Antifa badge (Norway). Antiracism is now part of a
legally enforced system of values and norms. Its followers are surreptitiously
becoming the underlings of authority, even to the point of becoming a secret
police that does the regrettable but necessary “dirty work.” (source)
Something is happening in France. Will this “Paris
spring” end up like the Prague Spring of 1968? Or more like the Velvet
Revolution of 1989? One thing is sure. There is a greater willingness to speak
out on various taboo subjects, one of which is race and racism.
This may be seen in a soon-to-be-published book, Dictionnaire historique et critique du
racisme, which shifts the spotlight of critical analysis from racism to
antiracism. Its editor, Pierre-André Taguieff, chooses his words carefully. As
he points out, “antiracism” is not just a word but also a norm, and one cannot
objectively describe a norm without offending those who feel bound by it. To be
objective is to blur the distinction between Good and Evil.
Pierre-André resolves this dilemma by arguing that
antiracism has violated its own stated norms. It has abandoned its original values
of doubt, debate, criticism, and free enquiry. It has moved out of the academy
and into the police department. It has become the antithesis of what it once
was.
He describes this reversal, and why it came about:
[Since WWII] Western antiracism
has taken the form of an ongoing anti-Nazism, or of a neo-anti-Nazism in search
of "neo-Nazis" who are believed to carry the racist ideology. Hence
the temptation to "Nazify" all phenomena perceived as being racist,
beginning with nationalist movements of whatever sort. Shaped by anti-Nazi
activism, the antiracism of the 1950s to 1970s was governed by the conviction
that racist views [thèses racistes]
were errors due to ignorance or to the power of prejudices, errors that
scientists could and must rectify after denouncing them. When not a villain, a
racist could be only an ignorant person, a man who was misleading himself or
who had been misled. The good news of antiracist activists could be summed up
in one sentence: racism was not in any way “scientific.” Antiracism was defined
ideally as a fight that the Enlightened were waging against the darkness of
ignorance or false ideas—the historical incarnation par excellence being the
racism of the Nazis and the racism of colonial regimes (during the era of
decolonization). This antiracism, incarnated by the authorized discourse of
biologists (and geneticists in particular), has thus long dominated antiracist practices
since the first UNESCO declarations in the early 1950s. “Scientific” antiracism
embraced an ideal that flowed from rationalist humanism: through instruction
and education, we shall create a world where, with the disappearance of errors,
prejudices, and illusions, racism will survive only as an archaism, a relic of
the past, a past we have fortunately transcended.
This faith that racism will
inevitably wither away seems to have evaporated. Antiracist activism has gone
from historical optimism to anthropological pessimism. If the racist is no
longer an ignorant person but rather a villain, and if he is defined by his
impulses or negative passions (hate, aggressive intolerance, etc.), then the
evil is in him, and his case seems hopeless. The antiracist’s task is no longer
to lead the "racist" towards goodness, but rather to isolate him as a
carrier of evil. The "racist" must be singled out and stigmatized.
The task is now only to make him powerless by imposing legal penalties, at the
risk of reestablishing ideological censorship and limiting freedom of
expression.
[…] With racism being illegal and
illicit, and with antiracism now part of a legally enforced system of values
and norms, antiracists have also ceased to stand for criticism and questioning.
Through a related process, antiracist organizations are no longer functioning
as an opposition to authority. They are surreptitiously becoming the underlings
[auxiliaires] of authority.
[…] As the fight against racism
becomes increasingly State-owned and professionalized, many antiracists have
lost their status as freethinkers who oppose authority, and antiracism has
taken on the face of repressive policing. Is there not a risk that the hyper-legalism
of contemporary antiracism is leading it into hyper-conformism? Are antiracists
forsaking the Sorbonne for the police department? Are they drifting away from
the fight for justice and truth, preferring instead the dreary hunt for
delinquents who say or write the wrong things? (Taguieff, 2013)
Like Pierre-André, I was once involved in the
antiracist movement. Like him, I deplore the totalitarian turn it has taken. I
am less sanguine, however, about the prospects for returning it to its original
values. Once antiracism had secured a monopoly over intellectual discourse, it
no longer needed to engage in intellectual debate, and its priority naturally
became one of maintaining this monopoly. Why should antiracism now jeopardize
its privileged status by engaging in self-criticism and allowing debate, or
even doubt? To be true to its original values? But those values were
situational, a compromise between long-term goals and the realities of the
moment. Circumstances change, and it’s not at all unusual for an ideology to go
from a libertarian stage to a totalitarian one.
Yes, the reverse can also happen … sometimes. In
such cases, however, the real reason is not a desire to return to original
values. It’s a growing conviction, particularly among the intelligentsia, that
something has gone terribly wrong and that a change in direction is imperative.
Typically, the only way to legitimize the new direction is to make it seem
consistent with original values.
This was the case with the short-lived Prague
Spring:
Those who drafted the Action
Programme were careful not to criticize the actions of the post-war Communist
regime, only to point out policies that they felt had outlived their
usefulness. For instance, the immediate post-war situation had required
"centralist and directive-administrative methods" to fight against
the "remnants of the bourgeoisie." Since the "antagonistic
classes" were said to have been defeated with the achievement of
socialism, these methods were no longer necessary (Wikipedia, 2013)
That strategy worked well enough inside
Czechoslovakia. Outside, not so well. The Prague Spring was brutally crushed by
the other members of the Warsaw Pact. For the next twenty years, that country’s
leaders, like those elsewhere in Eastern Europe, maintained the status quo by
making consumer goods more available (at the cost of a growing mountain of
debt) and by controlling intellectual dissent more effectively.
Which scenario will play out in France? An abortive
Prague Spring or a more promising Velvet Revolution? Much will depend on what
goes on in the minds of our antiracist friends. When I ask them about the need
for debate and self-criticism, I typically get a blank look. Debate? What is
there to debate? Criticism? What is there to criticize? Most of them prefer to think
in terms of stricter control and surveillance. If France, or any European
country, does abandon globalism, or simply moves away from it, they will be
clamoring for intervention by an outside power. Just like in Prague, 1968.
References
Mahler, T. (2013). Taguieff : le racism a son
encyclopédie, May 9, Le Point, pp.
2-4
Taguieff, P-A. (2013). Dictionnaire historique et critique du racisme, Paris: PUF.
Taguieff, P-A. (2013). Réflexions sur la « lutte
contre le racisme. », May 7, Le
Huffington Post
http://www.huffingtonpost.fr/pierreandre-taguieff/lutte-contre-le-racisme_b_2915909.html?utm_hp_ref=france
Wikipedia (2013). Prague Spring
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prague_Spring
"For the next twenty years, that country’s leaders, like those elsewhere in Eastern Europe, maintained the status quo by making consumer goods more available (at the cost of a growing mountain of debt) and by controlling intellectual dissent more effectively."
ReplyDeleteThis also sounds like America in 2013.
Doesn't this ultimately boil down to the American/NATO military occupation of Europe?
ReplyDeleteAt present a multicultural/multiracial supremacy reigns over nearly the entire world displacing traditional identities with corporate symbols and money. The primary tool of this supremacist regime is the worship of Hitler as an evil god and the Holocaust as the new crucifixion of the innocent lamb of G-d. It's basically just a nastier form of Judeo-Christianity which had its own mandate to spread to all corners of the earth (both Jews and Christians had that supremacist mandate from their respective deities -- the "father" and the "son" respectively).
ReplyDelete***The task is now only to make him powerless by imposing legal penalties, at the risk of reestablishing ideological censorship and limiting freedom of expression.***
ReplyDeleteThe attacks on Jason Richwine in the last week are an appalling manifestation of this. Rather than look at whether he's correct or not, the position seems to be "how on earth did Harvard let him study this?" They're encouraging people to email Harvard to stop this kind of heresy happening again.
"Whatever else, these three people signed and passed Richwine's obviously bigotted and substandard dissertation. A dissertation that was so obviously wrong and bigoted that the Heritage Foundation...the Heritage Foundation...distanced themselves from Richwine immediately.
These three professors should be held publicly accountable. More-so, I believe that the signatures of these professors demonstrate, unequivocally, that simple bigotry resides at the heart of movement conservatism--and that this bigotry is no different whether taking about teabaggers or 'scholars'.
The dean of the Kennedy School of Government is David T. Ellwood, (david_ellwood@Harvard.Edu). I've already dropped him a line asking why the School awarded Richwine a PhD and what they plan to do in the future to prevent it from happening again. Perhaps you might as well."
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2013/05/08/1207817/-How-did-Jason-Richwine-Get-a-PhD-from-Harvard
'BEREKLEY campus requirement, the one course that all undergraduate students at Cal need to take and pass in order to graduate. The courses... address theoretical or analytical issues relevant to understanding race, culture, and ethnicity in American society'.
ReplyDeletePierre-André Taguieff, one of Europe leading theoreticians of anti-racism, is not critical of the normative course that Berkeley students must take to graduate. He is saying that its norms are now being violated by the elite academic class in certain attributions of racism. However, what he has in mind is not the paradigm, it's the application of it in a specific case. The anti-racist ideal is for (white) intellectuals to call the actions of whites racist when they are acting in a ethnocentric or insufficiently altruistic way.
Taguieff (who is not Jewish) is an expert on anti-Semitism, and he construes anti-Zionism as anti-semitism. ( See here)
"Taguieff assents to Orwell's view that intellectuals are more totalitarian in outlook than ordinary people"
From what I can gather, the argument of Taguieff (in several books) is that immigrant communities and egalitarian internationalist ethnically European intellectuals and elites worldwide are authoritarian and antisemitic-racist if they criticise Israel. Criticising the Israeli state for its treatment of the Palestinians is simply a manifestation of transhistorical European myths about Jews murdering children according to Taguieff. An interview with him here; he does not mention the influential advocates of Palestinian rights who are themselves Jewish like Steven Rose and Mary-Kay Wilmers.
The behaviour of anti-racists offers excellent evidence for the existence and importance of race and its central influence on psychology. Those who lead (the self-serving liars) and those who follow (the puritanical dupes) have interesting genetic differences, for example.
ReplyDeleteBlack racism and race hatred of non blacks
ReplyDeletehttp://blackracismandracehatred.blogspot.com/
white victim of black crime
http://able2know.org/topic/138570-292#post-5326094
I think 'Dictionnaire historique et critique du racisme' is a provocation by an anti-racist faction which represents the most anti-European school of thought in the whole movement. The current received wisdom looks on the legally enforced system of anti racist values and norms as an irrelevant gloss on the reality of white racial prejudice; looking on white racist bias as being transmitted down the generations though subtle cues of superiority to which whites are amiable (nonwhites in European societies are damaged through internalisation of implicit attributions of their own inferiority). Hence any negative evaluation of anti-racism by whites is merely a visible symptom of the implicit racism of white societies,. The world's leading anthropologist of skin colour on (white) racism here.
ReplyDeleteEuropean intellectuals agree, but the plight of the Palestinians tasks the white knowledge class. Anti-racist whites asserting that white antisemitism-racism does not absolve Israel, or Europeans who support Israel, from charges of anti-Palestinians racism means Taguieff and company are now whites accused of racism; hoist by their own petard.
"Just like in Prague, 1968."
ReplyDeleteNot really. The analogy breaks down because the Czechs had all the time in the world. The Russians were not altering the demographic composition of their country.
Chronic non-white mass immigration into all white countries (and only white countries) plus forced integration is white genocide. The implication is a world without white people brought about by "anti-racist" policies which are in fact anti-white.
This is happening with horrible speed. Time is running out.
In countries where whites have been forced by international "anti-racism" to give up power, their condition gets worse and worse, and they have lost the power to avert their fate under hostile non-white rule.
Twenty years of Soviet rule was unpleasant but in the long run it meant nothing for whether Czechs and Slovaks would be free and the masters of their own country, or as it turned out, countries.
Decades more of totalitarian anti-white rule and mass immigration means...
People don't seem to care about genocide when it comes to whites, so I'll put it this way. Look around a library, and mark off everything you see that whites had a hand in that is good or beautiful or true or just lovable. Anything nice. Any contribution. Then think about everything that this race, which used to be a third of the human race, could do in the rest of forever. Then see all of that destroyed. Everything, everybody, all gone.
That is what the "anti-racists" are doing, with their anti-white mass immigration, forced integration, anti-white preferences and suppression of freedom. Genocide.
This post aged well.
ReplyDelete