Intersectionality - A Leftist Dilemma

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John Flynn

Intersectionality - A Leftist Dilemma

Post by John Flynn » Fri Apr 04, 2014 3:15 am

  • How fucking dare you…turn around and put the word “racist” in quotation marks like the accusation is a trivial or silly one…your response has been at all times to try and define this racism out of existence…your response at all turns has been to argue, essentially, we’ve got a moral chip on our shoulders. YOU FUCKING CRACKER.

    — commenter, discussing the racism of an advertisement
Who could they be talking about? Are these perhaps some racist white settlers exterminating indigenous people, and degrading blacks?

Well, no. In the first paragraph are tweets to the New Statesman columnist and feminist Laurie Penny, and the second paragraph are replies to the Guardian columnist and self-styled revolutionary socialist Richard Seymour. Both Penny and Seymour have made a point of arguing, moreover, for the latest fad in leftist thinking: intersectionality. “Intersectionality” supposedly means taking seriously the many different oppressions, and how they intersect. “My socialism will be intersectional or it will be bullshit,” Seymour has made a point of saying. Given that they are so keen to speak out against oppression in all its multi-layered forms, it seems really bad luck that they should be accused of being “racist crackers” and “white settlers.”

Why are they the ones denounced? And who are the critics who judge them so harshly? They are their friends. Yes, that’s right. That is what their friends think of them. In Richard Seymour’s case, it is what his own comrades in the International Socialist Network — that he recently helped to set up — think of him: that he is “a fucking cracker.” Laurie Penny says that the woman who tweeted or re-tweeted all of the posts above — about her being a settler engaged in genocide — is someone she takes very seriously: “I care what you think,” Penny reassured her.
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Penny got in trouble in June when her show of solidarity
with Pussy Riot was misinterpreted as “blackface”


When they were called out for what they said they were both surprised, even offended. “You would struggle to cite a single example of me doing that,” objected Seymour; Penny was being attacked for “things I did not say.” Protesting innocence, for some reason, only seemed to make their critics angrier, and more vociferous. Seymour was told that he was “bending over backwards to defend white supremacy,” while Penny was a “defensive white woman” (in the words of another white woman, Penny Schenk).

At that point, anyone sensible would have withdrawn, or told their accusers to get lost. Sadly for them, Penny and Seymour were already deeply invested in the ideology of “intersectionality.” To have withdrawn at that point would — according to the etiquette of that outlook — have been evidence of a failure to learn from others.

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'Is it because I am a Woman of Colour?'
Laurie Penny's critic, Flavia Dzodan is a marketing expert from Holland


Because their critics spoke for “People of Color,” the argument runs, then Seymour and Penny were obliged (regardless of whether the arguments made were any good) to sit down and be quiet, and be taught a lesson. One critic, Tim Nelson, put the argument like this to Seymour: “When I’m in a discussion and every black person involved says what I’m saying is racist, I try to shut up and listen rather than tell them they don’t know what they’re talking about.” So it was that both Seymour and Penny tried to adopt a penitent stance, and to promise that they were indeed listening to the criticisms, in the hope that that would assuage their accusers. “[T]hat’s something I’ll have to work on,” said Seymour. “I’m thinking about how to mitigate this in my future work,” said Laurie Penny.

When the Anglo-Saxon kings of the eleventh century agreed to pay the invading Danes money, it did not stop the invasion. They came back for more “Danegeld.” When Laurie Penny and Richard Seymour tried to mollify their critics it did not stop the criticisms — they just got stronger. But…wait a minute. You might ask: What was it that Seymour and Penny did to bring down this rain of criticism on their heads? Did they invade a country? Or did they lynch someone?

No. Seymour was talking about that chair — you know, the one that looks like it is a black woman, that Roman Abramovich’s girlfriend had herself photographed sitting on for the Evening Standard. Seymour did not say he liked the chair. He said it was racist. But he made the terrible error of pointing out that some sex play involved racial acting out (which is a bit outré, but not actually an endorsement of racial oppression). Penny’s crime was even greater: she wrote an article in the New Statesman about short hair being (a bit of) a feminist statement…except that she did not say anything about the hair of “Women of Color.” Yes, that’s right. Laurie Penny’s article “does not include any mentions (even as a side note) of WoC hair issues.”

Onlookers were amazed. Padraig Reidy asked whether it was really true that Laurie Penny was “being harassed because of a piece about her hair cut”? Penny’s editor parodied the critics, writing: “Why is this piece about what it is about and not ABOUT EVERYTHING?” Most left-wingers watching the argument among the “International Socialists” were laughing. They knew that the far left were given to splitting over arcane debates about property relations in the USSR, or the correct position to take on the Syrian conflict — but they had never seen a Trotskyist grouplet split “over a chair” before.

But neither Seymour nor Penny were in a position to make light of the criticisms. Laurie Penny said that “she was trying to stay in the room with people’s anger without freaking out,” and that she was “literally…having a panic attack.” Richard Seymour finally had enough, and said his critics were engaged in “moralistic browbeating,” and it was wrong that some subjects should be ruled off-topic, or that people should be anathematized in the debate. These were the wisest things said, and maybe if they had been said earlier on, the row would not have gotten out of hand. But actually they were said in a letter of resignation, co-signed by six of his supporters. And so it was that the terrible event came to pass: the International Socialist Network really did split over its position on BDSM sex.

Neither Seymour nor Penny understand that these dead-end arguments come about because of their own commitment to “intersectionality.” They think that “intersectionality” just means anti-racism. But it does not. In fact, it means the opposite. Intersectionality is not about opposing racism. It is about institutionalizing racism. It is about negotiating the differences between people that arise because of their race and their sex. What it rules out is that it might be possible to rise above such differences. It works the other way around. To get influence in this world, you have to emphasize your differences, and amplify them. Currency for the intersectionalists is ever greater offense at the things people say, even — especially — the people closest to them.

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Richard Seymour has anathematized others, like the late Christopher Hitchens
whom denounced in a whole book as an “apostate”


The arguments put up against Seymour and Penny were absurd. But they got traction because Seymour and Penny themselves have both used similar allegations. They joined forces to attack “Brocialists” and alleged “rape apologists” such as the Marxist professor Alex Callinicos, the comedian Russell Brand, and left-wing MP George Galloway. Using “moralistic browbeating” themselves, loudly proclaiming themselves “intersectionalists,” Seymour and Penny only succeeded in laying themselves open to similar criticisms.

It is the person who most loudly proclaims their own rectitude, and so extravagantly dismisses the faults of others, who is most likely to be exposed themselves for wrong doing. The temptation to hunt out hypocrisy — to magnify the slightest thing to find it — is just too great.

And if the evidence is not there, so what? You can always just make it up.


http://www.heartfield.pwp.blueyonder.co ... street.htm

Reinhard

Re: Intersectionality - A Leftist Dilemma

Post by Reinhard » Sat Apr 12, 2014 2:21 am

Comrades and Cannibals: Odium Theologicum on the Modern Left


Tobias Langdon

In Gulliver’s Travels (1726), the land of Lilliput is gripped by a furious controversy about hard-boiled eggs. Should they be opened at the big end or the little end? The opposing sides slaughter and persecute each other over the issue. Jonathan Swift was satirizing the absurdities of religious dispute in his day and the wars it caused between different sects. There’s a special term for this phenomenon: odium theologicum, or “hatred among theologians.” Because there is no objective means of establishing truth in theology, the only definitive argument is force.

Centuries later, the modern left is full of atheists and secularists who have no time for religious nonsense like that. Instead, they conduct furious controversies about chairs and haircuts. Two giants of the British left, Richard Seymour and Laurie Penny, have recently been excoriated as racists, colonialists and white supremacists:
  • But… wait a minute, you might ask. What was it that Seymour and Penny did to bring down this rain of criticism on their heads? Did they invade a country? Or did they lynch someone?

    No. Seymour was talking about that chair – you know the one that looks like it is a black woman, that Roman Abramovich’s girlfriend had herself photographed sitting on for the [London] Evening Standard. Seymour did not say he liked the chair. He said it was racist. But he made the terrible error of pointing out that some sex play involved racial acting out (which is a bit outré, but not actually an endorsement of racial oppression).
    Image
    Penny’s crime was even greater: she wrote an article in the New Statesman about short hair being (a bit of) a feminist statement… except that she did not say anything about the hair of “Women of Colour.” Yes, that’s right: Laurie Penny’s article “does not include any mentions (even as a side note) of WoC hair issues.” (Further adventures in intersectionality, The Charnel-House, 31st January 2014)
Intersectionality — the idea that oppressions “intersect” and make life much harder for, say, Black one-legged lesbians — is a new way of expressing an old theme. The old theme is cannibalism: the left eats its own, because the true aim of the left is not to serve humanity, but to rule over it. Leftists are greedy for power but they don’t like to share it. After the French Revolution, people who had fought for Equality, Fraternity and Liberty turned on each other in an orgy of hatred and slaughter. After the Bolshevik Revolution, the same thing happened.
Those cannibalistic tendencies are still alive and well on the modern left. If leftists are not torturing and slaughtering at the moment, that’s only because they’re not able to. Pioneering communists who helped Stalin to power eventually realized their mistake. But by then it was too late. Whites who are presently helping non-Whites to power are making the same mistake: the treatment of Seymour and Penny is clear proof of that.


Racist Laurie Penny, the part-Jewish racist who failed to discuss WofC hair issues when writing about short hair.
And if non-White leftists express such hatred and spite towards their own comrades, what will the increasing power of non-Whites mean for Whites in general? As we can see from South Africa and Zimbabwe, non-Whites believe in racial equality and justice for precisely as long as it takes for them to get the upper hand. Once they have it, their old beliefs are discarded. Not that those beliefs are ever sincere. This is a non-White Trotskyist addressing his White comrade Richard Seymour:
  • How fucking dare you…turn around and put the word “racist” in quotation marks like the accusation is a trivial or silly one. … Your response has been at all times to try and define this racism out of existence. … Your response at all turns has been to argue, essentially, we’ve got a moral chip on our shoulders. YOU FUCKING CRACKER. (Further adventures in intersectionality)
Ouch! The non-White obviously believes that the truth of an opinion is guaranteed by the aggression and self-righteousness with which it is expressed. And Seymour is unable to respond in kind. He’s a White heterosexual male, replete with “unearned privilege.” If he is criticized by a non-White or a homosexual or a woman, he has only one course open to him: repentance and obedience. Otherwise he is racist, homophobic and sexist.

As observers of the chair controversy have noted, Seymour is hoist on his own petard, because he has always been an enthusiastic hammer of heretics. He used to be a member of the Socialist Workers Party (SWP), but he resigned after a furious controversy about rape. A senior member of the SWP, “Comrade Delta,” was accused of raping a junior member, but was cleared by a committee made up of his own colleagues. The complainant was persuaded not to go to the police, because “bourgeois justice” is corrupt and anti-revolutionary. While Seymour was still in the party, he wrote this about the controversy:
  • One last thing. There is an article in The Independent about this case. It uses the phrase “socialist sharia court”. It is miles away, in tone and spirit, from Laurie Penny’s piece. I would urge people to think carefully about who wants to use the sort of language deployed in the Independent article. I think the answer is, “racists”. I would also point out that, as far as I know, the Independent did not speak to any party members. My advice is to disregard that piece. (Crisis in the SWP, Lenin’s Tomb blog, 11th January 2013)
The Independent is a deeply pious liberal newspaper. To accuse it of harbouring “racists” is ridiculous. But now Seymour is facing ridiculous accusations of his own. Arguments on the left often seem to consist of trying to manoeuvre one’s opponent into a position where one can throw an accusation of “Racist!” or “Sexist!” or “Homophobe!”

Or ideally all three. And now transphobia has been added to the list of heresies. I’m reminded of a story by the Texan writer Robert E. Howard (1906-36), creator of Conan the Barbarian. In Red Nails (1936), Conan confronts a wizard called Tolkemec, who has a “witch-wand” that kills anyone caught in the wrong position:
  • Then began slaughter. Screaming insanely the people rushed about the chamber, caroming from one another, stumbling and falling. And among them Tolkemec capered and pranced, dealing death. They could not escape by the doors; for apparently the metal of the portals served like the metal-veined stone altar to complete the circuit for whatever hellish power flashed like thunderbolts from the witch-wand the ancient waved in his hand. When he caught a man or a woman between him and a door or the altar, that one died instantly. (Red Nails)
That sounds like a “debate” on the left, where the death-bolts are words and the altar is anti-racism or feminism or LGBT rights. But there have been many wizards on the left using words to win power. One of them was called Yigael Gluckstein, a Jewish immigrant to Britain who founded the SWP under the nom de guerre Tony Cliff. Like Christopher Hitchens, Richard Seymour was trained in anti-racism by Gluckstein. And like Seymour, Hitchens was accused of racism by a former ally, the verbose and self-righteous Edward Said (see here).

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Yigael Gluckstein

Odium theologicum has never gone away: thanks to mass immigration and identity politics, it simply taken on new forms and continued to poison Western society. But who are the malevolent wizards most responsible for its modern virulence? The answer was supplied on Steve Sailer’s blog back in 2007:
  • Multiculturalism promotes segregation, stifles free speech and threatens liberal democracy, Britain’s top Jewish official warned in extracts from his book published Saturday.

    Jonathan Sacks, Britain’s [former] chief rabbi, defined multiculturalism as an attempt to affirm Britain’s diverse communities and make ethnic and religious minorities more appreciated and respected. But in his book, The Home We Build Together: Recreating Society, he said the movement had run its course. …

    Sacks said Britain’s politics had been poisoned by the rise of identity politics, as minorities and aggrieved groups jockeyed first for rights, then for special treatment.

    The process, he said, began with Jews, before being taken up by blacks, women and gays. He said the effect had been “inexorably divisive.”

    “A culture of victimhood sets group against group, each claiming that its pain, injury, oppression, humiliation is greater than that of others,” he said.

    (“Britain’s top rabbi warns against multiculturalism,” Steve Sailer, 20th October 2007)
Now Muslims and transsexuals have joined the “aggrieved groups” jockeying for special treatment. The left is not just eating itself: it’s eating the West, helping to destroy the societies that have funded its parasitism and tolerated its posturing. There is no easy or painless way out, but one positive thing will emerge from the approaching collapse: leftism and liberalism will be discredited for good.

http://www.theoccidentalobserver.net/20 ... dern-left/

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