1.
However, recent historical experience rather seems to demonstrate the opposite: there is no right moment to awaken. We either freak out too early and thus appear to spread empty panic, or we come to our senses when it’s already too late.
2. (Pessimism is a sign we love sth)
It’s easy, from today’s perspective, to mock the ‘pessimists’, from the Right to the Left, from Solzhenitsyn to Castoriadis, who deplored the blindness and compromises of the democratic West, its lack of ethico-political strength and courage in dealing with the Communist threat, and who predicted that the West had already lost the Cold War, that the Communist bloc had already won it, that the collapse of the West was imminent – but in fact it was precisely their attitude that did the most to bring about the collapse of Communism. In Dupuy’s terms, it was their very ‘pessimistic’ prediction of the future, of how history would inevitably unfold, that mobilized them to counteract it.
3.
Once a full military conflict has broken out (between the US and Iran, between China and Taiwan, between Russia and NATO …), it will appear to us all as necessary; that is to say, we will automatically read the past that led to it as a sequence of events that necessarily caused the explosion. If it doesn’t happen, we will read it the way we read the Cold War today: as a series of dangerous moments where catastrophe was avoided because both sides were aware of the deadly consequences of a global conflict.
4.
This is how ideology functions today: ideology tells the truth but creates conditions which guarantee that the truth itself will be perceived as a lie.
5.
There is no way to avoid the conclusion that a radical social change – a revolution – is needed to civilize our civilizations. We cannot afford to hope that a new war will lead to this revolution: a new war would much more probably mean the end of civilization as we know it, with the survivors (if any) organized in small authoritarian groups.
6.
A patriot, a person who really loves her or his country, is someone who is deeply ashamed of it when it does something bad.
7.
And some others on the ‘Left’ (I cannot use the word here without quote marks) have actually gone so far as to place the blame on the West – parroting the Russian line that NATO was slowly strangling and destabilizing Russia, encircling it militarily, ignoring Russia’s quite reasonable fears; after all, Russia was twice attacked from the West in the last century … There is, of course, an element of truth in this, but this reasoning is the same as justifying Hitler’s regime on the basis that the unjust Versailles treaty crushed the German economy. It also implies that the big powers have the right to control their own spheres of influence, sacrificing the autonomy of small nations on the altar of global stability.
8.
demands to boycott Russian culture are also extremely counter-productive since they de facto elevate the Putin regime into a defender of Pushkin, Tchaikovsky and Tolstoy. We should on the contrary insist that we are defending the great Russian tradition against its abusers. And we should avoid triumphalism – we should not demand that Russia should be humiliated. Our goal should remain positive: not ‘Russia must lose!’ but ‘Ukraine must survive!’
9.
We have today two main opposed ideological blocs. The religious neo-conservatives (from Putin and Trump to Iran) advocate a return to old orthodox Christian (or Muslim) traditions against ‘Satanic’ postmodern decadence – usually focussing on LGBT+ and transgender issues; however, their actual politics is full of barbarian obscenity and violence. On the opposite side, the Politically Correct liberal Left preaches permissiveness to all forms of sexual and ethnic identity; however, in its endeavour to guarantee this tolerance, it needs more and more rules – more ‘cancelling’ and regulating – which introduce constant anxiety and tension in this ostensibly happy permissive universe. These limitations are in some sense much stronger than the paternal prohibition that solicits the desire for transgression, and they do little to help the cause of genuine emancipation – they distract from it.
10.
With all its declared opposition to the new forms of barbarism, the woke Left fully participates in it, promoting and practising a flat discourse without irony. Although it advocates pluralism and promotes difference, its subjective position of enunciation – the place from which it speaks – is extremely authoritarian, allowing very limited debate and imposing exclusions that are often based on arbitrary premises.
11.
Cancel culture with its implicit paranoia is a desperate (and obviously inefficient) attempt to compensate for the actual troubles and tragedies faced by LGBT+ individuals, the violence and exclusion to which they are permanently subjected. The answer to this violence cannot be a retreat into a cultural fortress, a pseudo ‘safe space’ whose discursive fanaticism leaves intact and even strengthens the resistance of the majority to it.
12.
And it is exactly the same with much of the ongoing ‘woke’ movement: they awaken us (to the horrors of racism and sexism) precisely to enable us to go on sleeping, that is, ignoring the true roots and depth of racial and sexual trauma.
13.
The correct Leftist stance is: bring out the hidden antagonisms of your own culture, link it to the antagonisms of other cultures, and then engage in a common struggle between those who fight here, against the oppression and domination at work in our own culture, and those who do the same in other cultures around the world.
14.
The paradox is here double: Political Correctness is a displacement of good old class struggle – the liberal elite pretends to protect oppressed minority to obfuscate the basic fact of their privileged economic and political position. This lie allows the alt-Right populists to present themselves as a defense of the ‘real’ working class against the big corporations and the ‘deep state’ elites.
15.
(Orwell)
We all rail against class-distinctions, but very few people seriously want to abolish them.
(Zizek)
Orwell’s point is that radicals invoke the need for revolutionary change as a kind of superstitious token that should achieve the opposite, i.e. prevent the change from really occurring – today’s academic Leftists who criticize capitalist cultural imperialism are in reality horrified at the thought of their field of study really breaking down.
(Later on)
We should not underestimate the secret satisfaction provided by the passive life of depression and apathy, of just dragging on without a clear life-project. However, the change that is required is not just a subjective one but a global social change.
16.
But there is a deeper reason Assange causes such unease: he has made it clear that the most dangerous threat to freedom does not come from an openly authoritarian power, it takes place when our unfreedom itself is experienced as freedom...
17. (some sort of a solution)
To cope with our ongoing, escalating crises, from threats to our environment to unfolding wars, we will need elements of what, in this book, I provocatively call ‘war Communism’: mobilizations that will have to violate not only the usual market rules but also the established rules of democracy (enforcing measures and limiting freedoms without democratic approval). [...] ...let’s mobilize ourselves to attack the roots of our crisis, with all the risks that this involves. Because the greatest risk today is doing nothing and allowing history to follow its course.