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Tuesday, March 12, 2024


US conspiracy theorists monetize 'Disease X' misinformation

2024/03/03
Fast-spreading 'Disease X' conspiracy theories pose a threat to public health, researchers say

Washington (AFP) - Coined by the World Health Organization to denote a hypothetical future pandemic, "Disease X" is at the center of a blizzard of misinformation that American conspiracy theorists are amplifying -- and profiting from.

The falsehoods, including that the unknown pathogen indicates an elitist plot to depopulate the earth, appeared to originate in the United States but spilled to Asia in multiple regional languages, AFP fact-checkers found.

The fast-spreading misinformation, which experts say illustrates the perils of reduced content moderation on social media sites, threatens to fuel vaccine hesitancy and jeopardize preparation for public health emergencies four years after the outbreak of Covid-19.

Stoking fears about Disease X, right-wing influencers in the United States are also cashing in on the falsehoods by hawking medical kits which contain what health experts call an unproven Covid-19 treatment.

"Misinformation mongers are trying to exploit this conspiracy theory to sell products," Timothy Caulfield, from the University of Alberta in Canada, told AFP.

"This is often their primary mode of income. The conflict is profound. Without the evidence-free fearmongering about vaccines and government conspiracies, they'd have little or no income."

The conspiracy theories particularly took off after the World Economic Forum -- a magnet for misinformation -- convened a "Preparing for Disease X" panel in January focused on a possible future pandemic.
Selling products

Alex Jones, the founder of the website InfoWars who has made millions spreading conspiracy theories about mass shootings and Covid-19, falsely claimed on social media that there was a globalist plan to deploy Disease X as a "genocidal kill weapon."

As the conspiracy spread to China, posts shared on TikTok and X (formerly Twitter) claimed the Chinese government was rolling out mobile cremation ovens to cope with "mass deaths."

But using reverse image searches, AFP fact-checkers found the videos in the posts actually showed pet cremation services.

Last October, AFP fact-checkers debunked online posts in Malaysia that claimed nurses were being forced to take a nonexistent vaccine for Disease X.

US cardiologist Peter McCullough, known for spreading Covid-19 misinformation, claimed without evidence that Disease X was "expected to be engineered in a biolab."

He made the claim on the website of The Wellness Company, a US-based supplements supplier where he serves as the chief scientific officer.

Urging people to "be ready" for Disease X, the website offers a "medical emergency kit" for around $300, which contains drugs including ivermectin, an unproven Covid-19 treatment.

The Gateway Pundit, a right-wing website notorious for conspiracy theories, also promoted the kits in a sponsored message titled "'DISEASE X' -- Are The Globalists Planning Another Pandemic?"

"Don't be caught unprepared," the message said, leading readers to a link to order the kits.
Misinformation goes unchallenged

"Spreading conspiracy theories in order to make money is a grift long established on the right," Julie Millican, vice president of the left-leaning watchdog Media Matters, told AFP.

"The ones most likely to be spreading conspiracy theories" about topics such as Disease X, she added, "are also looking for a way to take advantage of their audience to profit from it."

The Wellness Company and Gateway Pundit did not respond to AFP requests for comment.

Much of the misinformation appears to go unchallenged as platforms such as X scale back content moderation in a climate of cost-cutting that has gutted trust and safety teams.

The conspiracy theories build on growing vaccine hesitancy since Covid-19, which is likely to have "far-reaching" public health effects, said Jennifer Reich, a sociologist at the University of Colorado Denver.

"Since Covid, we have seen declining support for childhood vaccines and more support on surveys for parents' rights to reject vaccines for their children," Reich told AFP.

Some believers of Disease X conspiracies vowed to reject future vaccines, according to social media posts tracked by AFP, a stance that could limit the response to real health emergencies.

"Disinformation can also lead to some segments of the population taking up either ineffective or even harmful measures during an epidemic," Chunhuei Chi, a professor of global health at Oregon State University, told AFP.

"It can become a major barrier for a society to be proactive in preparing and preventing an emerging contagious disease."

burs-ac/nro

© Agence France-Presse

Tuesday, February 27, 2024

Honoring Emmett Till Means Never Looking Away From the Horror of White Supremacy

Emmett Till’s murder exemplifies both anti-Black racism and the spirit of those who refuse to suffer it in silence.
February 26, 2024
A mural featuring a portrait of civil rights martyr Emmett Till looks out from an abandoned building front as volunteers gather nearby with family members of Tamiko Talbert-Fleming after passing out flyers in the Chicago Lawn neighborhood seeking information about her murder on January 19, 2022, in Chicago, Illinois.
SCOTT OLSON / GETTY IMAGES


Truthout is a vital news source and a living history of political struggle. If you think our work is valuable, support us with a donation of any size.

James Baldwin once said Black history is emboldening because “it testifies to nothing less than the perpetual achievement of the impossible.”

His use of the phrase “perpetual achievement” speaks to the processes of political and psychological endurance that have enabled our struggle to continue regardless of the hell that Black people have had to face within the context of an anti-Black world — a world that has conspired to make our very survival “impossible.”

In this way Baldwin invites us to reflect on what it means to be a people of deep vision, pride, dignity and resilience. On what it means to be a people who have engaged in forms of striving and surviving that speak to a spiritual indefatigability.

It is an idea that is also expressed in Maya Angelou’s poem, “And Still I Rise”:

“You may write me down in history

With your bitter, twisted lies,

You may trod me in the very dirt

But still, like dust, I’ll rise”

It is against the backdrop of Black endurance that I want the world, and especially the United States, not to forget the horrors of anti-Black hatred and lynching, and not to confuse “Black endurance” with an exaggerated sense of “superhuman” physical and moral strength. Black people have had their bodies crushed, flayed, burned, broken, dismembered, raped, held in contempt and rendered abject.

It is within this context that I turned to philosopher A. Todd Franklin, who is professor of philosophy and Africana studies at Hamilton College, to reflect on 14-year-old Emmett Till who was brutally murdered by two white men in Money, Mississippi, in 1955 after being falsely accused by a white woman of having “grabbed and verbally harassed her in a grocery store.”

The freedom to grow up without being viewed as a threat is a basic human right still being denied to Black youth. By Rotimi Kukoyi , TRUTHOUT August 28, 2023

George Yancy: We must tell our entire history. Could you talk about why remembering the murder of Emmett Till is so important during Black History Month?

A. Todd Franklin: I can think of no better way to begin a reflection on the significance of calling for remembrance than by calling attention to James Baldwin, who above all else saw himself as one who was called to bear witness to the trials, tribulations, tragedies, and triumphs of Black people within a nation historically determined to deny their humanity and destroy all hope of their full and equal regard within society. Add to that Maya Angelou’s voice of defiance as she tells all the world that even still, I as a person, and we as a people, have the wherewithal to rise, and you have what I would consider the perfect context for pointing out the importance of taking Black History Month as an opportunity to remember the murder of Emmett Till.

Thank you, George — both for framing the importance of remembering the horrors of anti-Black hatred more broadly and for giving me an opportunity to speak to the importance of remembering this specific horror more particularly.

Bluntly put, it’s important to remember the heinous murder of Emmett Till because it speaks to and exemplifies both the depravity of anti-Black racism and the indominable spirit of those who rise up against it first and foremost by refusing to suffer it in silence.

In what ways have you integrated the tragic story of Emmett Till within the context of your classrooms? Philosophically and pedagogically, what is the aim? And what has the impact been on your students? For me, this integration of Till’s tragic story is your way of refusing to suffer in silence.

One of my primary goals as an educator is to foster critical consciousness in ways that compel students to recognize their agency and to use it to reckon with the realities of race within the social world.

In order to do so, I strive to force students to grapple with issues of race phenomenologically. Plainly put, I try to create a space in which students encounter others sharing stories of the lived experience of race in ways that force them to contend with the ways in which they too experience and play a role in the social realities of race.

Nothing in all my years of doing so has proven more poignant and powerful than taking them through the story of Emmett Till. Primarily, I use Stanley Nelson Jr.’s documentary, The Murder of Emmett Till. Nelson masterfully weaves together interviews and archival footage that introduce the audience to an array of figures and perspectives both directly and indirectly involved in and impacted by the murder of Emmett Till. In doing so, the documentary makes space for students to reflect upon how they themselves relate to the event and to think seriously about being as such. Ultimately, the documentary serves as a visceral focal element that allows me to provoke each student to see themselves as in some way personally connected to what transpired and what followed.

For most of my Black students and those who are situated similarly, what hits home is the juxtaposition of Black embodiment as a form of undue danger and Black agency, both that of others and potentially their own, as a potent force for demanding that society take steps to address their predicament.

For most of my white students, and those who are mostly regarded as white, what proves striking is the way in which the story of the murder of Emmett Till is in part the story of whites callously closing ranks when it comes to race and how whites today, themselves included, are faced with the challenge of actively breaking ranks with white supremacy or otherwise being complicit in the vicious and vile ways in which it continues to find expression.

Fortunately, most of my students emerge from the experience eager to play an active role in denouncing and eradicating the subtle and not so subtle forms of white supremacy that continue to plague our society and place many in peril.

How were you personally impacted once you found out about the killing of Emmett Till? How did that knowledge shape how you began to see yourself as a young Black male?

In many ways, it’s my own personal story that served as the basis for what I just described as my pedagogy. For many of my students, seeing the documentary serves as their first introduction to the murder of Emmett Till. For me, it was an old Jet magazine that I discovered when I was no more than 10 years old. At the time of the murder, Jet covered the event and its aftermath extensively; and in doing so, it published a host of images of Emmett as a happy young boy with his mother and of the horrific and grotesque state of his corpse as it lay on display just prior to and during his funeral. Like Emmett, I was a young Black boy who was his mother’s only child — and seeing someone who looked just like me and who was socially positioned just like me scared the hell out of me. It was right then and there that racism became real to me and much of my adult life has been devoted to addressing the ways in which racism proves so pernicious.

Discovering that picture of Emmett Till in Jet is telling. What you shared made me think of the poet Patricia Smith’s powerful poem, “That Chile Emmett in That Casket,” where that picture functions as what I would call a “mnemonic archive,” a site of remembering, mourning and a powerful warning for young Black people vis-à-vis anti-Black racism. In one of my co-edited books, Our Black Sons Matter: Mothers Talk about Fears, Sorrows and Hopes, mothers of Black sons discuss the pain and sorrow that they endure in the face of so many young Black boys and adult Black men who have been murdered in the U.S. by the state or by proxies of the state who see themselves as “protectors” of all things white, gated and “pure.” These mothers understood the emotional gravitas of what it would mean to lose their own sons. I’m thinking here of Emmett Till’s dear mother, Mamie Till. Discuss how you understand Mamie Till’s insistence that the world bear witness to the disfiguration of her precious son’s Black face. At this moment in history, what do you think Black people should take away from her insistence?

Years ago, I gave a talk on campus and the title of it was “Let the People See.” The posters I used to announce it were plain and simple: a black-and white image of me against a blue background with large black letters that said, “Let the People See” and smaller ones that indicated the date, time and location. Colleagues and students were baffled by the poster and clamored for me to tell them more about the talk — in reply, I told them that the only way that they would get a sense of what I had to say would be by showing up to see and hear me speak.

I deliberately scheduled the talk for one of my mother’s visits from out of town. In addition, I also made sure that my son would be there too. Well, as the day and time finally arrived, I stepped into a standing room-only auditorium and gave a little context for the occasion. More specifically, I told the audience that my talk was a deeply personal way of marking the occasion of my son’s 14th year, and with that, I touched a button on an A/V console and projected a screen-sized image of the horribly disfigured face of Emmett Till.

Standing against the backdrop of this image, I told the audience that as horrific and traumatic as seeing it might be, that placing it on display was the least I could do to pay homage to Mrs. Mamie Till and the countless other Black mothers forced to endure this and similar sights of their young sons. Moreover, I shared with the audience how Emmett’s mother courageously opened the casket containing her 14-year-old son’s remains and called upon the nation and the world to see the heinous handywork of white supremacy in action.

Turning off the image, I began to tell the audience how for me and many like me it’s an image that never goes way. I told them how as a young child it was an image that made me ever fearful for my own life, and how as a father it’s one that makes me ever fearful for the life of my son.

However, following in the footsteps of Mamie Till, I went on to talk about the importance of never turning away from the task of calling out the deeds and challenging the dangers of white supremacist figures and forces — a disposition exemplified by mothers like Mamie Till and instilled in me by my own. To wit, I turned to talk about how the horror and grief of the callous killing of a Black child in 1955 was compounded by the fact that it was done without consequence; and how more than 55 years later, the anti-Black sentiments born of white supremacy continue to result in the callous killing of young Black males with social and legal impunity.

At the time, I called on all who were present to step up and answer the call to see and address the existential threat of white supremacy. Moreover, at the time, I called on all who were present to see and respond to the visual evidence of anti-Black racism and hatred. Today, however, I think that Mamie Till would consider it vitally important for not only Black people but all people to insist that the nation and the world see and respond as well to the less obvious ways in which Black people and others suffer hatred and harm in virtue of their race.

In short, at this moment in history, I see the legacy of Mrs. Mamie Till as a legacy that calls on Black people and others to insist that we see and address not only the shocking expressions of racism and hatred that threaten the lives of those beyond the pale, but also the ones that are more subtle.

GEORGE YANCY is the Samuel Candler Dobbs professor of philosophy at Emory University and a Montgomery fellow at Dartmouth College. He is also the University of Pennsylvania’s inaugural fellow in the Provost’s Distinguished Faculty Fellowship Program (2019-2020 academic year). He is the author, editor and co-editor of over 20 books, including Black Bodies, White Gazes; Look, A White; Backlash: What Happens When We Talk Honestly about Racism in America; and Across Black Spaces: Essays and Interviews from an American Philosopher published by Rowman & Littlefield in 2020.


Monday, February 05, 2024

Scientists Warn Climate Shocks Could Trigger Unrest and Authoritarian Backlash

Most of the public seems unaware that global temperatures will soon push past the target to which the U.N. hoped to limit warming, but researchers see social and psychological crises brewing.
February 4, 2024
Source: Inside Climate News




As Earth’s annual average temperature pushes against the 1.5 degree Celsius limit beyond which climatologists expect the impacts of global warming to intensify, social scientists warn that humanity may be about to sleepwalk into a dangerous new era in human history. Research shows the increasing climate shocks could trigger more social unrest and authoritarian, nationalist backlashes.

Established by the 2015 Paris Agreement and affirmed by a 2018 report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the 1.5 degree mark has been a cliff edge that climate action has endeavored to avoid, but the latest analyses of global temperature data showed 2023 teetering on that red line.

One major dataset suggested that the threshold was already crossed in 2023, and most projections say 2024 will be even warmer. Current global climate policies have the world on a path to heat by about 2.7 degrees Celsius by 2100, which would threaten modern human civilization within the lifespan of children born today.

Paris negotiators were intentionally vague about the endeavor to limit warming to 1.5 degrees, and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change put the goal in the context of 30-year global averages. Earlier this month, the Berkeley Earth annual climate report showed Earth’s average temperature in 2023 at 1.54 degrees Celsius above the 1850-1900 pre-industrial average, marking the first step past the target.

But it’s barely registering with people who are being bombarded with inaccurate climate propaganda and distracted by the rising cost of living and regional wars, said Reinhard Steurer, a climate researcher at the University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna.

“The real danger is that there are so many other crises around us that there is no effort left for the climate crisis,” he said. “We will find all kinds of reasons not to put more effort into climate protection, because we are overburdened with other things like inflation and wars all around us.”

Steurer said he doesn’t expect any official announcement from major climate institutions until long after the 1.5 degree threshold is actually crossed, when some years will probably already be edging toward 2 degrees Celsius. “I think most scientists recognize that 1.5 is gone,” he said.

“We’ll be doing this for a very long time,” he added, “not accepting facts, pretending that we are doing a good job, pretending that it’s not going to be that bad.”

In retrospect, using the 1.5 degree temperature rise as the key metric of whether climate action was working may have been a bad idea, he said.

“It’s language nobody really understands, unfortunately, outside of science,” he said. ”You always have to explain that 1.5 means a climate we can adapt to and manage the consequences, 2 degrees of heating is really dangerous, and 3 means collapse of civilization.”

Absent any formal notification of breaching the 1.5 goal, he hopes more scientists talk publicly about worst-case outcomes.

“It would really make a difference if scientists talked more about societal collapse and how to prepare for that because it would signal, now it’s getting real,” he said. “It’s much more tangible than 1.5 degrees.”

Instead, recent public climate discourse was dominated by feel-good announcements about how COP28 kept the 1.5 goal alive, he added.

“This is classic performative politics,” he said. “If the fossil fuel industry can celebrate the outcome of the COP, that’s not a good sign.”

Like many social scientists, Steurer is worried that the increasingly severe climate shocks that warming greater than 1.5 degrees brings will reverberate politically as people reach for easy answers.

“That is usually denial, in particular when it comes to right-wing parties,” he said. “That’s the easiest answer you can find.”

“Global warming will be catastrophic sooner or later, but for now, denial works,” he said. “And that’s all that matters for the next election.”
‘Fear, Terror and Anxiety’

Social policy researcher Paul Hoggett, professor emeritus at the University of the West of England in Bristol, said the scientific roots of 1.5-degree target date back to research in the early 2000s that culminated in a University of Exeter climate conference at which scientists first spelled out the risks of triggering irreversible climate tipping points above that level of warming.

“I think it’s still seen very much as that key marker of where we move from something which is incremental, perhaps to something which ceases to be incremental,” he said. “But there’s a second reality, which is the reality of politics and policymaking.”

The first reality is “profoundly disturbing,” but in the political world, 1.5 is a symbolic maker, he said.

“It’s more rhetorical; it’s a narrative of 1.5,” he said, noting the disconnect of science and policy. “You almost just shrug your shoulders. As the first reality worsens, the political and cultural response becomes more perverse.”

A major announcement about breaching the 1.5 mark in today’s political and social climate could be met with extreme denial in a political climate marked by “a remorseless rise of authoritarian forms of nationalism,” he said. “Even an announcement from the Pope himself would be taken as just another sign of a global elite trying to pull the wool over our eyes.”

An increasing number of right-wing narratives simply see this as a set of lies, he added.

“I think this is a huge issue that is going to become more and more important in the coming years,” he said. “We’re going backwards to where we were 20 years ago, when there was a real attempt to portray climate science as misinformation,” he said. “More and more right wing commentators will portray what comes out of the IPCC, for example, as just a pack of lies.”

The IPCC’s reports represent a basic tenet of modernity—the idea that there is no problem for which a solution cannot be found, he said.


“Even an announcement from the Pope himself would be taken as just another sign of a global elite trying to pull the wool over our eyes.”

“However, over the last 100 years, this assumption has periodically been put to the test and has been found wanting,” Hoggett wrote in a 2023 paper. The climate crisis is one of those situations with no obvious solution, he wrote.

In a new book, Paradise Lost? The Climate Crisis and the Human Condition, Hoggett says the climate emergency is one of the big drivers of authoritarian nationalism, which plays on the terror and anxiety the crisis inspires.

“Those are crucial political and individual emotions,” he said. “And it’s those things that drive this non-rational refusal to see what’s in front of your eyes.”

“At times of such huge uncertainty, a veritable plague of toxic public feelings can be unleashed, which provide the effective underpinning for political movements such as populism, authoritarianism, and totalitarianism,” he said.

“When climate reality starts to get tough, you secure your borders, you secure your own sources of food and energy, and you keep out the rest of them. That’s the politics of the armed lifeboat.”
The Emotional Climate

“I don’t think people like facing things they can’t affect,” said psychotherapist Rebecca Weston, co-president of the Climate Psychology Alliance of North America. “And in trauma, people do everything that they possibly can to stop feeling what is unbearable to feel.”

That may be one reason why the imminent breaching of the 1.5 degree limit may not stir the public, she said.

“We protect ourselves from fear, we protect ourselves from deep grief on behalf of future generations and we protect ourselves from guilt and shame. And I think that the fossil fuel industry knows that,” she said. “We can be told something over and over and over again, but if we have an identity and a sense of ourselves tied up in something else, we will almost always refer to that, even if it’s at the cost of pretending that something that is true is not true.”

Such deep disavowal is part of an elaborate psychological system for coping with the unbearable. “It’s not something we can just snap our fingers and get ourselves out of,” she said.

People who point out the importance of the 1.5-degree warming limit are resented because they are intruding on peoples’ psychological safety, she said, and they become pariahs. “The way societies enforce this emotionally is really very striking,” she added.

But how people will react to passing the 1.5 target is hard to predict, Weston said.

“I do think it revolves around the question of agency and the question of meaning in one’s life,” she said. “And I think that’s competing with so many other things that are going on in the world at the same time, not coincidentally, like the political crises that are happening globally, the shift to the far right in Europe, the shift to the far right in the U.S. and the shift in Argentina.”

Those are not unrelated, she said, because a lack of agency produces a yearning for false, exclusionary solutions and authoritarianism.

“If there’s going to be something that keeps me up at night, it’s not the 1.5. It’s the political implications of that feeling of helplessness,” she said. “People will do an awful lot to avoid feeling helpless. That can mean they deny the problem in the first place. Or it could mean that they blame people who are easier targets, and there is plenty of that to witness happening in the world. Or it can be utter and total despair, and a turning inward and into a defeatist place.”

She said reaching the 1.5 limit will sharpen questions about addressing the problem politically and socially.

“I don’t think most people who are really tracking climate change believe it’s a question of technology or science,” she said. “The people who are in the know, know deeply that these are political and social and emotional questions. And my sense is that it will deepen a sense of cynicism and rage, and intensify the polarization.”
Unimpressed by Science

Watching the global temperature surging past the 1.5 degree mark without much reaction from the public reinforces the idea that the focus on the physical science of climate change in recent decades came at the expense of studying how people and communities will be affected and react to global warming, said sociologist and author Dana Fisher, a professor in the School of International Service at American University and director of its Center for Environment, Community, and Equity.

“It’s a fool’s errand to continue down that road right now,” she said. “It’s been an abysmal ratio of funds that are going to understand the social conflict that’s going to come from climate shocks, the climate migration and the ways that social processes will have to shift. None of that has been done.”

Passing the 1.5 degree threshold will “add fuel to the fire of the vanguard of the climate movement,” she said. “Groups that are calling for systemic change, that are railing against incremental policy making and against business as usual are going to be empowered by this information, and we’re going to see those people get more involved and be more confrontational.”

And based on the historical record, a rise in climate activism is likely to trigger a backlash, a dangerous chain reaction that she outlined in her new book, Saving Ourselves: From Climate Shocks to Climate Action.

“When you see a big cycle of activism growing, you get a rise in counter-movements, particularly as activism becomes more confrontational, even if it’s nonviolent, like we saw during the Civil Rights period,” she said. “And it will lead to clashes.”

Looking at the historic record, she said, shows that repressive crackdowns on civil disobedience is often where the violence starts. There are signs that pattern will repeat, with police raids and even pre-emptive arrests of climate activists in Germany, and similar repressive measures in the United Kingdom and other countries.

“I think that’s an important story to talk about, that people are going to push back against climate action just as much as they’re going to push for it,” she said. “There are those that are going to feel like they’re losing privileged access to resources and funding and subsidies.”


“When you see a big cycle of activism growing, you get a rise in counter-movements, particularly as activism becomes more confrontational, even if it’s nonviolent, like we saw during the Civil Rights period.”

A government dealing effectively with climate change would try to deal with that by making sure there were no clear winners and losers, she said, but the climate shocks that come with passing the 1.5 degree mark will worsen and intensify social tensions.

“There will be more places where you can’t go outside during certain times of the year because of either smoke from fires, or extreme heat, or flooding, or all the other things that we know are coming,” she said. “That’s just going to empower more people to get off their couches and become activists.”
‘A Life or Death Task For Humanity’

Public ignorance of the planet’s passing the 1.5 degree mark depends on “how long the powers-that-be can get away with throwing up smokescreens and pretending that they are doing something significant,” said famed climate researcher James Hansen, who recently co-authored a paper showing that warming is accelerating at a pace that will result in 2 degrees of warming within a couple of decades.

“As long as they can maintain the 1.5C fiction, they can claim that they are doing their job,” he said. “They will keep faking it as long as the scientific community lets them get away with it.”

But even once the realization of passing 1.5 is widespread, it might not change the social and political responses much, said Peter Kalmus, a climate scientist and activist in California.

“Not enough people care,” he said. “I’ve been a climate activist since 2006. I’ve tried so many things, I’ve had so many conversations, and I still don’t know what it will take for people to care. Maybe they never will.”

Hovering on the brink of this important climate threshold has left Kalmus feeling “deep frustration, sadness, helplessness, and anger,” he said. “I’ve been feeling that for a long time. Now, though, things feel even more surreal, as we go even deeper into this irreversible place, seeming not to care.”

“No one really knows for sure, but it may still be just physically possible for Earth to stay under 1.5C,” he said, “if humanity magically stopped burning fossil fuels today. But we can’t stop fossil fuels that fast even if everyone wanted to. People would die. The transition takes preparation.”

And there are a lot of people who just don’t want to make that transition, he said.

“We have a few people with inordinate power who actively want to continue expanding fossil fuels,” he said. “They are the main beneficiaries of extractive capitalism; billionaires, politicians, CEOs, lobbyists and bankers. And the few people who want to stop those powerful people haven’t figured out how to get enough power to do so.”

Kalmus said he was not a big fan of setting a global temperature threshold to begin with.

“For me it’s excruciatingly clear that every molecule of fossil fuel CO2 or methane humanity adds to the atmosphere makes irreversible global heating that much worse, like a planet-sized ratchet turning molecule by molecule,” he said. “I think the target framing lends itself to a cycle of procrastination and failure and target moving.”

Meanwhile, climate impacts will continue to worsen into the future, he said.

“There is no upper bound, until either we choose to end fossil fuels or until we simply aren’t organized enough anymore as a civilization to burn much fossil fuel,” he said. “I think it’s time for the movement to get even more radical. Stopping fossil-fueled global heating is a life-or-death task for humanity and the planet, just most people haven’t realized it yet.”

Thursday, February 01, 2024

Silence Is Dangerous in the Current Age of Rising Fascism in the US

Social movements are creating powerful new languages for confronting tyranny. We must resist the plague of silence.


This week’s revelation that Donald Trump is already plotting new ways to try to put himself permanently above the law is just the latest reminder of the looming threat of lawless and emboldened right-wing forces in the United States. Trump’s new scheme to expand a Nixon-era policy memo to prohibit the Justice Department from prosecuting presidents, even after they leave office, is just a tiny hint of the greater threat. In recent months, several scholars have sounded the alarm that the United States is “sleepwalking towards authoritarianism.” The concern is not unfounded given that in his run for the presidency in 2024, Trump has boldly telegraphed his aspirations to impose an authoritarian future on the United States. He has repeatedly injected authoritarian language, extremist ideas and threats of violence into the mainstream. Moreover, he has done so to “create a climate of trepidation and powerlessness that discourages mobilization by the opposition,” in the words of scholar Ruth Ben-Ghiat. Forecasting his authoritarian intentions, Trump has openly stated that he intends to terminate portions of the U.S. Constitution, calls his political enemies “vermin” and boldly proclaims he will make himself a dictator “on day one.” On Truth Social, he claimed without irony that a president should have blanket authority and total immunity “even for events that ‘cross the line.’” He has repeatedly stated that if he regains the White House, “it will be a time for retribution” and revenge.

Taking pages from Hitler’s speeches, Trump has also said that the biggest threat to the United States “is from within.” In this instance, he reproduces a version of McCarthyite slander with his claim that the country is being overrun by “communists, Marxists, fascists and the radical left thugs that live like vermin within the confines of our country, that lie and steal and cheat on elections, and need to be rooted out.” His constant attacks on what he labels as the “enemy within” are meant to incite his MAGA followers to wage violence against people of color, critics, progressives, LGBTQ+ Americans, news networks, immigrants, feminists, and any other group that does not buy into Christian nationalist, white supremacist views.

Trump’s discourse overflows with the genocidal language used in the Third Reich. The historian Heather Cox Richardson rightly notes that Trump’s “use of language referring to enemies as bugs or rodents has a long history in genocide because it dehumanizes opponents, making it easier to kill them. In the U.S., this concept is most associated with Hitler and the Nazis, who often spoke of Jews as ‘vermin’ and vowed to exterminate them.”

Trump has claimed that immigrants “are poisoning the blood of our country” and polluting his notion of white Christian culture, and he’s indicated that, if reelected, he plans to make them undergo “ideological screening” in order to enter the country legally (assuming here that he wants to make sure they would not vote for the Democratic Party). If his vision were carried out, millions of undocumented immigrants would be barred from the country while others would be rounded up, put into what amount to Gulag camps, and subjected to unimaginably harsh policies. Given Trump’s calls to shoot shoplifters, impose death penalties on drug dealers, and his suggestion that his former chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Mark Milley, “deserves to be executed,” there is no reason to doubt Trump’s authoritarian designs.

On the campaign trail, Trump repeatedly echoes the language of autocrats such as Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who embraces the concept of “illiberal democracy,” and claims, as The Guardian points out, that the biggest threat to Hungary and other nations is “the ‘mixing’ of European and non-European races.” Trump and the GOP, like many of the authoritarian politicians they admire, believe that equality is a weakness endemic to democracy and destroys society. Trump’s contempt for the law and desire for absolute power is not only evident in his remarks about wanting to be a dictator; it was also on full display when his legal team argued before a D.C. Circuit Court that unless Trump is impeached, he could not be held responsible for “selling pardons, military secrets, or simply having people assassinated.” As Thom Hartmann put it, “Trump’s lawyer argued before the DC Appeals Court that if Trump became president again, he could order SEAL Team Six to assassinate Joe Biden or Liz Cheney and nobody could do anything about it.” While Trump’s lawlessness is central to his grab for unchecked power, there are also displays of the delusions and aspirations of a Nazi-infested politics.

RELATED STORY

MLK Was a Philosopher of Hope. He Reminds Us That Apathy Is a Dead End.
On MLK Day, the U.S. should painfully interrogate its monumental failure to address systemic injustice.
By George Yancy , TRUTHOUT   January 15, 2024


What is especially disturbing about the emerging fascism in the United States is the lack of general public outrage that accompanies it. Such silence extends from almost the entirety of the Republican Party, the mainstream media, 84 percent of white Evangelicals, and a number of the wealthiest American billionaires and corporate tycoons. While the Democratic Party, including President Joe Biden, have called out Trump as a fascist, they have been silent about their support for decades of neoliberal economic policies, the ravages of deindustrialization, a staggering rise in economic inequality and cuts to social programs. Such policies have produced the conditions that have accelerated the rise of authoritarianism in the United States. Wedded to the interests of the banks, corporate ideology and the financial elite, their silence should come as no surprise. At the same time, such policies have produced enormous economic hardships and a diminished sense of agency that creates an enforced silence among the most impoverished populations and often results in their inevitable retreat from politics, especially in relation to voting in national elections.

In the current historical moment, language has increasingly forfeited its obligation to a politics of truth, justice, equality and freedom, and in doing so has turned cannibalistic and cruel. As political horizons and public life wither under the assault of an emerging fascism and a mainstream media that refuse to confront it, language appears to fail in the presence of what Zygmunt Bauman called “the emergence of modern barbarity.” A continuing series of crises — political, cultural, economic and ecological — are translated into emotional plagues of fear, lies and violence produced by right-wing spectacles that have undermined the ability of the U.S. public to address critically the endless attacks by tyrannical forces on democratic ideas, values and institutions. Matters of historical context, interconnections, informed judgment and critical analysis that refuse to divorce themselves, in the words of Winifred Woodhull, “from social institutions and material relations of power and domination” are either ignored or disappear from public view. Language in the age of gangster capitalism and fascist politics is under siege, functioning less as a vehicle of audacious truth and moral witnessing than as a tool to purge democracy of its ideals. In the face of a politics of enforced silence, the United States is experiencing an era marked by what Brad Evans calls “a closing of the political,” grounded in the assumption that “nothing can be done.”

The poisonous shadow of authoritarianism has entered the public imagination in spectacular fashion as a normalized political discourse. A boisterous creed of “annihilating nihilism” marked by a politics of vacuousness, resentment, historical amnesia, self-interest and freedom from responsibility has become a dominating force in U.S. politics. A right-wing vocabulary of hatred, bigotry, lies and conspiracy theories has produced a brutalizing politics whose rhetoric and polices echo a dark and horrifying period of history unlike anything we have seen since the 1930s in Europe. The mobilizing passions of fascism are now being produced, circulated and legitimated though all aspects of the mass media, which are increasingly under the control of a billionaire class. How else to explain not only Trump’s public courting of white supremacists and antisemites, such as Nick Fuentes and Kanye West, but also Nikki Haley’s claim that slavery was not the cause of the Civil War? Such comments reveal the GOP’s fascist tendency not only to whitewash and seek to erase the relevance of the history of racism, but also to endorse the poisonous ideologies of white nationalism and white supremacy. As Czech dissident Václav Havel once remarked, “the disorder of real history is replaced by the orderliness of pseudo-history.… Instead of events, we are offered non-events.”


Diverse social movements … produced a language that allows us to recognize ourselves as agents, not victims.

Extremist language that was once considered unimaginable and relegated to fringe groups has been elevated to the center of power, politics and everyday life. For instance, billionaire Elon Musk’s recent racist comments echo the racial eugenicist movements in the U.S. in the 19th and 20th centuries, from which Hitler took inspiration. Yet, little is said in the mainstream press connecting Musk’s comments to a shameful past that gave us the Tuskegee experiments and provided a rationale for Jim Crow and racial segregation laws. Enforced silence is a tool for the repression of history and the wiping out of historical consciousness and memory, especially those moments in history we associate with segregation, exploitation, disposability and genocide. Fascist discourse is currently abetted and affirmed by ongoing public displays of the detritus of fascist politics, which makes visible that which the United States has forgotten and of which it should be ashamed — that is, a society in which collective morality and the ethical imagination appear to no longer matter.

Beyond bold and unapologetic public displays of fascist rhetoric, beliefs and policies, there are relentless right-wing assaults against democracy that are barely recognized in the media and in public discourse for the danger they pose to democracy. A short list includes book censorship, turning libraries into student detention centers, voter suppression laws, threatening election workers, assaulting reproductive rights, enacting cruel policies against queer and trans people and harassing critical educators. In addition, schools are turned into indoctrination centers, torrents of propaganda replace facts, history is whitewashed, dissent is suppressed and those who provide medical care to trans people and people in need of abortions are criminalized.

These authoritarian aggressions have become embedded in United States culture to the degree that they fail to garner any alarm or concern from the wider public. As fascist beliefs, values and language multiply, so do attacks by far right politicians, reactionary pundits and white supremacists against diversity, equality and inclusion, all the while promoting a white nationalist notion of who counts as a citizen. As Toni Morrison once noted, this is a language constrained by the “weary and wearying vocabulary of racial domination.” It is “a dead language” trapped in sordid silence regarding the racist ideology that drives its claims to “exclusivity and dominance.”

A dangerous silence now often accompanies a language at war with democratic ideals and the public imagination. This is an enforced silence among the larger public that purposely mutes matters of critical agency, moral responsibility, reason, justice and the demands of keeping alive a substantive democracy. It is a language where moral outrage disappears, is silenced or both, while concealing the danger that this fascist language portends. This is a depoliticizing silence that clouds lies and untruths in mindless theater, spectacles and a flood of evasions. Under such circumstances, community is emptied of any substance, reduced to notions of the social organized around the merging of lies and violence. The loneliness and social atomization produced under neoliberalism provide fodder for the dictatorial energies that offer forms of the false promise of community rooted in hate, bigotry and lies, often resulting in habitual ignorance to justice. Mainstream institutions such as schools, the media and online platforms that should trade in imaginative ideas and provide a critical culture are under siege. One consequence is the breakdown of civic culture, egalitarian values and politics itself. What many Americans fail to realize is that this reactionary mode of silence is a form of complicity that creates a political climate marked by cruelty, violence and lawlessness. How else to explain the lack of public outrage against an extremist Republican Party that rejects free summer lunch programs for food-insecure youth, weakens child labor laws and restricts voting rights?

Liberal and conservative Americans are immersed in a crisis of silence that ignores the fact that politicians such as Trump embrace totalitarian values — the language of dictators — and advocate for violence as a tool of political opportunism. This is not to suggest that all forms of silence function to erase the scourge of racism, white supremacy and the misery imposed by neoliberal capitalism.

Silence can be contemplative, offer consolation, and provide the space for close analysis, thinking critically and mobilizing modes of critical agency. However, in an era marked by a massive flight from ethical and political responsibility, a particular kind of administered silence emerges, one that subverts any sense of critical agency and abandons a more noble message regarding a warning of the dangers to come and the lessons to be addressed. Under such conditions, silence operates increasingly within oppressive relations of power. Tyrannical relations of power are now at the center of U.S. politics and radiate a contempt for dissent, integrity, compassion and liberty which, as Bauman notes in his book Babel, ejects “any sense of critical agency and [refuses] to recognize the bonds we have with others.”

In the face of injustice, silence has become ethically mute, and exhibits a dehumanizing indifference to human suffering in the midst of dangerous politics. Enforced silence, both as a subjective stance and as a political space of organized moral irresponsibility and self-deception, increasingly legitimates and helps to produce a society that has lost its moral bearings and wallows in a repudiation of civic courage and human rights. This current politics of enforced silence is happening at a time when many Americans seem oblivious to the threat posed to democracy by Trump, the GOP, far right foundations, reactionary cultural apparatuses and neoliberal educational institutions.

Silence today has become part of a politics of disappearance where critical ideas are buried along with dangerous memories, and the bodies of journalists, poets and those who lead the fight against oppression in its diverse modes. As Spanish painter Francisco Goya once warned of the degree to which truth and informed judgments are overcome by ignorance, superstition and falsehoods, “the sleep of reason produces monsters.” Martin Luther King Jr. gave a contemporary valence to Goya’s warning in his famous 1967 speech, “Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break the Silence.” His words alerted Americans to the dangers of refusing to speak out in the face of militarism, racism and massive poverty. Stating that “a time comes when silence is betrayal,” King was clear regarding how the refusal to speak out eviscerates both the idea of democracy and the promise of resisting the mobilizing passions of fascism, especially militarism, poverty and racism. The challenge posed by King’s call to resist a complicitous silence in the face of injustice is exceptionally relevant today. At the heart of this challenge is the need to not only make detectable the current threats to democracy but also to understand how silence in the face of tyranny legitimates authoritarianism along with the risks it poses to any viable notion of justice, equality and freedom.

It is important to note that fascism not only arrives through the language of hate, bigotry, dehumanization and military dictatorships as it did in Chile and Argentina in the 1970s; it also arrives through the everyday acceptance of an ethically debilitating silence. In the current moment, such silence accompanies authoritarian threats to democracy. A politics of silence facilitates a tsunami of manufactured ignorance advanced by the repression of dissent, the cowardice of the mainstream media, the unaccountability of social media platforms steeped in the astonishing toxicity of hatred, and a disdain for equality, freedom and truth in a society, notes Jonathan Crary, governed by the corrupting force of the billionaire elite.

Given the current threat posed to U.S. democracy, enforced silence should be analyzed within the uniquely current threats to liberty, basic human rights and equality that sabotage any viable notion of democracy. Such a challenge is especially crucial at a time when the habits of democracy are being replaced by what David Graeber called the “habits of oligarchy, as though no other politics are possible.” The politics of silence increasingly works through multiple sites and seemingly contrasting impulses, often aligning itself with a reactionary disdain for the public good. In part, it does so by refusing to address the growing (yet to some, seemingly unrelated) issues of Trump’s full embrace of fascist politics, the growing attacks on freedom of expression and the struggle for social justice.

This is all the more reason to reclaim the language of the common good; to protect public and higher education from a fascist takeover; to reject the privatization of public goods; expand the power of unions and the rights of workers, people of color, women, immigrants, queer and trans people, and all those others considered excess and disposable. The plague of silence has to be broken so as to inject the struggle for human rights back into the language of politics, and to fight for a socialist democracy built on the anti-capitalist values of equality, social justice, liberty and human dignity. The words of Frederick Douglass are prescient here and worth remembering. He writes:


If there is no struggle, there is no progress. Those who profess to favor freedom and yet deprecate agitation are men who want crops without plowing the ground. They want rain without thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the roar of its mighty waters.

If the plague of silence is to be overcome, Americans need to tap into a language that makes clear that they will not look away or refuse to stand up in the face of fascist aggression. The brilliant writer Maaza Mengiste argues for such a language with his call for a vocabulary that “will take us from shock and stunned silence toward a coherent, visceral speech, one as strong as the force that is charging at us.”

Fortunately, especially since the Occupy movement in 2011, a number of social movements have emerged to provide a language that both exposes and makes the ruthless power of the financial elite and other anti-democratic forces accountable through a discourse of critique and hope. The Occupy movement made the discourse of inequality and class differences a more central part of a national political narrative. In the last decade, workers have used the language of economic justice, solidarity and fair play to reenergize the labor movement. The resurgence of the labor movement provided a discourse that exposes how neoliberalism benefits the wealthy and privileged.


Silence has become the language through which people are either depoliticized or are willingly complicit with the economic and racial forces of totalitarianism.

Meanwhile movements such as the movement for Black lives have highlighted the language of structural racism along with making visible a history of slavery, racial abuse and police violence, and crafting a nuanced and multidimensional discourse of liberation.

The #MeToo movement created new discourses to make visible the pervasive extent of sexual assault, violence and harassment across a wide variety of sites and greatly advanced gender justice.

The abolitionist movement has provided a contextual and relational language highlighting the punitive nature of highly racialized criminal legal system and the carceral state while instituting a national movement to defund the police.

Trans and queer people have invigorated a movement and language that critiques the right-wing weaponization of marginalized and ostracized identities.

Climate activists have exposed the danger fossil fuels pose to the planet, and how the most vulnerable populations, especially Black and Brown communities, pay a heavy price for the abuses of the oil and gas industries. In doing so, they have inserted the language of climate justice into the public sphere and made clear how capitalism is creating a murderous future for human beings by destroying the environment.

Black and Brown theorists working with the idea of intersectionality have provided a new language highlighting how every social movement is “shaped by multiple intersecting inequalities and power dynamics,” which draw “attention to unmarked categories” of both oppression and resistance. All of these movements have imaginatively offered a new language of politics and continue to further expand and sharpen such discourses.

Equally promising is the increased political activism of young people, who are voicing a language and pedagogy of disruption, critique and possibility. As I stated more than a decade ago in Truthout, theirs is a language “that recognizes that there is no viable politics without will and awareness and that critical education motivates and provides a crucial foundation for understanding and intervening in the world.” Young people recognize that they have been written out of the script of democracy for too long and are now creating spaces and enacting a language in which to expand individual and social agency through collective forms of resistance as starting points to build a new democratic social order.

Fortified with the energy and language of these dynamic movements, it is incumbent upon the broader left and its various social movements to continue to develop a language that not only highlights social injustices but also includes a vocabulary that moves people, allows them to feel compassion for “the other” and gives them the courage to talk back. Beyond highlighting the wide range of social injustices, all of us on the left must continue to develop a vocabulary that speaks to people’s needs in a way that is moving, affirming, recognizable and enables them to confront the burden of conscience in the face of the unspeakable, and to do so with a sense of dignity, self-reflection and the courage to act individually and collectively in the service of a radical democracy.

One important contribution of these diverse social movements is that they all produced a language that allows us to recognize ourselves as agents, not victims. In doing so, they have expanded the discourse of radical democratic politics. Of course, there is more at stake here than a struggle over meaning; there is also the struggle over power, over the need to create a formative culture that will produce new modes of critical agency and contribute to a broad social movement that will translate meaning into a fierce struggle for economic, political and racial equality. While there is a new energy among youth and a number of powerful social movements, there is the ongoing challenge of confronting with renewed vigor a culture of silence and indifference that has become the most powerful educational force of the emerging fascism.

Writing about the civil rights struggles of the ‘60s, Martin Luther King Jr. was prescient in acknowledging that the tyranny and violence of authoritarianism feeds on silence, moral apathy and the collapse of conscience. Given the fierce urgency of the times, the struggle against an enforced silence is especially crucial when people refuse to speak up in the face of injustice. Silence has become the language through which people are either depoliticized or are willingly complicit with the economic and racial forces of totalitarianism. As King notes, it is the language of those “who accept evil without protesting against it.”

The new social movements in the face of an emerging fascism have done us a great theoretical and political favor in making clear that any viable mode of resistance must embrace a language that translates into power — a critical language that expands the power of education, agency and resistance. This is a language that imaginatively rethinks the forces of militarism, capitalism, racism and sexism in light of the dramatic changes taking place technologically, culturally and politically. There will be no justice or democracy in the United States unless a mass multiclass social movement emerges that combines political and individual rights with economic rights — that joins a movement for gender and racial equality with a movement for economic justice.

At the same time, many new social movements need to further a language that is not only theoretical and critical but also passionate. In many ways, they do this, but a politics of passion needs a greater place in their politics. Central to such a language is a politics of emotion that addresses what Ruth Ben-Ghiat refers to as communities of belonging. This is a language that invites joy while mobilizing emotions that embrace compassion, justice and hope. What might be called a politics of identification and emotion is particularly important at a time when many people living in a neoliberal society are atomized, feeling alienated, lonely, invisible, and subject to far right emotional appeals to forms of allegiance rooted in hatred, bigotry and a poisonous nationalism.

Anand Giridharads claims that today’s left is often too cerebral and too suspicious of what he calls empowering emotional appeals. He writes that much of the left today is “suspicious of the politics of passion” and “doesn’t do emotional appeals,” adding:


Can those who defend the rule of law and pluralism and economic justice and human rights not only articulate those ideas but also appeal to the more basic human needs to belong, to have anxieties soothed, to have fears answered, to feel hope, or just to feel something at the end of bleak and tedious days?… In an era [of anxiety and future dread] such as this, leaving the politics of emotion, of passion, to aspiring autocrats is a dangerous abdication.

It is worth emphasizing that the struggle against fascism and for a socialist democracy will not take place if education is not made central to politics. Any attempt to further the language of social, economic and racial justice will not be effective if it does not construct a language of critique, possibility and desire. We need a language that pedagogically moves people, makes power visible and creates communities of belonging, justice and compassion. We need to continue to fight aggressively the plague of silence with what Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak argues is “the power to think the absent.” It is only then that a critical public consciousness can be awakened, and a multiracial working-class movement can begin to bring into fruition a democratically socialist society.



HENRY A. GIROUX  currently holds the McMaster University Chair for Scholarship in the Public Interest in the English and Cultural Studies Department and is the Paulo Freire Distinguished Scholar in Critical Pedagogy. His most recent books include: American Nightmare: Facing the Challenge of Fascism (City Lights, 2018); The Terror of the Unforeseen (Los Angeles Review of books, 2019), On Critical Pedagogy, 2nd edition (Bloomsbury, 2020); Race, Politics, and Pandemic Pedagogy: Education in a Time of Crisis (Bloomsbury 2021); and Pedagogy of Resistance: Against Manufactured Ignorance (Bloomsbury 2022). Giroux is also a member of Truthout’s Board of Directors.

Wednesday, January 17, 2024

 

Do violent video games numb us towards real violence?

Results of a neuroscientific study suggest that violence in video games has no negative influence on the empathy of adults

Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF VIENNA

Neuroscientists from the University of Vienna and the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm have investigated whether playing violent video games leads to a reduction in human empathy. To do this, they had adult test subjects play a violent video game repeatedly over the course of an experiment lasting several weeks. Before and after, their empathic responses to the pain of another person were measured. It was found that the violent video game had no discernible effect on empathy and underlying brain activity. These results have now been published in the renowned journal eLife.

Video games have become an integral part of the everyday life of many children and adults. Many of the most popular video games contain explicit depictions of extreme violence. Therefore, concerns have been raised that these games may blunt the empathy of their players and could therefore lower the inhibition threshold for real violence. An international research team led by Viennese neuroscientists Claus Lamm and Lukas Lengersdorff has now investigated whether this is actually the case.

The Austrian and Swedish researchers invited a total of 89 adult male subjects to take part in the study. A key selection criterion was that the subjects had had little or no previous contact with violent video games. This ensured that the results were not influenced by different experiences with these games. In a first experimental study, the baseline level of empathy of the test subjects was assessed. Brain scans were used to record how the test subjects reacted when a second person was administered painful electric shocks. Then, the video game phase of the experiment began, during which the test subjects came to the research laboratory seven times to play a video game for one hour each time. The participants in the experimental group played a highly violent version of the game Grand Theft Auto V and were given the task of killing as many other game characters as possible. In the control group, all violence had been removed from the game and the participants were given the task of taking photos of other game characters. Finally, after the video game phase was over, the test subjects were examined a second time to determine whether their empathic responses had changed.

The analysis of the data showed that the video game violence had no discernible effect on the empathic abilities of the test subjects. The reactions of the participants in the experimental group who were confronted with extreme depictions of violence did not differ statistically from those of the participants who only had to take photos. In addition, there were no significant differences in the activity of brain regions that had been identified in other studies as being associated with empathy – such as the anterior insular and anterior midcingulate cortex. 

Does that mean that concerns about violence in video games are unfounded? The authors advise against jumping to conclusions. "Precisely because this is such a sensitive topic, we have to be very careful when interpreting these results," explains lead author Lukas Lengersdorff, who carried out the study as part of his doctoral studies. "The conclusion should not be that violent video games are now definitively proven to be harmless. Our study lacks the data to make such statements." According to the neuroscientist and statistician, the value of the study lies rather in the fact that it allows a sober look at previous results. "A few hours of video game violence have no significant influence on the empathy of mentally healthy adult test subjects. We can clearly draw this conclusion. Our results thus contradict those of previous studies, in which negative effects were reported after just a few minutes of play". In these previous studies, participants had played the violent video game immediately before data collection. "Such experimental designs are not able to distinguish the short-term and long-term effects of video games", explains Lengersdorff.

According to research group leader and co-author Claus Lamm, the study also sets a new standard for future research in this area: "Strong experimental controls and longitudinal research designs that allow causal conclusions to be drawn are needed to make clear statements about the effects of violent video games. We wanted to take a step in this direction with our study". Now it is the task of further research to check whether there are no negative consequences even after significantly longer exposure to video game violence – and whether this is also the case for vulnerable subpopulations. "The most important question is of course: are children and young people also immune to violence in video games? The young brain is highly plastic, so repeated exposure to depictions of violence could have a much greater effect. But of course these questions are difficult to investigate experimentally without running up against the limits of scientific ethics," says Lamm.

Friday, December 22, 2023

EMOTIONAL PLAGUE
Prague gunman David Kozak shared mass shooting fantasies online



James Crisp
Thu, 21 December 2023 

David Kozak

To the outside world, he was an introverted loner, but online the Prague University gunman was not shy about sharing his sick fantasies to kill.

David Kozak used online platform Telegram to muse on massacres and mass murder, while also boasting of his plans to carry out a school shooting, according to Czech media.

He said his Telegram channel would be a “diary” of his life “before the shooting”.


“I want to do school shooting and possibly suicide,” the 24-year-old wrote in one chilling post, before adding: “I always wanted to kill. I thought I would become a maniac in the future.”

Kozak went on to praise “Ilznaz”, which is thought to be a reference to Ilznaz Galyaviev, 19, who murdered nine in a 2021 attack on his former school in Kazan, Russia.

“When Ilznaz did the shooting, I realised it was much more profitable to do mass murders than serial ones,” he said.

He also wrote approvingly of Russian school shooter Alina Afanaskina, whom he said “helped me too much”.

The 14-year-old schoolgirl shot dead another student and wounded five others with her father’s pump-action shotgun before turning the weapon on herself in the city of Bryansk earlier this month.

“It was as if she had come to my aid from heaven just in time,” he posted.

The Czech authorities were quick to rule out any links to international terror organisations after the attack.

Kozak during the gun rampage at Prague University
‘An introverted type’

Kozak, dressed in black and armed with a rifle, certainly seems to fit the profile of a lone gunman.

The student had no criminal record but, as a legal gun owner, he had an interest in weaponry.

He had a bachelor’s degree in history and European studies, and continued with a master’s degree, focusing on the history of Poland.

Kozak would travel the 13 miles from his home to Prague for lectures at Charles University’s Faculty of Arts. It appears he lived in the central Bohemian village of Hostoun with his father in a large family house.


“He was an introverted type, strange probably like any other nerd,” one resident told local media.

“The family seemed normal. We went to their cottage years ago. His dad used to be mine’s boss and they were friends outside of work, including his wife.”

What exactly happened on the morning of Dec 21 is not yet clear. What has been established is that Kozak murdered his father before heading to Prague.

Czech police learned that he was heading to the capital and planned to take his own life.
Crazed ambition

Suicide featured heavily in Kozak’s social media posts, where he poured out his darkest thoughts.

He was due to attend a lecture at 2pm and opened fire just before 3pm.

In the bloodshed that followed, he fulfilled his crazed ambition to become a mass murderer.

As police swarmed towards him, he is said to have turned his weapon on himself and inflicted what was described as a “devastating” injury after a shootout with officers.



It is thought he may have been shot by police first before he killed himself to avoid arrest.

Kozak kept his Telegram channel private until just before his attack, when he made it open to read.

Posts taken from it spread across social media, granting him the notoriety he clearly craved, as news of the Czech Republic’s worst-ever mass shooting emerged.

His chilling “diary” has now been taken down, but not before he had opened a chapter of pain and grief for the friends and families of his many victims.

Tuesday, December 05, 2023

Wilhelm Reich and Sexology from Below
First published: 01 December 2022
 
Beitrag
Open Access

Abstract

One of sexologist Wilhelm Reich's most ambitious and enduring theories claims that sexuality and sexual repression play a central role in the production and reproduction of class structures and hierarchies. From 1927–1933, Reich combined his sexological work with his communist political convictions in a movement that became known as sex-pol. Reich developed some of his most provocative and potentially emancipatory theories through this empirical work with members of working-class communities. Though they often remain anonymous in his writings, the traces of their voices remain audible throughout. In this paper, I employ a Gramscian method, developed by post-colonial scholars, to read for the trace of proletarian voices in Reich's archive. I argue that these subjects helped to theorize the role of sex in producing and reproducing class oppression. Reading for the trace of proletarian voices in the archive expands our understanding of how working-class subjects in early twentieth-century Germany and Austria helped to produce concrete sexological knowledge from below. 


‘The fascism in our heads’: Reich, Fromm, Foucault, Deleuze and Guattari – the social pathology of fascism in the 21st century 

Michael A. Peters 

To cite this article: Michael A. Peters (2022) ‘The fascism in our heads’: Reich, Fromm, Foucault, Deleuze and Guattari – the social pathology of fascism in the 21st century, Educational Philosophy and Theory, 54:9, 1276-1284,

 DOI: 10.1080/00131857.2020.1727403

 To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/00131857.2020.1727403


Wilhelm Reich's Challenge to Classical Marxism

by Dr. Jan Garrett
last revised date: April 27, 2012

Having presented replies, sympathetic to Marx, to more than a dozen challenges, 1 I want now to consider a different type of challenge, one that addresses what appears to be gaps in previous Marxist thinking about the future.

The meaningfulness of Marx's view as a whole depends upon the possibility that working people can at some time in the future democratically and collectively manage or administer the economy.

Conservatives insist that this is impossible. One very common version of this view, defended by conservative Christian thinkers such as Augustine of Hippo in the fifth century C.E. (A.D., if you like), is that human beings are inherently sinful and have been so ever since Adam and Eve disobeyed God in the Garden of Eden and were appropriately expelled from the Garden. Somehow, as a result of Adam's and Eve's sin, human nature became corrupted, and all of their descendents—that is, all subsequent human beings—have received at birth an inability to avoid sinning. Self-centered vices like greed and lack of concern or respect for one's fellow human being are traced to this sort of original sin. Given original sin, it is claimed, human beings are unable consistently to cooperate and treat each other as equals. The political consequence of this view, already drawn by Augustine of Hippo, is that people must be ruled by an authoritarian state, i.e., a state of the political strict father type; they cannot rule themselves. With respect to the modern economy it means that most people cannot run the economy. Doing this must be left to the elect, who turn out to be those who own and control large amounts of capital, not members of the working class or, for that matter, members of a middle class who may have their retirement savings in funds partly invested in corporate stocks.

In case one wonders how those who own and control capital can be exempt from the general sinfulness of humankind, the conservative opponents of Marxism draw on Adam Smith: it is not generosity but the pursuit of self-interest that motivates the owners of business to engage in activities that, thanks to the invisible hand of the competitive marketplace, turn out to benefit everyone who participates in markets. (This is not the place to reply to that argument by demonstrating, as could easily be done and has been done elsewhere, that today's markets are not even close to the ideal situation imagined by Smith.)

Apparent indirect support for the conservative challenge comes from the discovery that many people are so handicapped psychologically that they cannot even manage well--that is to say, rationally--the most urgent aspects of their so-called private lives, and that this generalization applies to vast numbers of people from the working class as well as other social classes.

We do not have to explain this handicap in terms of original sin. There is another explanation: to understand it, we must turn to other inquirers into what makes people tick. Sigmund Freud's study of the mental disorders that were called neuroses suggested that large numbers of people were handicapped from living a fulfilling and rationally self-regulating life because of childhood experiences relating to their sexuality. Freud's focus on the importance of a healthy sexuality put him at odds at first with conservative forms of religion.

Work done by Wilhelm Reich, at one time a disciple of Freud, and his colleagues in the free sex clinics in central Europe during the early 1930's yielded results relevant to the Marxist aim of promoting human liberation by establishing a new form of economy administered by the working people themselves. (Reich himself was sympathetic to this aim.)

Reich's "character analysis" developed skills based on, but modified from, those practiced by Freudian psychoanalysis. Using it he tried to understand the problems of large numbers of people in Germany.

Reich discovered that:

1) as Freud suspected, before he was pressured by his own followers to state his views more conservatively, not only the misery of most people but also their lack of confidence in self-governing activity, is rooted in sexual repression imposed in intimate settings (families, classrooms, etc.) early in life and very rarely overcome.

2) This problem is a general one, affecting all social classes, although traditional elites compensate for lack of confidence by adopting the ideology of group superiority, such as class, male-gender, religious, national, ethnic superiority.

3) The social structure that first imposed sexual repression arose historically along with patriarchy and the subordination of women—about 4000-6000 years ago; it is far older than the capital system whose laws of motion Marx investigated. It operates especially, but not exclusively, through conservative religious institutions, and it often has state support. When the capital system replaced the feudal system in the early modern period (1500-1800 in Western Europe), it left patriarchy and sexual repression largely intact.2

4) Human motivation arises out of experiences grounded in the human body and its character structure acquired early in life. Often this is distorted by sexual repression beginning in the first years of life. Toddlers are spontaneously interested in love, work, and knowledge. If their love interests, which already have a sexual component, are not thwarted, they can develop at a fairly rapid pace as responsible knowers of the world and in their ability to interact creatively and productively with the material world, i.e., as workers.

5) But, as a matter of fact, their love interests are typically thwarted; they are taught early on that more than minimal touching of the sex organs is sinful and harmful to the person, and the pursuit of pleasure for its own sake is bad (even if it harms nobody else). As a result, when young people reach puberty and begin to have adult sexual desires, they cooperate with their sex-negative culture to repress that part of themselves; they feel it as alien to themselves, and if they indulge in, say, self-gratification, an internal voice echoing conservative religion and nosy neighbors tells them they are succumbing to Satan's lures. The anxiety that they feel at this point undercuts and distorts their sexuality; yet the desires refuse to be silent. A war within the psyche is set up, and when this has happened no amount of "civilized" habit-formation can create inner peace without a general exhaustion of the life force. Faced by internal division, most human beings lack the confidence and the focus to function as fully responsible persons.

6) During the 1930's fascists on the right, and political allies of the emergent Soviet bureaucracy led by Stalin on the supposed left, took advantage of this structure in the human character in their countries to establish authoritarian movements. This enabled the fascists to seize power in Italy, Germany, and Spain, and the Stalinist "communists" in the Soviet Union to strangle the democratic impulse that arose in the Revolution of 1917.

Implicit in Reich's thinking is this: Marx's vision of a free, democratic, social order based on mutual respect and cooperation will be possible only if the friends of this vision succeed in overcoming the patterns of sexual repression that have been with us since the original imposition of patriarchy, social hierarchy, and "compulsory sex-morality" (to use Reich's phrase) some 4000-6000 years ago. This is possible only if we are able to foster a less repressive (and more sex-affirmative) way of relating to ourselves and to each other, beginning with the very young.3

Notes:

1. See my Challenges to Marx.

2. Marx's close friend Friedrich Engels, using the historical materialist method he shared with Marx, published an important study of the rise of patriarchy and subordination of women in his Origin of the Family, Private Property, and the State. However, Engels did not fully understand, as Reich did later, how the sex-negative attitudes and social rules that accompanied this development produced psychological consequences unhealthy, and working against rational self-assertion, for members of all social classes and both genders.

3. For more on Wilhelm Reich, and a bibliography of works by and about his views and activities, see Taboo Science: The Story of Wilhelm Reich.


The End of Capitalism
A new world is on its way. We are building it, one day at a time.


Review of “The Mass Psychology of Fascism”

“Freedom does not have to be achieved – it is spontaneously present in every life function. It is the elimination of all obstacles to freedom that has to be achieved.”


May 17, 2009

“The Mass Psychology of Fascism”

by Wilhelm Reich

1946 The Noonday Press


First written in Germany in 1932 as Hitler was coming to power, then revised in the US in 1944, this is a classic study of the characteristics of fascist movement. Reich, a former Marxist from the Frankfurt School, emphasizes that fascism is not unique to Germany or Japan or Italy, but is instead “the basic emotional attitude of the suppressed man of our authoritarian machine civilization and its mechanistic-mystical conception of life.”

In other words it’s not enough to blame Hitler or the Nazis or any political party for the rise of fascism, we have to understand why millions of people have been, and continue to be, drawn to Right-wing movement (its mass character is what distinguishes fascism from simple authoritarianism). Finding its base in the Middle Classes, fascist movement feeds upon authoritarian patriarchal social structures, especially the father-dominated family, which prepares children to obey and even revere a harsh “leader.”

But what was most interesting to me about this book is the politics of sexuality. Reich as a psychiatrist observed that the repression of sexuality, especially from a young age, prepares people for lifetimes of neurotic self-hatred as some of their most basic and healthy life functions become embedded with deep shame and guilt. I would add, sexual assault and child abuse add much fuel to this fire. Reich stresses that children, adolescents and women are perpetually denied control over their sexual desires and bodies, which is what gives the patriarchal father so much power in the family, and therefore the sexual repression of masses of people becomes the seeds that grow fascist political movements.

I will write more on this train of thought in my review of Yes Means Yes!, and it’s also something I’ve been sparked to consider after watching the film The Handmaid’s Tale, about a dark future where pollution has made most women sterile, and a Christian fascist movement seizes control of society to make the remaining fertile women into the sex slaves of powerful male leaders. It’s surprisingly realistic in some scary ways, because it builds from the sad truth that the patriarchal Christian Right is a real force in society and continues to attack the rights of women to control their own bodies and sexuality. This tendency must be overcome, by women and trans folks taking back their body sovereignty and proclaiming their sexuality as no one’s but their own.

There’s a lot more in this book. Reich also dissects the Soviet Union and tries to explain why worker’s self-management breaking down led to dictatorship and state capitalism. He also quotes at length from Nazi and Soviet propaganda to illustrate his points. Finally, I need to point out that a fair portion of this book is spent on Reich’s ideas of the “orgone”, which he believed was the fundamental component of life, work, love, and knowledge. He’s been accused of pseudoscience, but if you look at it from a spiritual point of view, it doesn’t matter what you call that force inside each of us which strives for freedom, the point is to unleash it

“Freedom does not have to be achieved – it is spontaneously present in every life function. It is the elimination of all obstacles to freedom that has to be achieved.”


Revolutionary Desire

Wilhelm Reich: Beyond the Mad Scientist Paradigm


Sex-Politics

If Fenichel strives to reconcile a basically Freudian view of the Oedipus complex with a basically Marxist understanding (or perhaps little Marxian reminders) of the actual reality of the family, Wilhelm Reich’s project is to explore and expand this connection. Reich, a psychoanalyst, did his early work along mostly orthodox psychoanalytic lines, producing the highly influential mostly-orthodox text Character Analysis, a work that would lead Reich to posit a material existence for ideology. Throughout his career as a psychoanalyst, Reich emphasized the economic viewpoint, leading him to find sexual potency as a key requirement for health because of what he saw as orgasm’s unique ability to discharge vast amounts of libido otherwise consumed by symptoms and repression. In an interesting parallel, Reich looked to capitalist economic reality as a determinant factor behind the creation and maintenance of neurosis. He finds in the actual reality of the family a sexually repressive institution that is the primary source of neurosis. And, as he moves away from a strictly psychoanalytic or Marxist angle, Reich attempts to form a new theory of the economics of the family. The family can only be, according to this line of thought, a mini economy of actual libidinal energy. The source of libidinal energy that Reich thought he had discovered he dubbed the “orgone”.

Reich’s theory of orgonomy is widely loathed and disregarded. Reich was imprisoned by the F.D.A. in connection with his sale of devices designed to harness this energy. Many credible scientists find nothing of merit in Reich’s orgone work. Marxists and psychoanalysts find something of value in his early work but distance themselves from his later work, seen as a degeneration or even a psychosis. Clearly, there is a certain amount of confusion inherent in Reich’s orgone period. The work on its own, from the perspective of synthesizing Marxism and psychoanalysis, is not particularly valuable. However, in context, this work makes plain some tendencies present not only in Reich’s earlier work but also latent in orthodox Freudian psychoanalysis.

Reich’s psychoanalytic work emphasizes the role of orgasm in sexual health because of its capacity to discharge great amounts of libidinal energy. A certain degree of genitality was already present in Freud’s basic opposition of genital sexuality to non-genital perversion. [1] Reich clings to this differentiation and blames perversion—which he sees as basically undesirable—on the existence of anti-sexual morality. Repressive attitudes in the family toward natural, genital sexuality lead to the widespread counter-moral phenomena of perversion, prostitution, and masturbation. None of these is a real expression of healthy, natural sexuality in Reich’s view. But these phenomena are deeply rooted; even Engels, of course, recognized the deep link between monogamy and prostitution.

At the same time, Reich has rightly been criticized by Herbert Marcuse for a “tyranny of genitality”. [2] Reich’s view, which correctly traces the existence of perversion to the repression of sexuality, still upholds Freud’s basically normative distinction between perverse and normal or neurotic sexuality. For Reich, perverse sexuality would basically fade away after communist revolution and the overthrow of sexual morality. Marcuse’s work speculates that the revolutionary upheaval—seen through the lens of an end to “surplus repression”—would act against the exclusivity enjoyed by genitality under capitalism. Rather, work itself would be restored of its erotic nature; the body would be re-sexualized, back toward a kind of polymorphous perversity. Work becomes play. [3] Marcuse’s vision is valuable insofar as it attacks this weakness in Reich’s theory and attempts to resolve psychoanalytically the issue of alienated labor after revolution. Reich’s theory, on the other hand, like Freud’s, offers a cogent and detailed analysis of conditions as they exist now—which certainly does not exempt it from being attacked for overstepping from describing to defending the status quo.

However, despite its reactionary tendencies, Reich’s project flows from the pressing need for revolution in order to resolve both social and individual problems. For a period, before being expelled from the International Psychoanalytical Association for being a Marxist and from the Communist Party for being a psychoanalyst (perhaps both situations are more nuanced, but the point still stands), Reich produced a remarkable body of work attempting to merge the two fields of psychoanalytic and Marxist thought. The direction this work takes him is clear; Reich seeks to answer how the masses can come to desire fascism or their own repression. Mechanical Marxists expected a direct translation of economic interests and crisis situations to revolutionary consciousness. Instead, for many, the opposite seemed to be true. Reich thus moves from “Dialectical Materialism and Psychoanalysis,” an important and formative text in Freudo-Marxism, to The Mass Psychology of Fascism, a detailed application of his combinatory efforts, with its own points of departure and leadings-up to orgonomy. In this book is one of Reich’s points which seems to broadly exemplify his overall aims:


what religion calls freedom from the outside world really means fantasized substitute gratification for actual gratification. This fits in perfectly with the Marxist theory that religion is the opium of the people. This is more than just a metaphor. Vegetotherapy was able to prove that mystical experience actually sets the same process going in the autonomic living apparatus as a narcotic does. These processes are excitations in the sexual apparatus that cause narcoticlike conditions and that crave for orgastic gratification. [4]

Reich definitely understands his work as continuing and combining that of Marx and Freud. For the stretch of his Freudo-Marxist period, he offers valuable insight into the relations between sexuality, family, class struggle, and revolution. To begin with, Reich aims to extract the revolutionary core of psychoanalysis, one that he thought even Freud moved away from with the introduction of the death instinct. The great gain made by psychoanalysis is “withdrawing the discussion of morals from the sphere of philosophy.” [5] Morality is not metaphysical; it is rooted in education and parenting. By any interpretation, this is in line with the classical Marxist formulation of material base determining an ideological superstructure. Psychoanalysis, though, is a method which makes it possible to definitively reveal the link from an individual’s morality to family arrangement and education. Thus, Reich seizes upon it as a weapon against mysticism.

While Reich sees psychoanalysis as incredibly important in this struggle, this places it at something of a disadvantage. If, as Reich believes, psychoanalysis undermines the influence of mysticism, then it undermines the psychical basis for bourgeois class rule. If its practice becomes widespread and popular, then this can only come at the expense of the potency of its revolutionary critique:


And so the capitalist mode of existence of our time is strangling psychoanalysis from the outside and the inside. Freud is right: his science is being destroyed, but we add—in bourgeois society. If psychoanalysis refuses to adapt itself to that society, it will be destroyed for certain; if it does adapt itself, it will suffer the same fate as Marxism suffers at the hands of reformist socialists, that is to say death by exhaustion of meaning: in the case of psychoanalysis, above all neglect of the theory of the libido. [. . .]


Because psychoanalysis, unless it is watered down, undermines bourgeois ideology, and because, furthermore, only a socialist economy can provide a basis for the free development of intellect and sexuality alike, psychoanalysis has a future only under socialism. [6]

Psychoanalysis of Character

Reich’s book Character Analysis, which does contain some material disputed by orthodox analysts (in particular his denunciation of the death instinct theory) is also perhaps his most important psychoanalytic work. Readers of Reich’s work, typically Marxists or psychoanalysts or both, tend to view his writings as standalone products rather than mile-markers in a broader process. Contemporary editions of Character Analysis contain a section explaining the transition from character-analytic work to orgone therapy. Like it or not, as Juliet Mitchell points out, Reich’s work led him to the orgone and to radically rethink his entire platform. In Character Analysis, though, it is possible to observe the aspects of his more palatable moments which make possible his wide deviation from both Marxism and psychoanalysis.

This book, widely accepted in psychoanalytic circles, attempts to formulate a systematic method for attacking the patient’s ingrained resistances that appear as long-seated ways of living life but function in psychoanalysis to hinder the discoveries of the unconscious. The goal of the treatment remains the same: to interpret the analysand’s speech and render its unconscious meanings conscious. Yet these interpretations often fall to the spears of the defenses. The resistances of the patient, then, must be resolutely and systematically attacked in order to open up conditions favorable to interpretation. This is because the interpretations must be accepted for their own merit, while interpretation under conditions of defense will be accepted only “for reasons related to the transference,” that is, not for its correctness but by virtue simply of the nature of the analytic relationship. [7] This, of course, opens the treatment up to all the old vulnerabilities of hypnotherapy or any therapy which does not analyze the transference—the therapeutic motive force, perhaps, but also its cardinal resistance.

It is known in psychoanalytic pathology that the various forms neurosis takes can be categorized in part by the dominant fixation and regression that they activate. Reich applies this same methodology to the differentiation of the character neuroses, offering several categories including the hysterical character, the compulsive character, the phallic-narcissistic character, and the masochistic character, the latter providing details essential to Reich’s attack on the death instinct. While here Reich’s thought is perhaps not all that psychoanalytically controversial, the division between the genital character and the neurotic character is one that is contentious and highly necessary for understanding Reich and the direction his work took him. Mitchell heavily criticizes Reich for a kind of normative genitality:


Though his model at this time was still one of progressive evolution in his descriptions, Freud was aware that as these are re-expressed in adulthood the various ‘stages’ will be experienced simultaneously or in a new temporal sequence, a different structural arrangement. Reich’s alteration of Freud’s thesis amounts to what could be described as a moral assertion: genitality is unique and best. Given this supposition, all that detracted from genitality was perverse or disturbed. Freud’s careful diversification of sexuality into component parts, and various erotogenous zones and different sexual objects, was rejected in favor of a value judgement. [8]

Perhaps her judgment is right on some level. Freud is certainly to be praised for not assuming that sexuality is limited to genitality. Reich does not assume this either. Instead, his emphasis on genital sexuality is tied to his theory of the orgasm as the main mechanism for libidinal discharge. Perhaps because of the sheer amount of libido invested in the genitals, an inhibition of genital drives over-cathects other drives and makes them difficult to sublimate. This is because:


The genital apparatus, as opposed to all the other partial drives, is physiologically the most strongly equipped because it has the capacity for orgastic discharge; and in terms of libido economy, it is the most vital. Thus, we can assume that its impulses have a far greater similarity with hunger, as far as inflexibility and tenacity are concerned, than they have with impulses from other erogenous zones. This may well be a powerful blow to certain ethical concepts—but that cannot be helped. Indeed, the resistance to these findings can also be explained: their recognition would have revolutionary consequences. [9]

Reich’s position on genitality is not at all isolated from the rest of his theory, despite how disturbing this could be to Marxists who find themselves initially attracted to his theory of fascism. His entire theory of neurosis revolves around this conception of the orgasm as the ultimate, and only satisfactory, discharge of the libido imbued into the genital zone. In his view, the process goes as such. First, an external prohibition is internalized, producing a “libido stasis,” or an actual neurosis. This actual neurosis creates a dammed-up state that “imparts its pathological energy to the experiences of the Oedipal stage and, perpetuated as a consequence of sexual repression, keeps the psychoneurosis constantly supplied with energy in a kind of cyclic motion.” [10] Clearly, then, the task of therapy is not simply the undoing of the psychoneurosis, but the elimination of the actual neurosis underlying it by making possible genital gratification through orgastic release. One has a sense that Reich is attempting to do to psychoanalysis something akin to what Marx did to the dialectic: concretizing an abstraction, attaching an idea to a material reality.

The question of material base also arises in connection to the death instinct. Reich takes extreme issue with postulating cellular dissimilation as a somatic source for the so-called death instinct. Freud’s positing the death instinct allows him to abandon the view—Reich’s view—that masochism is a secondary phenomenon, a turning of sadism inward. Reich says: no, no, no! Sadism is for Reich not a turning outward of a primary masochism or death drive but rather the “mixture between the sexual demand itself and the destructive impulse against the person responsible for its frustration”. [11] As the stakes of this disagreement, it is interesting to observe how Reich’s writing, defending sexuality and seeing aggression as resulting only from sexual repression, itself becomes most aggressive at the moments when he senses that sexuality—or the gravely monumental stakes of its repression—is under attack by theoretical interlocutors.

Reich’s position is quite similar to Fenichel’s. Both share the concern that the theory of the death instinct undermines the radical conception of neurosis as struggle between individual instinct and frustrating external world. [12] The danger is a political one: Reich senses a need to defend sexuality from repressive class society, and the new theory offers an instinctual basis for what Reich sees as the social force of repression. Michael Schneider criticizes Freud, calling the death instinct that of “a murderous and suicidal class, the imperialist bourgeoisie”. [13] Reich, it must be said, operates within the Freudian context of instincts as basically individual and biological. From a Marxist perspective, Schneider’s position is highly interesting, perhaps pointing the way toward a more socially oriented conception of instincts. For now, though, it is helpful to remain within the Reichian view in order to see how the theory of character analysis helps lead Reich toward the orgone, away from both Marxism and psychoanalysis.

⁃Thus, at the same time they are political, the stakes of the death instinct are also clinical. For sure, Reich shares with Fenichel a concern that the theory would oversimplify the analysis of some cases, particularly those of masochism. Reich maintains that masochistic characters do not, as Freud thought, go beyond the pleasure principle. Reich’s main problem here is that the so-called repetition compulsion has been asserted, but not demonstrated, to be a primary phenomenon in the human organism. “Insofar as the repetition compulsion was understood to mean the law that every instinct strives to establish the state of repose and, moreover, to reexperience pleasures once enjoyed, there was nothing to object to. [. . .] When conceived of in this way, the repetition compulsion lies wholly within the framework of the pleasure principle; indeed, the pleasure principle itself explains the compulsion to repeat.” [14] In Reich’s view, masochism does not undermine this theory at all. The masochist seeks pleasure like any other person, but this seeking is disturbed; thus, the masochist perceives “sensations, which are experienced as pleasurable by the normal person, as unpleasurable when they exceed a certain intensity.” [15]

In analyzing masochism, we see Reich bring in his finest elements of critique. He intimately understands that the problems in this seemingly simple or semantic debate have consequences far beyond their clinical potential. The biologizing of a need for suffering or punishment, “The prevailing psychoanalytic assessment,” led to a misguided modification of the analytic theory of neurosis, had a negative effect upon the theory of therapy, obscured the problems of the prophylaxis of neurosis, and concealed the sexual and social etiology of the neurosis.” [16] Psychoanalysis, with all its radical findings, acts at times as a barrier to a revolutionary theory of psychology. Yet the division between work that advances such a cause and work that retards it is unclear. Even Fenichel allows for the possibility, in explaining variations in the phenomenon of a so-called latency period of sexual development in children, that social influences could cohere into biological changes in the organism. [17] Fenichel’s view seems to allow for the possibility of social development influencing more primordial forces of evolution (or rather hints at their fundamental inseparability). And, though Reich’s points are well taken on the dangers of accepting an inherent counter-Eros force, his own theory of the incapacity of the masses for freedom—which arise in particular in his theory of fascism—seem strangely in line with such a nearly evolutionary conception as the one Fenichel allows for as a possibility.

Reich, however, is certainly to be commended for his careful attention to social factors. So it is not particularly surprising that he draws from his direct clinical experience, contrary to other analysts, the realization that psychoanalysis has failed to deliver “a critique of patriarchal and familial upbringing” because it has underestimated the devastating power of “injuries inflicted upon the children by the parents.” [18] It is this perspective that draws Reich forth into creating some of the most jarring critiques of the family that had been yet formulated under class society. Certainly, Reich’s work on issues of compulsory morality and the family were far ahead of the work being done by communists or psychoanalysts alone. Yet he should not be free from criticism, particularly for not seriously handling the representation of family dynamics in the psyche. In some ways, Reich’s incredible work on the family is a prelude to his orgone work—both downplay the psychic impact of the Oedipus complex insofar as it is given (in psychoanalytic theory) a reality greater than the material reality of the family situation which engenders it. Reich’s focus on the family is very Marxist, yet it (partly) leads him to a new school of thought far removed from either psychoanalysis or Marxism, into the lonely realm of either genius or insanity or stupidity.

The Authoritarian Family and Sexual Morality

Reich’s position of hostility toward the patriarchal family flows from his views on sexual morality. Whereas for Freud, the main problem in neurosis is inadequate repression which can be overcome through conscious sublimation and renunciation of instincts, Reich sees sexual morality itself as the primary cause of symptomatic expressions of sexuality. The ruling class which arises early in society has a material interest in sexual morality against the natural sexual instinct, “by means of repression, nongratification, etc., [which] creates secondary, pathological, antisocial drives that must, of necessity, be inhibited.” [19] Reich’s view is that there is some truth behind the idea that these “antisocial” drives are undesirable. However, the repression of sexuality itself—which can be traced to the ruling class—creates these antisocial drives that society as a whole must then repress. Thus, Reich is against perversion, but extends this critique to sexual morality which he blames for the very existence of perverse drives.

Reich links sexual morality to the repressive nature of the family. He traces the development of the function of the family from an economic organization to one serving a basically political need. It exists, primarily, “to serve as the factory of authoritarian ideologies and conservative structures.” [20] Here the connection to Reich’s prior work on character is striking. Character is in many ways equatable with authoritarian ideology. Both result from development in the family. Here, plainly, is the connection between the Oedipus complex (a major factor in character structure) and ideology. Whereas Althusser (and others) see the Oedipus complex as “the dramatic structure, the ‘theatrical machine’ imposed by the Law of Culture on every involuntary and constrained candidate to humanity,” [21]—that is, as a theater—Reich sees the family itself as a factory of ideology.

Not only does the family produce “the authority-fearing, life-fearing vassal” which allows the ruling class to remain in power, it also reproduces the conditions of its own existence “by crippling people sexually.” [22] The family is seen as the only allowable expression for genital sexuality, according to Reich, giving rise to antisocial and pathological sexuality. Basically, the mechanisms of the Oedipus complex as outlined by Freud still operate in Reich’s schema; Reich, however, is not afraid to trace their cause to the reality of the family. Reich certainly agrees with Freud that the successful outcome of the Oedipus complex is symbolic castration and the accompanying repression; he simply does not think this state of affairs is in line with the material interests of the working masses. Because it serves to cloud workers’ consciousness with ideology, it must be attacked.

The Oedipus complex is to be seen as one aspect of this ideology. Reich certainly deserves praise for emphasizing the real nature of the family more strongly than other psychoanalysts, but there is also truth to Juliet Mitchell’s assertion that his theory is more like one of an “Oedipus simplex”: as Reich traces the Oedipus complex to the real, material family situation, he begins tracing it to an even deeper level, that of the instincts. [23] While Freud did not attempt to fully examine the mechanisms by which the family gives rise to the Oedipus complex, nor the mechanisms by which biology gives rise to drives, Reich attempts to bridge both gaps. In the end, the state of science will lead him to “discover”—or invent—the orgone as a material process underlying these epiphenomena.

Along the way, however, Reich’s theory allows him to criticize orthodox Communist ignorance of childhood development. Infantile masturbation serves as a key example. Whereas the question of whether or not to allow children to masturbate is a question mostly ignored by the Communists, “For the Church, infantile masturbation is politics.” [24] This is not to be left to individuals to address alone—after all, Reich can show beyond doubt that they are themselves previously conditioned by the same process of repression they will engage in with their children; rather, even something seemingly so private as the question of masturbation is for Reich a class question to be solved politically, not personally. Not only is Reich fighting for the communist revolution which can and must overthrow the patriarchal family; he is also proposing transitional positions for struggle toward that end.

Reich’s positions are derived intensely from both of his fields. It is not particularly surprising that Reich believes that, generally speaking, youth’s attachment to family ties is correlated to their political views—revolutionaries tend to break from the family, while reactionaries tend to embrace it. [25] With what is known about the family’s role in producing morality and the super-ego—essentially an alien class force for the proletarian—this makes sense. Particularly interesting, however, is Reich’s extrapolation of specifically psychoanalytic findings to support his Marxist arguments; here, he widely diverged from many other psychoanalysts. Psychoanalysis itself is a means by which to combat authoritarian ideology: “for the causal and comprehensive therapy of neuroses, the socially instilled morality of the parents had nearly always to be banished.” [26] Not only must one become conscious of the repressive and detrimental effects of sexual morality in order to free oneself of neurosis; one must also break with them entirely.

Women are of decisive importance in this process. Women are sexual beings, yet ideology denies this: “Sexually awakened women, affirmed and recognized as such, would mean the complete collapse of the authoritarian ideology.” [27] Reich often tends to overstate his points, and this is no exception. Yet even here, Reich’s optimism demonstrates an underlying faithfulness to psychoanalytic (perhaps not Marxist) theory. After all, this conclusion certainly seems to flow from Freud’s view that female sexual development instills a weaker super-ego and identification with the father. Perhaps it is accurate, and not at all reactionary, to say that women’s oppression in the family holds them back from cultural development. Freud did not see women as oppressed, but the latter is essentially his position. Reich exploits this weakness in sexual development; he believes women’s situation actually makes them of utmost importance in the struggle against authoritarian morality. Ultimately, women are not reproductive tools but sexual beings. Authoritarian society needs them to fill this reproductive role at the expense of fulfilling their sexual needs. Women, thus, perform a service to society analogous to the production of the worker—women workers, doubly so.

Reich’s critique of the family is really part of a broader sex-economic critique which takes him into the relatively uncharted waters of exploring the interplay between ideology and economy. He argues, for example, that late capitalism’s vastly large reserve army of the unemployed no longer necessitates (to the same degree) the prohibition on abortion for purely economic reasons. Yet it is obvious that the reasons are in fact economic ones, that is, of the psychic economy.

Sex-Economy Against Fascism

“Sex-economy” is the term Reich uses to describe his usage of both Marxist and psychoanalytic categories in his illuminating critique, best exemplified in his work on Nazi ideology, The Mass Psychology of Fascism. The book does not seek to explain, as might a similar book from a bourgeois perspective, why there are revolutions, but rather, why are revolutions unsuccessful? Reich’s question can be simply summed up: how can the masses, whose long-term objective interest lies in socialist revolution, side with the fascist counterrevolution? This very search put Reich at odds with orthodox Marxism, undergoing as it was the putrefying influence of Stalinization. In this light, it is helpful to see how Reich pits his theory of fascism against that of the Communist Party and other orthodox Marxist organs—whose failure, arguably, bears responsibility for the victory of the Nazis and the defeats of the revolutionary process in Germany and other countries. From the very beginning, Reich scorns the traditional view of a superstructure strictly determined by its material base:


Notwithstanding the the fact that vulgar Marxism now speaks of the “lagging behind of the subjective factor,” as Lenin understood it, it can do nothing about it in a practical way, for its former conception of ideology as the product of the economic situation was too rigid. It did not explore the contradictions of economy in ideology, and it did not comprehend ideology as a historical force. [28]

Ideology, in Reich’s view, is a force comparable—in terms of class consciousness—to the raw workings of the economy, the laws of motion of capital as outlined by Marx. Explaining these objective laws, as the Marxists had sought to do, speaks nothing to the ideology that acts to prevent the masses from reaching revolutionary consciousness. It counters the mysticism of bourgeois thought, to be sure, but it is not in itself necessarily convincing to workers who do not perceive the totality of capitalist economic relations in their daily work.

Reich’s work on character structure and the authoritarian patriarchal family is a logical lead-up to his attempt to solve this problem. If psychoanalysis must engage in character analysis to undo the character armoring that Reich traces to the family and educational apparatus of the state, then it is not far-fetched that Marxists should be doing the same. Before character analysis was systematically formulated by Reich, analysts were already attacking patients’ resistances. Reich shows in his work the futility of simply interpreting the unconscious of the patient directly at any and all forks in the analytic road. Viewed in this light, The Mass Psychology of Fascism is an attempt to attack the masses’ resistance to reaching revolutionary communist consciousness, that is, the consciousness of their own objective interests. Until Marxists are able to comprehend, explain, and attack these resistances and their sources, revolutionary propaganda falls on deaf ears. [29]

And yet the disparity between the workers’ interest and consciousness is not only a matter of thought. It is not so simple as to convince the workers that they are mistaken.


Since man, however, regardless of class, is not only the object of these influences [of “his material position” and the general ideology of society] but also reproduces them in his activities, his thinking and acting must be just as contradictory as the society from which they derive. But, inasmuch as a social ideology changes man’s psychic structure, it has not only reproduced itself in man but, what is more significant, has become an active force, a material power in man, who in turn has become concretely changed, and, as a consequence thereof, acts in a different and contradictory fashion. [30]

Ideology is quite insidious. Individuals, whose consciousness is necessarily contradictory and perhaps never fully aligned with their class interest, act to reproduce the ideology of the ruling class. Not even workers are immune to this, particularly insofar as they come to represent the interests of the state in carrying out the repression inherent in family organization. Ideology becomes a material force insofar as it influences the actions of its subjects, which in turn affect the material base through their participation in the production process. In 1934 Reich had described the ideology holding back workers’ class consciousness as “bourgeoisification” [31] which is seemingly a nod to Lenin’s theory of the “bourgeoisified” labor aristocracy [32] created by the scraps of imperialist super-profits—with all its economic emphasis on class and flows of surplus value. Coinciding with Reich’s removals from both the Communist Party and the International Psychoanalytical Association is an observable trend toward a “sex-economic” theory of ideology as fused dialectically with economy. Reich in 1936:


“As soon as an ideology has taken hold of and molded human structure, it becomes a material, social power. [. . .] There is no ‘development of the productive forces per se,’ but only a development or an inhibition of the human structure, its feeling and thinking on the basis of economic and social processes.” [33]

Ideology is material, and Reich clearly considers his position materialist, but the real manifestation of economic development is human structural growth. By 1945, Reich writes that “authoritarian and progressive ideologies have nothing to do with economic class distinctions. [. . .] The emotional and mystical excitations of the masses must play at least as large a role in the social process as do purely economic interests.” [34] Ideology is now totally divorced from economic interest, which is only one factor next to mystical and emotional motivations (which are ideological).

In understanding mysticism, which boils down to an irrational divide between class interest and individual consciousness, ”The Freudian conception comes considerably closer [than vulgar Marxism] to the facts of the case, for it recognizes such behavior as the effect of infantile guilt-feelings toward the father figure.” [35] Vulgar, mechanistic Marxism—particularly of the Stalinist variety—simply ignores this irrationality and does not seek even to explain it. It is assumed out of existence. As Adorno points out, Freud’s “primal father” fits Hitler to a tee. Adorno, whose work will not be examined in great detail, explains quite similarly to Reich that since fascism’s goals are totally at odds with the interests of the masses it depends upon for support, there must be a psychological basis for its success. Fascism, unlike communist revolution, can exist purely on the repressive psychological configuration already ingrained in the masses. [36] Whereas Reich sees the masses as “biologically rigid and incapable of freedom” [37] and fascism as “manifest in every single individual of the world,” [38] Adorno’s Freudian examination of the unconscious mechanisms of fascism does not emphasize character structure as does Reich’s. Thus, fascism for Adorno is not caused by “psychological dispositions,” it is a “psychological area which can be successfully exploited by the forces which promote it for entirely nonpsychological reasons of self-interest.” [39] While Reich also agrees that economic interest gives rise to the phenomenon of fascism, for him it fails to fully explain why the masses support it. And here Reich comes ironically close to the fascists he criticizes for seeing “the incapacity for freedom of masses of people” as “an absolute biologic fact.” [40] For the fascists, the determinant is race; for Reich, it is orgastic potency (genital by definition).

On the other hand, Leon Trotsky’s explanation of fascism is framed primarily in class terms. Trotsky, who believed that petty-bourgeois psychology “flows from the social crisis” exacerbated by proletarian struggle, does not see fascism through the Oedipal lens informing Reich, Adorno, and Freud (whose work on group psychology Adorno applies to fascism). Yet the mechanism is similar:


The petty bourgeoisie is economically dependent and politically atomized. That is why it cannot conduct an independent policy. It needs a “leader” who inspires it with confidence. This individual or collective leadership, i.e., a personage or party, can be given to it by one or the other of the fundamental classes—either the big bourgeoisie or the proletariat. Fascism unites and arms the scattered masses. Out of human dust, it organizes combat detachments. It thus gives the petty bourgeoisie the illusion of being an independent force. It begins to imagine that it will really command the state. It is not surprising that these illusions and hopes turn the head of the petty bourgeoisie! [41]

For Reich, the petty bourgeoisie’s economic position is certainly responsible for its mass disillusionment with bourgeois society. On the other hand, the petty bourgeoisie’s relative independence means that its family situation is of heightened importance. Because the middle class family “constitutes an economic enterprise on a small scale” [42], it is necessary for Marxists to examine this family arrangement—because in a certain sense, it is already a class division. The family, for Reich, is a repressive apparatus, and in this is explained why the lower middle classes flocked to fascism. To Trotsky, the fascist parties gained strength because of the void of a revolutionary party capable of seizing power. The German Communist Party misunderstood the nature of the situation and refused to commit fully to the united front against fascism (its so-called “social fascism” policy toward the also-proletarian Social Democrats, adopted under orders by the Comintern—but sustained by the Party masses’ lingering transference in 1917? Or in Lenin or Stalin?), and the fascists exploited the opportunity. There is thus in Trotsky a thread similar to the parties he criticized, an economistic view of politics. Reich, in his passionate appeals to communists to begin addressing daily and sexual concerns of the working masses as opposed to dry material on the mechanics of capitalism, indicates that perhaps there is more to the story than Trotsky sees. Trotsky’s account fails to explain why the German Communist Party did not become capable of seizing power through the revolutionary turmoil that provided the opportunity. Clearly, there are unanswered questions, and the strength of Reich’s account lies in its directly addressing the irrationality of fascism and the sources in the masses of this irrational desire.

At the same time, Reich’s focus tends to draw him away from the merits of the Trotskyist approach and its clear understanding of the tasks of a revolutionary party and the class dynamics that make the proletariat the revolutionary impetus. He correctly blames character structure for the masses’ complicity in fascism and oppression. Similarly, he is right to link this structure to the patriarchal family situation. But his focus on orgastic potency, already leaning away from psychoanalytic theory, implies that solution is possible under capitalism. It is simply a matter of increasing the masses’ genital-orgastic potency, and they will become free from interests alien to their class positions. This colors also his understanding of what defines a fascist state. Whereas Trotsky’s definition was relatively clear (a revolutionary void leads to the seizure of power by the petty-bourgeoisie), Reich’s gets quite a bit muddled up by the end of his book. Because the masses are essentially incapable of freedom:


the responsibility rests upon the state as well as upon masses of people, a responsibility in the good and not the bad sense of the word. It is the state’s duty not only to encourage the passionate yearning for freedom in working masses of people; it must also make every effort to make them capable of freedom. If it fails to do this, if it suppresses the intense longing for freedom or even misuses it and puts itself in the way of the tendency toward self-administration, then it shows clearly that it is a fascist state. Then it is to be called to account for the damages and dangers that it caused by its dereliction. [43]

Here Reich sharply diverges from Trotsky’s method. By this point, Reich not only robs fascism’s definition of its class character. He also implies that bourgeois states are capable of making the masses capable of freedom, and could therefore be supportable. The united front method, on the contrary, which defends the bourgeois state from the fascist takeover, is aimed exclusively at arming and training the workers for their own self-defense. This task is one that only the workers and oppressed can carry out. In every case of fascist takeover, the bourgeois state shows not only its essential helplessness against the irrational desire of the fascist masses, but its virulent hostility to the self-organization of the working class. Whereas Trotskyists are prepared to defend the bourgeois state from the fascists, this is to be seen as a grim necessity in preparation for the overthrow of this state and the revolutionary seizure of power. Reich, whose analysis of fascism’s irrational and unconscious characteristics is widely spot-on, fails to provide a clear alternative to the existing communist methods. And yet, Reich’s frustrations are reasonable in light of the opposition he encountered from all sides. Discussing the intense similarity in the sexual question of the Communist Party to various religious organizations, he says, “The fact that the Communist pastor Salkind, who was also a psychoanalyst, was an authority in the field of sexual negation in Soviet Russia, speaks for itself.” [44] Indeed, one Communist-pastor-psychoanalyst figure personifies well the reactionary overlap Reich discovered between religion, psychoanalysis, and even orthodox communism.

Social Implications of Schizophrenia

At the end of later editions of Character Analysis is a case-study with a schizophrenic patient Reich employing orgone theory and technique. [45] This is helpful to consider as an example of Reich’s inside-out explosion of psychoanalytic theory as well as a reminder that some of his critical insight remains, despite the insanity of his theory. Reich’s basic perspective, “that a living organism cannot experience anything unless there is some kind of reality behind it”, runs directly against the orthodox psychoanalytic view of psychotics as basically out of touch with reality and untreatable. [46] One is reminded of how radical it was for Freud to take his hysterical patients at their words describing symptoms lacking somatic origins.

There is more at stake with Reich, though, than simply accepting his patients’ reality; he thinks schizophrenics can make valuable contributions to a critique of society. This puts them at odds with “homo normalis”. Homo normalis is Reich’s answer to the basic congruity between normality and neurosis—the normal human is neurotic, is armored. The basic difference between homo normalis and the schizophrenic is:


Homo normalis blocks off entirely the perception of the basic orgonotic functioning by means of rigid armoring; in the schizophrenic, on the other hand, the armoring actually breaks down and thus the biosystem is flooded with deep experiences from the biophysical core with which it cannot cope. Understandably, therefore, armored homo normalis develops anxiety when he feels threatened by the findings of orgonomy, whereas the schizoid character understands them instantly and easily, and feels drawn to them. For the same reason, the mystic, who is structurally close to the schizoid character, usually comprehends orgonomic facts, although only as in a mirror, whereas the rigid mechanist looks with arrogant disdain on all scientific dealings in the realm of the emotions and calls them “unscientific.” [47]

Whereas in The Mass Psychology of Fascism Reich conceives of mysticism mostly in terms of its limiting influence on the capacity of the masses for freedom, now he finds that mystics do have some openness to orgonomy which makes them fundamentally similar to schizophrenics. What is tragic in Reich is his unshaken belief that his own theory is not mysticism: “We must seriously try to understand the mystical experience without becoming mystics ourselves.” [48] Perhaps a better modern question would be to understand Reich in terms of the very mysticism he criticized. His theory of orgonomy, no doubt, attempted to continue his wide sweeping critique of all forms of mysticism (orgonomy excluded!), though, so there is value in a reading of the orgone work as extending this critique to its very limit, perhaps to the very limit of its own anti-mysticism—that point at which his own theory becomes “abstruse mysticism”. [49]

To begin down this path, it is necessary to agree with Reich that schizophrenics pose a far lesser danger than that posed by class society. As he points out, even a violent schizophrenic, “if worse comes to worst, he kills himself or threatens to kill somebody else,” which contrasts starkly to the homo normalis nationalist leader who drives millions to their deaths and is followed nonetheless—the world over. [50] The schizophrenic’s broken-down armoring makes him or her a threat to the normal order of things—an order which is undeniably cruel, unjust, and fundamentally irrational. This difference is to blame for mental institutions’ function as “jails for psychotics”. [51] Not even psychoanalysis manages to treat or ‘cure’ the schizophrenic—only the mental institution remains.

If psychoanalysis fails to cure the schizophrenic, it is because it fails to perceive schizophrenia beyond the psychic level of functioning. Whereas psychoanalysis finds a present psychic reality for past experiences, Reich believes this can only be true if there has been a change in the biophysical functioning of the organism. Thus, in his case study Reich never even mentions the Oedipus complex, but rather focuses on the patient’s physical blocks.


All the psychic processes involved in character analysis, the resolution of resistances, the interpretation of the transference, ambivalence, etc., are no more than psychic descriptions of the bio-physical processes of the Orgone. These may be observed in the muscular tensions, in the movements of the diaphragm and in the vegetative phenomena and emotions which occur in the course of the analysis. [52]

The aim, then, is to reverse the biophysical modification of the patient-organism; this is precisely what psychoanalysis effects, limited as it is to the psychic level. Whereas psychoanalysis divides the psychic apparatus into the ego, super-ego, and id, Reich establishes a “biophysical arrangement of the functions of the total organism according to the functional realms of bio-energetic core (plasma system), periphery (skin surface), and orgone energy field beyond the body surface.” [53] The two arrangements link up in the id, a reservoir of libidinal energy which is basically derived from the field of orgone energy.




Figure 2: Reich's Diagram of the Schizophrenic Split [56]Reich’s schizophrenic patient projects “forces” in the form of hallucinations (which she compares to the aurora borealis) onto walls and into the external world. “The psychoanalytic explanation of the projection mechanism in terms of repressed drives which are ascribed to other people or things outside oneself only relates the content of the projected idea to an inner entity, but it does not explain the function of projection itself, regardless of the projected idea.” [54] Since the mechanism itself can be generalized (and psychoanalysis does this), it becomes necessary to explain not the individual content projected but rather the cause of projection as opposed to other symptomatic forms of coping with the underlying drives. Reich’s patient’s “self-perception had appeared where her ‘forces’ usually appeared: at the walls of the room” when she projected forth part of herself into the external world. [55] To Reich this is fundamentally a split in the organism between self-perception (which is now outside her physical body) and her “objective biophysical process that ought to be perceived.” [56] In Reich’s “healthy organism,” these are fused; in the armored neurotic, “the biophysical organ sensations do not develop at all”. [57] The schizophrenic rather experiences a fundamental split between the sensations and the self-perception, putting him or her in a position midway between health and neurosis (normality). And yet, the schizophrenic is not wrong to assume that the “forces” seen are in fact something broader than simple delusions. They are indeed the streamings of the orgone.






Figure 3: Reich's Diagram of Compulsion Neurosis [56]In Reich’s conception, the schizophrenic apparently has a much greater access to orgone energy yet still encounters a block. Both blocked and blocking excitation (in Freudian terms, the repressed representative of the drive and its repressing countercathexis) derive from orgone energy. Reich’s orgone fits, of course, much more neatly with Fenichel’s differing modes of operation for one erotic instinct than with Freud’s death instinct theory, which Reich rejects.



Reich’s theory, though, is clearly an attempt to unify the mind and body into one biological whole. Whereas Freud distanced himself from physiology by examining only its psychic manifestations, Reich wants to understand these as part of a complex whole. Perhaps he fails, subordinating them to the deeper (in his view, more materialistic) orgone level. Reich’s attempt, though, gets at a basic truth of the matter, that psychoanalysis fails miserably when it attempts to resolve the theoretical problems posed by schizophrenia in terms of the individual content of the disorder. Reich summarizes his basic differences and what makes this disease so fundamentally important for orgone theory:


The functions which appear in the schizophrenic, if only one learns to read them accurately, are COSMIC FUNCTIONS, that is, functions of the cosmic orgone energy within the organism in undisguised form. Not a single symptom in schizophrenia makes sense if one does not understand that the sharp borderlines which separate homo normalis from the cosmic orgone ocean have broken down in the schizophrenic; accordingly, some of his symptoms are due to the intellectual realization of this breakdown; others are direct manifestations of the merger between organismic and cosmic (atmospheric) orgone energy. [59]

For example, “withdrawal of libido from the world”, a defining symptom of schizophrenia in psychoanalytic theory, “is a result and not the cause of the disease.” [60] Reich’s theory, depending as it does on the unlikely existence of orgone energy, at least attempts to move beyond the formulation of schizophrenia in terms of symptoms (psychoanalysis at its best) or Oedipal neurotic conflicts (psychoanalysis at its worst).

Reich’s theory, therefore, positions him to be able to conceive of the disease in terms of the various specific blocks in which it manifests in the patient. At the same time, he sees individual cases of schizophrenia, and of cancer, as manifestations of a broader “emotional plague.” In the individual, the block or tumor is only a functional part of a much more insidious disease. The degeneration of a cancer victim—as opposed to that of a schizophrenic—does not put him or her into conflict with the social structure due to the resignation entailed. [61] Despite the schizophrenic’s forced opposition to society, though, a transcendence of individual incapacity for healthy emotional expression requires “thorough disarmoring of the human animal on a mass scale and, first of all, prevention of biopathic armoring in the newborn babies.” [62] Reich’s social critique shows its head again. Yet by now, society is seen not in terms of its divisions into classes (materialistically), but rather in terms of the flowings of orgone energy. Society is divided between those who are armored and those who are not. Herein can be found the explanation for Reich’s desperate search for orgone energy and ways to harness it.

In order to preserve one of his basic insights, that ideology does not necessarily line up with class interest, Reich invents orgone energy as a mystical explanation. Perhaps the theory can be explained in terms of his personal disappointments with psychoanalysis and communism; no doubt, his expulsions affected him dramatically. But essentially, the theory of the orgone can be explained as a mysticism against mysticism. In many ways, this is the legacy also of psychoanalysis. In Reich, the ridiculousness of the orgone serves to prevent many from taking it literally, whereas in psychoanalysis, Oedipus is to this day still historicized. There is no doubt that Reich’s critical insight into society falls apart, losing its class dimension and revolutionary implications. At the same time, his mystical flight is a warning for the cautious both of the inherent dangers in psychoanalytic theory and the reactionary potential of an attempt at linear synthesis between Marxism and psychoanalysis. It is in this vein that Reich’s work should be viewed: as a body, full of contradictions and lines of flight; the orgone, mystical as it is, is definitively Reich’s, as much as The Mass Psychology of Fascism.

Notes

1 Representing the orthodox tradition, Laplanche and Pontalis go so far as to define perversion as “Deviation from the ‘normal’ sexual act when this is defined as coitus with a person of the opposite sex directed towards the achievement of orgasm by means of genital penetration.” This is, quite simply, not a definition of sex that can be followed. Interestingly, it rests firmly on the theory of the genital orgasm, an issue most heavily theorized by Reich. The definition goes on more broadly: “Perversion is said to be present; where the orgasm is reached with other sexual objects (homosexuality, paedophilia, bestiality, etc.) or through other regions of the body (anal coitus, etc.); where the orgasm is subordinated absolutely to certain extrinsic conditions, which may even be sufficient in themselves to bring about sexual pleasure (fetishism, transvestitism, voyeurism and exhibitionism, sado-masochism).” — The Language of Psychoanalysis, 306-9.

2 Quoted in Myron Sharaf, Fury on Earth, 103.

3 See Herbert Marcuse, Eros and Civilization, 215.

4 Wilhelm Reich, The Mass Psychology of Fascism, 129-30.

5 Wilhelm Reich, “Dialectical Materialism and Psychoanalysis,” in Sex-Pol, 24.

6 Ibid, 56.

7 Wilhelm Reich, Character Analysis, 29.

8 Juliet Mitchell, Psychoanalysis and Feminism, 163.

9 Wilhelm Reich, Character Analysis, 208-9.

10 Ibid, 15.

11 Ibid, 228.

12 Ibid, 231.

13 Michael Schneider, Neurosis and Civilization: A Marxist/Freudian Synthesis, 9.

14 Wilhelm Reich, Character Analysis, 234.

15 Ibid, 236.

16 Ibid, 256.

17 “Other authors have pointed out that since among some primitive tribes a latency period never appears, cultural restrictions must be responsible for the renunciation of sexual wishes. However, there is no clear-cut contradiction between “biologically” and “socially” determined phenomena. Biological changes may be brought about by former external influences. It may be that the latency period is a result of external influences that have been in effect long enough to have left permanent traces; perhaps at this point we are watching external influences becoming biological. At any rate, during this period the forces operative against instinctual impulses, such as shame, disgust, and so forth, develop at the price of instinctual energies.” — Otto Fenichel, The Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis, 62.

18 Wilhelm Reich, Character Analysis, 259.

19 Wilhelm Reich, The Sexual Revolution, 22.

20 Ibid, 75.

21 Louis Althusser, Writings on Psychoanalysis, 29.

22 Wilhelm Reich, The Sexual Revolution, 82.

23 Juliet Mitchell, Psychoanalysis and Feminism, 180.

24 Wilhelm Reich, “What Is Class Consciousness?” in Sex-Pol, 318.

25 Wilhelm Reich, The Sexual Revolution, 75.

26 Wilhelm Reich, “The Imposition of Sexual Morality,” in Sex-Pol, 93.

27 Wilhelm Reich, The Mass Psychology of Fascism, 105.

28 Ibid, 14.

29 One might also wonder how parallel the winning of workers’ trust is to the transference situation: if these transference resistances are not overcome, would masses accept the economic arguments purely on the basis of transference to the revolutionary party? Is it true, as Badiou argues, that “the communist masses must come to despise the party: liquidation of the transference”? See Alain Badiou, Theory of the Subject, 247. Indeed, there is a deep and potentially disturbing similarity between the democratic centralist party-form and the process of initiation into psychoanalytic institutes, likely worth exploration.

30 Wilhelm Reich, The Mass Psychology of Fascism, 18.

31 Wilhelm Reich, “What Is Class Consciousness?” in Sex-Pol: Essays, 1929-1934, 295.

32 V.I. Lenin, Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism, 14.

33 Wilhelm Reich, The Sexual Revolution, xxiv.

34 Ibid, xv.

35 The Mass Psychology of Fascism, 25.

36 “It may well be the secret of fascist propaganda that it simply takes men for what they are: the true children of today’s standardized mass culture, largely robbed of autonomy and spontaneity, instead of setting goals the realization of which would transcend the psychological status quo no less than the social one. Fascist propaganda has only to reproduce the existent mentality for its own purposes;—it need not induce a change—and the compulsive repetition which is one of its foremost characteristics will be at one with the necessity for this continuous reproduction. It relies absolutely on the total structure as well as on each particular trait of the authoritarian character which is itself the product of an internalization of the irrational aspects of modern society.” — Theodor W. Adorno, “Freudian Theory and the Pattern of Fascist Propaganda,” 134.

37 Wilhelm Reich, The Mass Psychology of Fascism, 319.

38 Ibid, 320.

39 Theodor W. Adorno, “Freudian Theory and the Pattern of Fascist Propaganda,” in The Essential Frankfurt School Reader, 135.

40 Wilhelm Reich, The Sexual Revolution, 323.

41 Leon Trotsky, “Fascism: What It Is and How to Fight It.”

42 Wilhelm Reich, The Mass Psychology of Fascism, 48.

43 Ibid, 283-4.

44 Ibid, 124.

45 Laplanche and Pontalis list these characteristics as indicative of schizophrenia: incoherence of thought, action and affectivity (denoted by the classical terms ‘discordance’, ‘dissociation’ and ‘disintegration’); detachment from reality accompanied by a turning in upon the self and the predominance of a mental life given over to the production of phantasies (autism); a delusional activity which may be marked in a greater or lesser degree, and which is always badly systematised. Lastly, the disease, which evolves at the most variable of paces towards an intellectual and affective ‘deterioration’, often ending up by presenting states of apparent dementia, is defined as chronic by most psychiatrists, who consider it inadmissible to diagnose schizophrenia in the absence of this major trait.” — The Language of Psychoanalysis, 408-10.

46 Wilhelm Reich, Character Analysis, 436.

47 Ibid, 402.

48 Ibid, 437.

49 Dieter Wyss, M.D., Psychoanalytic Schools from the Beginning to the Present, 235.

50 Wilhelm Reich, Character Analysis, 417.

51 Ibid, 404.

52 Dieter Wyss, M.D., Psychoanalytic Schools from the Beginning to the Present, 235.

53 Wilhelm Reich, Character Analysis, 403.

54 Ibid, 437.

55 Ibid.

56 Ibid, 438. View full size images: (Figure 2) (Figure 3)

57 Ibid.

58 Ibid, 440-1.

59 Ibid, 448.

60 Ibid, 434.

61 Ibid, 433-4.

62 Ibid, 451.