, getting my consciousness raised on a regular basis whenever I seek out new experiences that push me beyond what I have come to take for granted (lately for me that has been happening at 5604 Manor, our progressive community center in Austin, TX, http://5604manor.org/). Although I love teaching and put considerable energy into my job as a professor, my community and political activities are just as important to me -- and a greater source of intellectual vitality. If consciousness-raising is an ongoing project, it’s not likely to happen in moribund institutions such as universities but will come through engagement with people taking real risks in political work.
That’s as accurate an account as I can offer about how I became, and continue becoming, the political person I am. But telling this story always makes me a bit queasy; I have yet to find a way to describe my political development that doesn’t sound self-aggrandizing, as if I am casting myself as an epic hero.
That longstanding discomfort in telling my story is further complicated by new concerns in the past few years. More than ever I’m aware that no matter how high anyone’s consciousness in the United States is raised, there may be very little we can do to reverse the consequences of modern industrial society’s assault on the living world. I don’t mean that there is nothing we can or should do to promote ecological sustainability, but only that the processes set in motion during the industrial era may be beyond the point of no return, that the health of the ecosphere that makes our own lives possible may be compromised beyond recovery.
In contemporary left/progressive organizing, we typically focus on those small victories we achieve in the moment and on a vision for social change that sustains us over the long haul. With no revolution on the horizon, we pursue reforms within existing systems but hold onto radical ideals that inform those activities. We are willing to work without guarantees, bolstered by a faith that, as Martin Luther King, Jr. put it, “the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.”[4] That’s supposed to get us through; even if our movements don’t prevail in our own lifetime, we contribute to a better future.
But what if we are no longer bending toward justice? What if the arc of the moral universe has bent back and the cascading ecological crises will eventually overwhelm our collective moral capacities? Put bluntly: What if homo sapiens are an evolutionary dead-end?
That’s the central problem with my consciousness-raising story. When I was politicized 20 years ago, I made a commitment to facing the truth to the best of my ability, even when that truth is unpleasant and painful. My ideals haven’t changed and my commitment to organizing hasn’t waned, but the weight of the evidence suggests to me that our species is moving into a period of permanent decline during which much of what we have learned will be swamped by rapidly worsening ecological conditions. I think we’re in more trouble than most are willing to acknowledge.
This is not an argument for giving up on or dropping out of radical politics. It’s simply a description of what seems true to me, and I can’t see how our movements can afford to avoid these issues. I’m not sure I’m right about everything, though I am sure this analysis is plausible and should be on our agenda. Yet it’s my experience that most people want to push it out of view.
In trying to make sense of my political consciousness-raising, I try to avoid the temptation to cast myself as an epic hero who overcomes adversity to see the truth. That’s a struggle but is possible when one is part of a vibrant political community in which people hold each other accountable, and for all my fretting in this essay, I think I’ve done a reasonably good job of keeping on track. We can overcome our individual arrogance.
More difficult is facing the possibility that the human species has been cast as a tragic hero. Tragic heroes aren’t characters who have just run into a bit of bad luck but are protagonists brought down by an error in judgment that results from inherent flaws in their character. The arrogance with which we modern humans have treated the living world -- the hubris of the high-energy/high-technology era -- may well turn out to be that tragic flaw. Surrounded by the big majestic buildings and tiny sophisticated electronic gadgets created through human cleverness, it’s easy for us to believe we are smart enough to run a complex world. But cleverness is not wisdom, and the ability to create does not guarantee the ability to control the destruction we have unleashed.
Not every human society has gone down this road, but we live in a world dominated by those who not only exhibit that arrogance but embrace it, refusing to accept the reality of decline. That means our individual awakenings may be taking place within a much larger dying. To face that is to live in a profound state of grief. To stay true to a radical political consciousness is to face that grief.
[1]Andrea Dworkin, Letters from a War Zone: Writings 1976-1987 (London: Secker & Warburg, 1988/Chicago: Lawrence Hill Books 1993), pp. 170-171.
[2]Ibid., pp. 169-170.
[3]Robert Jensen, Getting Off: Pornography and the End of Masculinity (Boston: South End Press, 2007), p. 9.
[4] “Where Do We Go From Here?” (annual report to the Southern Christian Leadership Conference), August 16, 1967. http://www.stanford.edu/group/King/publications/speeches/Where_do_we_go_from_here.html
Comments
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129 Comments so far
Show Allwad: i agree with you
not to be insensitive - this is the cardinal sin of the pampered class - or crass or to even take away from the author's process but it doesn't sound very important to me
no doubt it is to the author but in the big picture - ay maybe not so much
the author sounds like a stamped member of the rockefeller education system which teaches high self-esteem above all else
high self-esteem is the one common characteristic of serial killers and psychopaths and this is the mindset which teaches that no matter what you are - you are important - to whom they don't say - but that is a given
you don't have to work at it - esteem of your peers is a given in this system - which crushes boys and anything male and teaches folks how to "get along" with others
so this mind set makes big achievements out of the author's choices - when in fact they are inconsequential to anyone but him
the reality is - despite his process - we are becoming serf debts with no opportunity to realize the self made man/woman scenario of the amerikan fable
as an inner city social worker i see rapist, murderers and psychopaths all the time who have unbelievably high self-esteem, it facilitates their fantasy world
it fuels their self-importance
so i am glad this guy is a feminist and i'm glad that he figured out the oligarchs are illegitmate - but these are not major break throughs by any measure
he keeps referring to himself as having "unearned privelege" and i wouldn't know about that - i have been working class all my life and i am proud to say so
lastly, the author feels trapped - whoa bro - you are not trapped by the oligarchs and their system you are trapped by unearned self-esteem
they got pills for that
I do agree that our rulers are aware of the decline and much of what we see in today's world is their attempt to hold on to their power. But my experiences have not led me to believe that enlightened but cynical common people are the majority. Yes, "lots of common people... know exactly what's going on..." but the majority still remain ignorant and/or naive. I fail to see the benefit of insisting otherwise.
http://kiely-flashpoint.blogspot.com/
"…but they know for sure that something is haywire…"
Ya, I'll give you that one. Having the feeling that something isn't right but not being able to put your finger on it allows the multitude of propaganda machines to convince those people that the cause is the solution. You end up with tea-party movements, the working class voting for pro-corporate trickle down economic politicians and all sorts of other nonsense.
I agree many people have a feeling something is haywire but too many still lack the critical thinking skills to clearly identify what is causing it. The mind numbing fog of: media, television, celebrity and sports-hero worship, and constant trumpeting of the values of greed and individualism that we are all exposed to certainly doesn't help.
http://kiely-flashpoint.blogspot.com/
Joe Bageant refers to this "fog" as the national hologram. Check out his perceptive essays on his website at www.joebageant.com
joe's a great guy
joe's a great guy
Tartuffe.
There is a lot of nihilistic/leftist rhetoric on this website, both in the articles and in the commentary. Dr. Jensen, your article is one of the first that is not trapped in that self-regarding ideological bubble. Congratulations!
you recognize Mr. Jensen's language, eh?
i have a hunch that Mr. jensen didn't seek recognition and praise from your kind, though.
Jensen writes:
"All of those inquiries led me to the same conclusion: We live in a world structured by illegitimate hierarchies and based on a domination/subordination dynamic."
There's no one that comes to this site who consistently defends "a world structured by illegitimate hierarchies and based on a domination/subordination dynamic" more strenuously than you do. And if anyone's a nihilist here, it's Horace. The same way Nazi and fascist ideology is nihilistic, the ideology you convey in all your needling posts is ultimately nihilistic and utterly self-regarding. Except of course from your narcissistic perspective you're trying to protect and save the greed-worshipping owning/elite class from the democratic aspirations of the rest of us. You are awash in classism, and Jensen's efforts are toward economic democracy and social justice--the polar opposite of what you represent.
with all due respect, which is not small, to Mr. Jensen and his hard work, and despite complete faith in his sincerity,
i have to point out the still-existing-limits of Mr. Jensen's consciousness.
- if your ideals don't belong to the conventional wisdom, then there's nothing you can honestly achieve within the conventional institutions that is worth achieving. revolution is no sum of small reforms. baby-step piecemeal reforms only drain and diffuse revolutionary energy and parade as "alternatives".
- if you haven't been fired yet, it's safe to assume that that's because you are no threat to the status quo. for instance, trade unionism is no revolutionary idea. if you start offering truly revolutionary classes, you will become unemployable in a heartbeat.
a side note about dworkin and pornography: yes, as part and parcel of the capitalist domination/subjugation structure, pornography has no place in a just and peaceful alternative world the left envisions. accordingly, it's not an exclusively male problem but an individualist-capitalist problem. capitalism rewards "masculine" qualities in the female as well as in the male.
Yep, good points curiousteve.
Remember that Pappy Bush is the oligarch that made that infamous comment about the American way of life being non-negotiable. He made that arrogant statement at the Rio Earth Summit in 1992 like the ruling class bastard that he was. What he was saying is that a country with less than 5% of the Earth's human population had the right to consume it's brains out regardless of the consequences to others and would defend that right by any means necessary.
Is that the same guy our prez just awarded the Medal of Freedom?
How do you define "porrnography"? Is all erotic imagery or literature pornographic? Would you consider non-exploitative erotic sites like "ifeelmyself" or "abbywinters" (google them and view them before you respond to my post), which are popular among lesbian/bi women as well as straight men, pornographic? How about a site that just shows the faces of women and men having orgasms (forgot its name). Then, there is also the great wealth of non exploitative, erotic literature.
Sorry, but I'm a leftist and a socialist, and any future I envision would be libertarian (in the non-USAn sense of course) and such a socialist libetarian society would have erotica in it. Puritanicalism has no place in the left.
“If you start offering truly revolutionary classes, you will become unemployable in a heartbeat.”
That’s true, curiousteve. Do you mean that you would have teachers with revolutionary ideas spout them off, get fired, and . . . then what?
The academic community is largely a bunch of conformists who put too much stock in the power of their degrees. They specialize in tiny points, and most stop looking at the larger picture somewhere in the midst of their doctorates, as they are doing their best to genuflect to their advisor’s desires.
There is a middle way between touting what the students will see as crazy extremist views and buckling down to the hegemony. Some teachers take this middle route, asking pointed questions and hoping that some of their students will start smelling a rat, and start looking into the stink. In the long run, it’s better than getting fired and letting the job go to those who will never put out the alert.
It works often enough that I’ll stick to it.
Your second paragraph pretty much sums up why I got out of academe in the first place. Fortunately, I didn't have too much time invested in that tight little world, and other posssibilities were open to me. Another thing that propelled me out the door, was that I realized that a lot of the up-and-comers in my field weren't really competent in the nuts and bolts of their speciality-meaning that in the Comp Lit dept. at NYU in the sixties, there were grad students who weren't very good in the languages those literatures were written in.That was a surprise. What they were good at was shmoozing the right professors to ease their way up the greasy academic pole. And Comparative Literature was a new and experimental discipline at the time. Anyway-all a long time ago, and I'm sure things have improved a lot since then, right?
Alot of you have missed the point. Human thinking is the problem, not the solution. I've thought that being a human has been over-rated for quite sometime. Collectivly, homo sapiens have always acted as children, naively thinking that nobodaddy would save us. But guess what? All evidence indicates that the planet will not much longer tolerate the cancer of a species that is at the same, rapacious and blind.
The Druids never went away. They just went underground.
"Human thinking is the problem, not the solution."
I disagree. Ego is the problem. It prevents us from considering the consequences of our actions, our desires. It is the "hero" syndrome, Mr. Jensen so beautifully articulates.
What if evolution always lead to the extinction of the life it raised on any particular planet? Its mechanism that an individual strives to reproduce itself in as large as numbers as possible might lead to castastrophe for the overall ecosystem. Perhaps, all the consciousness was never intended to be permanent--- all the great music, poetry, art, and altruistic social movements only meant for a universal moment. In any case, I'd like to thank Robert Jensen as one of the writers who influenced me to raise my own consciousness, and I've got a lot more work to do in this aspect of my life.
Larry the 'gator in Pearls before Swine say : "Beer your only friend". He economical with words.
I just wish to point out that there is a profound flaw in the numbers of the Drake equation. The equation fails to include a factor for our moon, that is, of rocky worlds in habitable zones of their stars, how many possess a moon of 1% mass? Without such a feature, oceans would periodically leap from their beds and sweep over the land masses, eliminating the development of long term evolution on land, rendering the remainder of the terms irrelevant. While the physics would say that such an arrangement is impossible, our own moon suggests otherwise, and so I would put the odds of such an occurrence as one in ten to the sixty-fifth power -- more than sufficient to make us the only tool-using sapients in ten thousand universes such as our own. Either our singularity is far more extreme that humans would wish to contemplate, or we are engineered by an alien species who do not wish to be identified and are probably deeply chagrined at watching their efforts run amok. My fiction of this account is at:
http://home.roadrunner.com/~markwrede/Fiction/TARAKAYANA.pdf
There is some very deep flaws in your proposition! How is the moon preventing ocesns from "leaping out of their bed and sweep over land masses"? You are pulling our legs, right?
The primary reason SETI hasn't found anyone yet is simply that we (and Drake) are assuming that this thing we call "technology" (specifically the desire and means to build radio transmitters), is some kind of "natural progression" of the evolution of complex life. It is not! It is merely just one of 10^(some big number) of possible useful survival adaptations that a complex species on a planet could acquire - like say, animals with hoofs and antlers. If we traveled to a million habitable worlds, would we expect to find a life form that looked like a white-tailed deer? Than why do we expect to beings who would do this peculiar thing called "radio technology". Sure ther may be one or two such species at any given time in a galaxy, but that is far, far too few for us ever to hope finding them.
This effect upon the oceans is an inevitable byproduct of the effect of the moon upon Earth's "wobble" (precession) which would be much greater without the moon. The effect would inevitably bring the oceans rushing over the land masses periodically, every few million years, ending the prospect for long term evolution on land. On Earth the land masses have congealed, then broken apart, then congealed, then broken apart, but the dry land areas have remained on the whole persistently above sea level for the last billion years. Creationists have deployed variations on this argument for "god," but if the "intelligent design" theory is adopted, there remains the hurdle that alien engineers are far more likely than a god, and if "chance evolution" involving the anthropic theory is is invoked despite the overwhelmingly contrary odds, that explanation is still far more likely than a god.
Once you get used to the idea that we are not even pimples on the cosmic butt, everything falls into place.
Quotes from William Faulkner: "...the moral and spiritual waif shreiking his feeble I-am-I into the desert of chance and disaster" (from Pylon, 1935)
And from Soldier's Pay: "Circumstance works in mysterious ways, Joe".
The Heart of Whiteness is in Mill Valley.
don't be so hard on yourself - I think in the end it will all be ok.
Especially since in the end we'll all be dead.
wow, did the 4th grader also have insight to point out how rude your commentary is about other people's ideas - glad you feel so superior, that must be reassuring.....
I did leave a very long personal reply and changed it to this - which was a summary of my first long winded reply. And in the end - to the reply above this - yes, we all die. And the earth does, too.... at some point in it's own cycle. I just tend to believe we can't predict how and when it will happen for anyone outside of ourselves, including humanity as a whole... but we can certainly self reflect and work on ourselves and creating a better world while we are here. My suggestion, readbetweenthe_lines would be to work on yourself before you spend all of your energy trying to work someone like me over. Best to you despite your rudeness.
Take comfort.
When confronted with derision and ridicule,
read the Desiderata...
and jump off the world for a while.
God Bless.
Perhaps, as you seem to think,your little friend was fabricating a comforting alternative to a dire topic. Or perhaps he was remembering a prior experience.
I have encountered more than one instance of compelling evidence that suggests the latter.
"And therefore as a stranger give it welcome.
There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
Than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
IT is bleak, but that's okay. Nice car to drive, after the War.
from the article:
~ I am trapped, yet I am trapped in a system that makes my life relatively easy. ~
trapped? yes...
how? by those that use violence to steal, hoard and resell this planet's resources, primarily land...
how to get untrapped, and cease the industrial havoc?
take back the land, and turn off the machines...
again, from the article:
~ That longstanding discomfort in telling my story is further complicated by new concerns in the past few years. More than ever I’m aware that no matter how high anyone’s consciousness in the United States is raised, there may be very little we can do to reverse the consequences of modern industrial society’s assault on the living world. ~
this recent change is bigger than he admits...personal, human issues, including the pornography and prostitution industries, will need to be prioritized against the backdrop of damage to the living world...
many subjects we consider important now will soon be seen to be trivial in light of ecological realities...
sacrifice isn't really sacrifice if only done when no other options exist...
writing about, well, I'm not sure what, privilege? one's elevated consciousness? isn't really effective if you won't tackle, for example, the concept of private property...or violence...
by that point, it is just following the easiest course...
finally:
~ That means our individual awakenings may be taking place within a much larger dying. To face that is to live in a profound state of grief. To stay true to a radical political consciousness is to face that grief. ~
what radical political consciousness, precisely? anti-porn? anti-capitalism? anti-democracy? anti-industry? anti-banking? anti-government? what?
perhaps we could discuss, rather than what we're against, what we're for?
is unwillingness to sacrifice equal to radical political consciousness?
is it equal to victimhood? fortitude? nonviolence?
is unwillingness to confront property ownership a form of radical political consciousness? is it intelligent? moral?
Some grow in a hurry, some grow slow; I see no advantage to either. The journey is life to the same goal of awareness. for me, that is what he wrote; "I'm growing" and whether he said it "correctly" is moot to me because that is the way I took it. Tony
You'll all remember how radical feminism was demonized in the late 20th century...along with Marxism. Demonization is a very powerful force in society. It is a great challenge for all of us to see thru it and I admire all efforts to that end.
My wife, who's been a serious feminist for a long time once told me "You're wasting your time reading Dworkin. She's a nut job with a really narrow agenda." Since I had a lot of other stuff to read at the time, I took her at her word. This was sometime around 1970. Did I miss anything?
With respect Robert - prostitution is a "sexual-exploitation industry" that cuts two ways.
But it are the customers who are being willingly exploited when it is legal.
When it is forced underground, then the pimps do the exploiting...
'I think we’re in more trouble than most are willing to acknowledge.'
Those who are willing, however, need to adjust accordingly and prepare to survive.
I was going to expound, but you said these things very well...
I will simply 'second' you...
Isn't resistance itself a form of negative attraction the gives even more 'power' to that which is being resisted? It seems ironic to me that people will fight so hard for 'external' freedom, yet be willing prisoners psychologically. A very curious state of affairs, indeed.
It is unnecessary to personalize everything in such a way, read. I wasn't talking about physical self-defense. However, it seems all to easy to become a prisoner of one's own bitterness. To see psychological imprisonment is to see our commonality with the suffering of others, regardless of race.
"what it sounds like... sounds like you're trying to have your cake and grieve about it, too..."
Goo comment! I got a good chuckle about it!
But since Jensen is probably not too welcome in the stuffy faculty club at UT Austin, the image that came to my mind was liberal bourgies on Jensen's patio, sipping chardonnay and organic raw goat-brie, on organic whole grain crackers.
Dear Robert,
I agree with just about everything you say but for the sake of brevity, I'll address the issue of homo sapiens as a potential dead end.
Consider that we did okay until we obtained the sorcerer's apprentice force multiplier of the industrial revolution. Any immature animal in nature is always easy prey. In our case, we are an immature species becoming prey to environmental cause and effect. The illusion that one has the world by the short hairs is the mark of an immature human.
That said, consciousness of what horrors we have visited on the other earthlings, as well as on each other, is now erupting. Continue doing what you can. That is all any of us can do. We must mature as a species or die. We might die anyway if the movers and shakers don't mature in time. I don't think it's too late as long as people like you exist.
And for those who think everything is just hunky dory, you need to take a good hard look at the senseless torture (for "profit") of animals we engage in on a daily basis. For that alone, we deserve the death penalty.
http://topdocumentaryfilms.com/earthlings/
We must learn to respect all life forms, as well as ourselves, or perish. Science and nutrition without animal torture isn't just possible, it is non negotiable for a mature species. A mature species is life centered. An immature species is death centered.
I seriously doubt whether homo sapiens is at an evolutionary dead-end. Capitalism, Imperialism and American deception may be coming to a dead-end, but to believe the entire species is going to fail will leave so many people so hopeless that we won't be able to struggle against the tyrannies that bring so much suffering to so many. We're a resilient species, we've been around for a million years and each individual must take it upon themselves to evolve, to evolve, to evolve.
Jerry Gerber
http://www.jerrygerber.com
I am reminded of Vonnegut's brilliant future-world story where a simple virus that does no harm other than prevent women from getting pregnant wipes out all of homo sapiens rather painlessly over a few centuries, except for a small group stranded on the galapagos. The actual story takes place some 2 million years in the future. What I took from the story is that mankind is its own worst enemy, our giant brains giving us better and better ways of killing each other with very little increase in "humanitarianism" to counter.
I too don't think we're on the brink of extinction, but what we'll look like in 2 million years, that's a whole 'nother question. My hat's off to Vonnegut.
It ain't about you Jensen. Who cares? Just "BE" man, and stop using the word I.
I agree. This piece, like some other writings of Jensen I've read is overly self-absorbed and narcissistic.
The "I" is the beginning and end of consciousness. But you can only trust your individual perceptions up to a point, and how do you know when that point is reached? The world is too big and too complex for any individual, no matter how brilliant, to comprehend. Forget other life forms in other galaxies.So you make your individual choices, and proceed, knowing that a lot of the time, you're just going to fuck up. Nevertheless,I approach life with a certain amount of joy, while at the same time being aware of the sadness at the core of all human life.Absurdism 101.
"Finally, I began thinking more about how human domination of the living world is destroying the ecosphere’s capacity to sustain life as we know it."
I have doubts as to whether humans are meant to behave like animals in the natural world, greedy, fearful, reactionary, cruel, violent, deceitful, destructive, etc., like our conservative brothers and sisters, or in a uniquely different liberal humanist way.
The animal way has long proved useful in preventing overpopulation, resource depletion, pollution, and producing species diversity in adaptive natural selection and in keeping ecosystems in balance. But we don't have much experience in achieving the same goals humanely through birth control, selection by sports without bloody wars and by intellectual superiority.
All of which leads me to consider whether conservatives are the animal within that a natural world indifferent to suffering uses to maintain her balance. Granted that the dominant conservative human animal is achieving the opposite. But that could be a temporary adjustment hindered by liberal humanists opposed to killing each other off. Still, how could one adapt to indiscriminate modern weapons that defeat natural selection and an oligarchy that owns everyone and everything?
Maybe liberal humanists are a more highly evolved sub-species whose effect on the natural world is promising but remains to be determined. By electing to take on the elimination of human suffering while living in harmony with nature, liberals have taken on a task long performed by nature in her own cruel way.