Friday, December 4, 2015

Narcissism forever

I read a newspaper story last week about how a financial action group of investigators set up back in 1989 by the economically powerful G20 countries, has been complaining recently that the world’s 194 governments have largely failed to use any of the legal instruments that most of them possess to crack down not only on tax evasion but also on the financing of terrorism. Only a handful of governments have ever condemned any financiers caught in the act of raising money for terrorist groups, and the few cases acted upon only involved relatively small amounts of money. Apparently in the wake of the recent Paris massacres, the French finance minister, Michel Sapin, thinks that it is high time that every country made a real effort to prevent the world’s leading financial criminals from supporting their prodigies billion-dollar terror operations.

As most people realize, since 9-11(2001) in the USA, by far the most important sources of non-governmental terrorism in the world have been the ultra-conservative Islamic organizations, Al-Qaeda, the Islamic State and their various subsidiaries. In theory, a large coalition of armed forces are supposed to be trying to eliminate those terrorist entities, a coalition that currently includes not only the USA and France, but also Russia, Britain, Germany, most of the Arab countries and many other places. That coalition’s attempts to eliminate the terrorists have so far been mainly military, focusing on poorly targeted bombing and drone strikes from afar (state terrorism), as well as arming and training various, presumably anti-terrorist, local militias. None of those efforts have succeeded in curtailing private Islamic terrorism (quite the contrary), not only in Muslim-majority countries but also in the so-called “crusader” (Christian-majority) countries.

So why have the coalition states not tried to attack terrorist financing as well? The answer to that question does not seem to have anything to do with the usual official bleating about how difficult it is to track terrorist communications. A much more likely reply is to point to the evident lack of resolve on the part of the coalition governments themselves. Many of the Muslim-majority nations, such as Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, have regularly been condemned in the world media for their two-faced attitudes toward Islamic terrorism. The guilty countries officially fight against the terrorist groups but secretly support them, either directly by investing millions of dollars of seed money, or indirectly by refusing to crack down on the trafficking of fighters, slaves, weapons, illegal drugs, illicit petroleum, looted antiquities and the various other international sources of terrorist income.

But the Muslim-majority members of the coalition are not the only ones lacking resolve in the anti-terrorism campaign. Major partners in the coalition whose populations are not mostly Muslim (such as the USA, Britain, France and Russia) also seem terribly reluctant to go all out in fighting terrorism. They are not only refusing to commit large numbers of their own soldiers outside their own borders, but also refusing to openly condemn their two-faced allies, and refusing to make a serious commitment to eliminating international terrorist financing.

By itself, this kind of behavior is hardly surprising, given the fact that for the past hundred years or so, the Western empires have, at various different times and in various different countries in the Middle East, allied themselves temporarily with nationalist organizations like the Baath movement in Syria and in Iraq against the communists, or allied themselves with the Islamist movements, also temporarily, to defeat the nationalists and the communists. Up until 1956, they even played Zionist nationalism off against Arab nationalism. Being two-faced, or even three or four-faced in not anything really new for the Western countries, any more than it has been for the USSR and Russia.

As has been pointed out by dozens of political commentators all over the world, the post-1979 radicalization of modern capitalism, aka the return of laissez-faire, aka neoliberalism, has also helped pave the way for the formation, or the return of, such other forms of extreme radicalization as Islamic terrorism. Starting in 1979, when Margaret Thatcher was first elected to power in Great Britain, most capitalist countries began severely reducing state intervention in economic or social development, outsourcing national industrial strength and substituting globalized, speculative “investment” in its place. Leading politicians in the West made a big show of denouncing the rise of Eastern forms of fascism and imperialism, while simultaneously increasing the dependence of their own imperial economies on the very countries they were so strenuously denouncing! Some of those Western countries, including Canada, even decided to cut way back on military expenditures, hypocritically without cutting back at all on belligerent rhetoric.

The most intriguing case of such two-faced behavior was the USA’s constant refusal to do anything at all about “allies” like Saudi Arabia, with its trillion-dollar expenditures (especially since the Yom Kippur War of 1973) on promoting ultra-Islamic Wahhabism all over the world. The USA also chose to ignore the involvement of hundreds of Saudi citizens, and citizens of many other two-faced countries, in some of the most important terrorist attacks, starting with 9-11. Even nowadays, with the USA and Saudi Arabia actively engaged in an economic world war over the control of petroleum supplies, no changes to their official relationship are currently being planned by any of the declared candidates in the current presidential election race.

But the influence of laissez-faire neoliberalism has recently become much more extensive than it was initially. Ever since the 2007-2009 world financial crisis, the world’s leading financiers, and their political backers, seem increasingly reluctant to do anything at all about world-wide flows of capital, legal or illegal, lest anything they do touch off a new round of financial collapse. They do not want to do anything real or serious about international terrorist financing for the same reason that they do not want to do anything real or serious about international tax evasion, shadow banking or totally unproductive financial speculation. They fear that any attempt whatsoever at getting serious about any large flows of capital anywhere, for whatever reason, would touch off an international panic among the world’s increasingly skittish, big-time investors.

Unfortunately, the world’s most important capitalists seem to be suffering from an extreme form of individualist narcissism that makes each one of them deathly afraid of what each other one might do to his (or her) power-base, or accumulated fortune. In other words, they have lost any trust, or confidence, whatsoever in their fellow conspirators, each individual trader thinking that each other trader has become capable of even more large-scale cheating and backstabbing than they already practiced in the past. It is like imagining the projection into the present of the ultra Machiavellian attitudes already described by James Clavell, in his novel “Noble House”, about the 1960s machinations of the directors of fictitious firms, based on the operations of real trading companies like Jardine Matheson and the Hong Kong-Shanghai Banking Corporation.

Now more than ever, the whole world seems to be divided up into competing gangs like those ones, half big business, half big politics, their simultaneously public and private empires in perpetual Hobbesian warfare of each against all, for maximum power and profit, completely ignoring nominal differences of nation, religion or ideology among all the leading players. All the “democratic” capitalists, the “proletarian” communists, the “independent” terrorists, the Islamists and the crusaders, are ideologically joined together hand in hand, ignoring the real needs of ordinary peons (clay pigeons) everywhere.

Instead, they are substituting ultra cynical manipulation of masses of people into Us and Them categories that are systematically ignored by all the real players, who continue trying to outmaneuver each other in pop-cult games that are not limited by any reference to any real countries, religions, ideologies or cultures. Each gang of players simply uses its own particular religious, cultural, and/or patriotic slogans to keep the ignorant masses in line, without actually believing in any of its own ridiculous propaganda.

This, however, has not prevented a few multicultural sycophants in the West from continuing to flog a dead horse, to the effect that ancient Islam not only inspires the terrorists but also the anti-imperialists in the Arab spring movement. In an article updated and republished recently in a Montreal newspaper (“Le Devoir”), a prolific author and editor from a Jesuit periodical (“Relations”), while pretending to attack the racist prophecy of Samuel Huntingdon (1993) about the supposedly ongoing clash between Christian and Islamic civilizations, managed to do exactly the opposite!

Emiliano Arpin-Simonetti’s way of “fighting against” cultural shock was to deny Muslims any access to “Western-imposed” universalism (either liberal or socialist), and to insist that they had to go through Islam to find the mystical resources necessary to solve their culturally exclusive problems. This seems to be an application of Catholic liberation theology (with situationist and/or gnostic tendencies thrown in) to “help” progressive-minded people from formerly colonized cultures, every one of them being induced to go way back to the primeval sources of their local religions, before being allowed to move on to more modern ways of thinking. Or is this just a back-handed way of getting people in the West to go back to their mystical Christian origins as well, and to convince everybody in the world to leave aside such modern secular slogans as liberty, equality and fraternity, in favor of a massive return to belief in magic?

The same ultra-cynical attitudes also seem to apply to the political and economic refugee crisis, which has seen millions of people simultaneously trying to get out of several failed states in western Asia and northern Africa, and dozens of other countries (in the Middle East as well as in the West) either refusing to take any of them in, or trying to take in as few of them as possible. The worst case of all seems to be in the Republican half of the USA, with leading politicians from that party not only wanting to keep any more Old World refugees out, but also wanting to simultaneously deport millions of illegal citizens of Latin American origin. In Canada, the new Liberal government seems open to receiving a few thousand more Old World immigrants, but only if they can be shown not to have any terrorist tendencies. No one in Canada has so far bothered to point out to the government what everyone in Europe already knows, that it only takes a few months of radicalization to transform a mentally unstable person into a suicide bomber, no matter in which country that person starts out.

But refusing to fight terrorism or racism for real, or refusing to fight tax evasion for real, and imposing austerity on all the little people instead, are not the only manifestations of the extreme narcissism that seems to have infected so many people, whether VIPs or their intellectual sycophants. All over the world, pollution and climate change are also being treated in the same two-faced manner as terrorism and the refugee crisis, with all the major players (examples like Volkswagen and India come to mind) blaming every ecological crime on someone else, or claiming to be doing something constructive while actually doing nothing of the sort.

Trying to defend democracy, such as it is, by fighting against corruption, is another case in point, in which ultra-radical and ultra-cynical attitudes are again preventing people from moving forward. In Quebec for example, the Charbonneau commission on corruption in the construction industry finally handed down its report, making all kinds of neat suggestions while simultaneously refusing to attribute any blame to the real ringleaders, such as former premier Jean Charest. Every country, region and city in the entire world seems to be going through very similar corruption crises at the present time, with very similar results. In every case, commentaries in the media about what is going on serve to reinforce the same observation made earlier, that none of the real players genuinely want to doing anything real about this problem either. Especially since in this case, as in so many other cases, they created the problem in the first place, and really do identify strongly with their own corrupt selves.

Neoliberal thinking on this subject exhibits the same libertarian or nihilist attitude as with every other major crisis, by downplaying what happened and emphasizing how disruptive it would be to society if anyone ever decided to actually do anything about any of these situations. Another sycophantic commentator in another Montreal newspaper went so far as to create an artificial boundary between corruption and cronyism, pretending that Quebec has suffered from very little real corruption, which could be easily rectified, and a great deal of cronyism, which is okay because according to him it has never been a real problem after all.

Other commentators followed this up by saying that the construction scandal showed that Quebec suffers from too much democracy, rather than not enough, because the commission recommended that elected politicians be separated from public construction projects as much as possible, since they are so easily corrupted, and that provincial and municipal construction projects be handled exclusively by much less corruptible, “independent” experts. The incredible idiocy of that observation did not seem to have occurred to any of the people who brought it forward, since none of them seems to have realized that all the so-called independent experts were actually hired by the private contractors who participated in the entire sting operation from the beginning.

The same method of defending democracy from corruption also occurred recently to defenders of Donald Trump in the USA, who said that their man avoided corruption altogether by using his own millions to pay for his presidential campaign! But the USA is certainly not the only country in the world where this kind of beleaguered logic is being tried out these days. For example, the good people in Quebec’s main opposition party, the Parti Québécois, also recently voted to take out the middleman between politics and business in their organization by electing their own neoliberal millionaire, Pierre Karl Péladeau, as their current chief. Péladeau, however, has been trying to transform himself into a social democrat, at least in public, ever since his internal election, which is certainly not true of Donald Trump. Nevertheless, the Quebec population in the next provincial election will still have to choose between premier Philippe Couillard’s 100% austerity-minded Liberal Party and the PQ’s lesser brand of libertarianism, since none of the smaller opposition parties seems capable of getting elected. Every other country in the world seems stuck in the same kind of political vise.


Other major problems being treated with the same nonchalant attitude include the enormous recent increase in the income gap between the social classes, all over the world, accompanied by a ridiculous claim that the social classes themselves have all disappeared. Not to mention the rip tide against women’s liberation, stemming from the largely anti-female effects of both austerity and religious atavism. To sum it all up, most of the world’s countries, in every major civilization, seem to be getting less and less democratic, more and more socially divided, and more and more corrupt, as time goes on. Unfortunately, our world is combining massive declines in real democracy, and in real ecology, with massive increases in real terrorism, real tax evasion, real austerity and real corruption. None of these manifestations of VIP narcissism, on every continent, seem to augur well for humanity’s immediate future, not to mention its long-term survival.

Thursday, November 5, 2015

Eastern fascism is as bad as Western fascism

For some strange reason, holier-than-thou partisans of political correctness in the West do not get nearly as upset about Eastern fascism and neofascism as they do about Western fascism and neofascism. The most obvious example of this curious attitude is the tendency among self-proclaimed, broad-minded multiculturalists in the West to denounce Islamophobia much more often, and with much greater virulence, than they ever dare to denounce Islamic terrorism. For them, Western neofascist populism is what they call a “racist” reaction to Islamic violence, even though Islam is a universal religion open to all the world’s “races”. The multiculturalists nevertheless consider Western populism to be much more dangerous than Islamic terrorism itself because it incorrectly assumes that all Muslims are potential terrorists.

The fact that the ultra-Islamic terrorists themselves have considerable popular support throughout the world-wide community of Muslims, in some countries much more than in others, does not seem to faze them at all. Nor does the fact that the ultra-reactionary Islamic movements supporting those terrorists also believe that all Westerners are inherently anti-Muslim. Nevertheless, the multicultural sycophants, posing as professional anti-racists, refuse to simultaneously denounce all the other kinds of racial or cultural discrimination that exist in this world. Nor will they admit that every kind of ultra-conservative amalgam, no matter of which cultural origin, is just as bad as every other kind. In so doing, they are being just as “racist” as any of the populists that they pretend to detest so much.

Ultra-orthodox factions inside every religion (not only Judaism, Christianity and Islam, but also Hinduism, Sikhism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Shintoism, animism, etc.) believe that everyone who does not think exactly the same way as they do are necessarily out to get them. Similar fanatics in all the secular ideologies (neoliberalism, ultra-conservative nationalism, totalitarian socialism, etc.), are also just as paranoiac about every rival system of belief, religious or secular.

Some of those ultra-believers even manage to combine some particular form of religious fanaticism, such as fundamentalist Christianity, with some other particular form of secular fanaticism, such as ultra-conservative nationalism (aka imperialism), and develop complicated phobias against anyone not afflicted with both of those thought diseases at the same time. They believe in both of them so much that they do not feel it is possible that any decent human being could possibly not think the same way. The fact that those two systems of belief are based on totally opposite and contradictory principles (a universal religion versus a geographically-limited empire) does not even occur to them. As one such true believer in both those ultra ideologies, former US president George W. Bush, expressed it not so long ago, “You are either for us or against us”.

Based mainly in Western countries, politically correct intellectuals of the ultra-liberal persuasion are constantly denouncing powerful Western leaders like George Bush as fascists, imperialists and state-terrorists. But because those same intellectuals are trying their very best to accommodate every kind of non-Western immigrant and/or First Nations minority possible, they strongly object to the use of words like “fascism” or “imperialism” in any non-Western (non-European-origin) context. They are a lot like those anal-retentive historical purists who claim that only Italian fascism from the first half of the twentieth century should be considered real fascism, and even exclude German nazism and Japanese militarism during the same period, or Italian neofascism nowadays, from their ultra-discreet definition of that concept.

Unfortunately for the multicultural purists, however, most people using the English language nowadays have adopted a much larger definition of such words. Judging from all the mainstream media outlets that I have been consulting over the past several years, the word “fascism” now refers to any ultra-conservative form of ideological atavism that glorifies any one of a number of imaginary, “golden-age” tribal, ancient or medieval approaches to contemporary problems. Even if it does not fully manifest every specific characteristic of Benito Mussolini’s twentieth-century political formation.

So why do multiculturalists like Canadian philosopher Charles Taylor look at the world according to this binary system of greater Western evil versus lesser Eastern evil? One possible explanation comes from the classical liberal definition of good government as being based on “keeping the peace”, in the sense of seeing police officers as peace officers and judges in the liberal system of justice as “justices of the peace”. This idea leads them to believe that people who have often been mistreated by “our side” in the past, such as native peoples and immigrants from non-Christian countries, need to be over-compensated for that poor treatment, not so much with money as with a “turn the other cheek” kind of mentality.

Those goody-goody liberals want so much to be seen as kind, benevolent and ultra-inclusive friends and neighbors to every “non-Western” person they can find, that they are willing to practically turn themselves inside-out to accommodate everyone not belonging to their own cultural group of evil sinners. This ridiculous way of thinking has the same kind of antisocial origins as the tendency among many like-minded Western jurists to identify with aggressors (criminals), rather than with victims of crime, giving the bad guys dozens of advantages in court over their much less interesting victims, just in order to prove those jurists own pretentious magnanimity.

Keeping the peace, however, like every other liberal principle, is not really what it initially seems to be. In our class-based global village called human society, hundreds of millions of under-privileged people make only one dollar per day while a few thousand over-privileged people make millions of dollars per day. In such a world, keeping the peace really means using the justice system to make sure that those near the bottom of the heap do not get so upset at their inferior status that they start rioting in the streets, or making “unrealistic” demands on their more prosperous betters. Paternalist liberal politicians try to show everyone that we all can live together peacefully in spite of our income differences, or our cultural differences, and let their equally benevolent friends in big business get on with the job of “creating wealth for everyone”. So, you under-privileged ones, please don’t rock the boat and get so angry all the time. We are doing our best, after all, to make sure that there is room for everyone under the sun.

Another way of explaining this peculiar kind of politically-correct liberalism comes from exceptionally perspicacious analysts like French author Sophie Bessis, who wrote a book recently called “La double impasse: l’universel à l’épreuve des fondamentalismes religieux et marchand” (“The double impasse: universal values challenged by religious and market fundamentalisms”). Unfortunately, like many other people, I have not been able to read most of her book because there seems to be a considerable delay in getting it into Quebec bookstores. So in the following paragraphs, I have had to rely on a long book review written by journalist Pierre Dubuc that appeared in “L’Aut’Journal”, a pro-union and pro-independence newspaper published here in Montreal.

As reported by Dubuc, Bessis began her analysis of Eastern varieties of religious and secular fundamentalism with the national liberation movements against Western colonialism during the 1960s and 1970s. In those days, a large number of former Muslim colonies, such as Algeria, based their definitions of their emerging nationalities on the Muslim religion. In such places, “the nation” was deemed to exclude any national minorities living in those countries, which is to say all those who did not have the same religious and ethnic origins as the majority group. In Algeria’s case that meant any people residing in that country, no matter for how many generations, who were not, or did not consider themselves to be, 100% Arab Muslims.

According to Bessis, back then the Maoist wing of the world communist movement, in its fight against both Western imperialism and Soviet “revisionism”, adopted an ultra-populist strategy of “support for the masses” (“from the masses, to the masses”) that led them to believe in a socialist form of international globalization. According to them, national liberation in every country could only take place if the people there totally eliminated any ideological influence coming from Western “cultural imperialism”, most emphatically including such concepts as democracy, liberty, fraternity and secularism. Such ideas were necessarily foreign to the various peoples in the colonies because according to the Maoists they were not compatible with the ultra-conservative versions of formerly dominant religions and ideologies, such as Islam, in which the vast majority of ordinary people (the masses) still fervently believed.

Combined with the simultaneous rise of laissez-faire globalization (aka neoliberalism), Christian fundamentalism and liberal multiculturalism in the West, that led many people in left-wing politics to become “altermondialists” instead, favoring an anti-capitalist form of globalization. Even though Maoism itself soon disappeared completely, it left in its wake the belief that every people in the former Third World had to repudiate Western imperialism completely by harking back to the feudal ideologies that they had supported prior to the onslaught of European colonialism. By mixing up several conflicting ideologies in this way, millions of left-wingers in the West became convinced that they had to hold their noses and support Eastern forms of fascism, lest they be accused of supporting Western neocolonialism instead!

Sophie Bessis’s book is largely concentrated on what happened in Muslim-majority countries, particularly during the recent “Arab spring” uprisings. She also demonstrated how the ultra-radical Islamic movements in those countries simultaneously adopted neoliberal ideas of “governance”, to replace the largely interventionist national governments that had existed for a time right after independence. As a result, the Islamic Brotherhood organizations and the even more radical terrorist groups such as the Islamic State, have largely abandoned economic nationalism and social-democracy to concentrate on developing their ultra-reactionary, cultural counter-revolutions. Even formerly “moderate” kinds of Islamic reaction, such as the Erdogan government in Turkey, are gradually becoming just as radical as their terrorist neighbors.

So far as I can tell, the Bessis thesis also readily lends itself to an analysis of many different kinds of Eastern atavism, not just Islamic fundamentalism. In India for example, the recently re-elected Hindu nationalist movement, that sees only Hindus as being true patriots, has also fervently embraced big-business neoliberalism as the focus of its economic policy. In China, the current Communist Party leadership has itself become the world’s most obvious example of an alter-globalization state, combining great Han chauvinism with a large and ever-increasing dose of billionaire domination of government.

The Western countries are also drifting towards less and less democratic brands of government. The Netanyahu regime in Israel is the most obvious example, as are some of the post-Soviet Eastern European states, such as Hungary, that have made it into the European Union in spite of their increasing authoritarianism. Since before the 2008 financial crisis, neoliberal attempts at balancing national and regional budgets at the expense of everyone except the ultra-rich, have enormously undermined European social policy. Needless to say, the current refugee crisis is also making mincemeat out of Europe’s open borders strategy, exacerbated every day by the ongoing atrocities of the Syrian civil war and the only slightly less violent situations in other parts of western Asia as well as in Africa.

North American politics has also degenerated under similar pressures, most notably by the same combination of big-business tax evasion and austerity-driven pauperization as in Europe. In the USA, neofascist elements inside the Republican Party are threatening to completely eliminate that country’s long-standing policy of accepting large numbers of immigrants, making a mockery out of the original definition of a democratic republic as a place where anyone can become a useful citizen. In Canada, the authoritarian nightmare of the former Conservative government has been replaced by the return of the Liberal Party under Trudeau the Younger. But it remains to be seen if he will not simply follow in his father’s footsteps by calling out the army to control dissent, and thereby make things even worse than the Harper Conservatives did.


The entire world therefore seems to be moving closer and closer to a bewildering variety of antediluvian political ideologies that can all be legitimately classified as pro-fascist or neofascist. But confining oneself to denouncing Western forms of fascism, while simultaneously accommodating the Eastern kinds, like the politically-correct multiculturalists do, is not going to prevent reactionary movements from setting up completely anti-democratic, inegalitarian, thought-control regimes all over the world. All that is going to do is to encourage those people to take over even more quickly than they were already planning to do.

Friday, October 9, 2015

Of scabs and niqabs

During the last phase of the current election campaign in Canada, millions of people, most of them not Muslim, are up in arms again about radical Islamic women’s clothing. This was touched off when the ruling Conservative Party, initially declining in the polls, managed to make political hay out of a court case involving the right of one Pakistani immigrant to take the oath of Canadian citizenship while wearing a niqab, a special kind of head-scarf, or hijab, that leaves only the eyes visible. All of a sudden, the niqab issue became important, even though very few people in Canada ever wear that garment, and only two women have ever wanted to become a citizen in one of them.

Immediately thereafter, the normally underdog New Democratic Party, which had made a valiant effort to win a federal election for the first time in history by repudiating socialism and moving to the center of mainstream Canadian politics instead, dropped from first place to third place in the polls (after both the Conservatives and the federal Liberal Party). Although the outcome of the election will not be known until October 19, and there are several issues considered by all to be much more important than that one, there is now a very real possibility that the right to wear, or not to wear, a face covering in a public ceremony will decide who gets to run the next federal government!

Most of those Canadian citizens reacting to the niqab were from Quebec, where the NDP has been the preferred federal party since 2011, replacing the previously dominant Bloc Québécois (a federal emanation of the “separatist” Parti Québécois). Until recently, most Quebecers had given up on the Liberals because of the corruption scandal that tainted them severely during the 1995 referendum campaign for independence. For their part, the Conservatives have not had much of an impact in that province since their enormous loss of influence following the English-Canadian repudiation of the 1992 constitutional compromise, a repudiation that almost resulted in a victory for the “separatists” in the referendum.

The NDP, which has some support all across Canada but not enough to win a federal election without most of Quebec behind it, was supposed to have been the party that brought the francophone Québécois majority back into the Canadian federation for real by “eliminating” the Bloc. Now, however, the Bloc’s opposition to the niqab and their own  reasonableness on other issues have also resulted in their return to significant popular support in Quebec. The federal Liberals, whose point of view on the niqab is quite similar to that of the NDP, have not suffered nearly as much from that in Quebec mostly because they did not have that much to lose in the first place.

On the face of it, this whole federal controversy seems to be quite similar to the one that erupted within Quebec provincial politics back in 2013, when the Parti Québécois government introduced its Charter of Values, then lost the 2014 elections to the Liberal Party of Quebec. Although that charter was hardly the only issue in that election either, the fact that the PQ tried to promote official government neutrality for its personnel by trying to ban the wearing of “conspicuous” religious symbols, especially cover-up clothing, certainly contributed to its defeat. It would be highly ironic if it turns out that the officially laissez-faire Conservative government in Canada, gets to deny power to the formerly social-democratic NDP because of Tory opposition to the wearing of radical Muslim women’s clothing during public ceremonies, while the formerly social-democratic PQ lost power for wanting to uphold very similar ideas! A Liberal return to power in Canada, on that issue, would be even more ironic.

These curious electoral foibles in Canada serve to underline some of the basic facts about the nature of “democratic” elections everywhere. In the first place, as in many other parts of the world, the political differences between the leading parties at both the federal and provincial levels have become much less important, even on the surface of things, than they used to be in the somewhat less uniform past. Issues such as the niqab can only become important when all the major parties seem to have adopted the same neoliberal approach to economic and social questions, and do not have much to fight over except largely symbolic differences. In reality, most governments nowadays have given up trying to have any real control over domestic policy, as many of them tried to do at least a little bit in days gone by. Which means that big time private investors now run pretty much everything important to them (“the bottom line”) from behind the scenes, even more than they did in the past.

Nevertheless, the niqab issue is not totally meaningless, even though only a handful of women in Canada have currently chosen to wear such a radically isolating garment in public. The wearing of cover-up clothing, from the ordinary hijab, which hides only the hair, to the totally isolating burqa, that makes the entire body, even the eyes, invisible to outsiders, is supposed to symbolically convey an ultra-Islamic message of female submission to male domination. It is the most radical interpretation possible of the Koranic admonition favoring modesty in women, which millions of ordinary Muslim women have shown can easily be attained without resorting to such ridiculous excess. Every form of cover-up clothing except the horrendous burqa violates the modesty provision anyway when the person supposedly trying to hide from the world always wears a lot of attractive make-up at the same time.

Interestingly enough, most of the anti-feminist, religious militants who favor male domination over women like them, are not meek, mild-mannered wimps, but are every bit as well-informed, dedicated, organized and seemingly intelligent as are most of the world’s feminist militants. To be sure, these ultra-conservative true believers do not mindlessly run around talking openly about the need for female submission as such, but speak instead of the need for social order, harmony, tradition and the sexual division of labor. In other words, they use the same kind of euphemisms for voluntary slavery that were already used a century ago by the equally well-educated, aristocratic ladies in Western society who also argued strongly against giving equal rights to women.

In any case, ultra-reactionary opposition to women’s liberation is certainly the leading characteristic of fundamentalist fanaticism within every religion in the world, including Islam. To make an intriguing analogy, advocating voluntary slavery looks a lot like the anti-feminist equivalent of the sociopathic libertarian movement, particularly strong in the USA, that supports right-to-work legislation aimed at silencing, and ultimately eliminating, the labor movement once and for all. Trade unionists use the word “scab” to designate people within the working-class who oppose all forms of collective resistance to private capitalism, particularly those determined individualists who identify so strongly with the bosses that they continue to work while their fellow wage-slaves are on strike. To complete the analogy, those female scabs sporting cover-up garments use them as publicly displayed ideological weapons for advocating female submission, with the ultimate goal of silencing the feminist revolution, all over the world, forever.

A large number of well-intentioned people have, however, made the very interesting point that religious clothing is no more a sign of male domination over women than is the often much more popular tendency that many unfortunate women have to under-dress instead of over-dressing. It is certainly true that those women who eschew modesty completely by leaving most of their clothes at home when walking on the street or in a suburban mall, are just as much under the influence of the ideology of male domination as are the ultra-religious women who do just the opposite. These two forms of extreme behavior do indeed have something in common, even though sexist over-dressing most often has a religious motivation (not just within Islam), while sexist under-dressing is usually associated with consumerism. In both cases, however, individual egoism, calling attention to oneself in the most immodest ways possible, is their most important shared characteristic.

Unfortunately, other seemingly well-intentioned people have taken to condemning all criticism of such religious over-dressing as being a form of Islamophobia. The National Assembly in Quebec, for example, recently adopted a unanimous resolution to that effect, rejecting what they consider to be irrational fear of the Muslim religion on the part of the Quebec population, and refusing to simultaneously condemn the ultra-Islamic ideology as well. By adopting this politically correct attitude, the elected representatives of the people at the National Assembly seem to have been aiming at populist xenophobes who apparently believe that all Muslim immigrants in Quebec are potential terrorists, just like the ones who recently assassinated thousands of innocent people all over the world.

It is true that millions of people in the West associate Islam not only with terrorism, but also with such things as honor killings, forced marriages, severely limited female access to education, complicit attitudes toward rape and pedophilia, and every other kind of female oppression possible. These Western xenophobes refuse to realize that millions of ordinary Muslims have also rejected the disgusting excesses of the Islamist ultra-conservatives, and that every other religion in the world also possesses ideologically similar fundamentalist factions.

Nevertheless, condemning Islamophobia without condemning Islamic fundamentalism gives the impression that Quebec politicians are bending over backwards to accommodate even those very numerous radical Muslims in many parts of the world who do indeed support such ultra-reactionary attitudes and policies. While it is obvious to everyone who follows the media that the majority of Muslims living in the West are not religious fanatics, some of them definitely are. If the good people at the Quebec National Assembly and those involved in the Canadian election campaign really wanted to support women’s liberation from religious fundamentalism, they would avoid both over-reacting to the symbolic content of the niqab issue, and also avoid trying to ignore it altogether.

The appropriate attitude would be to recognize that all kinds of religious fundamentalism, including the Islamic kind, are very harmful political ideologies, that cannot be successfully accommodated without destroying human rights, democracy, science, liberty, equality, fraternity, and all the other universal values that millions of people have adopted since they stopped supporting absolutism and totalitarianism. The same admonition also applies to every kind of racist or populist rejection of other people’s right to exist, whether it is rooted in some kind of self-contained religious mythology, or in some kind of politically-based populist xenophobia.

People all over the world also have to free themselves from the ridiculous notion that such values as liberty, equality and fraternity only exist within the Western tradition and do not apply to any of the world’s other cultures. In the first place, as the fascist and neofascist movements have proven over and over again, ultra-religious fantasies and barbarian tribal traditions have always been just as popular in the West as in any other part of the world.

Both ultra-right wing and ultra-left wing movements and intellectuals in the West are also dead wrong in assuming that everyone living in or coming from the Third World cannot possibly understand universal political or social values because of their Muslim, Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Confucianist, Taoist, Shintoist, animist, totemist or shamanist traditions. It is the worst kind of racism to adopt any kind of Western exceptionalism towards every other culture. In reality, Christians and Jews, coming from the same Middle Eastern origins as Islam, are every bit as inclined as any other religious tradition to ultra-idiotic forms of fundamentalism, literal interpretations of religious texts, oppression of women, terrorism and the entire disgusting list of barbarian cultural practices.

Most of the leaders of the Conservative Party in Canada are also closet fundamentalists, pretending to reject the niqab for feminist reasons but really doing so for strictly opportunist, electoral reasons. In reality, they are not the least bit feminist, as every one of their economic and social policies attest. Electoral opportunism is also the only reason why they have so far refused to abolish abortions altogether, to revive the death penalty, to reject same-sex marriages and to plunge the entire country back into the same medieval conditions as currently characterize some of the more reactionary Muslim countries.

As for terrorism, the Canadian government, along with the American, British, French and sundry other Western governments are not at all opposed to using terror from time to time to achieve their foreign-policy goals. Western military machines, including Israel, regularly use “counter-terrorism” raids, particularly bombing attacks, as a method of convincing civilian populations not to support anti-Western terrorists in many parts of the world. In so doing, they are not that different from most of the non-Western countries, all of which have either supported terrorist organizations themselves, or punished their own civilians for supporting “illegal” terrorist organizations in their own (theoretically) counter-terrorism campaigns.

Governments, movements, religions and every other kind of human institution on this planet regularly distinguish between “our” terrorists, who are always good people, and “their” terrorists, who are always evil people. Even the Quebec independence movement regularly denounces bad terrorists everywhere else, such as the Canadian Army soldiers during the October crisis, while making an exception for the good terrorists from the FLQ. Even the First Nations like their own Warriors, while hating everyone else’s warriors. As for American citizens, they refuse to realize that they are supporting their own kind of internal terrorism as well with their utterly ridiculous gun culture. To be sure, killing millions of people, through legal or illegal terrorism, is much more devastating to human civilization than killing thousands of people, or even only a handful of people. But supporting terrorism of any kind is not morally defensible.

So the amazing entry of the niqab issue into the current federal election campaign in Canada is just a symptom of a much larger disease, affecting the whole world. The anti-feminist scabs in the pro-niqab section of the radical Islamist movement are a lot like the anti-feminist manipulators of public opinion in the Conservative government of Canada.

Neither group deserves anyone’s support. But there are also very few politicians or militants of any kind, anywhere, who play a completely blameless role in this kind of live theater.

Saturday, September 19, 2015

L’amalgame à rebours

Cet article a été publié dans le site Internet de “L’Aut’journal”, le 5 mars 2015.

Depuis les attentats terroristes contre les caricaturistes à Paris et à Copenhague, les fantassins de la rectitude politique ne cessent de nous mettre en garde contre la tentation de l’amalgame. Pour ces bien-pensants, le mot amalgame dans ce contexte veut dire la reaction primaire de la part de certains non-musulmans, voulant faire de chaque musulman dans ce monde un fanatique islamiste et un terroriste potentiel.

Nos partisans de la rectitude dénoncent aussi l’islamophobie, c’est-à-dire la peur déraisonnable de tout ce qui concerne l’islam, dans ses diverses versions modérées aussi bien que dans ses nombreuses versions radicales. Toutefois, ils vont trop loin dans cette direction, accusant de racisme non seulement les islamophobes primaires, mais aussi tous ceux qui refusent d’adopter une attitude accommodante envers les intégristes.

Tous ces bien-pensants, au Québec et ailleurs, ont la fâcheuse tendance à toujours vouloir blâmer l’Occident pour tout, même pour tout ce qui relève plutôt des islamistes eux-mêmes. En d’autres mots, ils font ce qu’on pourrait appeler un amalgame à rebours, en essayant de culpabiliser l’ensemble des Occidentaux pour avoir créé les conditions nécessaires à la montée de l’islamisme et de ses dérives terroristes.

Or, ça prend un peu plus qu’un terreau fertile pour expliquer vraiment pourquoi les musulmans les plus radicaux ont décidé de passer à l’acte et d’assassiner de plus en plus de victimes civiles, dans des pays occidentaux aussi bien que dans des pays à majorité musulmane. Bien sûr, il faut quand même reconnaître que l’Occident n’est pas du tout sans faute dans ce dossier. Les dirigeants des empires occidentaux ont souvent envoyé plusieurs de leurs soldats dans des pays musulmans, pendant plusieurs siècles.

Leurs interventions les plus récentes, même celles en théorie dirigées contre des dictatures militaires ou contre les mouvements islamistes les plus meurtriers, ont souvent dérapé. Ces interventions ont tué beaucoup de non-combattants et laissé ces pays avec davantage de problèmes que ces mêmes pays en possédaient auparavant. De plus, le soutien inconditionnel de l’Occident envers Israël, pas du tout conforme à une prétendue neutralité entre l’état sioniste et le peuple palestinien, a laissé une blessure permanente entre l’Occident et l’ensemble des pays musulmans.

À l’intérieur des pays occidentaux aussi, les dirigeants n’ont pas souvent travaillé très fort, parfois pas du tout, pour essayer de bien intégrer les immigrants musulmans. Le résultat a souvent été de créer des ghettos périurbains, dégoûtants, insalubres et sans espoir, pour beaucoup de ces immigrants. Ainsi, il n’y a pas de doute, les dirigeants occidentaux ont effectivement créé un terreau fertile pour l’émergence de dérives violentes, surtout celles d’origine islamiste.

Toutefois, il est absurde, encore davantage qu’autrefois, de tout mettre sur le dos des puissances occidentales. Même si d’un point de vue militaire, les pays occidentaux semblent encore posséder un certain avantage, ce n’est plus le cas du point de vue économique. De nos jours, avec la montée économique de plusieurs pays de l’ancien tiers-monde, il y a autant de millionnaires et de milliardaires dans le monde non-occidental qu’il y en a dans le monde occidental.

En Asie, en Afrique et en Amérique latine, de dépit des prétentions de leurs politiciens quant à leur indépendance décisionnelle vis-à-vis des grands investisseurs, ces gens riches contrôlent quasiment tout ce qui se passe dans leurs pays, autant sinon plus qu’en Occident.

Comme on pouvait s’y attendre, la grande majorité de ces richissismes ont autant tendance qu’en Occident de faire absolument tout pour garder leurs privilèges sociaux, avec tous les mpyens à leur disposition. La plupart des dirigeants de ces pays se concentrent aussi fortement qu’en Occident sur leurs “vraies affaires”, ignorant les besoins de leurs populations pour s’occuper exclusivement de leur propre accumulation du capital.

Pour réaliser cet objectif, comme partout ailleurs, ces dirigeants doivent manipuler l’opinion publique, pour convaincre les gens ordinaires de laisser tomber leurs propres revendications sociales. Hier comme aujourd’hui, le moyen de contrôle idéologique de masse le plus efficace, est encore la religion, toujours utilisée par les dirigeants en tant qu’opium du peuple.

Ainsi, les terroristes islamistes ne sont devenus que les petits soldats de ces mêmes milliardaires ultra-puissants qui, eux, ne semblent pas aussi croyants que leurs subalternes. C’est quand même l’argent des ultra-riches des pays musulmans qui financent tous les mouvements islamistes les plus meurtriers.

Autrefois, quand des idéologies collectivistes d’origine occidentale, telles que le nationalisme et le communisme, possédaient un peu d’influence dans ces mêmes pays, les puissances occidentales ont souvent aidé les islamistes à éliminer cette influence. De nos jours, suite à l’affaiblissement radical de ces idéologies séculières dans ces régions, l’influence que les puissances occidentales possédaient sur ces mouvements religieux, ultra-réactionnaires, a rapidement disparu.

Bien sûr, cet islamisme n’a pas nécessairement grand-chose à voir avec l’islam historique, en tant que tel. Comme c’est le cas de tous les fondamentalistes des autres grandes religions, les islamistes préfèrent ne choisir que les caractéristiques historiques de leur religion qui font leur affaire, laissant tomber d’autres caractéristiques moins intéressantes à leurs yeux.

C’est ce qui explique, par exemple, leur opposition totale à toute représentation illustrée du prophète Mohamed, une admonition qui semble avoir été ignorée dans la plupart du monde musulman avant la montée en puissance de l’empire ottoman, au XVIe siècle. La capacité démontrée des terroristes islamistes à convaincre les opportunistes occidentaux de laisser tomber leurs propres principes laïcs, est ainsi devenue une sorte d’idolâtrie à rebours, les militants préférant adorer leur nouvelle puissance militaire davantage que leur Dieu théorique.

Pour toutes ces raisons, nos bien-pensants en Occident font fausse route en essayant de nous culpabiliser quant à l’origine exclusivement occidentale du terrorisme islamiste. Les dévots musulmans ne sont pas des enfants et ils n’ont pas besoin des mères-patries occidentales pour les aider à adopter, ou à rejeter, une version extrêmement violente de leur religion.


Ils ont la capacité humaine, comme tout le monde, à choisir entre les idées progressistes et les idées réactionnaires. Ils ont choisi, en toute connaissance de cause, d’ignorer l’interdiction officielle de leur religion contre le meurtre, et de tuer des innocents, aussi souvent que les soldats des armées occidentales.

Thursday, September 17, 2015

In praise of treason

For the past fifteen years, I have been reading and interpreting thousands of pages of information to help me understand how and why human beings initially decide to adopt and to identify with some particular system of belief, such as a religion (a religious ideology) or a political point of view (a secular ideology). I have also focused on why many people then suffer from the inevitable disillusionment and despondency that takes place as soon as they discover that every “truth” in which they so fervently believed was in fact nothing but heteronomous hypocrisy. In the course of that effort, I published three books (“Taking the Lying out of Living”, “Universal Skepticism”, and “Billions of Big Babies”) as well as several articles on this subject, before starting this blog dedicated to the same goal, that I prefaced with a section outlining some of my own unpleasant ideological experiences.

This time out, I want to continue describing how my most recent readings on this emotionally difficult subject have influenced my own understanding of it. For example, in  a French social-science magazine, I read a report on the findings of a psychological experiment carried out by British and Canadian researchers, Julia Shaw and Stephen Porter, that they initially described in a recent issue of “Psychological Science”. Those researchers discovered just how easy it was to convince dozens of students to construct “rich false memories” of committing a crime in their childhood that they did not in fact commit. This kind of research helps criminologists explain why all over the world, thousands of people over the years have confessed to committing crimes (including murder) for which they were in fact innocent, and not just because they were mentally browbeaten beforehand by overzealous detectives. It turns out that it often does not take very much psychological manipulation to get people to invent “memories” of their own “misdeeds”.

This reminded me very much of the famous Stanley Milgram experiment from the 1960s in which a large number of other people were just as easily induced by researchers to believe that they were justified in physically harming volunteers by mindlessly following orders given to them by a person playing the role of a psychological expert. (No one was actually hurt.) That American experiment was originally designed to bolster a theory about the influence of authority figures to explain ordinary German participation in the Holocaust, but it has also been replicated over and over again by other researchers in dozens of different cultures.

Those two experiments did not have the same methodology nor the same purpose (quite the opposite in fact), and by themselves do not constitute sufficient scientific proof about the origins or the development of psychological manipulation. Nevertheless, the findings of those researchers fit in quite well with all the other information that I collated and interpreted in my previous writings about how ideologies work in the real world. It seems to me that psychological manipulation of individual weaknesses is central to understanding how people come to identify with particular religious or secular points of view, losing all or part of their capacity to think rationally in the process.

I have also discovered that the nature of the ideology involved has no effect on the “brainwashing” procedure by which people come to believe completely in any necessarily limited point of view, nor in how many of them come to reject it later on. All kinds of points of view affect people in similar ways, whether they be religious beliefs (moderate or fundamentalist), or political beliefs (mainstream or extremist). They include all the different kinds of religions that exist, or ever existed, in human history, as well as all the different kinds of secular ideologies, along with every associated sect, branch, permutation and combination, whether they be normally accepted as legitimate by a majority of believers, or relegated instead to the outer fringes of society.

Even certain sciences are still dominated by highly prejudiced, pseudo-scientific people who substitute narrow ideology for the scientific method. One of the better-known current examples is the practice of mainstream economics, where under the influence of big business, neoliberal (laissez-faire) ideology is still considered by a majority of economists to be synonymous with scientific procedure in that field.

Even people who decide to believe in absolutely nothing at all, either because they claim to be completely scientific in their approach, or because they claim to be totally pragmatic instead, are usually individual believers in scientism or pragmatism instead. It seems that the human brain functions exclusively by metaphor, or association of multiple phenomena that are often mistakenly judged to be quite similar, or very different, by a particular brain composed of individual thought patterns and experiences. As a result, all humans construct their own specific interpretations of reality, almost always under the overwhelming influence of authority figures from the society that surrounds them, and are congenitally incapable of grasping what science-fiction writer Douglas Adams used to call the “total perspective vortex”.

Over centuries of social history, these metaphors coalesce into rival systems of belief, in which egotistical manipulators who desperately want to win friends and influence people regularly claim that they have developed a new explanation for everything, that outclasses and replaces (or should outclass or replace) every other system. Given the inherent incapacity of any particular system of belief to really cover everything that currently exists, and to anticipate everything else that may soon come into being, believers are obliged to fill in the gaps between ideology and reality by creating “false memories” of things that never existed, or ever will exist, in the real (monist) world.

In this manner, super-heroes are turned into polytheist gods, who are often then fused into one all-powerful Father-figure, while rival emperors simultaneously claim to have received competing mandates from heaven. Later on, multi-billion-dollar voting systems are invented to substitute corrupted representatives for everyday citizen participation in collective decision-making. (Not that such citizen participation would be easy to organize, nor necessarily result in better outcomes every time.) In the meantime, the extremely rich investors who control “our” elected representatives run around all over the place claiming to be the ultimate do-gooders, by “creating wealth” for everyone and not just for themselves.

An excellent example of how people try to project such wishful thinking onto the real world comes from sociologist Max Weber’s thesis about Protestantism and capitalism, that was originally conceived during the early part of the twentieth century. That thesis still has considerable intellectual resonance a century later, well-known philosopher Mark Alizart even contending that it helps to explain the religious connotations of today’s pop culture. Weber managed to combine modern developments in both the Christian religion and secular investment into one highly influential account about how the Protestant ethic was linked to the rise of modern capitalism.

According to him, the sixteenth-century preacher Jean Calvin inspired a huge increase in capital accumulation during the Reformation with his theory of predestination. Calvin contended that at the very beginning of the universe the Christian god made an arbitrary, a-priori decision, anticipating everything that every future human being would ever do from Creation all the way to Armageddon. For Calvin himself, predestination buttressed the Protestant desire to substitute faith alone for the good works that the Catholics had been insisting on until then as being the best way to get on good terms with the Supreme Being, and thus end up living with him in paradise for all eternity.

In Weber’s theory, ambitious Calvinists then came up with the Protestant ethic, exploiting everyone around them and saving every penny so as to make a lot of money.  Their material success was somehow deemed by them to be “proof” of divine election to paradise of their own worthy selves. Weber’s thesis has often been criticized, not so much by those wanting to deny any ideological link between Christianity and capitalism, as for the considerably more interesting fact that in many parts of the world, Catholics participated in capital accumulation every bit as much as Protestants did.

Predestination has also been linked by other historians to nineteenth-century social-Darwinism, supposedly justifying not only huge income and life-style divisions between the social classes, but also legitimizing Western colonialism and racism. According to this extension of Calvinist theory, the rich are rich and the poor are poor because God decided at the outset (Genesis) that things should be that way forever, just like he also decided that white people have always deserved to dominate “people of color”. For such neo-Calvinist and/or social-Darwinist ideologues, any attempt to change that situation, such as by setting up the welfare state or by promoting racial equality, therefore becomes blasphemy in the eyes of the Lord.

In reality, however, it is the very attempt to justify material success or racial domination by using predestination that is genuinely blasphemous in this case. If it is true that a Heavenly Father really exists and that he committed himself to predestination at the beginning of time, then any attempt to fix things so that God’s decision would not be truly arbitrary and a-priori is inherently blasphemous. It indicates that those who organize their own lives for material success, as a way of gaining divine election to paradise, are in fact the real traitors to their chosen religion. There is no way that individualist or corporate attempts to make a lot of money at other people’s expense, or to impose capitalist imperialism on the rest of the world, would interfere with God’s original plan any less than collectivist interventions promoting social equality would also interfere with that same plan. If we look at things from a presumed God’s perfectly unprejudiced, non-ideological point of view, private enterprise is in no way preferable to government intervention.

Likewise, so far as today’s neoliberalism (free trade, laissez-faire, deregulation, globalization, international tax evasion, speculative investment) is concerned, the overall effect on society is not at all positive, as implied in the big-business slogan “consumer democracy”, but instead decidedly negative. Just before the onslaught of neoliberalism, during the “thirty glorious years” of 1945-1975, in the Western world but not at all in the Third World, democracy was somewhat less class-conscious than it has become nowadays. In those days, in that relatively small part of the world, the gap between the rich and the poor was declining instead of increasing, taxes on huge fortunes were much higher, free trade was largely ignored and social security was becoming stronger every day rather than weaker.

Democracy, in the sense of being rule by the majority of the population rather than rule by a very small part of it, only works at all when rich people find it difficult to control everything that moves. In today’s libertarian world, considerably less divided into distinct regions than before, only about one percent of one percent (one-ten-thousandth) of the total population is really involved in any serious decision-making. Propaganda aside, the vast majority of the population (poor and middle-class people), in every country, are not benefiting at all from the current situation. Most of the Western countries today are also not as democratic as they were for a time, just before the hegemonic onset of neoliberalism. On the other hand, some of the former Third World countries are somewhat more democratic than they used be in their often totalitarian past, but not nearly enough on a world scale to offset the decline in democracy in the West.

In this sense, so far as collective decision-making is concerned, genuine democracy and genuine communism are synonyms. By that, of course, I do not refer to the disgusting party-bureaucrat dictatorships that stood in for “communism” in the USSR (1922-1991) or in any of the so-called “people’s democracies”. At best, those state-capitalist governments only became more or less adept at using economic nationalism to prevent multinational control of their countries by immensely wealthy private capitalists. In other words, they managed for awhile to separate their part of the world from private control, at least partially freezing out the big owners of ultra-large business establishments operating from within the horribly misnamed “free world”.

In fact, genuine communism, like genuine democracy, has never existed anywhere in the real world, because the huge, ongoing gap between the social classes makes real freedom impossible for most people, even when that gap is declining slightly, albeit on a temporary, regional basis. So far as genuine rule by the majority of the people is concerned, it makes no difference whatever whether or not most people’s lives are run by private bureaucracies or by public ones, so long as all those different kinds of bureaucrats are working on behalf of ultra-rich, ultra-powerful, private and/or state-capitalist investors. The People’s Republic of China (PRC) is one of the world’s best (or worst) examples of a country that has never been run by the majority of the people, before or since the death of Chairman Mao. The same lack of democracy also applies to countries like Canada or the USA, where private bureaucrats outnumber public bureaucrats a thousand to one, even at the best of times.

As for the centuries-old debate between economic nationalism and economic liberalism, often contracted into a debate between protectionism and free trade, unrestrained competition (the infamous “level playing field”) is really a form of protectionism for the strongest players. For the past two hundred years, emerging nations have been using the infant-industry argument to support protectionism for the weakest countries instead, but even then it was only designed to benefit local manufacturers. In those countries, the much larger social class of newly-created industrial workers are, or were, not often better treated by national bosses than by multinational ones.

Back in the early-modern period of history, the emerging nation-state absorbed opposing regions, often run beforehand by feudal lords (or warlords), into a national entity dominated by the rulers of a dominant region. This process, begun in Europe, gradually spread to the rest of the world over the past several centuries. Nowadays, however, laissez-faire globalization is going one step further, by making all the smaller nation-states gradually disappear, as in the European Union, if they are not big enough to withstand the power of today’s dominant “regions”, such as the USA, the PRC or the Federal Republic of Germany. Free trade and laissez-faire inevitably create or reinforce a pyramidal effect on society, that has recently resulted in a significant, overall social decline in liberty, equality, fraternity, solidarity and prosperity for everyone, not just for the privileged few.

One interesting example of all this took place recently in Canada, when the “separatist” movement in the province of Quebec tried to buck the trend toward ever-larger political entities by turning the province into a more or less independent nation-state. The often-elected Parti Québécois (PQ) started out as a sort of left-center-right, ideological coalition favoring political sovereignty for Quebec while still naively striving to maintain an economic association with English Canada. It twice (1980 and 1995) tried to get the majority of Quebec voters to go along with that proposition, and almost succeeded the second time around. However, its already ambiguous half-way position between independence and federalism was weakened a lot more after the first referendum defeat when the party leadership decided to support free trade and neoliberalism in general.

That curious strategy, aimed at saving Quebec from Canadian imperialism by allying it with American and European imperialism instead, ruined any chance Quebec may have had back then of uniting the entire province around political and economic nationalism. People cannot be persuaded to make the tremendous effort necessary to create a new nation-state when it becomes obvious to everyone that nothing substantial distinguishes the pro-independence platform from that of its steadfastly anti-independence rivals, except a largely symbolic desire to add a new flag to those flying outside the United Nations building in New York.

At the federal level of government, the various Conservative Party regimes, favoring asymmetrical federalism but also theoretically based on unflinching support for free trade and neoliberalism all over the world, soon made sure that the PQ strategy would become a total disaster for Quebec independence. The Conservative-PQ alliance against the highly corrupt, federal Liberal Party, which favored centralized federalism, largely succeeded in marginalizing that party’s previously interventionist governments. However, the end result for Quebec was to break up the PQ’s initial coalition for partial sovereignty and to make any future bid for real independence much more difficult.

A somewhat similar kind of dynamic, but on a much larger scale, also affected another kind of geographically-based ideology, that of native peoples liberation from their own foreign oppressors. Throughout the Americas, but also in Australasia, the violent and prolonged takeover of aboriginal lands by European immigrants, later joined by millions of African and Asiatic populations, took place in every colony in which the settlers eventually came to outnumber the original populations. Diseases imported from the Old World eliminated millions of natives, and millions more were deliberately eliminated through slavery, organized starvation and other such “successful” attempts at regional genocide.

As a result, the remaining native peoples were only left with very small parcels of territory scattered over very large regions, in a process replicated several centuries later in several more recent invasions in other parts of the world, such as the ever-expanding Israeli occupation of Palestinian territory. For aboriginals in Canada and the USA, the cultural imperialism of residential (boarding) schools, in which native children were taken away from their communities in order to “civilize” them, started in the nineteenth century, like many similar attempts at native assimilation in other settler countries, but only ended about twenty years ago.

Unfortunately for some recent native attempts to turn a losing situation into a winning one, however, the anti-racist liberation movement has often indulged in reverse racism instead, attempting to solve native problems at “outsiders” expense. To be sure, acting in this way is not inherently native or aboriginal, the original invaders of native territory having previously used military oppression of colonial territory as a way of dealing with a relative decline in the rate of profit back in Europe, as well as with the problem of overpopulation in many of their homelands.

Nevertheless, in a process of reverse discrimination some native groups in the former settler colonies have recently succeeded in taking back small portions of real estate from outsider control. In so doing, however, they used the same kind of violence and intimidation that the invaders had used originally, although on a much smaller scale. Similar confrontations (also used by many other protest movements) have also involved blockades of roads, railroads and other methods of transportation, aimed at harming the entire non-native population rather than directing popular rage against the people in power (politicians and business executives). Other forms of reprehensible behavior, often occurring simultaneously across both native and non-native communities, include drug trafficking, international tax evasion, organized crime, ultra-macho wife-beating, murder and mistreatment of women and children, and community expulsion of women who marry outsiders.

This last kind of unacceptable behavior is particularly galling, given the fact that none of the native communities (or any other human communities anywhere else) are racially “pure”. Since the different aboriginal ethnic groups started interacting with outside invaders several centuries ago, any kind of purely biological “nativeness” has long disappeared. Even during the precolonial period, millions of captives of multiple ethnic origins were incorporated into warring tribes over and over again. Scientists nowadays are even positing the possibility that not all the original native populations even came from the same parts of the Old World, as was originally thought. Not to mention the fact that ever since aboriginal origins became less stigmatizing, following a decline in the most virulent kinds of outsider racism during the 1970s, even the number of people claiming to be native has increased dramatically. So trying to impose racial “unity” nowadays is especially abhorrent.

With native liberation ideology, the problem is not the fact that some native people often behave in the same reprehensible ways that some non-native people do, which is to be expected in any non-racist vision of the world. Racism, after all, not only includes rotten attitudes and behavior toward oppressed peoples, it also includes complicit condoning of rotten attitudes and behavior within those same communities. The problem here is that some native and pro-native ideologues often excuse such reverse-racism by blaming most of it on reaction to oppression of natives by outsiders. But as in dozens of other horrific cases all over the world, victimization of one group of people, even over a long period of time, is not a sufficient excuse for condoning or belittling reverse discrimination.

Nor is it a viable excuse for instituting a similarly oppressive pecking order inside local communities, in which the stronger members of the community mistreat the weaker members, in imitation or emulation of outside oppressors. In the case of men mistreating women and children, native communities may not just be imitating settler behavior, imported from the Old World, but may also be carrying on their own local “traditions” left over from the precolonial period. Unfortunately, almost every religion and ideology in the world has deliberately included mistreatment of women among its inherent characteristics, even in the relatively less sexist Iroquois communities. Once again, however, this kind of rotten behavior has also been condoned by the true believers in every other human system of belief. Even a large proportion of the people practicing such left-wing ideologies as anarchism and communism, that are theoretically supposed to be based on opposition to all forms of oppression, are still incredibly sexist.

But it would be another form of cultural imperialism to ignore an attempt at comparative evaluation when discussing native liberation ideology. In this case, it can certainly be shown that the outsiders (mostly of European origin) have done a lot more harm to native peoples over the centuries, even very recently, than native peoples have managed to harm the outsiders in return. But approximate quantitative evaluations like that one still do not make more palatable rotten native behavior toward outsiders, or towards each other inside native communities.

Nevertheless, it would be totally unfair to compare the two situations as if they were in any way quantitatively equivalent, the numbers of victims involved being much higher during the settler invasions. Even today, in spite of official propaganda campaigns focusing on tolerance, those invasions have never really ceased. One recent example is the exemplary role that many native communities have been forced to play in resisting the unbridled expansionism of extractor corporations in the mining and fossil-fuel industries.

A similar type of analysis can also be applied to the well-known example of the former white-racist regime in South Africa, of Calvinist origin, with its disgusting treatment of “people of color”, particularly during the apartheid period (1948-1991). Since it came to power in 1994, however, the African National Congress government seems to have done its utmost, not so much as to mistreat South Africans of European or Asian origin, following Nelson Mandela’s anti-racist rainbow concept, as to mistreat its own population in ways that recall the decades of apartheid. The new leaders and their clientele regime have set up a new ruling class, a kind of ultra-corrupt “Black bourgeoisie”, that treats the majority of the population almost as poorly as the Boer states used to do. The same observation can also be made about many other post-independence governments throughout Africa, not to mention those in Asia and Latin America, as compared with the even more disgusting colonial or settler governments that preceded them.

Another horrible example of this kind of effect is the very disturbing treatment meted out to multiple minorities in the USA, which includes not only the native peoples but also the African-American population. In that country, any person with at least one percent of African blood (such as the current president) is officially considered to be black, even though practically all of those people are once again of mixed blood. Most of today’s “Black” population suffered through slavery before becoming second-class citizens ofter the Civil War, a socio-economic condition that has persisted in more recent times. Nowadays, unequal treatment even seems to be gathering atavistic momentum, gradually repudiating many of the political improvements made during the 1945-1975 period.

Unfortunately, as in the case of the native peoples, today’s African-American communities suffer from similar kinds of behavioral “emulation” of their white oppressors, with drug trafficking, organized crime, macho treatment of women and abandonment of children topping the list. Once again, however, any attempt at approximate quantification of that situation would necessarily arrive at the same conclusion: the “White” majority has committed many more crimes against the “Black” population than the Blacks have committed against the Whites, and most of the crimes that some Black people have committed over the years have also been directed against their own people.

As mentioned earlier, in a much different part of the world, the Israeli regime since 1948 and several political movements inside Israel have also mistreated the Palestinians and other neighboring peoples a lot more than those peoples have mistreated Israelis during that same period. Nevertheless, as in the previous examples, the Palestinian governments and political movements, and similar forces inside Israel’s other regional victim-states, have also mistreated their own populations quite a bit more than they have succeeded in mistreating the Israelis. The only way to do “justice” to everyone in this kind of discussion is to make sure that every single kind of oppression known to mankind be underlined and evaluated, quantitatively and qualitatively, as thoroughly as possible. No one’s guilt should be under-estimated, but neither should it be over-estimated, something that is never easy to do properly.

Religious examples of this kind of misguided ideological behavior are every bit as frequent as the secular examples analyzed above. I already referred to the curious “miscegenation” between Calvinism and capitalism earlier in this article. But every religion in the world always functions in the same absurd ways as does every political or social ideology. Not to mention the fact that the “deep beliefs” that religious people claim exclusively for themselves are not in reality any deeper than any equivalent secular beliefs, as in the Chinese fixation on the thoughts of Chairman Mao.

The way that I look at it, this is what happens over and over again with every system of belief: true believers are always saying that they are either carrying out God’s will, or closely following the mandate of heaven, or obeying the dictates of market forces (consumer democracy), or defending their own ancestral territory, or organizing society exclusively for the common good, or whatever other slogan that they may choose to propagate. But in reality, most of the time they are merely following the path of individual egoism and personal corruption, instead. The religion or the ideology involved becomes just an excuse or cover story to make totally inadequate behavior look legitimate in the media projection of reality.

Over fifty years ago, at age fourteen, I taught Sunday school during one summer to a group of young children, endlessly repeating the usual Bible stories that I had learned about myself just before that. A few years later, however, I decided to read the Christian Bible from one end to the other to find out for myself if what I had been teaching had any connection with the real world. I soon found out that the goody-goody-two-shoes version of Biblical events and modern parallels that I had been dishing out to my younger victims were in total contrast to what most Christian people really spent their time doing or supporting, such as during the incredibly violent Vietnam War (1957-1975). (Not that any of the other participants in that war were any less hypocritical.)

All over the world, ever since Christianity became a religion separate from Judaism, people calling themselves Christians have been adopting completely opposite points of view on all sorts of particular subjects, which makes one wonder what all of those self-proclaimed Christians really have (or had) in common. A recent example of this kind of thing was the clerk in Kentucky, Kim Davis, who went to jail for a few days rather than sign papers authorizing same-sex marriages, or even let anyone else in her office do so. She justified her stand by talking about same-sex marriages as a heaven or hell issue, and avowed that her love of Jesus Christ made it impossible for her to support such a presumed abomination of Christian teachings. In this case, as in many other such controversies involving monotheist religions, it turns out that belief in God is the ultimate conspiracy theory, since people are always trying to justify just about anything in this way.

The most obvious comment to be made about controversies like this one is that millions of Christians agree with Kim Davis’s point of view on this subject, but millions more of them do not. So what is the link between love of Jesus Christ and same-sex marriage? The short answer is that there is no such link; it turns out that no one really knows what a good Christian ought to do in this case, or in any other case. I have not researched the New Testament to see whether or not Jesus, considered to be the Messiah (“the Christ” in Greek), was reported to have said something that may or may not indicate what he would have done in similar circumstances.

But my main point here is that no one can be certain what the historical Jesus, if such a person ever really existed, would have thought about anything at all. No one had a tape or a video recorder around two thousand years ago, which means that everything he said or did not say is subject to interpretation. The gospels themselves were not written down until several decades, or even centuries, after his death, and contain conflicting accounts not only about his life, but also about his thoughts when he was alive, and even his presumed manner of dying.

The same point applies to everything else that is written down in the Judeo-Christian tradition’s favorite book (the Greek word for book is “Bible”), whether in the Jewish section (the Old Testament) or in the Christian section (the New Testament). Even the separate chapters, or little books, included in authorized versions of the compendium of texts making up the larger book, were not considered to be definitive choices until several centuries after the presumed death of Jesus. The bishops who voted to include, or exclude, any of the texts being proposed, during any particular Christian synod, did so for political or polemical purposes that had nothing to do with what Jesus may have thought about their decisions. Even nowadays, some people are still debating the inclusion of currently approved texts over what are now officially considered to be apocryphal texts.

Similarly, the various Jewish authors of the Old Testament, starting with the five first smaller books, collectively known as the Talmud, wrote down most of their stories centuries after the events that they were supposed to be describing took place. Not only that, they included in those accounts of supposedly Jewish events various myths (such as the great flood and the story of Noah’s Ark) that were borrowed from other Middle Eastern civilizations. Most notably from the Sumerian (or Akkadian) story of Gilgamesh, the first recorded book every published (and not the Bible, as everyone used to believe).

Their narratives about the prophet Moses and his leading the Jewish people out of Egyptian bondage and back to the promised land, or of the founding of the kingdoms of Israel and Judea, under such leaders as David and Solomon, also seem to have been invented, or at least made to seem much more important at the time than they really were. Modern archaeologists, including dozens of Israeli teams, have so far been unable to find any definitive proof of the very existence of those particular people and their kingdoms. This in a region in which archeological evidence (even when deliberate destruction of such evidence is taken into account) of all the other great civilizations of the same period still exist in magnificent abundance.

This makes it extremely difficult for anyone living since ancient times, or even since medieval times, to base any of his or her own thoughts and actions on anything that may or may not have been said or done back then. Not only in the Middle East, but also in any other parts of the world, including Europe, India, China, Japan, Ethiopia, Polynesia or the pre-Colombian Americas. It is just incredibly foolish to deliberately ignore the existence of every human being’s capacity for critical thinking, and to accept as given any necessarily limited interpretation of events in which the authors are proclaiming that their vision of the world is the only one that everyone ought to be supporting.

Contradictions abound in every such belief system, including such obvious examples as the state of Israel’s current claim to absolute geographical hegemony in all the lands that used to be ruled by Saul, David, Solomon, or any of their presumed successors prior to the Babylonian and/or Roman invasions. The ultra-orthodox movement in modern Judaism is also quick to point out that Israeli nationalism is anathema for the Jewish religion itself, since the state of Israel was not supposed to have been reconstructed before the coming of the “real”, Jewish Messiah. As a result, these people often show up in demonstrations in support of the Palestinians and do not agree with the Christians that Jesus was any kind of savior, and certainly not the son of the god of ancient Israel. Moreover, Israeli nationalism owes an immense debt for its continued existence to the “Christian Zionists”, particularly in the USA, who foolishly believe that it is some kind of harbinger for the second coming of Jesus Christ.

These are some of the reasons why I also enjoyed reading a recently published book about atheism (“Traité d’athéologie”), written by French philosopher Michel Onfray. He lambasted the three most important monotheist religions from a philosophical point of view, coming up with a number of fascinating arguments, many of which were new to me. His main focus was on how any true believer in Judaism, Christianity or Islam could not possibly support any of the characteristics of the modern European Enlightenment, specifically directed against such long-outdated concepts as absolute monarchy and religious totalitarianism.

I found his treatment of monotheism to be quite useful when I also read many parts of the Koran for the first time, rather than just those few excerpts that other authors I had consulted before had brought to their readers attention. I certainly had to agree with Onfray, for example, when he argued that the two or three sentences in that book in favor of tolerance, respect for others and the refusal to impose religious ideas by force, were completely overwhelmed by hundreds of other sentences promoting entirely opposite attitudes instead.

Most of that text is written in an extremely militant fashion, totally focused in verse after verse on how everyone in this life who supports Islam will be rewarded by God for all eternity with every kind of pleasure imaginable, while those who refuse it will be cast into hellfire and suffer horribly, also for eternity. In other words, the message contained in that text resembles nothing more than a straightforward series of sermons very similar to the ones that can also be read in the Bible. Many of the chapters include extensive retelling of the stories about prophets like Noah and Moses, as well as several favorable comments about Jesus as one of the more recent prophets leading up to the most important monotheist prophet of them all, Mohammed himself.

From my cultural background, it also closely resembled the kind of preaching that used to be delivered in the American “Bible Belt” during the first half of the twentieth century. I immediately pictured Burt Lancaster starring as preacher “Elmer Gantry” in the 1960 American movie, which was based on the 1926 Sinclair Lewis novel with the same title. Lewis based his portrayal on several real preachers from that period, Gantry’s wife, for example, being based on the life of Aimee Semple McPherson (née Kennedy), an extremely popular preacher born in a rural town in Ontario, Canada, who became one of the most important founders of the Pentecostal movement in the USA. I also recalled reading the 1955 play, by Jerome Lawrence and Robert Edwin Lee, and seeing the 1960 movie adaptation, both called “Inherent the Wind”, about the famous 1925 “monkey trial” in Tennessee, in which modern evolutionary science clashed openly with “old-time religion”. The fundamentalist attorney in that trial, William Jennings Bryan, was vigorously supported at the time by such fellow-travelers as McPherson.

Fundamentalist Christian movements nowadays, as well as a hundred years ago, also resemble today’s fundamentalist Muslim movements, not only in their style of preaching, known in the USA as “fire and brimstone”, but also in their attempt to solve the practical problems of their flocks (believers only) by engaging in extensive charity and religious-based social-welfare programs. They make a feeble attempt at replacing the equally innocuous efforts of “sinful” organizations like national and regional governments in every country and every period of history (like the USA in McPherson’s time), that do not provide properly for the poor and the handicapped within their own populations. The popularity of such movements is therefore not just based on proselytism, it is also based on charity, similar to the approach previously adopted by the British-based Salvation Army that influenced McPherson in her younger years.

Another cultural reference that came to mind during my reading of the Koran was Harry McClintock’s 1916 poem, “Hymn of Hate”, that is often called the battle song of the anarcho-syndicalist Industrial Workers of the World. IWW organizers like McClintock particularly detested the “Starvation” Army and the other pro-capitalist Christian churches of the era, because like most of the other religious organizations in the world they fervently supported the most backward political regimes possible. The poem itself focused on the hate for capitalism generated by the killing of millions of ordinary workers because of the horrible working conditions, and the incredibly violent repression of strikes, imposed by millionaire investors back then. (Even though most industrial workers nowadays live in the former Third World, not much has changed since that time.)

At one point in McClintock’s poem, he added: “We hate your slave religion with submission for its creed.” Since the word “islam” itself means “submission”, a world traveler like him (Africa, China, the Philippines, etc.) would certainly have included Islam in his denunciation of ultra-reactionary religions. He also agreed with another famous IWW organizer, Joe Hill, who proclaimed in his 1911 song, “The Preacher and the Slave” (a parody on the Christian hymn, “In the Sweet By-and-By”), that the only thing that preachers could ever answer to grossly underpaid workers begging for food was “You’ll get pie in the sky when you die.”

To put it as succinctly as possible, the most outstanding characteristic of all religious ideologies is the huge contrast that always exists between what those movements preach and what they actually end up doing. In McPherson’s case, for example, the inherent pacifism of early Pentecostalism was rapidly replaced by all-out support for the American effort during the Second World War. The “Elmer Gantry” story also focused on how the ultra-conservative social principles of all the fundamentalist preachers are almost always contradicted by their own personal failings and subsequent falling from grace, once again as in Aimee McPherson’s case.

Nevertheless, secular preachers like the anarcho-syndicalist organizers did not always manage to avoid committing the same kind of hypocrisy as the religious ones did. Some of the IWW leaders who survived the First World War period of intense repression, such as William Z. Foster, went on to found the nascent communist parties in North America during the 1920s. Unfortunately, those Marxist-Leninist organizations soon became highly disciplined followers of the USSR, slavishly following Soviet policy through the constant zig-zags between ultra-totalitarian and slightly more liberal forms of “communism”. Many of them were also ardent misogynists, though perhaps not as often as the religious fundamentalists, whose outlook on women’s role in society was always ultra-conservative.

Moderate believers in any of these competing systems of belief, whether religious or secular, are sometimes like the doubting Thomas character in the New Testament, who realize at least part of the time that they are not in fact following the principles of their chosen path at all, before they are forced by tremendous social pressure to switch back to more orthodox ways of thinking. On the other hand, fundamentalist, or extremist, believers refuse to ever doubt anything at all, with the inevitable result that their own blasphemy, or treason toward their one true chosen belief, turns out to be even more pronounced than that of their more moderate brethren.

As I have often pointed out in my other writings, many fundamentalist forms of religion, whether Christian, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist or whatever, regularly adopt laissez-faire (aka, neoliberal) ideology as well. Even though the basic principles of each of these religions seem to be in total contradiction with letting multibillionaires control everything that moves, most of the moderate as well as the fundamentalist factions within those religions end up imitating the neo-Calvinist, social-Darwinist movements of the nineteenth century, by inventing ideological “bridges” between the doctrines of each particular religion and those of private capitalism. For example, the Muslim refusal to accept usury, defined as charging interest when lending money, has been overcome by various ingenious subterfuges, even for organizations as theoretically fundamentalist as Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State. The current government of India is also led by a political party combining both so-called Hindu nationalism and a neoliberal approach to economic policy and foreign investment.

Every kind of religious fundamentalism has also succeeded in surmounting religious principles condemning gratuitous violence against innocent bystanders, and “justifying” terrorism instead. Ultra-Christian opponents of planned parenthood, for example, regularly terrorize patients and staff members in abortion clinics, occasionally murdering  abortion doctors. Ultra-Islamic movements, often funded by Muslim billionaires, have also carried out much more murderous, and extremely well-publicized, terrorist attacks against presumed unbelievers and apostates in all the majority-Muslim countries, as well as in every country possessing significant Muslim minorities.

Once again, however, quantitative comparisons also have to be made in this case, since most of the very numerous Muslim victims were killed by state-sponsored terrorism, carried out by nominally Muslim governments or by Western military interventions. Even the United Nations economic boycott of Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, between 1991 and 2003, resulted in the deaths of several hundred thousand ordinary citizens, most of them Muslim. Today’s enormous refugee crisis in western Asia and northern Africa, spilling over into most parts of Europe, also involves mostly Muslim victims fleeing from both “private” and “public” forms of terrorism. Many majority-Muslim countries, even more than some of the more conservative European countries, are also making the plight of the millions of refugees much worse, by refusing to take in more than a handful of those unfortunate refugees.

Rival groups of self-defined, radical Christians, Muslims, Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, etc., also regularly attack each other militarily all the time, the most extreme groups within each religion also managing to find good reasons to wage war on each other as well. From their point of view, it is impossible to go too far in becoming a “good” religious fanatic; there does not seem to be any limit to how fantastically crazy those different kinds of true believers can become.

All the religious ideologies in the world are divided up into rival factions in the same way that the Marxist-Leninist organizations were always fighting among themselves in the twentieth century, each fraction of the whole always claiming to represent the one, true version of each separate system of belief. All the other secular ideologies (such as racism, nationalism, imperialism, liberalism, conservatism, fascism, social-democracy, etc.), are also divided up in similar ways. Every particular point of view in the world always splits up into dozens of little splinters or tendencies that fight each other all the time over ideological purity and hegemony, sometimes with words, sometimes with poison, or with guns, or even occasionally with weapons of mass destruction.

So, as Nikolay Chernyshevsky might have put it, what is to be done about all this? If the true believers in all these extremely popular kinds of belief are constantly fighting with each other about which is the one true belief system of all time, and are constantly falling off the wagon morally speaking as well, how do we get people to use the rational part of their brains more often, instead, and to gradually abandon all those manufactured beliefs?

Unfortunately, the simple answer is that human beings do not seem very willing to do that. The world seems to be going in exactly the opposite direction at the moment. True, modern science, aimed at honestly investigating the characteristics of the real world rather than inventing simplistic alternatives, has existed for several centuries now. In recent times, teams of scientists all over the world have learned how to use highly methodological observation and experiment, repeated hundreds of times over and over, to investigate reality. Then they spend the rest of their time debating with each other in innumerable conferences and written controversies, to make sure that everyone’s contribution is really out in the open and on the level.

These impressive collections of hundreds of thousands of scientists, in every imaginable field, are the closest thing that human beings have ever developed in order to approximate the truly neutral, non-partisan attitude that monotheists like to attribute to their fictional God. Philosopher Karl Popper’s suggested test for demonstrating conformity to problems based on the scientific method, the possibility of falsification, is also based on forever accepting the absence of absolute perfection in human endeavor. Science, in other words, is the only rational alternative to necessarily heteronomous ideology.

Nevertheless, science does not currently seem to be attracting ever larger numbers of admirers toward using critical thinking more often, at least not since the onslaught of neoliberalism. Perhaps one of the reasons for that has to do with what Thomas Kuhn pointed out originally in his 1962 thesis on scientific revolutions, that even people totally dedicated to science will fight tooth and nail against any scientific advancement that threatens their own sacrosanct careers. Popular identification with science is also regularly challenged whenever journalists manage to expose collusion between some corrupt scientists, and the big governments and big corporations that employ most of them. Proven examples of fudged results do not help much, to say the least.

And as I pointed out earlier, some of the sciences focused on human activity rather than on investigating physical reality, such as mainstream economics, are even more corrupt simply because they deliberately refuse to be politically neutral. My own discipline, history, is also dominated by practitioners focusing much more often on propagandistic heritage than on ideologically neutral, scientifically justified, versions of history.

Most people are also extremely uncomfortable with the uncertainty of scientific investigation, particularly since probability theory replaced positivist science during the first decades of the twentieth century. The kind of immense universe depicted by recent scientific discoveries, in which human beings have lost their previously presumed position at the center of creation, do not appeal to people’s favorite ego projections at all. For egotistical reasons, hundreds of millions of people much prefer believing in a world that revolves around them, their entirely illusory “spiritual needs” taking precedence over philosophical rationalism (based on hylozoic monism).

The constant revival of old-time religious ideologies, of every possible denomination, often funded by manipulative billionaires from every possible country, makes the advent of rational thinking on a massive scale, even more difficult. So does the constant revival of all sorts of prejudiced secular ideologies, especially neoliberalism (laissez-faire) but also including racist forms of nationalism and the current rise of neofascism all over the world. By far the most popular system of belief nowadays, neoliberal laissez-faire, has been particularly reinforced by the recent capitulation of most of the world’s formerly interventionist governments. Most of the relatively recent examples of ideological treason (aka betrayal or blasphemy), come from all those established religions and secular ideologies that have decided to support the privatization of all levels of government, rather than to continue supporting public solutions for public problems, like some of them used to do in the past.

Under the influence of big business, millions of ordinary people all over the world are now supporting the very billionaires that many of them used to rail against. The best recent example comes from Donald Trump’s campaign to win the Republican nomination for president of the USA. Apparently, many of his supporters believe that he is the most honest politician in the USA because he spends his own billions on his campaign, rather than spend funds coming from occult sources such as political action committees. As if political corruption could be eliminated by getting every ignorant, ultraconservative billionaire to corrupt himself straight out by becoming his own favorite candidate, rather than let someone else do it!

This has got to be one of the stupidest observations every made since time began. With people like that in every country prostrating themselves in front of such obvious demagogues (another example: France’s Marine Le Pen), is it any wonder that rationalism is retreating rather than continuing to advance? Do Trump’s supporters genuinely believe that he could have become a billionaire, more than once, without exploiting underpaid workers in his hotels and other properties? Do they not realize that most of those workers come from the same illegal immigrant populations that their “independent” candidate pretends to so thoroughly despise?

In the final analysis, I doubt very much that there is much hope these days for any revival of popular interest in rationality and scientific methods of thinking. This is one of the reasons why I also have to reject the opinions expressed by Francis Dupuis-Déri and Thomas Déri in a book on anarchism that I also read during the past few weeks, “L’anarchie expliquée à mon père”. This little book gives dozens of examples of anarchist movements that have existed over the years all over the world, even though the authors curiously leave out any mention of anarchist influence within the Canadian New Left, including inside their own home city, Montreal. Their best contribution to political analysis was in explaining how elected representatives in “democratic” countries always manage to betray their ordinary constituents and to obey the occult instructions of their ultra-rich masters instead.

But I cannot for the life of me figure out how anyone who knows anything about politics, past or present, could possibly agree with their utterly naive belief in a future anarchist world. Following some combination of Earth-shaking events, they want everyone to believe that the local anarchist councils that would presumably be set up in every little community, belonging to enormous globe-spanning federations of such councils, would always remain faithful to the wishes of their local supporters and forever resist every attempt on the part of those same federations to corrupt them! Just like all the other preachers in all the other systems of belief, they use critical thinking and the reality principle when criticizing what everyone else proposes to do, but forget all about rational methods when describing their own proposals.

If eternal vigilance really is the price of liberty, then surely eternal skepticism is the price of rationality. Which is why everyone also ought to refuse the arguments of all those pundits who claim that no one has the right to criticize anyone else’s point of view in a given situation, without coming up with a plausible solution. But there are literally thousands of particular problems in which none of the current participants will ever accept any solution that does not provide them with total victory, the famous two-state “solution” to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict being the most obvious. In fact, even in ordinary life everyone knows at least a few egotistical monsters who will never accept any reasonable solution, to any situation, that does not feed into their overwhelming desire to always control everything that moves.

So the inevitable pattern of religious or ideological ego-projection is always the same. First, in the interests of what is called social harmony, the preachers from some belief system or another call for what in reality amounts to identification with the aggressor. Then, social laws of correct behavior, such as the current hypocritical campaigns against rape culture on many university campuses, are set up to make people feel safe (without anyone actually becoming safe). Then all those social laws are regularly broken by all those individualist sociopaths who never believe in society as an entity, but only as a collection of individuals divided into winners like them and losers (everyone else).

Then the prevailing belief system in any given case uses the argument of social harmony again to get all the victims back onside, so that they can be successfully exploited, and mistreated, once again. Then the social boundaries are fixed once again, perhaps slightly differently from the time before. Then the egotistical monsters break all the rules again, then their friends in the belief system get everyone onside again (“peace in our time”), and so it goes on and on forever, ad infinitum, ad nauseam.