Difference between revisions of "Anarchy 84/Fake revolt and mystic double-think"
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{{tab}}Revo­lu­tion in your own soul is the hippy recipe to save the world. Forget the dead and dying else­where on whom your econo­mic freedom is predi­cated. Such a revo­lu­tion does not touch the modern state and its sup­por­ters. To believe other­wise is gross bad faith or mere trans­cen­dental naivety. Why under­esti­mate the enemy or deny him exis­tence? This hippy half revolt is inhe­rent­ly élitist, unsym­pathe­tic in prac­tice to the wage slaved prole­ta­riat, bour­geois in its econo­mic base, and {{p|64}}riddled with mys­tical ini­tia­tions. All the wishful clap about turning on straight people one by one cannot dis­guise the hippie{{s|r}} basic treason to their fellow men (sorry, beings), their other­world­ly denial of the glaring social and econo­mic prob­lems beyond those that affect them indi­vidu­ally this week or next. Cool it baby, what bag are you in, I{{m}} an indi­vi­dual. | {{tab}}Revo­lu­tion in your own soul is the hippy recipe to save the world. Forget the dead and dying else­where on whom your econo­mic freedom is predi­cated. Such a revo­lu­tion does not touch the modern state and its sup­por­ters. To believe other­wise is gross bad faith or mere trans­cen­dental naivety. Why under­esti­mate the enemy or deny him exis­tence? This hippy half revolt is inhe­rent­ly élitist, unsym­pathe­tic in prac­tice to the wage slaved prole­ta­riat, bour­geois in its econo­mic base, and {{p|64}}riddled with mys­tical ini­tia­tions. All the wishful clap about turning on straight people one by one cannot dis­guise the hippie{{s|r}} basic treason to their fellow men (sorry, beings), their other­world­ly denial of the glaring social and econo­mic prob­lems beyond those that affect them indi­vidu­ally this week or next. Cool it baby, what bag are you in, I{{m}} an indi­vi­dual. | ||
− | {{tab}}When it suits them the tota­lita­rians of busi­ness, poli­tics and culture can trade in such a move­ment for a new one more along ''their'' lines. The {{w|German State|Weimar_Republic}} changed the far-<wbr>out {{qq|{{w|Wan­der­vogel|Wandervogel}}}} of the 20{{s}} into the {{qq|Hitler Jugend|Hitler_Youth}} of the 30{{s}}. From 2 Balfour Place, here in {{w|London|London}}, {{qq|{{w|The Process|The_Process_Church_of_The_Final_Judgment}}}} (symbol | + | {{tab}}When it suits them the tota­lita­rians of busi­ness, poli­tics and culture can trade in such a move­ment for a new one more along ''their'' lines. The {{w|German State|Weimar_Republic}} changed the far-<wbr>out {{qq|{{w|Wan­der­vogel|Wandervogel}}}} of the 20{{s}} into the {{qq|Hitler Jugend|Hitler_Youth}} of the 30{{s}}. From 2 Balfour Place, here in {{w|London|London}}, {{qq|{{w|The Process|The_Process_Church_of_The_Final_Judgment}}}} (symbol [[File:Process.png]]<!-- no symbol printed in the original, only a blank space -->), in true élitest style, calls the young and con­fused to re­nounce the dif­ficul­ties of living-<wbr>in-<wbr>the-<wbr>world in favour of joining their spiri­tual storm­troo­pers of {{w|Mayfair|Mayfair}}, {{w|{{popup|Greece|The sect allegedly purchased a yacht in Greece for travel between Great Britain and Mexico.}}|Greece}} and {{w|Xtul, Mexico|Xtul}}. |
{{tab}}Innocent mystics capi­tu­late to dia­bolic mysti­cisms. Like {{qq|the natio­nal inter­est}}. The missing ele­ment{{dash}}social per­spec­tive. | {{tab}}Innocent mystics capi­tu­late to dia­bolic mysti­cisms. Like {{qq|the natio­nal inter­est}}. The missing ele­ment{{dash}}social per­spec­tive. |
Latest revision as of 20:15, 2 October 2016
and mystic double-think
This most sarcastic but overdue tract rips apart phoney youth revolt in psychopathic America, and by extension, “her cheap imitators”. The Fake Revolt was published this year. The author, G. Legman, is not of the age group he says has had it. I detect nostalgia for the simplicities of socialist revolutionaries in the 30’s and rationalisation of rile at missing out. Under the flash viciouis style lies a pessimist and a puritan, sometimes underestimating, always stimulating. He takes the Bomb as the supreme fact hanging over the world, fact making nonsense of all revolts stopping short of tearing down State and capitalism.
Legman picks on three blind alleys down which the rebellious have been led; gestures that merely raise the ante, e.g. sloganising, hitting cops; the cult of cool; and “perversion”, sexual and chemical, e.g. sadism (“The Atom Bomb is nothing but the Marquis de Sade on a government grant”) and LSD culture. He reserves his harshest tirades for youth’s misleaders—
Increasingly big business makes equally meaningless the idealist’s desire to improve the world and the disillusioned’s desire to escape its decay. Money and Power between them buy up most threats to the status quo. Sell out is the way out. Legman cites girls leaving their lovers for money bags, boys shedding communist skins when McCarthy turned on the heat, and worse still those who are waiting in the wings with ready made excuses for their tardiness in promoting revolution. “Everybody wants to be your bedfellow, the whole scene trembles continuously on the paranoid edge of violence.” Revolt is meaningless when consumer-
Camp is apolitical, concerned with style not content. The daring pose or “revolution in dress” tends to disguise the reactionary vacuum in the mod psyche. Camp pleases the eye when you are out of your mind. Where else can one be when analysis of society’s dynamics reveal no easy political “way out”? So let’s be beautiful people.
After the sell out what’s left of revolt? Legman dismisses the civil rights workers for a start. “Getting bashed by the cops or by Southern sheriffs makes them feel involved.” Violence is implicit in revolt. He accuses the non-
He dismisses provocation likewise, without granting that to provoke is a way of trying out one’s strength by setting authority against people until people take sides or suffer. The Diggers he writes off as mock-
He points out that a drug scene is nothing new—
Curiously, with its tone of comprehending everything, The Fake Revolt omits mention of the ghetto riots, the Vietnam War and “The Resistance”. Events have overtaken the author, words like these no longer stand. “It cannot come out for anything radical without going to gaol so it has come out for nothing.” Other judgements are still sharp. “A hippie or a beatnik is a frantically self-
Some hippies speak truer than they realise when referring to their “brothers” in advertising and the military; common to both sides is this affectlessness which does not preclude hate. Love-
The sexual byways he deplores so self-
The Fake Revolt relates the Hell’s Angels’ celebrated cool to the cool of the so-
What worries Legman most, to quote him at length, is “the attempted gathering of this proudly self-
The lash of all his whipwords leaves one smarting. Cleverly Legman never reveals from what superior standpoint he judges the Fake Revolt. Is he a lone figure crying out for a movement to share his attitude with? Is he trying to tell people how to make a revolution? If so, then take this; “the new revolt nowadays consists therefore of a bunch of inarticulate long-
Legman, I repeat, is not of the generation he writes of, broadly those now between 15 and 25. Thus his detached fury and total lack of sympathy. Previous generations have bequeathed this one a fouled-
When it suits them the totalitarians of business, politics and culture can trade in such a movement for a new one more along their lines. The German State changed the far-
Innocent mystics capitulate to diabolic mysticisms. Like “the national interest”. The missing element—
May I leave you with the expensive doublethink of the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, speaking to students at the University of California, Los Angeles.
“Is it true that you told the Beatles that the Ban the Bomb movement was silly?”
“Yes, I told them that. We must concern ourselves with meditation. Besides if one country bans the bomb, it will then be helpless and defenceless.”
“Maharishi, there is a great deal of opposition to the Vietnam War, many students are under the threat of the draft. Should we resist?”
“We should obey the elected leaders of this country. They are representatives of the people. …”