[lbo-talk] 'The Reactionary Mind': An Exchange
shag carpet bomb
shag at cleandraws.com
Fri Feb 3 19:05:20 PST 2012
At 12:14 PM 2/3/2012, // ravi wrote:
>On Feb 3, 2012, at 11:52 AM, Shane Mage wrote:
> > On Feb 3, 2012, at 11:44 AM, shag carpet bomb wrote:
> >> what are you two talking about?
> >
> > The phenomenon of reactionary mass political engagement by the "lower
> orders."
>
>
>So, Shane, do you think that's because there is a
>"conservative/reactionary mind" in quest of a "taste of lordly power"?
>
> ravi
>
>
>Please don't tell me to read the book. That's a cop out. I am not asking
>about Robin's ultimate opinions. I am asking about yours in response to
>something that just happens to be something Robin wrote in the NYRB, but
>has been brought up before as a question: how does one explain
>"reactionary mass political engagement by the 'lower orders'"? I don't
>have a good explanation. But I do have a suspicion that it cannot just be
>all explained by pointing to white supremacy and such.
what's inadequate about white supremacy as an explanation. (i'm not even
sure what it means, actually)
> Better I think an EP style argument that human "minds" are adapted to
> pressures dating millenia where loyalty, group cohesion, etc, matter more
> significantly than it does today;
but if robin is right that people are constantly pushing up against
relations of superordaintion/subordination - or at least have been doing it
a lot with the emergence of modernity - aren't the very people rebelling
against that system also exhibiting loyalty, group cohesion. it is my
experience that they do. even as we argue on the list, within the people
taking sides on issues, we form cohesive units of loyalty, etc. alignments
shift, etc.
i think cohesiveness has zero to do with loyalty and cohesiveness.
>or that human "minds" are naturally conservative, preferring a well-known
>status quo/equilibrium, even if disadvantageous to new complexities.
you should get out and ride the ducati more.
More information about the lbo-talk
mailing list