Thursday, November 5, 2020

 Real conspiracies and fake conspiracies


One of the most important aspects of the recent US presidential election campaign was that it was often focused on a form of political insanity, namely the Trump campaign’s deliberate use of the totally fake “Q-Anon” conspiracy. That the Donald himself, and all his closest supporters, alternately took turns supporting, then officially disavowing, then supporting again, on several hundred different occasions. In the state of Georgia, the Republican candidate for the House of Representatives, Marjorie Taylor Greene, has been elected, even though she is a fervent supporter of the Q-Anon delirium. A couple of dozen other Republican/Q-Anon candidates may also have been elected to the House as well. In the state of Oregon, the Republican candidate for senator, Jo Rae Perkins, equally well-known for being that state’s most ardent supporter of that extremely odd conspiracy, may also have been elected. Q-Anon being an ultra-right-wing form of idiocy, according to which the US governing elite’s “deep state”, via the “left-liberal” Democratic Party and several well-known actors, is itself engaged in an enormous, global conspiracy centred on child sex-trafficking and cannibalism! Which would only cease to exist once Trump himself succeeded in counter-attacking, thereby saving both the USA and the rest of the world by locking up all the plotters in that huge (non-existent) cabal. It would be hard to find something stupider than that in which to believe.


This became the number fake conspiracy of the world’s most disgusting political campaign, namely the phoney pretension that Donald Trump was genuinely trying to help save ordinary people in the USA from their ultra-elitist enemies. Looked at from the opposite point of view, the same pretension also simultaneously became one of the USA’s most important real conspiracies, namely Trump’s desperate attempt to prevent his less wealthy supporters from finding out that he was in reality the worst elitist enemy that those unfortunate people ever had. How could so many white working-class people, often living in small towns and rural areas, some of whom recently lost their formerly well-paying industrial jobs, possibly believe that a fake billionaire from Park Avenue (New York City), who reduced taxes for ultra-rich people and their corporations more than anyone else in US history, was really on their side?


Real conspiracies have always existed, everywhere in the world, throughout the ages. They are  an integral part of ordinary politics in every country, as well as being inherent to both private and state capitalism. Huge banks and corporations are constantly plotting against each other all the time, stealing each other’s data, always desperately trying to take market share away from their most important competitors. Increasing one’s market share being by far the best possible strategy for making a whole lot more money than any of the other contenders. Up and coming empires like China are also always trying to steal trade secrets from more established empires like the USA, sometimes taking such secrets away from US satellites like Canada, as the Huawei corporation apparently did from Canada’s now defunct Nortel Networks. So there is nothing new about real conspiracies.


Fake conspiracies have also always existed, since forever. Such as the Catholic Church’s medieval “donation of Constantine” document, purporting to show that pro-Christian Roman emperor Constantine back in the fourth century considered the Catholic interpretation of Christian doctrine to be very much superior to the Orthodox Church’s rival version. Pope John Paul II (1978-2005) was the first Catholic pope in history to finally admit, a thousand years after the fact, that the “Constantine” document was in fact penned by Catholic monks during the Middle Ages. All the world’s fake conspiracies are also always real conspiracies as well, in the sense that they help to “muddy the waters”, or to (changing metaphors) “set up a smokescreen”, that gets targeted populations so confused that they never know what is really going on.


In order to believe such complete inventions, victimized people start out with a false idea of what kind of world in which they are really living, which, once thoroughly manipulated by utterly despicable ideologues, such as Trump associate Steve Bannon, often lead to totally unhinged interpretations of real events. Most people suffer from false consciousness, or alienation, and do not really know what lies directly in front of them. They often see only what they want to see, rather than what is. In some cases, the conspirators themselves are based in the same countries as the targeted populations, whereas in other cases they can also be based inside a rival empire, such as Russia in this particular instance. Which is precisely the kind of situation that the USA is going through right now, as are a whole lot of other countries.


As for the alleged sex-trafficking of children by members of the elite, the only real conspiracy of that overwhelming nature has been the Catholic Church’s equally desperate attempts to hide the fact that a large number of its priests, deprived from normal sexual relations with women since the Gregorian “reforms” of the twelfth century, have been caught molesting millions of young boys and girls all over the world, even more often in recent decades than they did in the more distant past. This being the same Catholic Church that, since the Republican-dominated Senate’s promotion of ultra-traditionalist circuit judge Amy Coney-Barrett, now controls two-thirds (six out of nine judges) of the USA’s Supreme Court. This in a country in which Catholics only make up 21% of the total US population, even less than the percentage of atheists in that same ultra-rich country, which also “boasts” one of the world’s highest levels of social inequality.


So, if as recently alleged in some of the most well-informed sections of the US media, Trump is in fact working on behalf of the USA’s most long-lasting, full-fledged, deeply-embedded, evangelical-Protestant conspiracy, known as “The Family” or “The Fellowship”, it seems a bit odd that ultra-conservative Catholics like Coney-Barrett could help that very real conspiracy achieve at least some of its goals. Such as, soon enough, making it possible to outlaw all abortions in the USA, which, under current circumstances, is one of the worst possible things that could happen to the women’s liberation movement in that country. As well as making sure that poor people will get no more help from the government (via the “Affordable Care Act”) in their efforts to avoid paying huge sums to private health-insurance corporations.


Coney-Barrett could also become very useful to the forces of reaction in the USA by contributing to the most important fake conspiracy on a world scale, the one that denies the existence of climate change, or any of the other negative consequences arising from the recent arrival of what is now being called the Anthropocene. In spite of all these probable, soon-to-be-realized, contributions to the cause of Christian fundamentalism, we should never forget, however, that Catholics, even ultra-reactionary ones like Coney-Barrett, are not usually very well-liked by proselytizing, evangelical Protestants. Nor do Catholics of any political persuasion enjoy working all that much with their evangelical enemies.


On the other hand, all the ultra-right-wing Christian extremists in the USA might still want to band together and make common conspiratorial cause for a short time, if only to get rid of left-liberalism forever, at least in “America”. Once that is done, they can always go on a new crusade after that, and start yet another civil war between them, to determine once and for all which kind of Christianity is the “best” kind. Just like those other, equally fanatical, religious extremists in the Muslim part of the world, divided up into dozens of fiercely competing Sunni and Shiite factions, who, when they are not murdering unbelievers in as many different countries as possible, are also busy tearing each other apart in a fight to the finish. Once we get a winner from the wars of religion inside the ultra-Christian community, and a rival winner inside the ultra-Muslim community, not to mention winners between opposing gangs of equally neofascist fanatics imbedded within all the other religions in the world, then we can have a much bigger, global “war to end all wars”, each strain of religious fundamentalism seeking to physically eliminate all the other strains. What a wonderful perspective for a not too distant future!


But the selfsame US election campaign also underlined the importance of at least one other important set of conspiracies, both real ones and fake ones again, this time centring on the issue of democracy. In this case, the people who run the Democratic Party, and their bosom buddies in the traditional US media, are constantly bleating about how much danger “American democracy” is in because of the neo-nazi machinations of the Republican lunatics, and their up-start allies over at Fox News. While it is certain that whatever is left of formal democracy in the USA will undoubtedly disappear if the very real, pro-Trump conspiracy prevails for another four years, in spite of seeming to have lost the election, one must also not forget that genuine democracy has never been terribly well-defended inside the not-so-glorious American empire.


Just over the past ten or fifteen years, according to investigative reporter Greg Palast, over 16 million more eligible voters than before that time, most of them coming from racial minorities, have been deliberately taken off the US electoral lists by local officials using all sorts of conspiratorial methods. Such as several states’ bureaucratic machinations aimed at disqualifying all the people who did not vote in the most recent local elections, by sending them a misleading flyer deliberately designed to induce them to dump it into the garbage rather than replying to it, thereby “confirming” those potential voters’ “lack of interest in democracy”.


But there is also a considerably larger issue contributing much more substantially to the pathetic weakness of formal democracy, not just in the USA but all over the world, that most political commentators never mention. This is the unprecedentedly large gap between the world’s social classes, particularly the outrageous income division between a very small group of ultra-rich people and a very large group of ultra-poor people. Most experts on that subject, including those in the United Nations and in the People’s Republic of China, concentrate all their attention on what they call “extreme poverty”, which is to say those several hundred million people, mostly to be found in Asia, Africa and Latin America, who are still making less than two dollars a day. Quite a large group of people, after all, but which is getting larger all the time (at least 100 million more of them so far, according to the World Health Organization) because of the harmful effects of the current pandemic. None of those people, however, live in rich countries like the USA which, in spite of its extreme social divisions, does not seem to include anyone living on less than two dollars per day.


However, if we take a closer look at poverty all over the world, like the Oxfam organization has done, and enlarge the definition to include not just everyone living on less than two dollars per day, but instead focus on what the world’s richer countries define as living in poverty, it becomes obvious that over two-thirds of the world’s total population ought to be listed as poor. Rich people in general (and not just the super-rich) only account for somewhat less (according to conflicting definitions of what being rich means), than one percent of the world’s population, with the rest of the world’s people belonging to the so-called “middle class”. Which, in countries like the USA starts at about 25 or 30 000 US dollars per year (according to which one of the 50 US states is doing the calculating), or about 70-80 dollars per day, but in countries like China the selfsame “middle” class starts at less than ten percent of either of those figures. Poverty is therefore by far the most common socio-economic condition of human beings living in every part of the world.


The overall gap between the rich and the poor has been increasing at a much greater rate over the past several decades, mostly because of the worldwide revival of laissez-faire policies (neoliberalism) that started in 1979. When both the UK’s Margaret Thatcher and China’s Deng Xiao-ping first came to power, followed by the USA’s Ronald Reagan (who came to power in 1981), and most of the other ruling politicians in the world. Neoliberalism, which has been practised by almost all the governing parties in the formally democratic countries since that time, as well as in most of the world’s proudly authoritarian countries, has always focused on putting the emphasis back on such things as “shareholders’ rights”, rather than on the rights of any of the other “stakeholders” in the world economy. As well as by paying much larger sums to corporate directors, often through the use of stock options, than in days gone by, thereby making sure that the world’s largest owners of capital would get the lion’s share of all the new wealth being created over the past forty years.


As part of their own worldwide conspiracy, the rich and powerful people promoting neoliberalism also included a concerted effort to greatly reduce the power of trade unions, social-democratic parties, non-ruling communist parties, nationalist (interventionist) governments, as well as ecology movements, to siphon off more than a small percentage of that wealth to serve the needs of all those people who were not classified as being rich. From 1979 to 1989, the world’s most important central banks fought the “war against inflation” by raising interest rates from about 5% to about 20%, deliberately causing an enormous worldwide recession. Which was followed by an even bigger recession in 2008, also largely created by the effects of rampant neoliberalism, as well as by the even more harmful effects stemming from the current pandemic. In both these more recent cases, this led many of the same central banks to divert even more enormous sums into programs like “quantitative easing”, not terribly well understood by most ordinary people, that also greatly contributed to enlarging the income gap even more.


As a result, neoliberalism has brought about an enormous deterioration in working-class living conditions all over the world, even in the richer countries. In Québec, for example, that deterioration, which started long before the pandemic did but has become even worse since its arrival, is typified by the extreme suffering of tens of thousands of public-sector nurses, forced to work under a compulsory overtime scheme, often leading to several 16-hour shifts per week, per person. Therefore becoming one of the most important examples of how neoliberalism is constantly morphing into neofascism. This kind of thing just keeps on getting worse and worse with every year that goes by, in both the private and the public sectors of every economy. Huge corporations all over the world are always protecting themselves from even minimal taxation by transferring assets back and forth all the time, from one country to another, in an ever-increasing spiral, with the result that most of the tax burden has been shifted onto the backs of the very same class of overworked citizens that has to put up with all the neofascist nonsense as well.


Establishment observers, however, refuse to talk about the very obvious link between this ever-increasing social gap and the simultaneous, ever-accelerating decline of democracy. Which has left the field open for authoritarian regimes in every part of the world to point out to everyone just how weak all the governments in the (self-proclaimed) democratic countries have become, given the neoliberal transfer of most of the wealth and power in those countries to the top echelons of the private-capitalist class. To a much greater extent than what those same ultra-rich people already possessed during the previous period of history (the “thirty glorious years” between 1945 and 1975).


What the world’s very numerous, openly authoritarian regimes conspiratorially “forgot” to mention, however, was that they also participated quite actively since 1979 in that very same transfer of wealth and power to private capitalists, although not to the same extent as the formally democratic countries did. All of which became much less democratic, and therefore much more similar to the authoritarian countries, as a result. What has to be emphasized here is that regardless of where it takes place, unprecedentedly high income and power divisions between the social classes always make any attempt at running any kind of democracy much more difficult than it was when those same social divisions were not so glaringly obvious.


It really is incredibly stupid for those who continue to support the democratic illusion, sometimes called “the American way of life”, such as the leaders of the Democratic Party in the USA, to exclusively blame their increasingly successful, authoritarian adversaries (people like Donald Trump), for the decline of democracy in all their countries. Their current candidate, Joe Biden, besides having recently been Barack Obama’s vice-president, spent most of his career as a pro-establishment senator from Delaware, the tax-evasion capital of the USA, where “free enterprise” for huge corporations is part of the state psyche. Biden himself actively participated in helping the USA’s largest credit-card companies escape from any kind of government supervision. Every US government of the past four decades, from Ronald Reagan to Donald Trump, whether Republican or Democrat, has supported neoliberalism in thousands of different ways, creating precisely the kind of “zombie nation”, turning inward against itself, that has been depicted in several recent horror movies, as well as in the recent elections.


Trump’s white-supremacist neofascism, directed against every one of the USA’s minority groups (of Afro-American, Latino, Asian and indigenous origins) is part and parcel of the real conspiracy in this scenario. While a very important part of the same demagogue’s fake conspiracy is his completely bogus pretension at becoming the champion of anti-Chinese protectionism and economic nationalism in general. Which he spends a great deal of time sounding off about, without ever adopting any kind of national economic program, instead constantly lowering taxes for financiers and doing away with any kind of protection for the natural environment. As a result, the US economy today, the manufacturing industries as well as the service industries, are even more dependent on China, and on the entire worldwide, free-trade, economy, than they were under his presidential predecessors. The guy is a total fake, his populism being exclusively focused on building up a cult of the personality for himself, a kind of ultra-right-wing version of the ultra-left “cultural revolution” (1966-1976) in China, during the last ten years of Chairman Mao’s reign.


Donald Trump (“Delirium Tremens” himself) really enjoys the loving, cheering crowds of total idiots who really think that he is their saviour, rather than their grave-digger. As he pointed out several years ago when he first began thinking about his future candidacy, he deliberately chose the Republican Party because he was convinced that those “dumb asses” would believe everything he said, no matter how crazy it turned out to be. He truly enjoys putting one over on them, a lot like the pied piper of Hamelin was supposed to have done. The comparison with the pied piper being particularly appropriate, since most of the people who voted for Trump are constantly acting like children, refusing to accept any responsibility whatsoever, for their wives or for their children, for democracy, or for any other “sissy” preoccupations like those ones. Trump himself may be looked down upon by all the intellectuals in the world, but he still knows that he can manipulate that enormous crowd of super-dummies, and make them turn in any which direction he pleases. What a rush! In the USA, he even seems to have stolen every modern nation-state’s monopoly on violence (the police, the army, etc.), by substituting his own individual “proud boy” militias for those of “we the people”. Calling him a neofascist is not any kind of an exaggeration.


Every Democratic attempt at counter-attacking, such as sending in Barack Obama or invoking the hundreds of thousands of dead people killed by Trump’s refusal to do anything to stop the pandemic, blew up in their faces. The millions of people who voted for the Donald once again, mostly white and mostly men, justified their support by quite literally invoking the New Hampshire state slogan: “Live free or die!” They all want freedom from all the rules: freedom to be racist, freedom to be sexist, freedom to piss on the environment, freedom from wearing anti-viral masks, freedom to bear arms, freedom to shoot people they do not like, freedom to drive their pick-ups over other people’s dead bodies, freedom to pick their noses in public, all the world’s most important freedoms.


Meanwhile, “up in” Canada, the Liberal government of Justin Trudeau fears Donald Trump’s zombie nation every bit as much as the Biden camp in the USA does, without really doing all that much to prevent that dangerous virus from crossing the border. The Liberal government of Justin Trudeau has decided to temporarily abandon its party’s previous obsession with austerity, in order to face up to the current pandemic, but still gives the lion’s share of all that government aid to the business class. The same government also refuses to regulate the all-important transportation sector of the economy, or to live up to its international obligations aimed at limiting, instead of encouraging, the ever-expanding use of fossil fuels.


It is true, however, that after the Trudeau government introduced the (temporary) “Canada Emergency Response Benefit” to help poor people survive the pandemic, independent researchers discovered that the CERB recipients became the only Canadian social grouping whose level of anxiety declined for awhile, in spite of the pandemic, because they no longer had to put up with choosing between two forms of abject poverty, totally inadequate social welfare and the almost-as-bad minimum wage. That sort of government largesse (CERB) is not destined to survive for very long, unfortunately, the entire business class (big business, medium-size business and small business) being totally and permanently opposed to any kind of post-pandemic program of that sort.


In a capitalist society, “corporate welfare bums” are very much preferred to poor people refusing to be satisfied with the minimum wage. If the Trudeau government (God forbid) ever tries to make such a thing permanent, via Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland (who wrote a book several years ago about the divisive nature of huge personal fortunes), the business class will soon find a way to replace them with a much more accommodating, Conservative-Party regime. Capitalism thrives on the systemic poverty of ultra-elitism and cannot survive without it. It has even become a form of quasi-religious observation in the USA, especially among Trump supporters, with their visceral hatred of anything that smacks of socialism.


In one way or another, all the world’s liberal democrats continue to support the still ongoing triumph of neoliberalism, because they have no other pro-capitalist choice. They are all obliged to pretend, in their entirely conspiratorial manner, that that incredible transfer of ever more money and ever more power to people who were already dominating most of the world even before the advent of neoliberalism, has nothing whatever to do with the global decline of democracy. On what planet do all these “deplorable democrats” live, exactly? The incompatibility of private capitalism with any kind of genuine democracy is unfortunately not something that they can ever succeed in getting their heads around.


Which, however, does not in any way justify the idea that it is somehow preferable, so far as the world’s ordinary people (those with no power and very little money) are concerned, for them to support openly authoritarian regimes instead. As already indicated, the world’s state-capitalist regimes, in which governments still possess as much power and clout as the private-capitalist elites possess, are even less inclined than the self-proclaimed democracies to spend very much money on ordinary people’s needs. The “People’s” Republic of China, for example, still does not possess any kind of decent social welfare system, despite the fact that “the people” have theoretically been in power for the past 71 years. It turns out that ultra-individualist reactionaries in the USA, who abhor social welfare, have much more in common with “Red” China than any of them would care to admit!


Back in the day, some of today’s authoritarian (state-capitalist) regimes, such as China, used to support the totalitarian, falsely “communist” ideology of the 1950s and 1960s, which still seems to exist in North Korea, but has long been abandoned not only in China, but also in such other, still officially “communist” countries as Vietnam, Laos and Cuba. Many more of today’s authoritarian regimes are largely based on some form of religious fanaticism, such as Poland, Hungary, Russia, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Pakistan, India, Malaysia, Myanmar, Sri Lanka and Brazil. While dozens more such regimes are simply military or political dictatorships, often practising ethnic exclusivism, a common characteristic that also applies to most of the ultra-right-wing religious states. Wherever state capitalism exists, however, the people who run those countries are almost entirely focused on controlling an important regional empire, conspiratorially pretending to be trying to make their country great again, using the same slogan that Donald Trump is using, their leaders (Xi Jinping, Vladimir Putin, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Norendra Modi, Jair Bolsonaro, etc.) also adopting the same, ultra-egotistical kind of self-aggrandizement (“If it wasn’t for me, we wouldn’t be important at all”).


Yet another very important controversy also exists, in one version or another, in almost every country in the world, wherever ethnic and religious majorities live alongside ethnic and religious minorities. Even though its very real connection with the ever-increasing use of real and fake conspiracies does not seem to be obvious at first glance. This is the recently exacerbated  division between two forms of extremist belief about the issue of “race”, a concept that has no scientific basis in biological reality but which nevertheless is constantly being treated as something real by professional ideologues all over the world. It is centred on the supposedly inherent differences between “colonialists” (often falsely considered to be of exclusively European origin) and “victims” (just as often falsely considered to be exclusively of non-European origin).


In the real world, imperialism and colonialism do not “belong” exclusively to Europe at all, and have in fact been practised over and over again since ancient times, by various different empires based in Asia, in Africa and in what is now called Latin America, as well as those based in the Western world (Europe, North America, Australasia). Non-Western empires also continue to exist nowadays, not just in China and in Russia (partly European, partly Asian), but also in smaller, more regional empires like the one in Turkey. The controversy over racism that I am referring to here falsely assumes that only people of European origin can possibly be imperialist, or colonialist. It is a fascinating example of two equally deviant but nevertheless conflicting interpretations of reality, pitting supposedly “colonialist” people who refuse to believe in the concept of systemic racism, against supposedly “racialized victims of colonialism”, who refuse to believe that any of the people falsely designated as “colonialist” can ever be considered anti-racist.


As has already happened in dozens of other places, particularly in the USA, this conspiratorial virus has recently infected various different people in Québec, and has become all mixed up (as so often happens vis-à-vis practically every other issue) with the “national question” in Canada, over whether or not Québec should some day become an independent country. Many francophone politicians who are currently supporting Québec autonomy within Canada, such as premier François Legault (himself a former supporter of independence), as well as a significant portion of the professional politicians who still support Québec independence nowadays, refuse to recognize the existence of systemic racism in Québec.


These politicians self-identify with the European origins of the Québec majority and feel that any recognition of systemic racism as part of Québec reality somehow amounts to a blanket accusation directed against their own constituency. An accusation that, according to them, is also being used by the largely anglophone, Canadian empire to deny the Québécois either autonomy or independence. This part of their analysis is entirely true, the Canadian state having long ago decided to include Québec-based minorities in its communitarian conspiracy against “separatism”, disguised as nothing more than the “innocent” application of ordinary multiculturalism. Each participating culture in the Canadian mosaic always being defined by federal ideologues according to the exaggerated pretensions of religious fundamentalism. The same conspiratorial approach to multiculturalism that also (curiously enough) characterizes one of the Québec education ministry’s own courses, the one called “Ethics and religious culture”.


Unfortunately, some of the people currently supporting the independence option, or the autonomy option, seem to have forgotten the broader definition of the Québec people as simply being anyone currently living in Québec, which includes not only francophone Québécois of various cultural origins (European-origin francophones, indigenous francophones, Haitian francophones, and so on), but also anglophone and allophone people combining the same kind of widely differing geographical origins for their ancestors. This used to be the official view of the pro-independence, and the pro-autonomy, militants during both the 1980 and the 1995 referendums, the last one of which was almost won by the “Oui” (“Yes”) side.


In my opinion, recognizing that various groups of people living in Québec do in fact suffer from systemic racism, in various different ways, does not make the Québécois nation unworthy of independence, in any way, shape or form. Acknowledging the reality of systemic racism  should never have been allowed to infect the debate between federalism and Québec nationalism in the first place, regardless of where those minority people’s ancestors came from: indigenous origins, people of African descent (whether directly from Africa, or by way of Haiti, Jamaica, or some other extra-African nation), or people whose ancestors came from some Muslim-majority country, or any other similar origin.


For the simple reason that all the other nations in this world, including those currently independent (or considered to be independent), as well as all the other ones still struggling to achieve the status of independence (dozens of such places still exist all over the world), are also contributing to systemic racism, every bit as much or even more so in some cases, than is Québec. If Québec became independent from Canada, “the rest of” Canada would still be practising systemic racism, towards the very same groups of people. All the people living in an independent Québec would have escaped from the domination of the English-Canadian empire, but both Canada and Québec would still be practising systemic racism.


Which is because all the world’s nations are, after all, just so many “imagined communities”, every one of which (including, paradoxically, English-Canada itself) officially projects the image of its own majority population onto the world scene. The faction within the Québec independence movement, and the Québec autonomy movement, that refuses to recognize systemic racism in its midst, has quite simply fallen into the trap laid by the federal conspiracy of fundamentalist multiculturalism, abandoning the much more inclusive strategy that both those movements used to support, during the two referendum campaigns.


In reality, systemic racism, just like even more prevalent systemic sexism (inside every cultural community), both exist in every country in the world, and are not at all related to any particular country’s constitutional status. Both racism and sexism are part and parcel of the worldwide division of human beings into distinct social classes, which is the most fundamental characteristic of every human civilization. They both play very important roles in the (undeclared) class war, dominant classes, even more than dominated ones, using racism and sexism, as well as religious and cultural differences, as pawns in their constant battle over the control of more (on the dominant side), or less (on the dominated side), income, power and prestige, in every part of the world and during every period of history.


As pointed out earlier, we are currently living in a period characterized by the largest social divisions ever experienced, both neoliberalism and neofascism using every available, atavistic, ideological weapon (racism, sexism, class-based elitism, imperialism, militarism, religious fundamentalism, ethnic exclusivism and environment-destroying extractivism) to make absolutely sure that the dominant social classes will always succeed in controlling all the dominated social classes. The dominated people are considered by the dominant ones as belonging to various different herds of domesticated sheep, to be conveniently fleeced at regular intervals. All the real and the fake conspiracies, originating from all the reactionary ideologies listed above, are all currently being promoted from the dominant classes’ point of view. As Donald Trump would put it, everyone in the world is either a “winner” or a “loser”, belonging to the dominant classes or to the dominated ones. That is the disgusting way that the world-system actually works, whether we like it or not.


Many of the dominated people in the world, no matter in which official country (members of the General Assembly of the United Nations) that they may reside, often self-identify as belonging to some minority, whether indigenous, or “black”, or Muslim, or Christian, or any of the several hundred other minority denominations currently existing in some part of the world or another. Every single world minority is itself an imagined community living inside some officially designated, independent country, based on its own majority culture, which therefore becomes a somewhat larger, imagined community. As pointed out earlier in this text, “races” and all the other kinds of socio-cultural adhesion, do not exist in any kind of scientific, biological sense. Only the common species, homo sapiens, belongs to a proven, biological definition. Even most of the world’s indigenous peoples are not really “indigenous” in the dictionary sense of the word, that is, still belonging nowadays to the very first ethnic group that ever lived in any particular geographical location. Even the Inuit, living in Canada’s (and Québec’s) far-northern, polar regions, arrived later on the scene than the now-extinct Dorset people.


In addition, most of the world’s black people are not really “black” in any exclusivist sense. Barack Obama, the USA’s first “black president” was (and still is) just as white as he was (is) black. All the world’s religious minorities, no matter from which religion, nor from which branch of any particular religion, can self-identify however they please, in whichever country they are currently residing, they are still considered to be citizens of that country. Not only by the officials of that country, but also by the officials of whichever country their (often multiple) ancestors came from.


Even some of the more extremist Muslim minorities in France, those belonging to what French president Emmanuel Macron has called the “Islamic separatist movement”, who have taken over several hundred suburban districts all over France, and run them practically as independent countries, still officially reside in the Republic of France. Even the ones who hate the God-forsaken republic, and spit on the graves of all those unbelievers (“mécréants”) that they have recently assassinated. They can only be stopped by the kind of all-out opposition to their conspiracy as that now being waged by the French Republic, which is certainly not being helped by wishy-washy “allies” like Justin Trudeau, who seems to think that freedom of expression should not include doing anything or saying anything that any ultra-right-wing fanatics in the Muslim world might conceivably disapprove. He did try to walk back his opposition to freedom of expression a couple of days after he opposed it, without really convincing anyone about his re-conversion. But this sort of thing is what Justin T. always does on every issue, trying to simultaneously support both opposing views at the same time.


Even the authors of a 41-page brief presented recently (September 21, 2020) to the Québec government’s “Groupe d’action centre le racisme”, that call themselves the “Groupe de reflexion sur le racisme et l’integration”, got it wrong when they also tried to deny the existence of systemic racism in Québec. Those authors (the main contributor, André Lamoureux, as well as Djamila Adar, Léon Onaknine and Michèle Sirois) seem to think that ideologies such as racism cannot possibly be expressed passively (subconsciously or by accident), as well as actively. In order to arrive at that conclusion, they seem to have confused institutional racism, which may be reduced somewhat through the adoption of corrective legislation, with systemic racism, which can continue to function in spite of legislation, being practised even by people working for the government. As has been proven over and over again, as in the application of Québec’s Charter of the French language (“Bill 101”), as well as,  everywhere in the world, in humanity’s losing fight against the current pandemic.


The only way to make any sense of all these conflicting definitions of “race” and racism is to see them for what they really are, and not just to accept the authors of each conflicting definition’s own official projections of what they are all about. It is also entirely possible for at least some of the individual people in any particular cultural community, dominant or dominated, to hold an anti-racist point of view, regardless of the reality of systemic racism being actively practised within that society. Nothing gets me more upset than to read some of the texts being written all the time by particularly intransigent people, in which every single individual belonging to any particular community, or even to all those belonging to every cultural community except the one with which that particular author self-identifies, is accused of being guilty of some horrible ideological crime, such as racism, even when they are in fact (at least in some cases) being anti-racist.


So it came as quite a shock to me when I read a text (“L’arme”, “The weapon”) written by Émilie Nicolas, a columnist for the Montréal newspaper “Le Devoir” (October 21, 2020). This was one of the first comments made in the context of the infamous “n-word” debate, that has spilled over recently into Québec from its origins in the USA. In that text, Nicolas denounced in no uncertain terms every single person on the planet who does not belong to the community designated by the n-word itself, as being guilty as charged. Even though that word is in itself only a derogatory derivative (“nigger”) of the Spanish word for “black” (“negra” is the feminine version, and “negro” the masculine version of the same word). According to Nicolas, no one can ever be allowed to use that word, regardless of the reasons being offered for using it in some particular context, even if it is for educational purposes, and even it is used merely in citing the title of some well-known literary work.


Such as “Les nègres blancs d’Amérique”, (“White niggers of America”) written by FLQ leader Pierre Vallières in 1968. That book is precisely the same kind of left-wing exaggeration to which the Émilie Nicolas’ article also belongs. In his case, he was trying to argue that the francophone Québécois majority of the 1960s was every bit as mistreated inside anglophone Canada as was the black minority in the USA, because the Québec majority population back then had an average income well below that of the average English-Canadian, to the same extent that the average income of the black people in the USA was inferior to the average income of its white population. An argument that does not stand up to historical scrutiny since, among other things, it does not refer to the existence of slavery in the USA (from colonial origins in 1619 to its removal after the Civil War), that also existed (though it involved far fewer people) in the French and British colonial regions that later became Canada and Québec, for almost as long.


In Émilie Nicolas’ case, no use of the n-word should ever appear in print, or in any other form of communication, because all such usage is necessarily racist. In reality, however, it is no more racist to use that expression than it is to use such other expressions as “people of colour”, since white is just as much a colour as is black, or any other colour that can be found on the surface of human skin. Her point of view is truly extreme because, as pointed out by Québec author Pierre Nepveu, in another article also published in “Le Devoir” (October 23, 2020), the very fact of accusing an anti-racist person of being racist instead is what people from ultra-right-wing identity groups are always doing. The genuinely anti-racist person in this case being Verushka Lieutenant-Duval, a professor at the University of Ottawa, who touched off the whole n-word debate in Québec when she innocently used the word that Nicolas hates so much during a class specifically directed against the derogatory use of that very term!


The totally exaggerated nature of that deliberate misinterpretation made me think right away of the attitudes I used to support for awhile myself, during the late 1960s, coming from people like Mao zedong and his supporters during the “Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution” in China. An extreme left-wing point of view, called “Mao zedong Thought” at the time, that I decided to completely repudiate back in 1971, as described in my 2013 autobiography (the first seven posts in my blog). When I was working as a history teacher, mostly in Québec but also in Ontario, between 1980 and 2014, I avoided using any of the racially derogatory terms, not only the word for black but also all the other words invented over the years to put down all sorts of other cultural or ethnic groups, all over the world. But avoiding the use of such a word even in an anti-racist context, seems to me to be the kind of extreme intransigence that progressive people should avoid like the plague. Equating every single use of the black word as being necessarily the same as supporting white supremacy, as some people in the USA are doing, is a completely unjustified over-reaction.


It was also fascinating to read, towards the end of the very same Nicolas article, when, not satisfied with denouncing all the so-called white people in the universe as being necessarily guilty of anti-black racism, she also went on to denounce all the men in the world for always being anti-feminist as well. Using precisely the same intransigence for any male supporters of feminism out there as she also used for any white people pretending to be anti-racist. What is more, she seems to have thought that she could get away with all these blanket accusations by claiming in the conclusion of her article that if white people (or, more specifically, white men) really want to be seen as genuine progressives, all they have to do is to turn over a new leaf and immediately rectify every single horrible thing that all the white people have ever done to all the black people in the past. Thereby magically making racism and slavery disappear forever afterwards, from history as well as from current events. As if the category of “white people” (particularly white men) was some kind of singular, monolithic entity in which every member of the group had an “equal opportunity” to achieve whatever they set out to achieve, for better or for worse, regardless of the enormity of the task being set out in front of them.


One of my early blogposts (“I plead not guilty”, March 4, 2014) was all about how incredibly absurd it was for people like myself, who have never had any power, nor a whole lot of money, nor a great deal of recognition in life, to be considered by someone else to be nevertheless guilty of causing something, or helping to cause something, that we never had the slightest chance of influencing, let alone causing. Some younger people nowadays have even opined that everyone born during the baby-boom (1945-1965) is necessarily guilty of having caused, or helped to cause, all the problems that those younger people have to deal with in their daily lives these days, which presumably began during the baby-boom period. Because we obviously benefited from not having to deal with such problems back then, things like the much higher cost of rent, or the lower levels of unemployment (at least before 1980), or the lower cost of a university education back then, or whatever. Personally, I really do not see how I could have had any influence on the coming-into-being of neoliberalism, or the extremely high interest rates of the 1980s, or the onslaught of neofascism for that matter, than I personally had the capacity to do away with systemic racism and with systemic sexism, forever, all by myself. Although I do remember denouncing all of those things back then, and I also have the newspaper and magazine clippings to prove it.


The fact is that almost all ordinary people, not only poor people but also the vast majority of those in the middle class, cannot be held collectively responsible for any of the major decisions being made all the time in the world by people in the dominant classes (big business and world leaders in every political, economic, social and cultural branch of power). Ordinary people can and should oppose every disgusting reality that already existed before they were born and still continues to exist during their lifetimes. They also can and should denounce every disgusting decision to make things even worse, that was taken by all the big-shots during their own lifetimes, such as choosing to inaugurate neoliberalism and neofascism (both of which began simultaneously in Chile, when the Pinochet dictatorship was jointly launched in 1973 by the Chilean army and the Central Intelligence Agency of the USA). But inventing false groupings, such as the category known as “all the white people in the world”, or the category of “eternally anti-feminist men”, or the category of “guilty baby-boomers”, is just a symbolic, conspiratorial, way of looking at the world. It is not the way that things really work, in the real material world.



Thursday, October 8, 2020

 Truth versus truthfulness


I have been writing my blog, more or less monthly, over the past seven and a half years, this being post number 85, using the same generic title that I had already used for the first book that I published back in 2001, “Taking the lying out of living”. Followed by a second book in the same series, “Universal skepticism” (2003), and a third, “Billions of big babies” (2006), for a total of 494 pages of printed text. It freaks me out no end to discover now that I was really on to something back then, when I was writing those books, that I have been trying to develop more and more ever since in my blog. Something that has become very important indeed to all kinds of people, all over the world, particularly during the past twenty years.


Without realizing it fully at the time, I focused on a very important theme that had already been analyzed, in a much more erudite manner, by one of the world’s leading philosophers, the UK’s Bernard Williams (1929-2003). His last book, published by the Princeton University Press just before his death, was called “Truth and Truthfulness: An essay in genealogy” (2002). But I only found out about Williams and his book very recently, when the Montréal newspaper, “Le Devoir”, published an article (September 12, 2020) by journalist Alexis Riopel (“La vérité en panne de plaisir”) (“truth no longer gives pleasure”). It was all about his interview with a well-known, and very prolific, French physicist, Étienne Klein, whose most recent book, “Le goût du vrai” (2020) (“the taste for truth”), is partly based on Bernard Williams’ ideas.


Klein’s contribution centred on the same observation that Williams had already described, namely that scientific truth (verity) is increasingly coming under attack in recent decades from much more prosaic truthfulness (veracity). Klein believes that the conflict between those two ways of looking at the world, that seem to be quite similar to each other on the surface but are in fact totally opposed, has become considerably more acute over the past few years than it was back in 2002, or any time before that. A trend that he thinks has become even more accentuated during the current coronavirus crisis.


Klein became extremely upset last April when a French newspaper (“Le Parisien”) published a survey asking its readers to give their opinion about the efficiency of a certain remedy for SARS-coronavirus-2, even before any serious scientific study had been published on the subject. 80% of the thousands of people surveyed gave their opinion (“yes” or “no”) before any of them had the slightest idea what the scientific community might have to say about the usefulness of that particular drug. Which led Klein to underline once again what scientists have always maintained, namely that science, in every discipline, is not the same thing as common sense, nor is it some kind of derivative from individual intuition. It is instead a worldwide process aimed at increasing our knowledge of the entire universe though collectively determined forms of meticulous and methodical observation of the real world, and carefully controlled experimentation.


Scientific truth (verity) cannot be reduced to any one person’s individual desire for truthfulness (veracity), nor is it at all democratic. It should not therefore be mixed up with any of the recent, conspiratorial projections of all sorts of popular, but irrational desires to find immediate, satisfying and simplistic answers to every single problem that exists in today’s world. Klein got the title of his book from German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, who predicted way back in 1878 that the “taste for truth” would eventually disappear from civilized society as soon as the desire for discovery no longer satisfied people as much as it had since the beginning of the scientific revolution. Nietzsche also believed that with the return of illusion, error and chimera, humanity would plunge back into barbarism instead. Wow! Who knew that Nietzsche, in addition to all his other accomplishments, was capable of predicting Donald Trump’s rise to power 139 years before it actually took place?


For my part, I have no pretension as to always having been on the scientific side of the fence in every one of my published opinions. In the autobiography that I wrote back in 2013, that makes up the first seven posts in my blog, I admitted to having made several important errors of political judgement in my life, and I am certainly ready to acknowledge several similar mistakes that I have also made since that time. Nevertheless, I feel that over the past two decades I have been describing the real world more often than many other observers have, quite a bit more often when it comes to all the immensely powerful, neoliberal/neofascist, professional opinion manipulators whose deliberate use of reactionary, atavistic and antediluvian misinformation I have been lambasting over the years. Some of the people I talk to about the content of my blog criticize me from time to time for exaggerating the extent to which most of the dominant people in this world try to brainwash everyone else. But as I continue finding out more and more about reality, I am constantly discovering that in fact I underestimated just how consistently evil (entirely self-centred) the dominant ones really are. Every time that I feel that the world we live in could not possibly get any worse, it does anyway.


In every blogpost, based on my most recent readings, I like to take issue with the erroneous opinions of several different sets of people. Some of whom (the neoliberal/neofascist tandem) I find particularly disgusting in many different ways, as well as a few others that I may agree with part of the time, but who seem to me to be making serious mistakes in some other part of their analyses. Some observers might consider this to be a haphazard way of proceeding, but however disparate my references might seem to be, each time out, I try to make sure that they all nevertheless deserve their place under the common theme of each posting. In this month’s blogpost, I feel that all the people I have singled out this time around, to a greater or a lesser extent, seem to be confusing truth in the real world with merely apparent truthfulness, in which they let their desires get in the way of their judgements more often, or in the more extreme cases much more often, than I usually do.


My first target on this month’s list definitely belongs to the category of extremely disgusting reactionaries. I have always been opposed to religious bigotry in all its various manifestations, but I only just recently found out about what is probably the most dangerous of all the world’s fundamentalist movements. This one refers to itself as “the Family”, or “the Fellowship”, and seems to be by far the most powerful of all the ultra-right-wing, evangelical Christian movements currently dominating politics in the USA. This particularly egotistical gang of fanatics also seems to be the main organization behind the current, extremely erratic US president, using him as a kind of populist “wrecking ball”, designed to knock over all the opponents of that conspiratorial organization, so that they can achieve a truly totalitarian  stranglehold on what is still the world’s most powerful country.


Which they feel will become an all-important step in their worldwide crusade to force everyone, everywhere, to kow-tow to their brand of ultra-militaristic Christianity. For his part, “Proud Boy” Trump only signed on for this ultra-right-wing, “stand-by” assignment so that he could use the presidency as a way of recouping his very numerous business losses, involving hundreds of millions of dollars, in a large number of really stupid investments. But voting for him in the next US election, if he survives his current bout with the coronavirus, is nevertheless a good deal worse than voting for someone like drug-lord Pablo Escobar would have been in Colombia thirty years ago. A totalitarian theocracy in the USA would probably ruin that country completely, and most likely the rest of the world, pretty much forever.


Up until very recently, I knew nothing about the existence of this particular organization, any more than I knew about Bernard Williams’ insights into the differences between truth and truthfulness. Nor did I know anything about New Hampshire journalist Jeff Sharlet’s book, “The Family: the secret fundamentalism at the heart of American power”, published in 2008, until I watched a recent, PBS episode of a Netflix exposé, on the Fellowship’s multifarious machinations all over the world, and started looking up a lot more information on the Internet. It turns out that this Fellowship is a very successful, highly secretive, male-chauvinist, white-supremacist organization that was founded back in 1935, specifically to fight against left-wing labour leaders like Harry Bridges, the 1934 general strikes in three different US cities (led by Bridges and other people like him), as well as the pro-labour version of Franklin Roosevelt’s “New Deal” (not the initial 1933-1935 “New Deal”, which was much more conservative, but the second one, operating from 1935 to 1939).


“The Family” has sponsored such events as the very influential “National prayer breakfast”, attended every year by all the US presidents since Eisenhower, not to mention the same organization’s prayer breakfasts in Russia, that recently attracted quite a few of Vladimir Putin’s people (from the Orthodox brand of Christianity). This Family/Fellowship conspiracy is supported by thousands of US senators, ambassadors, leading businessmen and so on, all of whom have participated in constructing alliances over the past several decades with hundreds of ultra-right-wing parties and military dictators all over the world. Carrying out such specific campaigns as executing as many homosexuals as possible in countries like Uganda and spending enormous sums of money getting hundreds of their most distinguished members off the hook whenever they were caught cheating on their long-suffering wives.


It has also been quite fascinating to find out that these Fellowship people are not the least bit interested in portraying the prophet Jesus as a rather progressive preacher (“turn the other cheek”, “love thy neighbour as thyself”), like some Christians do, but see him instead as a kind of supreme warrior, leading his troops into battle, “till every foe is vanquished”, as in the song, “Onward Christian soldiers”. They love comparing Jesus to people like Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot and Ben Laden, preaching the idea that their champion must be obeyed by his followers with the same kind of blind devotion that all those well-known dictators received from their own brainwashed brethren.


For the people running the Fellowship Family, laissez-faire is God’s will, which makes them a kind of ultra-elitist, social-Darwinist, simultaneously neoliberal and neofascist movement, for whom “inferior” social classes (workers and peasants), “inferior sexes” (women and gays), and “inferior races” (all the world’s non-whites) only exist in order to serve their “natural superiors”, anointed by God himself. The racist character of this movement was also emphasized recently in public television programs underlining the fact that the political founder of neoliberalism in the USA, Ronald Reagan, used the same racist electoral slogan (“Make America Great Again”) that Donald Trump is currently using. Which meant the same thing back in the 1980s (white supremacist attacks on the gains of the civil rights movement) as it does now.


Religious fundamentalism is undoubtedly the ultimate source of the current “fake news” epidemic, opposing “the two worlds” over the past several hundred years, on the one hand, scientific observation of the real world, and on the other hand, totally artificial, extraterrestrial spiritualism. People who really believe in fairy tales like the ten commandments and virgin birth have been thoroughly primed and predisposed since their childhood to also believe anything that some strongman like Donald Trump wants them to believe. The most recent conspiratorial amplification of which seems to be the closely related “Q-Anon” movement, projecting the totally irrational idea that ultra-right-wing dictators, not only in the USA but everywhere else as well, will save us all from the diabolical machinations of the “deep-state”, run by an international cabal of ultra-liberal pedophiles! Is it possible to get any more insane?


In that sense, the Fellowship’s point of view is quite similar to the exaggerated bigotry of many other kinds of religious fundamentalism, such as the Muslim variety. The Muslim community, or umma, is also suffering from an enormous wave of ultra-conservative sentiment, a lot like the one that the Catholic section of Christianity went through during Pope Pius IX’s period of power back in the nineteenth century (1846-1878), as well as being quite similar to the Family’s evangelical form of ultra-Protestantism. In all three of these cases, the countries suffering from these intense convulsions of religious fervour are to be found in many different parts of the world, not only in places where those varieties of metaphysical belief have long been adopted by the majority of the local population, but also by similar contagion infecting all the minority groups founded by emigrant diasporas inside dozens of other countries.


Like Christianity, the Muslim community has long been divided up into warring factions, such as the majority Sunni faction and the minority Shiite faction, each of them nowadays sponsoring similar kinds of militant, ultra-right-wing movements getting more and more popular with every passing day. Some of those movements are often tied to particular nation-states, such as the (Sunni) Muslim Brotherhood currently dominating countries like Erdogan’s Turkey, which uses the Brotherhood’s brand of extremism, coupled with its own ethnic exclusivism, to wage war against rival Muslim organizations and empires in the Middle East.


This behaviour often puts it on a collision course with regional rivals like Saudi Arabia, sporting its own, even more extremist brand of Sunni Islam (Wahhabism), as well as with the military dictatorship currently ruling (Sunni) Egypt, which at one point claimed to despise Wahhabism even more than it hates the Brotherhood’s point of view. All those factions within the Sunni world (of which there are many others) are all violently opposed (as in the Syrian and Yemeni wars) to the Shiite faction, dominated (with the exception of Turkish-speaking Azerbaijan) by the Iranian empire, which also combines a form of religious extremism, every bit as virulent as Wahhabism, with its own variety of ethnic exclusivism operating from within its own home base. As for Azerbaijan, it is also currently at war, once again, with Orthodox-Christian Armenia, supported by Russia, making the advent of a much bigger war, between Turkey (still formally a part of NATO) and the Russian Federation, a very real possibility in the near future.


All those different kinds of Islamic extremism also exist in all the other Muslim-majority countries, as well as within all the emigrant diasporas, of which the Muslim minority in France is certainly one of the most important. France is focusing once again on that huge problem, during the current trial of all the people who helped the Muslim terrorists during the murderous 2015 attacks, directed against the cartoonists of “Charlie Hebdo” in Paris (for having re-published “blasphemous” drawings of the prophet Mohamed), as well as against several Jewish people who happened to be living nearby. Just a short time ago, two more innocent people were also attacked by yet another Muslim terrorist, of Pakistani origin, armed with a small axe, not far from the former offices of “Charlie Hebdo”.


Most of the political cartoonists in France, as well as almost everyone else in the national media over there (but not the much more courageous “Hebdo” itself), have collectively decided that “discretion is the better part of valour” and have completely abandoned publishing anything that any religious fanatic might conceivably consider to be blasphemous. Meaning anything that could be interpreted as being critical of any religion at all, a definition that could easily be deemed by some ultra-zealous nut-cases to include any contributions, of any kind, to any scientific discipline whatsoever, past, present and future.


A cowardly decision, to say the least, that has also been taken by most of the other world media, such as the “New York Times”, which last year ceased publishing political cartoons altogether after some people criticized some other organization’s cartoon, that they decided to reprint, for being antisemitic. Which means that people in many different parts of the world, even in places that still take pride in formally supporting freedom of expression, have made up their minds that that particular kind of freedom no longer means what it used to mean. An excellent example, therefore, of the fundamental difference between truth (verity) and self-defined “truthfulness” (veracity). Everyone now seems to have the “God-given right” (so to speak) to pretend that freedom of expression does not apply to political cartooning. Which also means that no one these days really knows to what forms of thought the right to “freedom of expression” still applies.


Unfortunately, the current fixation on fanaticism does not just apply to the Christian and the Muslim religions, but also to every other religion in the world, all of which seem to be currently infected with the same virus of ultra-reactionary proselytism. In India, for example, the Modi government has also doubled down on Hindu domination of that country, coupled with often violent attacks on the Muslim minority, the Sikh minority and all the other minority religions that still exist in that enormous nation. But those attacks simply feed into similarly violent counter-attacks by militants operating within many of those religious minorities, such as the most extreme sections of the Khalistan organizations within the Sikh minority, agitating for an independent state in the Punjab region.


India is once again exhibiting a form of regional imperialism, not only towards neighbouring states, such as its eternal enemy, Pakistan, which is every bit as infected as India is with its own, Sunni Muslim, form of religious fanaticism. But this mainly Hindu country has also revived a domineering attitude towards the internal minorities within India, violently imposing Hinduism on other forms of belief, through the use of state power, which constitutes a form of imperialism just as much as does going to war against external states. The Modi government, however, is merely going down the same path that the Indira Gandhi government did way back in 1984, sending in the army to destroy the most important Sikh temple in Amritsar. After which, in 1985, a group of Sikh militants blew up an Air India flight from Toronto to London, killing hundreds of Hindus, many of whom just happened to be Canadian citizens. Which is just as much a form of regional terrorism as Hindu domination is a form of regional imperialism. Both imperialism and terrorism are also variations on the common theme of militarism, the use of violence to attain political goals, pitting much more powerful state terrorism (imperialism) against considerably less powerful, but still quite dangerous, minority-group terrorism.


The relevance of all this to my theme about the struggle between truth and truthfulness ought to be obvious. Imperialism is imperialism, even when it is deemed ‘internal’, and terrorism is terrorism, even when it is considered ‘anti-imperialist’. Defining such ideological categories in as rigorous a way as possible, rather than in a lackadaisical way that completely eschews rigour, does not just apply to relatively poor countries with huge populations, like India, it also applies just as much to relatively rich countries, with much smaller populations, like Canada. Canada also practices regional imperialism in its own way, not so much by waging war on its neighbours (its only real neighbour being the immensely more powerful USA), but by participating in military alliances like NATO, as well as in the neocolonial exploitation of many other countries, mostly through its multinational mining companies, such as Barrick Gold.


Canada also practises internal imperialism, not only towards the hundreds of indigenous peoples to be found within Canada’s official borders, but also towards Québec and l’Acadie. The same kind of rigorous definition should also be applied to minority-group terrorism within Canadian borders, as in the case of the minuscule FLQ (“Front de libération du Québec”), that killed several innocent people, mostly by bombing Canadian-government mailboxes, during its short period of existence between 1963 and 1970. Ostensibly to somehow provoke the “complacent” Québec population into supporting their completely unrealistic vision of creating an independent, revolutionary-socialist nation-state, like the ones that had been recently set up in countries like Cuba and Algeria, the local population in those places supporting those goals much, much more than they ever did in Québec.


A thoroughly romantic idea that the Canadian government, under Pierre Elliott Trudeau (the current prime minister’s father), then used as a convenient excuse (a totally fictitious “apprehended insurrection”) to put the War Measures Act into operation 50 years ago. During which federal agents illegally entered 36 000 homes and offices, arresting and detaining 497 Québec citizens, most of them from the recently-founded, not at all revolutionary Parti Québécois (PQ), eventually charging only 18 of them with any specific crime. In other words, once again, definitions of words, particularly loaded words like imperialism and terrorism, should not be subordinated to the totally subjective criteria of mere truthfulness (ideologically biased appearance of truth).


Another fascinating example of how Williams’ theory of distinguishing between real truth and distorted truth applies to quite a large variety of major controversies, comes from an article by well-known American historian Deborah Lipstadt, “The ancient template of antisemitism”, that was published in the July-August 2020 edition of the BBC’s “World Histories” magazine. At one point in her otherwise factual attack on Holocaust denial, Lipstadt refers to the idea that even many progressive-minded people can participate in distorting the truth about the Holocaust because “many progressives consider prejudice to be a function of power—that those who possess power cannot possibly be victims. This view of prejudice is refracted through a prism that has two facets: class and race. Someone who is wealthy or from a group that is considered wealthy, and someone who is white or from a group that is considered white, cannot be a victim. When Jews claim to be victims, these progressives dismiss their claims as invalid and as a means of subterfuge designed to deflect attention from other issues—for example, Israel.”


The real truth in this particular case being the fact that there are indeed many false progressives out there who seem to genuinely believe that “those who possess power cannot possibly be victims”. But the rest of what Lipstadt wrote in the above quote does not necessarily follow, at least not exactly in the way that she indicated. Though millions of prejudiced people do not seem to realize this, it ought to be obvious to everyone that most Jews are not wealthy, and have never been wealthy in the past. It ought also to be obvious that most white people have never been wealthy either, as it ought also to be just as obvious that not all Jews are white people. Moreover, rich people can also be victims, if they are attacked in some way (robbed, shot at, killed, etc.), either by poor people or by other rich people. To which  should be added the fact that racism is still very much alive and kicking, and certainly seems to be systemic as well in almost every country in the world, including just about every white-majority country that exists.


None of those facts, however, take away from other realities with which Lipstadt may not agree, but are nevertheless every bit as factual. Such as that rich people are much less often victims in this world than are poor people, particularly the poorest of the poor, who also tend to be (without always being) non-white and female. And that most Jews did not support Zionism very much when it first came into being, back in the nineteenth century, and some of them still do not support it nowadays, often for reasons of religious orthodoxy. And that many early Zionists did not want to set up a state of their own in the region occupied by the Palestinian people back in 1948, when Israel first came into being, but were actively considering many other possible sites.


And that while today’s Palestinians are mostly Muslim, according to Israeli historian Shlomo Sand and many other Israeli citizens, they may very well be direct descendants of the majority of the Jews from the ancient world, who subsequently converted first to Christianity and then to Islam. And that some of the Jews in today’s Israel are not Semitic in origin, but hail instead from other groups of people converted to Judaism over the years, such as the Turkic-speaking Khazar people, from southeastern Europe. And that Israel is most certainly conducting itself in a colonialist (or imperialist) fashion toward the Palestinians, and toward the Israeli Arabs, even more so nowadays than it did during its earlier years. And that today’s Israel has become an increasingly ultra-right-wing society that currently mistreats the majority of its own Jewish population as well, although considerably less than it mistreats its other victims.


In other words, the section of Deborah Lipstadt’s article that I quoted above is true as far as it goes, but does not tell the whole truth about any of those things. Which is that progressive people can be perfectly justified in their profound dislike for what the search for wealth, and the desire to preserve that wealth, does to a majority of wealthy people, who mistreat poor people, as well as the so-called middle class, in as many different ways as possible. Such as by carrying out massive tax evasion, thereby cutting deeply into the financing of government programs aimed at helping the poor. Progressive people can also be perfectly justified in their opposition to many of Israel’s policies, provided that they do so for real-world, rational reasons that do not rely on “fake news” nor on any kind of prejudice. The quoted section of the Lipstadt article is therefore misleading and tendentious, in the sense that many progressives are not Holocaust deniers nor are they antisemitic in any way. That, however, is not the impression with which the reader is left after having read that section of her article. It belongs, therefore, to a more subtle form of mere truthfulness and not to the truth as defined in Étienne Klein’s interpretation of Bernard Williams’ insights.


Now that we are on the subject of wealthy people versus not-so-wealthy people, I would also like to mention a particularly misleading newspaper article, which was recently published in “The Montreal Gazette”, part of the National Post chain of newspapers in Canada. The fellow who wrote this article definitely belongs to the more objectionable category of reactionaries that I often target in my blog, quite a bit more ultra-conservative than middle-of-the-road people such as Deborah Lipstadt seems to be. The article (“Let’s not forget low-income consumers”, published on September 3, 2020) was written by Michel Kelly-Gagnon, the president of the Montreal Economic Institute, a distinctly neoliberal (appearances to the contrary, “neoliberal” and “ultra-conservative” are synonyms) think-tank and perpetual lobby for the domination of “free enterprise” (otherwise known as big business) over Canadian society.


Kelly-Gagnon’s basic premise in his article is that low-cost retailers like Dollarama should not be taken to task by their employees, as recently happened in Montréal, for paying really low wages and imposing lousy working conditions on them, because those retailers’ business model of providing goods at low cost to poor people in general, would fall apart. Thereby leaving all the poor people in Québec, including those employed by Dollarama, without any way of affording most of the goods sold in their stores. Nor, according to Kelly-Gagnon, should the minimum-wage laws be used to force such companies to pay more for their employees’ work because people with low skills, and many recent immigrants, need such low-wage jobs to be available to them. Ergo, higher wages would end up benefiting no one, not the poor people and not the Canadian economy in general. The only way out, according to Kelly-Gagnon, is to cut corporate taxes way back, like Trump did in the USA, thereby making tax evasion unnecessary and “allowing” low-cost companies like Walmart to raise its own wages without threatening its business model. A typical, everyday, run-of-the-mill article for the Montreal Economic Institute.


Which is also another excellent example of the usefulness of the Bernard Williams/Étienne Klein proposal about scientific truth (verity) being in eternal conflict with what some prejudiced people regard as truthfulness (veracity). In Kelly-Gagnon’s case, we are faced with a never-ending series of ignorant sophisms, based on such circular arguments as the only way to keep low-wage people alive is to make sure that they never get paid more! This is the sort of thing that this leading propagandist is proposing as his version of economic “science”, since we are all supposed to believe, as “everyone knows”, that the world’s leading investors are not in business to make as much money as possible, in the shortest period of time possible, but that they are “really” in business to provide jobs for poor people, as well as to produce low-cost goods and services specifically designed to “benefit the downtrodden”. Anyone taking Kelly-Gagnon’s rhetoric seriously would make an excellent member of Donald Trump’s electoral base, who are totally oblivious to the tens of thousands of lies that that particular neoliberal, who also favours neofascism, has been screaming at them, and everyone else, since day one.


Another recent newspaper article, “Let’s marginalize the bigots” (September 2, 2020), was published in the English-language weekly, “The Suburban”, that focuses a lot of its attention on Montréal’s Jewish community. This one was also written by someone very close to big business, F. Anthony Comper, the co-founder of “FAST” (a largely business-community group that fights against anti-semitism), as well as having served (until 2007) as president and CEO of the BMO (Bank of Montreal) Financial Group. His article, however, is not nearly as reactionary as the Kelly-Gagnon one, having much more in common with the Lipstadt article analyzed above.


The one really objectionable blooper in Comper’s piece comes toward the end of his (also) otherwise factual article, when he concludes his contribution by recommending that all “the bullies and the bigots” be “marginalized”, by taking “direct aim at antisemitism, racism and all the other ugly ‘isms’ that pollute our world.” This idea of marginalizing all the world’s bullies and bigots by getting rid of all the ideologies (“isms”) in the whole world, all at once, is the same totally unrealistic goal that US author Eugene Golob set for himself back in 1954, when he published his major work, “The ‘isms’: a history and evaluation”. As in 1954, so nowadays, human beings do not seem to be capable of avoiding ideology altogether and concentrating on strictly scientific ways of thinking, particularly since science, all by itself, does not always provide obvious answers to many of our philosophical and ethical conundrums.


Unfortunately, people in big business, like Comper, also fall prey to the very similar “end of history” prejudice, as expounded back in 1992 by US political “scientist” Francis Fukuyama in his book, “The end of history and the last man”. According to which, with the fall of “communism” (the Soviet bloc) in 1989-1991, the world somehow “converged” into treating “private enterprise and liberal democracy” as the “normal” state of everything economic and political. All other possible ways of interpreting reality were therefore dismissed, henceforth and from now on, as mere ideologies left over from our unfortunate past. A point of view that is also quite similar to the one expounded back then by Samuel Huntington in his article “The clash of civilizations” (1993), published in the US magazine, “Foreign Affairs”. But the very idea that capitalism, political liberalism and neoliberalism (laissez-faire) are not really ideologies, while racism (including antisemitism), socialism and communism really are, is completely superficial and ridiculous.


Comper’s otherwise factual article was therefore largely undermined by his irrational conclusion, calling on everyone to somehow boycott all the world’s ideologies with which he does not agree, while still (at least implicitly) keeping a firm hold on the ideologies that he likes. Unfortunately, as I pointed out in the above paragraphs concerning Kelly-Gagnon’s neoliberalism, the ideologies that most of the people in the big-business community truly adore are not any more useful to human society than are the racist and antisemitic ideologies belonging to the world’s leading bigots. Today’s version of laissez-faire, neoliberalism, is in fact the king of all the currently popular ideologies promoted by the world’s most important bullies, not only in the USA and the rest of the Western world, but also in Russia, China, India and just about everywhere else. In my opinion, the world’s most reactionary ideologies should not be tolerated by fair-minded people, not only for all the reasons so far given, but also because they are all excellent examples of the underlying conflict between scientific truth (verity) and ideological truthfulness (veracity).


Another article that I would like to mention this time out was also published in “The Montreal Gazette”, on September 15, 2020, one of Lise Ravary’s columns (“The pushback on efforts to protect French”). In that piece, she was arguing that it was a good idea in Québec to protect the French language, not only for nationalist reasons but also because preserving a little bit of linguistic diversity in North America would be a good thing all by itself. One of the people opposed to protecting French that she quoted in her column was Montréal author Heather O’Neill, who seems to have recently tweeted that “nitpicking about grammar” was contrary to the “wild and eclectic” nature of North American society, where “there were never any rules”, a point of view that Ravary associated with the woke movement. The woke movement, however, comes from the civil rights movement in the USA and was originally supposed to be about fighting against racial and social injustice.


In my opinion, linguistic diversity does not seem to be at all opposed to racial and social injustice, because all francophone people have a right to continue speaking their language wherever they please. Which applies not just to white francophones, whose ancestors came from Europe, but also to black francophones who originally came from Africa (some of them by way of Haiti), not to mention many indigenous people in Québec who have been speaking French for quite some time now. If she really wrote what Lise Ravary said she wrote, I have no idea where Heather O’Neill got the notion that North America has no linguistic rules, a notion that would come as a total surprise to informed anglophones in the USA. What I do know is that the “no rules” movement is completely bogus, particularly because in cases like the anti-vaccination prejudice in the fight against infectious diseases, and the anti-mask prejudice in the fight against the coronavirus, the desire for a total absence of rules is not, to say the least, a very healthy attitude. It is, instead, another marvellous example of the conflict between verity and veracity.


One last reference that I would like to make in this particular blogpost comes from a 44-page brief submitted to the Québec government’s “Groupe d’action centre le racisme” (“Action group against racism”), by a feminist movement known as “For the rights of women” (“Pour les droits des femmes du Québec”). A movement that, unlike some other women’s groups, is very much in favour of religious neutrality (laicity) and the Québec law prohibiting the wearing of religious symbols by public-sector workers in positions of authority. This brief was submitted to the anti-racism group in August (2020), and was written by three militant Québec intellectuals, Nadia El-Mabrouk, Radhia Ben Amor and Marie-Claude Girard.


The essence of their message is that the fight against racism in Québec should not be subordinated to any sexist tendencies operating within several of the numerous organizations claiming to represent Québec’s immigrant populations, and indigenous communities, namely the ones that have succumbed to such reactionary ideologies as religious fundamentalism. In their brief, they also singled out several different, federal government policies (currently in vigour all across Canada) that tend to either accommodate, or even to encourage, several forms of sexism currently being practised within those communities. Notably by refusing, for ostensibly “anti-racist” reasons, to collect statistics on manifestations of male chauvinism within those communities, such as murdering women, or deliberately depriving them of employment. Apparently the federal government was afraid that those statistics would demonstrate higher degrees of male chauvinism among certain immigrant groups, and certain indigenous peoples, than those that exist within the overall Canadian population.


It ought to be obvious to everyone in this world, however, that the fight against systemic racism should not be replaced by the promotion of systemic sexism instead. The fundamental reason why human societies should be refusing to accept racism is the same as the fundamental reason why those same societies should be refusing sexism, since both of those anomalies make it practically impossible to solve any of our other common problems (such as potentially catastrophic environmental degradation and equally dangerous economic depression). For the simple reason that both of those ideologies make it impossible to develop any kind of common cause (or commonwealth) among human beings. Pretending to be fighting against racism, while leaving all the women out of the picture, simply means maintaining thoroughly racist attitudes toward one-half of the people being mistreated!


The policies being denounced in the PDF brief are a lot like the attitude that was adopted a few years ago in Ontario, in which many of the judges in that province decided for awhile to give out shorter sentences to some of the men convicted of heinous crimes against women, if those men belonged to some particular minority culture. But fighting against cultural discrimination against minority men (a form of racism), by foisting that discrimination onto those very same minorities’ female populations (both racism and sexism), does not make any sense at all. Two wrongs do not make a right, nor do two reactionary ideologies put together ever act to cancel each other out.


It ought also to be pointed out that both racism and sexism are merely special cases, albeit extremely important ones, of the larger ideology known as elitism, which is also being actively encouraged these days by all the people involved in promoting both neoliberalism and neofascism. The enormous, ever-increasing gap between the social classes, includes an unprecedentedly high income gap: 100 million dollars a days being earned by a very small number of the world’s richest people, versus one dollar a day being earned by a very large number of the world’s poorest people. Equivalent, ever-increasing gaps are also being recorded every day between dominant people’s ever-expanding power and influence over society, in every sector of activity, contrasted with dominated people’s almost total lack of  power and influence. With most of the world’s so-called “middle” classes having much more in common with the bottom end of the scale than with the top end.


The real world that we are all forced to live in does not provide any easy solutions to this worldwide conflict between scientific truth, on the one hand, and endlessly recurring varieties of ideological identification with mere truthfulness, on the other hand. The vast majority of the world’s people constantly suffer under the ever-tightening control of very small minorities of dominant people, who are themselves divided up into violently competing factions, separated by religion, ethnicity and imperialist projections, constantly fighting among themselves for world hegemony. In the meantime, none of the world’s “ordinary” people, who do not belong to any of the currently functioning “ruling classes”, can ever rely upon their “own” local rulers to provide for their needs anywhere near properly. Which means that those ordinary people are constantly thrashing about, trying to find some way to stay alive for a little bit longer, and quite often falling for all the irrational, “fake-news” traps (ideological illusions) set for them by ever more cynical fraud artists like Donald Trump, and thousands of other thoroughly corrupt, organized criminals just like him, spread out all over the world. Many of whom are also religious fanatics as well.