Guerrilla Ontology and Zeteticism, Openness and Humility

Robert Anton Wilson (RAW) was one of the first thinkers to teach me to deeply question the world and imagine alternative views (Low Trash, High Weird). Never take anything at face value. Always interrogate and unpack what is presented to you. Imagine alternatives. If expressing wariness, it’s not about paranoid distrust, but more akin to penetrating curiosity, as well as the ability to sit in a state of scrutiny and contemplation, the ability to inquire and wonder, interrogate and explore, to test and experiment. Just take it all in and then consider all possibilities, play out various thought experiments. Yet one should be on one’s guard, most of all, when dealing with institutional power that speaks with a voice of authorization (Julian Jaynes), that commands you with a hail (Louis Althusser).

What looks like a free market might be authoritarian social control. What looks like meritocracy might be a kakistocracy, oligarchy, kleptocracy, and plutocracy. What looks like news media might be a propaganda operation. What looks like a civic organization might be a front group. What looks like grassroots might be astroturf. What looks like a think tank might be a shadow network. What looks like philanthropy might be a profit model. What looks like a corporation might be inverted totalitarianism. What looks like two competing parties might be a one-party state with two right wings. What looks like a democratic election might be political spectacle. What looks like a better choice might be controlled opposition. What looks like a president might be a puppet and figurehead.

The same thing applies outside of power systems and figures, such as to our physicality and humanity. Power doesn’t only operate in formal organizations but also in ideologies, memes, rhetoric, cultures, and social orders. In many ways, seemingly informal and private power can be even more tricky. That is why, as Corey Robin argues, reactionaries prefer power that can be presented as natural, organic, and divine, fundamental, essential, and inevitable: patriarchal family structure, an authoritarian church, workplace hierarchy, etc. They conflate human force with unquestionable reality; and anyone who questions will be punished with force. At it’s most powerful, it infects and parasitizes our very sense of identity and reality; and, to further problematize, it hides behind the obfuscations of moral imagination and the misdirections of symbolic conflation (Moral Imagination: Conservative vs Traditional, Reactionary vs Radical).

But when it comes to dominant paradigms, the most dangerous consequence is when belief is taken for truth, when the map gets mistaken for the territory. What looks like autonomous, boot-strapped individuality might be a social construction. What looks like poverty might be the shit life syndrome of the permanent underclass. What looks like freewill might be the deterministic product of conditions, environments, systems, structures, and institutions. What looks like Newtonian physics might be quantum biology. What looks like an egoic mind might be a bundled mind and 4/5E cognition (embodied, embedded, enacted, & extended; + ecological). What looks like an isolated body might be an enmeshed and inseparable part of a living biosphere, of a Gaia as homeostatic system.

Appearances can be deceiving, especially when those appearances are based on enculturation, indoctrination, and interpellation; based on conventional thought and pathway dependence. When ideological realism is effective, it’s of course taken as reality itself. Another word for ideological realism at its extreme is a reality tunnel, as coined by Timothy Leary and expanded upon by RAW. Most people spend their entire lives in a single reality tunnel, never suspecting that a potential infinity of other reality tunnels exist just beyond the bounds of their mind and imagination. It’s totalizing epistemic closure, like staring at the shadows cast on Plato’s cave, if those shadows were cast by no singular source of light and if the cave walls were covered in funhouse mirrors. We must keep in mind, as RAW explains, that anytime we leave one reality tunnel we instantly enter another. There is no objective, final standpoint to get above it all.

But this attitude of philosophical skepticism or zeteticism (Marcello Truzzi) isn’t contrarianism and, in particular, must be distinguished from pseudo-skepticism as debunking. Rather, it’s guerrilla ontology, the inducing of and abiding in cognitive dissonance, a skepticism even of skepticism; somewhat related to the Fortean impulse to entertain the strange — equal parts radical skepticism and radical imagination. It’s a way of developing negative capability, but not a passive state of neutrality or indifference, cynicism or apathy. Involved is an active, open-ended process of engagement and seeking, of jarring the mind and disrupting the psyche. Partly, it involves juxtaposing what is normally kept separate and isolated. Yet there also can be an observant patience to it, letting the mind settle, waiting to see what is revealed.

It isn’t, however, merely about escaping a conviction, dogma, or assumption, a bias or prejudice. What is required is the ability to tolerate uncertainty and ambiguity, to hold things in tension and seeming contradiction or conflict, or even to take pleasure in the state of unknowing, to tempt boredom but keep it at bay with wonder and awe, curiosity and playfulness. One has to remain open, and so obviously this requires high levels of the personality trait ‘openness’: openness to experience, openness to ideas, etc; as well as ‘honesty-humility’ (HEXACO) in admitting what you don’t know. But there also has to be a drive for truth-seeking and knowledge-acquisition (Neuroscience News, Semantic Knowledge Is Key to Human Innovation). We have to see the lines to draw outside of them, see the box to step outside of it.

Unwanted Unknowns

To be wrong

“What if everything you knew was wrong?”

Way back in the late 2000s, I began blogging on an independent website called Zaadz, later bought up and destroyed by the rapacious maw of the Gaia corporation. When still operational, they had a daily writing prompt and, on one occasion, it was the above question. I answered it as a serious inquiry (and I had another stab at it later on). But, at the time, in looking around at the responses of others, it became apparent that it was impossible for most people to even imagine this kind of a scenario or allow it into their mind.

Basically, such a level of skeptical doubt and contemplation requires an extreme degree of the personality trait ‘openness to experience’ (FFM). This specifically includes tolerance for uncertainty, ambiguity, and cognitive dissonance (i.e., low need for certainty and closure), as related to what artists and the literati like to call negative capability.

The problem for most people in the modern world is that we are under stress that is severe and chronic, systemic and cumulative. Many of us are near constantly exhausted, depleted, and overwhelmed by life, pushed to or beyond our limits. As research shows, that shuts down ‘openness’ and hence everything that goes with it, such as need for cognition along with intellectual curiosity and intellectual humility.

If ‘openness’ is really low, a question like the one above would simply be incomprehensible and uninteresting or else felt as an existential threat to identity and the social order. Many of the relatively more liberal-minded could at least think about the posed inquiry, but even most of them are significantly compromised in a society like this. They would less likely have the fuller cognitive complexity, cognitive flexibility, and perspective shifting to entertain radically challenging answers to the question.

A strong expression of ‘openness’ is a rare hothouse flower at present in the United States. It’s like trying to swim back to shore against the pull of a rip tide or rip current.

This feeds into our demoralizing sense of being stuck. It’s been said that it’s easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism. If so, that is only true because of a collective lack of ‘openness’. It forces us into an oppressive condition of ideological realism, a hopeless state of fatalism. There seems to be no way out of the prison, in the minds of an increasing number of people, other than overthrowing or killing the guards and blowing it up.

That is why a significant portion voted for Donald Trump, as the same people often said they would’ve voted for Bernie Sanders. Anyone who offers them a way out (or merely pretends to) will be supported, no matter the means of escape (even if only into fantasy). What Trump proposed was that he’d throw a grenade into the bunker of power (The Fantasy of Creative Destruction); and, in a way, he kept his promise, if he also destroyed so much that was good and worthy in the process.

MAGA and DOGE is a greater blow to the American Empire than was the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and the entirety of World War II. Ironically, the present ongoing dismantling and dysfunction may have cleared the stage to allow more people, if mostly Trump’s opponents and detractors, to embrace radical imagination. It’s why socialism is suddenly on the table again, with someone like Zohran Mamdani able to win a major election.

A poly-crisis and a meta-crisis

Some of it may only be out of desperation. When everything seems to be failing or else in the process of intentional destruction, when the personal stakes are high and the consequences harsh, people can become more willing to consider and try something else, anything else. It’s a public mood that hasn’t been seen in generations.

Authoritarian pseudo-centrism, propagandistic false equivalency, and malignant lesser evilism is dead and buried.

Whatever comes next, good or bad, will be entirely new. The problem is there are too few with enough ‘openness’ to help guide us through the wreckage and pitfalls, to shine a light on future possibilities and visions. Like Trump with populists and the GOP, Bernie Sanders (and AOC, etc) too has ended up always herding leftists strays and stragglers back into the fold of DNC corporatism and Zionism where any leftist promise is neutralized (Anti-Zionism, Like Anti-Fascism, is the Dividing Line of Our Age).

Such co-optation and recuperation needs to end, and it seems most Americans are coming around to realizing that is the case. The purpose of our thought experiment here, though, is not mainly political. We are considering ideology on a larger battleground.

My thoughts at present are closer to a more recent piece of mine (A Paradigm Shift of Paradigm Shifts). We are in the middle of a replication crisis across nearly every major field of research, development, and application. To put it simply, the beginning question isn’t rhetorical. We are literally facing a situation of mass ignorance, including among supposed experts and other authority figures, where we’re unsure that we actually know what we think we know.

Many perceived reputable and foundational studies that have upheld conventional views, standard practices, and established protocols for decades or generations, once retested, have been challenged or disproven in part or whole. Simply put, a surprising percentage don’t replicate.

We are teetering on a precipice. The replication crisis is just one of numerous uncertainties and catastrophes looming on the horizon. It’s not only a general meta-crisis as we are also, specifically, in an identity crisis, civilizational crisis, and existential crisis. But to be fair, it’s happened before (The Crisis of Identity). If total destruction isn’t inevitable, the world as we know it might collapse, whatever may or may not follow afterwards.

Yet most people are still going about their lives as if it will go on on forever, as if the ship will be righted at the last moment before sinking. Allowing existential doubt into consciousness is too scary.

Knowledge of knowledge, or lack thereof

It’s an interesting situation. And though dire, maybe not as hopeless as we think. Answers are within our reach, if we’d reach out to grasp them.

We do have enough knowledge — along with wealth, resources, expertise, and human potential — to solve numerous problems and remedy diverse harms, to save the world and create a utopia (or eutopia and protopia) for the entirety of global humanity. It’s true that our ignorance of the universe and everything in it is vast beyond what our knowledge will ever be, since ignorance (or rather potential knowledge) is infinite. But we have enough working knowledge to know how to improve things on a basic level that, at a human scale, could be transformative.

Our only limitation is our own psyches, specifically the conditions that suppress ‘openness’. Ironically, the very problems that could be solved by enough people with high ‘openness’ are the same problems that close down the human mind and constrains human behavior; hence, unleashing conservatism, right-wing authoritarianism (RWA), social dominance orientation (SDO), and dark triad or tetrad (Machiavellianism, narcissism, & psychopathy; + sadism). And the right-wing elites understand this and so never let off on the pressure of stress-induced and fear-riled manipulation, forcing us into a state of endless anxiety and alienation.

The ruling elite are playing a game of chicken as they hit the gas pedal to launch us full speed at a cliff edge. They’re betting that the rest of us will blink rather than wrestle the steering wheel out of their hands. Our aspiring overlords are deranged and destructive, not only to others but also to themselves.

These elite, like most people in the world today, are severely compromised. They too lack the cognitive abilities to understand the world and what they’re doing, maybe to a greater degree than any other elite in modern Western history or maybe all of world history. They’re merely clever monkeys who got their paws on some levers of power and now are jerking them around with amused and manic glee. They’ve convinced themselves they’re visionary geniuses; but so far, as inept chaos agents, they’ve only accomplished not-so-controlled demolition.

We can’t last much longer at this pace.

So, the problem is twofold. First, we really do lack knowledge to a tremendous degree. Future humans, if we are to survive as a species and a civilization, will look back upon our present crude and primitive brutality with amazement. They won’t be able to understand how we lasted as long as we did or why we allowed it to go on.

Then, second, it’s not only the knowledge that we know we lack or even don’t know we lack but also, more importantly, the knowledge we think we know yet don’t. We know neither the limitations of our knowledge nor the extent of our ignorance. Too often, we’re confident and cavalier where we should be cautious, and we’re dismissive and defensive where we need to be open to new information, theories, hypotheses, and avenues of research.

But most of the funding, drawn from the profits of capitalism, is funneled back into further studying the certainties and convictions, further confirming the biases and beliefs of conventional ‘wisdom’, much of it being false at best. Good money gets thrown after bad, in an endless attempt to maintain the system and the establishment.

We have the most well-backed ignorance of any generation. Most humans in the past were content with blind faith, whereas we moderns deny our faith is faith. In many cases, we’ve been spending generations of effort and trillions of dollars on red herrings that keep us misdirected and preoccupied. For stability, a known falsehood is safer than an unknown truth.

The example of allopathic medicine

That pointless waste and diversion is seen, for example, with research on cancer and Alzheimer’s that have gone down many blind alleys (genetic mutations, brain plaque, etc), if that’s finally beginning to change with younger generations of researchers proposing new hypotheses and protocols.

Part of the difficulty is that most of the focus has been on diagnosing patterns of symptoms, putting a label on them to create a false sense of certainty, and then treating those symptoms to ameliorate anxiety, but often in the process conflating an effect with the cause. Much of healthcare is simply the placebo effect, subject-expectancy effect, and Pygmalion effect.

It creates an illusion that, under the sway of official authority, causes us to sometimes be interpellated into symptom relief or sometimes even measurable improvements. We want to be the good patient who heals and so our body tries its best to conform to expectations or maybe assuage the doctor’s ego. For example, many medications work well when first introduced on the market — and heavily advertised in the U.S. — but lose their efficacy over time.

Thus, the big pharma has to constantly pump out new hyped-up drugs. That indicates much of their efficacy was never objectively real in the first place or at least was never solely and fully attributable to the medication itself. They’re placebos, at least partly

Heck, a placebo isn’t required. Research has found that simply going to a doctor’s appointment, even when the doctor takes no medical action at all, will tend to leave the patient feeling better about whatever ails them. That is to say, to put it colloquially, a significant part of modern medicine is faith healing, hence the importance of good bedside manner. That isn’t to wave healthcare away as having no value, but it does once again demonstrate how little we understand.

Obviously, beyond simple and straightforward issues, this kind of confidence game can only go so far in dealing with real world problems.

For many major diseases, similar to large-scale and convoluted messes in society, we still don’t know the fundamental causes. Typically, the potentially most fruitful research is being ignored because it doesn’t fit into the hegemonic paradigm, not to mention it usually being difficult and expensive with rare promises of it leading to a profitable product that can be quickly marketed for a guaranteed return on investment.

Considers Dr. Dale Bredesen’s protocol for Alzheimer’s that is based on the premise that there is no single disease (hence, why a cure has been so elusive), rather overlapping patterns of symptoms involving various systems that are being affected by diverse causes: toxicity, nutritional deficiencies, metabolic disorder, mitochondrial dysfunction, etc. So, the treatment is multi-factorial and personalized, but almost no one wants to offer funding for a larger study. The majority of research grants go to studies that are limited to single factors.

That is why allopathic medicine primarily involves either a chemical pill or invasive procedure used in a targeted fashion, usually where separate specialists are treating each health issue as if it were unrelated to all the rest other than concern about drug interactions. Whereas functional medicine looks at the whole body as an integrated system of systems, all operating within larger conditions and environments requiring the doctor to holistically consider the patient’s lifestyle, diet, living situation, workplace, social stressors, relationships, etc.

The inadequacy of the former is that, in people’s lives, there is no such thing as controlling everything but one isolated factor, symptom, or issue. This is why standard research doesn’t always translate well or else only applies partly and inconsistently. Much of healthcare is throwing darts. The doctor tries one thing after another to see what might happen, in the hope that something will eventually show benefit, if also side effects at the same time.

We’re good at dealing with single symptoms or single physiological mechanisms, sometimes with amazing results. The problem is that, when you change one thing, it pushes and pulls numerous other systems with complicated and cascading webs of effects. This is how patients end up with long lists of drugs where many of them are treating the side effects of the others.

The doctor is often working blind or else with only the capacity to get glimpses into this or that, but doing so might require more expensive tests than insurance will pay for or the patient can afford. Even then, trying to put all the pieces together to make sense of it might be a near impossible task. It’s similar to reverse engineering, the attempt to figure out what was a piece of technology and what it did by looking at the scattered parts found after an explosion.

Reductionism and capitalist realism

What reductionism doesn’t acknowledge is that the whole is greater than the parts. There might be no way to get back to a comprehension of the whole merely going by the parts, no matter how many parts one has. Humpty Dumpty can’t be put back together again. The only way to get to the whole is to start with the whole.

Falling short in this fashion is not only intrinsic to medicine but the whole scientific model that has dominated for centuries. It’s been about an atomistic and analytical approach where one tiny factor and causal mechanism is isolated. Without a doubt, the knowledge gained can be literally powerful (e.g., atomic bomb). Though this has some merit in advancing science, the largest and worst problems we’re facing aren’t amenable to such a limited strategy (e.g., anthropocene).

This leaves us in a state of utter cluelessness about the complex systems within systems and their vast number of dynamically and interactively moving parts (e.g., biosphere). Sadly, our obsession with individual bodies, isolated from the social sphere and separate from environments, has caused us to ignore individuals in actual practice of medicine where everyone is put into cookie cutter diagnoses and treatment protocols, largely because of the capitalist demands of bureaucratic healthcare systems and insurance companies.

Obviously, the failure with this approach is that, though it sometimes can be narrowly effective, it rarely promotes and re-establishes full physical health and flourishing, either for the individual or society, much less for the environment. It’s the difference between treating millions of lead-poisoned children and cleaning up the lead in the environment and preventing the lead pollution in the first place. It targets particular areas or individuals, but often with many potential side effects and long-term consequences or simply leaving the cause of the problem unresolved.

Most modern medicine is a blunt instrument, while what really need is multifactorial interventions, often at the level of public health or other governmental policies, programs, and practices. We need to flexibly combine the large-scale with the individualized, but at present we don’t typically get either. Instead, we end up with a muddled compromise that only has the benefit of increasing profits.

This is how the U.S. has ended up with one of the most expensive healthcare systems in the world that gets far worse outcomes than countries with universal healthcare.

The challenge, of course, is that doctor deals with patients who live in a society that is systematically destroying their health on a daily basis: trauma, inequality, poverty, debt, economic desperation, permanent underclass overwork, exhaustion, dependence on simulants and sleep aids, malnourishing food system, manipulative media, and on and on. In the worst situations, it’s all combined as shit life syndrome.

Most often, the doctor can’t or won’t bother to try to change those conditions as it would make them the enemy of the very system they serve and benefit from. They too are trapped in ideological realism that is entrenched in path dependence. Understandably, with learned helplessness as cogs in the machine, the average doctor would rather not think about it because then they’d feel miserable and guilty. No one wants to see themselves as the bad guy, as part of the problem.

There is no profit in researching, promoting, and enacting this other systemic, integralist, and comprehensive understanding. All the institutional incentives, in fact, indoctrinate those working within the system to put their heads down and pretend they don’t see the horror show all around them. So, doctors try their best to patch up their patients, lessen the symptoms, numb the pain, and send them back into the battle to be sacrificed for the greater cause of the elite games of wealth and power.

It’s like the ancient Roman physician working on gladiators who only needed to fix them up enough so that they could later put on a good fight and die in the arena, as the second part of bread and circus. Or think of the vet treating the cow so that it will soon be healthy enough to pass inspection and be turned into meat. Modern medicine doesn’t need to heal us, doesn’t need to help us thrive and flourish, doesn’t need to ensure we live up to our potential. All that’s required is, however suffering and short our lives may be, that we can be good workers for a few decades to keep the profits flowing into the private bank accounts of the capitalist class. But with AI and automatization, most of us might no longer even have that value.

Certainly, the purpose isn’t to save anyone, other than the middle-to-upper classes with the privileges and access to resources. What the hegemonic status quo requires is relatively healthy ruling and managerial elites to keep the system running and to keep the peasants in line.

Costs: externalized and socialized, immeasurable and unknowable

The scale of the problem is vast.

Public health relates to environmentalism, and the latter operates at a global scale (Environment-Caused Deaths: Who is Counting, and Who Counts). Such harms don’t respect national boundaries. But it’s at a local level that it’s immediately and personally experienced. The capitalist class is able to pick healthy environments for themselves and their families while concentrating the sickness and suffering on the exploited, oppressed, and disenfranchised (e.g., offshoring factories in foreign countries with weak regulations, consisting of populations that are mostly poor and brown).

Such externalized costs are a way of punishment and control, a means of disciplining the permanent underclass (Capitalism as Social Control). The costs, though harming all of society, are deemed a worthy investment by the plutocrats and oligarchs so as to maintain their power and privilege (Costs Must Be Paid: Social Darwinism As Public Good). But such ruling elites don’t really have a clue what they’re doing, don’t appreciate the full costs, especially not the extent to which it even harms them (Keith Payne, The Broken Ladder; Christopher Ryan, Civilized to Death; etc).

That is what makes unrecognized and unconscious ignorance so dangerous. Informed rational actors would never create, support, and defend a civilization this insane and self-destructive.

Consider that the greatest known cause of disease and death, about 40%, is pollution (Socialized Medicine & Externalized Costs). Not to mention all the other physical and mental health issues likewise caused or contributed to by it, with the problems incurred being spread unevenly. Living near an unregulated factory pumping out pollution would translate to far higher numbers — 80%? 90%? — of disabilities, diseases, and deaths related to pollution. If we reduced that single factor alone, all the costs of healthcare, sick days, lost pay, disability payments, psychiatric problems, orphaned children, etc would drop like a rock.

It probably would be a reduction of at least trillions of dollars that are presently wasted worldwide every year. The global GDP is over $100 trillion, while a UN report found that almost no major global industry is a net gain for society when environmental costs are included.

Then consider environmental costs are just one portion of costs typically that are overlooked and dismissed. The diverse costs are so numerous and immense that we don’t even know what it all adds up to, especially as most of the costs are being deferred onto ignored populations and future generations. How does one put a price tag on resource loss, mass extinction, ecosystem destruction, ecological collapse, climate change, refugee crises, environmental-caused civil conflicts, resource competition that causes wars, poisoned groundwater, escaped GM crops, and on and on? Not to mention annihilation of indigenous knowledge that might hold answers to present or future problems, diseases, etc.

Most of the causes of harm are collective or else privatized with externalized costs, as part of socialism for the rich and capitalism for the poor. We not only get sick because of what the rich do (e.g., factories and farmers dumping chemicals into our public waterways and atmosphere) but then we have to pay the rich to treat our sickness. They get us coming and going, as we’re corralled down the chute of the slaughter house.

At the very least, all of this means the global externalized and socialized costs are greater than the global net GDP, indicating that our apparent civilizational progress is actually an overall decline since its unsustainable and eventually the bill will come due. Some of the consequences could last for hundreds or thousands of years and, in some cases, forever.

Ignorance is magnified by inequality

Yet we’re told we can’t afford universal healthcare, environmental protections, or any other form of public good. That everything that benefits the common people must be cut. That destruction of the natural world is an inevitable price to be paid. But maybe we can’t afford to not improve conditions for all, can’t afford continued indifference and inaction, can’t afford the status quo that brought us to this point of crisis.

Certainly, though our ignorance is immense, we know enough to realize that wisdom tells us to heed the precautionary principle. That is part of the point of contemplating the original question: “What if everything you knew was wrong?” If we took it seriously, we’d act far differently. We need to be humbled. Then we might recognize that most of these costs could be avoided. But none of that is possible under capitalist realism that offers false confidence, a mirage of experts in control.

This constrained worldview applies to everything else as well.

Because of the profit model, most R&D funding simply goes to ascertaining methods to more effectively manipulate the physical and human world, including the psyche: “The best minds of my generation are thinking about how to make people click ads,” said Jeff Hammerbacher, an early employee at Facebook. It’s practical knowledge of a sorts, but it offers nothing in terms of wisdom and value. It doesn’t tell us what we should or shouldn’t do, what are the consequences of what we do or don’t do (Jathan Sadowski, The Mechanic and the Luddite).

As such, we’re able to obtain natural resources and build a vast industrial and technological society. But the Cassandras of the world get little audience and traction, no matter how vast and obvious are the costs, no matter how the evidence piles up. We remain collectively ignorant while awash in more knowledge than has ever before existed.

The techno-optimists simply wave it all away with their grand visions and authoritative posturing. New innovations will magically solve all problems, as it’s claimed. This sense of faith is theological dogma, not a thoughtful assessment and clear-eyed conclusion. These ambitious elites have no interest in the petty concerns of the “reality-based community” because they make their own reality or so they believe. They’re idiots with too much power. But in the power disparity of dominance hierarchies, there is no one in a position to tell them they’re idiots to their faces.

That is the thing. Humans didn’t evolve to be scientific researchers, objective analysts, and rational actors. Nor did we evolve to to live under such freakishly abnormal conditions that disconnect us from reality, that alienate us from one another. Our ability to comprehend the world was shaped under much simpler conditions of evolution.

Maybe that is why, among tech giants, they start sounding rather religious in their prognostications, as a new breed of self-proclaimed prophets. Consider Peter Thiel who talks about the Anti-Christ and AI in a single breath. One gets the sense that he sees himself as a priest-godman who will capture and control these new demiurgic forces and redirect their power toward a grander vision of humanity, if many will have to be sacrificed in the process. In his case, that means techno-feudalism with a daker version of trickle-down.

Nothing about this is scientific and rational. Such people are madmen. But they wield an immensity and extent of power that no human before possessed.

Ruled by animism projected onto social constructions

The supernatural impulse never goes away. It just gets transformed. If we continue on this path… Machines are what we’ll worship in the future. Machines are what we’ll put our faith in to save us. This is naive, of course. It’s hubris. Yet we’re well on our way.

Animism is what we humans fall back on when complexity is too great for our minds.

One can sense that in our having given corporations legal ‘personhood’, to the point they have more rights, privileges, and protections than actual humans. As we once had god-kings and god-emperors, we now have god-corporations. This creeping animism is an undercurrent that we pretend isn’t there because we modern Westerners are supposed to be smarter and more sophisticated than the primitive, backwards cultures of the past.

We treat collective organizations and systems as if they have lives of their own, as if they’re inevitable and outside of our control. They’re greater than us, above and beyond us. We’re told that we have no choice but to relent to their claims and demands, that to reassert our own humanity would be morally wrong because property rights are the only rights that matter, hence property is all that matters, with violence against property being the greatest of crimes (e.g., the FBI designating Earth First as a terrorist group).

Disturbingly, instead of corporations being property, we are moving toward a neo-feudalism where we of the neo-serfdom will be beholden to corporations (Neal Stephenson, Snow Crash). Already, on social media and such, we the commoners are treated as products, not customers. They harvest our data, our attention, etc and then sell it to the highest bidder.

This is our inevitable fate, as long as capitalist realism continues to rule our lives and minds. As Margaret Thatcher put it, there is no alternative (TINA). That is what they want us to believe without question, that we’re trapped without an escape.

Capitalism has come to be treated more real than humans. It’s a hegemonic entity and immortal deity that, presumably, can’t be defied, thwarted, or killed. We have no choice, so we’re told, other than to submit and bow down to the system that stands far above us, that came before us and will continue long after us. That is literally true in the case of some corporations that have continued for generations at this point, something the American Anti-Federalists and other revolutionary radicals warned about based on their direct experience with the British East India Company.

This might be understood as a result of the modern disenchantment and rationalization of everything, as Max Weber argued. It has been denied that the world is alive, that the biosphere is a living system. This took the wind out of traditional religion that, until quite recently, treated nature as divine Creation. It might be filled with demons as well as angels but it was never doubted that it was filled with animate powers, beings, minds, and voices. It wasn’t limited to overtly animistic cultures like indigenous tribes, as it likewise remained a potent worldview among early modern Europeans.

This was the expression of an oral culture. It’s easy to forget that, until the past century, most people in the world were still illiterate or else barely literate (e.g., only able to write their signature and maybe read a simple sign). It’s interesting that we only finally achieved mass literacy at the very moment the literary paradigm had been toppled from its throne by photography, radio, film, and television; as explained by Walter Lippman’s Public Opinion, Jeff Jarvis’ Gutenberg Parenthesis, Marshall McLuhan’s global village, and Walter J. Ong’s secondary orality.

Other things likely contributed. One intriguing case in point is the transition in substance usage. Western animism largely disappeared, by the 1800s, when caffeinated beverages and other addictive stimulants finally replaced the traditional gruit ales that were sometimes mildly psychedelic, beyond that of alcohol as depressant (“Yes, tea banished the fairies.”).

The point is that we modern WEIRDos (or MYOPICS) are not normal. And the world we’ve collectively created should not be treated as normative.

Old wine in new wineskins

In any case, the point is that animism is likely the starting point and resting state of the human psyche. It’s the evolutionary norm.

The more deadened the natural world comes to feel, the more its essence is displaced by the human-made world. As with a golem or tulpa (e.g., Pinocchio), we bring a sense of life and vitality to what we fantasize about and focus on. We pour ourselves into what we obsess over. We create the monsters that haunt us and vampirically prey upon our life force, leaving us depleted.*

Animism has never gone away, however much it’s repressed and unappreciated. The repressed, as it’s been said, returns with a vengeance.

In this light, capitalism has become our religion, technology our gods, and the tech oligarchs our priestly class (Eugene McCarraher, The Enchantments of Mammon). While we peons are lost in confusion, our lords and masters tell us they have everything under control. They give us the myth of rational téchnē. But it’s really the rituals and magic of a priesthood.

The rational facade is constantly breaking down and the underlying animistic impulse is forever reasserting itself, whether or not we acknowledge it. In fact, it can operate all the more powerfully to the degree it dwells in the shadows, by remaining obscured and hidden in the unconscious.

In the Bronze Age, no language had a word for ‘religion’.

That is because they perceived nothing separate from or outside their shared and contained ideological worldview. They were at the center of their world. Often referring to themselves as ‘The People’, they took the world they knew as having been made for them, or else that they had been made out of it.

It was comprehensive and totalizing, making sense of every aspect of their world and lives — there were no parts left on the shop floor. When a social system of beliefs, values, and practices gets labeled as something distinct in itself and distinct from all else (e.g., religion), it’s already been weakened and so, to that degree, needs to be enforced from above (e.g., a theocratic priestly class).

That is why religions have been involved in so much mass bloodshed since the Axial Age Revolution. Different than the Bronze Age, later rulers could no longer completely depend on a people who organically conformed and submitted to a communal reality without doubt and question.

Nonetheless, though clearly declining after the Bronze Age collapse (approximately 1177 BCE), there lingered much of the archaic sensibility, identity, and culture: dividualism, animism, bicameral mentality, bundle theory of mind, and 4/5E cognition (embodied, embedded, enacted, & extended; + ecological). Being a transitional period made the ancient world dynamic. Boundaries were less hardened and rigidified. There was constant conversion between, mixing of, and influence by diverse groups that made different claims on identity and reality.

Everything more easily could shift and become something else. There was still some animistic dirt on the roots. In their reaction, the new and emboldened literary elite (e.g., Plato in Classical Athens) didn’t like that continued vitality of oral culture and so they were constantly trying to stamp it out. But it kept reemerging and resurging, until more fully being strangled into a coma millennia later during modernity.

That ancient syncretism of ideologies and clash of mentalities, with its creative flux (why it’s sometimes called the Axial Age revolution), was eventually replaced by the authoritarianism of religion proper — the new world religions. But that old time religion has been slowly dying out in recent history, generation after generation. Ironically, the weapon of murder was the Protestant reformation with its promotion of mass literacy.

The modern ruling elite have needed a more powerful theurgy of interpellation (i.e., indoctrinated mental capture). What makes both science and capitalism so compelling is that, like the Bronze Age religions (and, if to a lesser degree, the medieval Church), they’re totalizing; hence, why political totalitarianism proper didn’t appear until the 20th century. Even fundamentalists today feel compelled to rationalize their faith with pseudo-scientific Creationism, as did the fascists with eugenics. And of course, televangelism is among the most successful and profitable products on any capitalist market.

One may be an atheist, Christian, Buddhist, or whatever, etc. But no matter the specific group identifiers, significant or superficial, everyone under science and capitalism has no choice in the matter in the claims held over them. It’s a hegemonic ruling paradigm that contains and defines all else. The past century of totalitarianism has been the return of that archaic hunger to be fully immersed, the longing for the lost living divine that once inhabited direct experience (Hunger for Connection; & Music and Dance on the Mind).

This totalitarianism has been so effective and successful that most of us can’t recognize it. And there is a mindless comfort in willfully not recognizing it. This is the blindness of our mass ignorance. It gets mistaken for reality, like a mime who can’t find his way out of an invisible box.

*Side note

Julian Jaynes’ offered a similar explanation about egoic consciousness (i.e., individualism; or, more broadly, what Brian J. McVeigh called the ‘propertied self’). Schizophrenics, with weak egoic boundaries, often have near boundless energy. Jaynes postulated that may have been true of archaic humans (i.e., bicameral mind). It would explain why they were capable of architectural feats through methods forgotten after the Bronze Age collapse.

Maybe it wasn’t only lost knowledge — yet another example of our present ignorance — but also lost energy.

The new psychic structure required more energy usage. It could also explain why we hyper-egoic moderns with our obsessive individualism need constant intake of sugar and stimulants (caffeine, theobromine, nicotine, cocaine, meth, Ritalin, etc), for mere daily functioning, along with depressants (alcohol, l-theanine, opioids, semi-opioids like kratom, etc) to take off the edge from our exhausted and frazzled existence. We’re running on fumes.

The thick, rigid, and highly-controlled boundaries of egoic consciousness are energetically expensive. But it allows for a much more complex society with all its advantages and benefits. There appears to be a correspondence between the intricacy of societal structures and intricacy of the psychological structures. Considering our modern massive nation-states, empires, and geopolitical order, that would suggest an equally impressive socially constructed identity to match it, all of it internalized.

In contrast to modern WEIRD society, take the Old Kingdom of Egypt.

The archaic Egyptian population was relatively small (1.5-2 million; equivalent to present Phoenix AZ, Philadelphia PA, or San Antonio TX), was mostly spread out across small farms in rural areas, had multiple semi-autonomous regions (though technically unified), and had little infrastructure or technology (no paved roads, bridges, cranes, etc). They didn’t even have a large slave class at the time to sacrifice in back-breaking labor.

Instead, the Great Pyramids apparently were built by freely acting farmers in the off-season. Mostly using sheer manual labor, apparently combined with innovative thinking, they quarried and transported — from about 500 miles away — stones that weighed upwards of 80 tons (e.g., above the King’s Chamber in the Great Pyramid of Giza), all of which was amazingly positioned with exacting precision. We literally don’t know how they accomplished this exploit and no one has ever been able to repeat it or come close to it. In any case, the manpower used was immense.

To put it in context, the first crane that could lift 80 tons was the Grove TM 800 built in 1970.

Another point could be added. It’s not only lost technical knowledge and lost access to physiological energy. It seems to represent a loss of an entirely different way of being. Part of modern ideological realism is that it traps us in a narrow sense of self, maybe by design (Enclosure of the Mind; & Containment of Freedom). We built the trap and, after being lured into it, we forgot that it was a trap, something separate from us. It’s ideological realism as Stockholm syndrome.

The familiarity of this ignorant state is comforting to many. Or rather, like a straightjacket, it would be extremely uncomfortable to get out of it. It’s easier and more relaxing to just accept the constraints of one’s conditions and work within them. Being blind doesn’t feel so crippling when one has never known anything else, has never met anyone who could see, and couldn’t even imagine the possibility of sight.

The constraints and the fatigue feel natural. Even if we could escape, we are like the animal confined to a small cage since birth. Most of us have permanently lost our range of motion. The hobbling is built into our very developed self. And it’s hard to miss what you never knew.

Conclusion: What’s next?

Let’s return to the question we began with.

  • What if all that we’ve taken as true and real turned out to be some combination of false, misunderstood, inaccurate, partial, uncertain, questionable, confused, illusory, fantastical, delusional, deceptive, contrived, artificial, socially constructed, obfuscatory, mystifying, and alienating?
  • Could we, if only momentarily, drop our guard of ideological realism, essentialism, absolutism, and fatalism to allow into consciousness our own doubts, uncertainties, and ignorance, maybe to glimpse beyond the veil of our psychological defenses and ideological groupthink?
  • Could we sit naked before our own immediate experience of the world as terra incognito and see it with fresh eyes, to relax into that undefended state of unknowing so as to find out what we might discover, notice, and learn, even to be surprised or fall into awe?

But to my mind, that’s merely the first step. It clears the board to start again. It empties the cup to fill it with something else. To imagine having a false understanding then makes possible imagining a better understanding. It’s a hopeful exercise of radical imagination. Ultimately, it’s a contemplation of human potential.

What if you, humanity, and the world are vastly greater than you were taught and indoctrinated to believe?

Many would see this emphasis of challenging criticality as negative. It goes against the prevailing mythos of Whiggish progressivism and confident utopianism, that the world is continuously improving and progressing in a linear pathway. If with nicer garb, our society is still ruled by an ideology of Manifest Destiny and White Man’s Burden. It’s just now our paternalistic overlords are think tank intellectuals, technocratic politicians, philanthro-capitalists, and big tech broligarchs.

Still, even as we are free to challenge this claim of authority over us and over our imaginations, we don’t have to deny that the arc of history bends toward justice, though that arc may take a winding and halting path. Sometimes the only realistic and meaningful way to have optimism about the future is through pessimism of the present. We must be ruthless in clearing the way for more inspiring possibilities, for greater expressions of human potential.

If this is the best of all possible worlds, then we should abandon all hope. But this being the best it can get is a simplistic conclusion of shallow optimism. It seems unlikely and silly, the mere self-serving rationalization of small minds and corrupt power. It’s time to take on our responsibility as co-creators of the good society we’ve long aspired toward, however often it gets obscured and forgotten.

The challenge is, in order to move in the right direction, we first need to stop going in the wrong direction. We need to pause, take a breath, and look around us so as to reorient ourselves, to reestablish environmental awareness, to assess our situation. Scientifically speaking, that is the purpose of the default mode network, a more open and undirected focus. Think of daydreaming, meditating, or going for a walk in nature. It’s to loosen the grip of egoic consciousness, if but for a moment.

In the modern world, we’re almost always in directed attention and repeatedly drawn into hard fascination, from work to media that leaves us in directed attention fatigue. Driven by stress and anxiety, this results in irritability, impatience, anger, aggression, etc; but also it’s associated with addictive behavior. Basically, we’re always on edge and distracted, and so ever more dependent on substances and activities to calm us down or ramp our minds back up to regain focus, never reaching a point of balance.

There is little left over for involuntary attention, such as soft fascination and a flow state. Yet it’s precisely in this other open and relaxed mentality where our psyches can process more deeply and think divergently, can engender creative and innovative responses (attention restoration theory). Otherwise, we get stuck in ruts.

Fortunately, it’s easy to change this. First off, we need to become aware of the attentional economy and how it’s harming us (Johann Hari, Stolen Focus; Jonathan Haidt, The Anxious Generation; & Marc Berman, Nature and the Mind). Pulling back from distraction and sidestepping addiction, we need to reclaim our own minds, our own personal psychic space. We need to regain our sense of place in the world.

The only way to enter, embrace, and pass through uncertainty is by relaxing into it. We should befriend the darkness, grow accustom to it, and develop our night vision. We might begin to discern the outlines of something else. We might glimpse something in our periphery, something around the next corner. At the edge of what we’ve seen before, on the other side of the dim murkiness, there might be gallery of light. Or an opening onto a vista. Or multiple pathways that leads deeper into the woods.

But we’ll never know if we passively remain in place, mesmerized by the flickering shadows on the wall.

Magic Trick

(Also posted on Medium)

Let us perform a magic trick.

Social conservatism and right-wing authoritarianism is linked, likely causally, to stressful and sickly conditions, as research shows in populations with high rates of parasite load and pathogen exposure. This is explained by parasite-stress theory, behavioral immune system, disgust response, stress reactivity, sickness behavior, and conservative-withdrawal behavior. The skyrocketing rates of disease (metabolic, cardiovascular, mitochondrial, autoimmune, neurocognitive, etc) that is worsening over time, combined with a recent infectious epidemic (COVID-19), could be why there is so much social madness and reactionary politics in recent years.

To tip society all the way into a demented hell hole, the American right has pushed (while the American left has relented to) increasing economic inequality and other vast disparities, which is itself strongly correlated to social dominance orientation, Machiavellianism, mental illness, addiction, alcoholism, stress-related diseases, anti-social behavior, paranoia, aggression, conflict, and violence. Plus, the conservative indifference to public health issues like heavy metal toxicity is further worsening neurocognitive problems, behavioral issues, and violent crime across the national population.

All of this harms and deranges those on the left as much as those on the right, of course; precisely at a time when the healthcare system is failing and costs have become exorbitant, potentially threatening to bankrupt our society. As always, those who are most harmed by such problems are the poor and disadvantaged, even as almost no one escapes such large-scale health crises. One might think that the leaders on the political left, the ideological persuasion most focused on public health and helping the needy, would be all over this with organized responses, solutions, and policies. But alas, one would be wrong. The focus on public health, since the early post-war period, has been superficial and halfhearted. The well functioning social democracy we Americans once had was long ago defunded and dismantled.

Meanwhile, American liberalism and leftism at present is so weak and impotent, demoralized and disorganized possibly because of malnourishment and maldevelopment caused by the standard American diet of processed foods (refined starches, added sugar, soy, seed oils, etc), although that is true of the American right as well — as a side note, metabolic diseases cause immunocompromise and are a major comorbidity of infectious disease like COVID-19. This is bad enough on its own, if it weren’t exacerbated by the leftist or pseudo-leftist fear-mongering about and corporate-co-opted scapegoating of animal foods and animal fat (quasi-ethical veganism, corporate greenwashing, environmentalist astroturf, low quality nutrition studies research, etc) that has resulted in the recommendations of severely restricted intake of animal-based nutrition (fat-soluble vitamins, B vitamins, creatine, carnitine, taurine, glycine, etc).

This animal-based nutrition, if it were appreciated, would otherwise offset the harm and promote health — no such luck. Research particularly associates nutritional deficiencies, as related to low intake of animal foods, with mental illness like mood disorders and with what Dr. Weston A. Price talked about in terms of moral sickliness (i.e., anti-social behavior). The push for a plant-based diet, typically high-carb and high-seed oil, could turn out to be one of the most devastating and crippling things that has ever happened to the American left. Without a healthy, strong, and vital political left to push back against an increasingly psychotic right led by dark personalities (narcissists, Machiavellians, psychopaths), it has allowed the invigorated meat-eating minority on the far right to dominate — certainly, the likes of Donald Trump eats his meat.

More broadly, some argue that there are underlying issues that connect so much of these health issues, wrapping them all up as a singular health crisis (Chris Palmer, Brain Energy). There are also rising rates of autism, ADHD, and similar neurocognitive issues — no, this isn’t mere neurodiversity (e.g., autistics have higher rates of de novo mutations). Numerous diseases seem specifically linked by way of metabolic syndrome and mitochondrial dysfunction. And all of this is worsening across generations, with each younger generation more sickly than the last. There is also something weird going on with the sexes. Girls are sexually and neurocognitively maturing at ever younger ages, while boys development is increasingly delayed. This is seen in real world results such as increasing rates of women in college with decreasing rates of men. Many worry that young males are being left behind, yet we don’t understand what is causing it — this has given ammunition to the reactionaries and understandably has fed into moral panic, with the indifference by much of the left not being helpful.

Quite likely related to this shift in the sexes, across this past century, there has been a steady decline of measured testosterone levels, sperm count, and male grip strength. Boys and men are literally becoming effeminized, including rising rates of male infertility, erectile dysfunction, and moobs or man boobs (i.e., gynaecomastia). This could be caused by various factors, such as increased intake and exposure to hormones, hormone-mimics, and hormone-disruptors from food, food packaging, and environmental sources (soy, canned foods, farmed fish, pesticides, plastics, cosmetics, fragrances, cleaning products, herbal supplements, pharmaceuticals, tap water, etc). By the way, a major hormone disruptor is that of heavy metals; and so not only causing brain damage, stunted neurocognitive development, lowered IQ, increased learning disabilities, disturbed impulse control, aggressive behavior, and violent crime.

As a liberal, we have no issue with people expressing non-conforming gender identities and so individuals don’t need to give any reason. We take LGBTQ+ rights as a given, and we support people choosing their own pronouns or whatever. That said, what if the rapid spread of such gender diversity is being artificially induced? It’s one thing for someone to freely choose an identity, but it’s not a choice (i.e., non-consensual) if it’s happening by causal agents that were forced upon people by circumstance, by collectively-created conditions. Yet neither is it a choice on a collective level, since we’re not even publicly talking much about it, at least not in the mainstream. We are just passively allowing ourselves to be affected in unpredictable ways and with unforeseeable consequences. We could implement better regulations. Do we have the political will to do so? No. In our dysfunction, we feel fatalistic about our dysfunction, forming a vicious cycle.

There are many strange and challenging things going on in society. To make matters worse, the fields of research that could better help us to understand have been in the middle of a replication crisis for decades, while the public health experts have become corrupted by big money and powerful interests. We are in the middle of a public health crisis that our leading institutions can’t fully acknowledge as a public health crisis. Instead, it’s often portrayed as a bunch of unrelated issues, typically private concerns, with illness to be treated with expensive drugs to further profit pharmaceutical companies.

The public is not convinced or comforted. The problem isn’t only a crisis of public health but also of public trust and confidence, a crisis of bad governance, along with a crisis in the economy. Polling shows that public trust has declined in every major American institution: Congress, military, corporate media, big business, religion, etc. The general stress and sickliness has created a sense of general malaise, having turned malignant with cynical apathy and learned helplessness at a collective level.

There you go. In having grabbed hold of multiple third rails, this post is officially politically incorrect and lacking respectability. All sides have been equally antagonized and fairly indicted. We are all the problem. We Americans are a population in a vicious spiral, possibly a death spiral; a health crisis drawing us into an existential crisis. The entire spectrum of American politics has been critically judged as sickly and worse. This post has managed to tell the harshest of truths that few would want to hear or be willing to take seriously, and this is why the most important truths remain unseen, invisible. Almost all of the potential viewers, from right to left, who might have benefited from reading this post probably have disappeared before reaching the end of the piece, if they even bothered to read past the beginning.

It’s a disappearing act. Magic!

* * *

Addendum:

There is a simple reason for why most people’s minds would likely shut down and snap closed long before they got near to the end of this piece. In ideological and egoic self-defense, it would be hard for most people to believe that what is argued here is completely true or even significantly true. Sure, those on the left might cheer along with associating the right with a sickly society. And those on the right could nod their heads in agreement about the left being weak. But the majority on both sides would feel instant denial that any of the accusations might fully or partly apply to themselves and those they identify with.

A common weakness of human nature is the lack of and resistance toward self-awareness, self-scrutiny, and self-criticism. It’s not a widespread talent in the human species to be able to look upon oneself from an external perspective, to imagine how other’s would perceive one’s behavior. There is another limitation. Individuals of immense, wide-ranging, and insatiable intellectual curiosity (e.g., highest end of the dual personality trait of ‘openness to experience’ and ‘intellect’) are extremely rare specimens. This post is implicitly asking people to remain open-minded to a greater extent, which simply is something most people are unwilling or unable to do.

Everything argued here is based on a vast amount of scientific research and evidence, but few are familiar with it, much less conversant. It’s not because this knowledge is meager, contested, arcane, and obscure. Rather, it’s just that most people don’t want to know it. These are uncomfortable truths. We don’t find what we don’t look for. If one simply denies it or else refuses to acknowledge it at all, then one never has to face that sense of discomfort, nor think a new thought, nor consider a new perspective. This article is inviting people into radicalism, specifically a radically leftist take. It’s presenting a systems theory that we humans are the products of socially constructed environments and material conditions.

Some of the evidence is already decades old, and in other cases it’s been around for generations, but it’s definitely only now taking hold more fully within the social sciences. It will probably take some decades more for it to spread out into public awareness and mainstream politics. One of the difficulties is that the world we are living in changes faster than does public and political knowledge. That means problems develop faster than solutions. So, we’ll have to utterly destroy our collective health as a society and tumble into total existential crisis before we’ll be able to collectively respond. Our present system is based on old knowledge with much of it already obsolete, if few of us are cognizant of this state of affairs.

As such, we are trapped in the echoes of the past, struggling just to keep up with present realities. We can’t see the world around us for what it actually is, blinded by our ideas about what we think it should be. We stumble along with knowledge claims and theories that often have already been disproven, or are partly false, or shown to be weak. Multiple fields of research have been stuck in replication crises for quite a while now. Some things we think we know have been premised on very few studies that no one ever bothered to try to replicate in the past. We’ve just assumed so much is true according to what confirmed our biases and what agreed with our preconceived conclusions.

Now with better quality research being done, we are coming to entirely new understandings, or else reinterpreting old evidence in new light. That is some of what’s being presented here. Take the first part about the link between sickliness and certain ideologies or rather ideological mentalities. The evidence for that has been building over a long period of time, but it’s taken the development of theories to explain that evidence and bring it together, so as to make it persuasive and compelling. It’s simply not how we’ve thought about something like authoritarianism since World War II.

The fact of the matter is people, including scientists and other experts, rarely change their minds. The old guard of the post-war understanding of ideology will have to die off before new understandings can take hold (Thomas Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions). That is probably even more true for the understanding about not only the nutritional importance of animal foods but also the understanding of how powerfully diet affects psychology, personality, neurocognition, and mental health. Tremendous amount of evidence is already available, but we can’t accept it and make sense of it according to old models. That brings us to the second part of this piece where we talk of the political left.

Since we falsely assume a plant-based and meat-restricted diet is healthier, according to severely problematic epidemiological studies, mainstream experts refuse to acknowledge that numerous other studies show that vegans and vegetarians have higher rates of numerous health issues, such as mood disorders. What is extremely odd is that, as the rate of mood disorders is rapidly rising, one might think we’d be curious about why that is happening. Intake of red meat and animal fat has declined over the past century, although there has been an increase of chicken and fish intake, along with an increase of fruit, vegetable, and whole grains intake. We Americans were told what was healthier and most of us have done what we were told; more or less (e.g., even sugar intake has stopped rising). So, why is health worsening?

The basic point is narrow, though. We aren’t so much, at the moment, making any grand argument overall about the American diet. Even if experts were correct that more plants and less meat is better for physical health, there is no evidence and never has been evidence that severe restriction of meat and other animal foods is beneficial for mental health. It was just assumed that, since such a diet was supposedly better, there weren’t any concerns. Many on the left felt proud of the sacrifices they made to follow a plant-forward diet, as being perceived as ethically and environmentally better, along with presumably healthier. Even many who didn’t become vegans or vegetarians still made major cuts in their meat consumption, specifically that of red meat.

These dietary changes were concentrated among those on the left. We should be unsurprised that, as with vegetarians and vegans, liberals have higher rates of mood disorders. As a left-winger ourselves, we find it shocking that there is relatively so little concern about mental health on the political left, other than what can seem like superficial and weak posturing. We just don’t take public health all that seriously, at least not seeing it as an actual threat to not only individuals but to democracy itself. It’s simply not on the mainstream radar that we might be psychologically and neurocognitively crippling ourselves as a society, and possibly even worse on the left, because of bad dietary advice and practices.

Though the evidence is right in front of us, we can’t quite put together two plus two and get four. It doesn’t fit the dominant paradigm. No matter how human physiology actually works, the appreciation of animal-based nutrition isn’t how many on the left want to believe human physiology works, and belief trumps all else, not that the human body cares what we believe. Entire ideological narratives have been spun in rationalizing ethical veganism in defense of and in conflation with moral commitments to animal rights and environmentalism. Ultimately, it doesn’t matter, on ideological grounds, what a moral accounting of the data actually shows about which diet and food system causes the most harm, death, suffering, and environmental damage. That is because most of those who have taken on this ideological identity are no longer open to new info. They just know they’re right, largely because that is what they experts have asserted to be true.

Yet we have diverse sources of scientific evidence from the research literature that challenges this dogmatic self-certainty and self-righteousness. For a fact, we know which nutrients are positively correlated and causally linked to neurocognitive development and mental health. We know those specific nutrients are concentrated in animal foods, particularly meat. We know those who eat less meat or no meat have higher rates of mood disorders. We know that liberals and others on the left on average eat less meat. And we know that liberals, like vegans and vegetarians, likewise have more mood disorders. These are all of the facts that are needed to make sense of what is going on, but we can’t quite put it all together. And so it doesn’t occur to us that maybe the reason the political left has gotten weaker and more disorganized over time might be related to these interlinked facts of mental health decline.

We could go through all of the facts for the other arguments and observations made. The issue of the sexes similarly becomes apparent just by looking at the vast data that has accumulated over the past century. So, we could cite and link to the sources of all this info, all the research, data, and theories. We’ve done that many times before in many other pieces elsewhere. But a large point being made is that all of that is largely irrelevant. Facts only matter if they’re acknowledged. The majority who wouldn’t read this piece to the end don’t stop reading because there wasn’t enough scientific references. If anything, to include all the supporting evidence would make an even more ideologically challenging and threatening piece that would result in even fewer reading it. Public knowledge, awareness, and perception doesn’t change because of facts; at least not in the short term.

* * *

A Personal Note:

The motivation here is highly personal. [And by the way, our chosen personal pronouns are plural, for reasons of the bundle theory of mind, having nothing to do with gender identity.] As a leftist, we are both radical and liberal. But we aren’t extremist, as that is entirely separate from radicalism. Introverted proclivities combined with a mild-mannered Midwestern upbringing has shaped us into a moderate in personality. We are the product of Iowa Nice, but translated through the culture of a liberal and literary college town, and driven by a love of learning.

What our radicalism means is that we have the ability and the tendency to follow lines of speculation, argument, and evidence to their ultimate conclusion, no matter what others think . We are highly principled in that way; and in an unprincipled world, that is radical. But also, etymologically, radical simply means going to the root of things; and hence the connection to a fierce intellectual curiosity. That is what’s being expressed here. It’s our independent-mindedness that leads us to becoming politically incorrect leftists. Our moral commitments demand this of us.

That is how we became liberal leftists, an ideological identity that some leftists claim is impossible — pick a side! Well, we have picked a side, a total commitment to egalitarianism, liberty, and solidarity; the tripartite overlap between the liberal and the leftist. We’d go so far as to argue leftism isn’t possible as anything but liberalism and that leftism so far is the greatest fruition of liberalism. We are both liberal-minded and socially liberal. Our having turned into a malcontent was more incidental, but it’s never turned us to the dark side of misanthropy. We are a tender-hearted feeling type, in Jungian typology (or INFP in MBTI).

Yet though raised in a touchy-feely, hyper-liberal, new-agey church, our parents are actually conservative Republicans. And we spent most of our teen years in the Deep South, the region of the country with the most conservative and authoritarian population, not to mention the highest rates of parasitism and metabolic syndrome, both of which cause immunocompromise. So, our early life spent between different kinds of regions and communities has given us a strong sense of comparison and contrast. That is why we can be an equal opportunity critic, in having seen both worlds up close and personal.

This leads us to troubles, but we can’t help ourselves — like the scorpion, it’s just in our nature. Anyway, our mind resides in an ideological no-man’s land. Hence, when we write freely like this, we guarantee ourselves almost no audience. And of course, we knew exactly what we were doing when we wrote the above, all the text prior to the Addendum. That was the whole point. We occasionally feel compelled to demonstrate what fierce truth-telling looks like, just in case a random person comes along who shares this kind of intellectual radicalism. But admittedly, such people are uncommon; and so we typically have tried to moderate this impulse to make our writings more inviting and accessible.

In the end, we can’t hold back all the time. And as we age, the less we want to hold back at all. The results, though, are predictable. This came up again lately and it’s what directly motivated us here. We were chatting with a fellow Medium writer, Frances A. Chiu, who is a published author. Her most recent book is The Routledge Guidebook to Paine’s Rights of Man. As expected, her main focus or at least recent focus is that of Thomas Paine. By the way, Paine was also a radical malcontent who had a way of telling it like it is, eventually resulting in his having become a persona non grata. His later harsh critiques of organized religion was not well received at the time, but he wasn’t one to only speak the truth when it was popular and convenient.

In talking with Chiu, it became clear we had much ideologically in common. We even noticed she had a piece where she described her love of meat, including red meat. So, however she might identify herself, she fits what one could call a red-blooded leftist, in that the deep red color of blood comes from iron that is particularly concentrated in red meat. A century ago, or even earlier in the century before that, almost all American leftists were meat eaters with red meat being widely consumed. With that in mind, we decided to take a chance by mentioning our thoughts related to diet and health, a variation on the argument made here. Up to the point of our writing that comment, she had quickly and positively responded to every one of our comments. But after that comment, there was total silence.

It’s an example of where some people’s radicalism stops other people’s radicalism is just getting started. Rather than an end point for our ideological aspirations, Paine’s radicalism is merely a jumping off point. And Paine, for certain, was a red-blooded American. That was part of the point we made to Chiu, in the above linked comment: “American colonists were able to successfully revolt against a vast imperial force was partly because they were known as the healthiest population in the Western world at the time, with tremendous access to an abundance of animal foods, including lots of lard and butter: farm-raised animals, wild game, and seafood. It’s not a coincidence that the first two centuries of powerful leftism, from the late colonial period to the mid-20th century, was when the majority of leftists were on an animal-based diet.” This apparently wasn’t received with curiosity, excitement, and inspiration.

We’re used to it. Even for radical leftists, this kind of thought is more than a few radical steps too far. It’s not even necessarily that someone like Chiu would’ve been offended by our suggestion that plant-based leftism has led to a weak and disorganized left-wing movement. That is a possibility, although just as likely it just made no sense to her or otherwise felt off-putting. She was all on board as long as our critiques remained within conventional categories of ideological thought. Our bringing up this other angle can be transgressive in a way that, to our experience, few other people seem to grok. It presents an understanding of humanity and society that feels alien to many, sometimes to the point of seeming absurd and incomprehensible. Or else it might feel too personally critical, as people can get really sensitive around all things dietary.

It’s not the first time this has happened. We’ve lost count. It’s not only about diet. The entire health framing of ideology really just doesn’t make much sense to most people, as few people have much knowledge of this area of evidence. It feels wrong, particularly to individualistic Americans, that environmental conditions might shape or possibly even determine our ideological identity and worldview. That suggestion can feel plain wrong, as undercutting a standard ideological bias in American culture. Then throw the dietary theory on top of that and it’s just way too much for the average American, including the average leftist, to handle. Put all this together and you can almost guarantee to have no audience at all, which was the point of this whole exercise.

So, when we say that these kinds of thoughts are politically incorrect, we aren’t exaggerating. What we speculated here about plant-based undermining of movement leftism is a thousand times more harsh of a critique than the mild comment that ended our friendship with Wagner. But it’s not only about overly sensitive liberals. If we were to point out the research on sickliness in relation to conservatism and authoritarianism, it would not go over well with our conservative parents or other conservative family members. Just even mentioning the research showing the real world overlap of conservatism and authoritarianism would be an invitation to a verbal fight. As for those besides family members, if we were to post such blasphemous thoughts on a conservative forum or subreddit, we’d be banned in a sweet second. It’s political incorrectness all around.

As a lover of free speech, this is demoralizing. The thing about free speech is that it requires both negative freedom and positive freedom. It’s not only about being free to speak but also being free to be heard and free to effectively communicate, hence freedom of dialogue which requires there to be multiple sides who are committed to freely engaging, including listening. The response we so often get, though, is disengagement. And as a leftist in general, it’s doubly demoralizing to be shut down by one’s fellow leftists. If other leftists won’t even listen to hard truths from the left, then there is no one else to hear those truths at all and so it’s as though they were never spoken.

* * *

Some Further Thoughts:

Ironically, it’s precisely a sickly left that feels so weak as to be threatened that, in seeking to protect the leftist in-group, the sickly left turns authoritarian in censoring, suppressing, ignoring, or banishing what doesn’t conform to groupthink; which is a betrayal of centuries-old leftist principles (liberté, égalité, fraternité). The potentially anti-authoritarian left that otherwise could offer something different from the authoritarian right, instead, in reaction merely offers another variety of authoritarianism. This confirms the very theory of sickliness that was denied and dismissed by default of silence or refusal to engage.

Even a liberal doesn’t have full access to the greatest potential of liberal-mindedness under illiberal conditions, and all stressful and sickly conditions in this sense are illiberal. Liberal-mindedness, hence social liberalism and liberal democracy, is a result of health and so is only possible through health. In an already stressed-out population within high inequality and dominance hierarchies, one would expect a malnourished, sickly, and weak left to be reactionary toward anyone pointing out that the left is malnourished, sickly, and weak. Whereas in a well functioning liberal democracy, a healthy, strong, and confident left would allow, support, and promote vigorous open debate about such challenging viewpoints.

This is an old thought we’ve had, as we’ve realized that liberal-mindedness requires social, public, and moral health. Left-liberalism is a hothouse flower, in needing optimal conditions to bloom. That is why it’s so easy to turn a liberal or leftist into a reactionary authoritarian simply by putting them under even minor stress or cognitive overload. Such as how liberals will speak in conservative-style stereotypes when just slightly intoxicated, as shown in one study. Or from another study, how liberals who first learned of the 9/11 terrorist attack through tv images, as opposed to radio, were more supportive of the right-wing War On Terror. Stress and sickliness, in shutting down liberal-mindedness, shuts down the capacity of liberals to express their liberal-minded concern for public health.

There is the conundrum. The very unhealthy society that needs to talk about it’s collective ill health is the least able and willing to talk about it, along with having the most compromised liberal democracy and liberal leftism that would support public health policies and interventions. That thought is both intriguing and frustrating. The problem itself obstructs solving the problem; or, heck, obstructs even acknowledging that a problem exists; or else simply obstructs recognition of what kind of problem it is so as to help guide the process of seeking and implementing an effective solution. That is a real humdinger.

Such a conundrum is found all across our society, and so examples of it abound. A similar line of thought occurred to us recently in perusing the research, theories, and treatments of Alzheimer’s disease. Like numerous other illnesses, physical and mental, as Chris Palmer writes about, much of what underlies Alzheimer’s is metabolic and mitochondrial, hence having much to to with diet and nutrition; although interestingly pathogens and toxins can also play a role — — all the factors of Alzheimer’s, by the way, overlap with the previously described conditions of anti-social behavior, social conservatism, right-wing authoritarianism, the reactionary mind, and deranged leftism. Anyway, the focus ends up being expansive, even as the mechanisms involved are specific. There are connecting points that link together the diverse factors.

Dr. Dale Bredesen, a leading Alzheimer’s researcher, has written about the centrality of amyloid protein precursor (APP), which is directly tied into the mitochondria. Also, in terms of metabolism, the digestive system and microbiome (gut, oral, and nasal) connect to the mitochondria, nervous system, endocrine system, brain, etc through numerous pathways. Once all is accounted for, Dr. Bredesn states there are several dozen primary causal and contributive factors to Alzheimer’s. In looking around at the evidence, the originating and fundamental sources of pathogenesis seems to be a combination of lifestyle, personal habits, diet, and environment. Basically, the individual becomes sick because they’re living in sickly conditions. The near total failure in the development of effective Alzheimer’s treatments is because the healthcare system and the public health institutions have failed to support, promote, and advocate the change of the sickly conditions that cause disease in the first place, with Alzheimer’s merely being one of numerous consequences.

That is the situation we find ourselves also with sickly ideological mentalities. The conditions that cause sickness are also the conditions that prevent healing and health. Those sickly conditions involve high inequality, dominance hierarchies, socioeconomic stressors, over-work, sleep deprivation, anxiety-inducing corporate media, political propaganda, anti-democratic Machiavellianism, toxins, hormone mimics and disruptors, pathogens, antibiotic and antibacterial overuse, immunocompromise, malnourishment, nutritional deficiencies, food additives, pesticides, household cleaners, metabolic syndrome, mitochondrial dysfunction, inflammatories, and on and on.

Yet almost everything we know or think we know about humans has been in studying them under these sickly conditions, and so to a large degree we’ve normalized sickliness and the sickness response as part of our normative conception of human nature; which feeds into WEIRD bias since most research subjects are WEIRDos (Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, Democratic). The non-human equivalent of WEIRDos is that of lab animals. Lab chow (industrially-processed, plant-based, high-carb, high-seed oil, etc) is the equivalent of the standard American diet. And the lab animals live isolated and kept relatively inactive in cages that mimic modern urbanization of humans. Like modern WEIRDos, lab animals are some combination of bored and stressed, with an epigenetic inheritance shaped by such unnatural conditions. No wonder we struggle to understand what makes health possible.

In his book Chasing the Scream, Johann Hari brought up an awesome example. A study was done on rats that seemed to imply that addiction was biologically predetermined. When given a choice between plain water and cocaine-laced water, the rodents felt compelled to drink the drugged source. They wouldn’t do anything else and continued until they died. To many researchers and experts, that settled the debate. There is just something genetically inborn about addictive behavior that is elicited by certain chemicals. But a later researcher considered the possibility that caged rats don’t represent normal, healthy rodent behavior. He repeated the study but did so with entirely different conditions. He built his lab animals a rat park. They had everything a rat could need and want: lots of space, separate rooms, places to hide, a community of other rats, nutritious tasty food, and toys. His rats ignored the drugged water.

To put it simply, we are not living in a human park, no where near it, and if anything the opposite. As the research appears to indicate, the mentalities of social conservatism, right-wing authoritarianism, social dominance orientation, and dark personality traits (psychopathy, narcissism, Machiavellianism, sadism) are how human nature is more likely to express under conditions of parasitism, pathogen exposure, social stress, cognitive overload, perceived threat, high inequality, dominance hierarchies, etc. All of this represents the occasional and fleeting extremes during hominid evolution. Hunter-gatherers will temporarily face a problem (drought, food scarcity, etc), typically remedying it or moving on to somewhere else.

Until the agricultural revolution and hence permanent settlements, it was rare for humans to get permanently stuck in unhealthy conditions. So, we have little evolved capacity for dealing with long-term chronic stressors. It’s just not normal in evolutionary terms, but it has become normal in modern civilization, at least outside of the healthy social democracies. In United States history, there was only one period during which a liberal consensus ruled society and the government, and it’s no coincidence that it was during the time when the country was known as the leading social democracy in the world, not to mention praised as generally having the best run government. It specifically had a reputation as an efficient and well functioning bureaucracy, that is to say the government genuinely served the public good, including public health.

Also not coincidentally, that shift away from the liberal consensus, when the social democracy was defunded and dismantled, simultaneously involved a change in dietary dogma toward plant-based fear-mongering about red meat and saturated fat. Up to that point, meat and other animal foods had been considered central to a healthy diet, along with an understanding that carbs were fattening. And for the centuries prior  —  from Roger Williams, Daniel Shays, and Harriet Tubman to Mother Jones, Eugene V. Debs, and Fred Hampton  —  Americans had eaten tremendous amounts of meat, fish, eggs, dairy, and animal fat, particularly lard and butter. Under these healthy conditions, it was a powerful red-blooded left-wing movement that had fought so hard during the American Revolution and other early revolts, fought so hard during the Populist and Progressive eras, fought and won many battles. Through a highly organized movement, they built up the public-minded institutions and policies that made social democracy possible (e.g., Milwaukee sewer socialists). But as the diet and other lifestyle conditions worsened, the left no longer has what it took to defend the public good.

Populism Continues to Grow, Across Party Lines

“The government lies to us, we all know it. The media lies to us.”

“My mission over the next 18 months of this campaign and throughout my presidency will be to end the corrupt merger of state and corporate power that is threatening now to impose a new kind of corporate feudalism in our country.”

~ Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Democratic son of assassinated Democratic Robert F. Kennedy, is out on the stump for his presidential campaign in challenging President Joe Biden. He is beating the populist drum, but he is no newcomer to this. What some might not be used to hearing is this kind of populism in the Democratic Party and coming from a member of a political dynasty, since so long ago the neoliberal DNC elites betrayed the working class and sold their souls to big biz interests. Yet populism, in its mercuriality, has a way of coming from all directions, constantly shifting forms, and soaking into everything.

It’s not quite guaranteed that Republicans will become the new populist party, in this new populist era. Along with RFK Jr., many Democrats are making a run for it: Bernie Sanders, Andrew Yang, Marianne Williamson, etc; with much earlier precedents such as George McGovern, Jesse Jackson, Ralph Nader, and many others. But the powers that be have, until recently, kept populists down (Matt Stoller, How Democrats Killed Their Populist Soul), as they’ve done with leftists. Also, though progressives have typically opposed populists (Bill Schneider, Class warfare fractures both parties), one can sense that the line between the two is presently blurred, maybe disappearing entirely; as leftward public opinion indicates. Populists have lit a fire under progressives’ asses.

Populism is often a strange mix of fears and hopes. RFK Jr. is an environmental lawyer with a platform of civil liberties, anti-corruption, transparency in government, opposition to military-industrial complex, anti-corporatism/fascism, and economic revitalization, but he is also an anti-vaxxer, the latter more often associated with the alt-right. It reminds one of how Donald Trump made progressive-like campaign promises about infrastructure rebuilding, healthcare reform, fighting corruption, etc, albeit all bull shit; and now is campaigning on protecting Social Security and Medicare, further bull shit. As with progressivism, populism is in the air, and has been for a while now. An old creed of populism has always been a distrust of elites, going back to ancient slave revolts and medieval peasants revolts, then reawakening in the modern era of revolutions and mass movements.

On that note, RFK Jr. has resurrected the conspiracy theories about the supposed CIA’s assassination of his father Robert F. Kennedy and his uncle John F. Kennedy. Even as the accumulated evidence does get one thinking, it’s not verified if CIA agents or other government officials assassinated or were involved in the assassinations; though the government apparently was involved in its coverup for some motive or another. For example, in response to questions and criticisms following the Warren Commission Report, a 1967 CIA memo directed agents to deceptively push ‘conspiracy theorist’ accusations through assets in the US mainstream media; and data analysis shows that the use of the label ‘conspiracy theorist’, that had been rare in the MSM up to that point, suddenly was widely used following. That illegally propagandistic attempt to hide and obscure the truth from the public provides supporting evidence for a potential link of the CIA to the assassination itself, but it doesn’t prove it and at this point, barring further leaks or a death bed confession, we’ll likely never know.

But what is proven beyond a doubt, according to released and leaked CIA documents and assorted other evidence, is that for generations the CIA has assassinated numerous democratic leaders around the world, along with having overthrown democratic governments and attacked democratic groups and movements; in concert with persecution and oppression of the left in general. This is similar to it being proven, according to released and leaked FBI groups, that the FBI used COINTELPRO tactics to attack, weaken, and destroy democratic groups in the US, including actions that involved a FBI asset and led to the assassination of Black Panther leader Fred Hampton by the police that the FBI was working with, but also including other devious ploys like the attempt to blackmail Martin Luther King Jr. into suicide. That is some fucked up shit that most Americans remain unaware or disinformed about, as they’re not going to learn about it by attending school, public or private, or by listening to corporate media, including so-called public media largely funded by corporations.

If our government has done all of this and worse in other countries and here at home, what would stop them from assassinating a standing U.S. president? Certainly, neither morality nor law has been a significant hindrance so far in their covert activities. So, it’s easy to be suspicious when the intelligence agencies of one’s own government have a known long history of political evil, violence, brutality, terrorism, and oppression; even when knowledge of this remains an open secret amidst mass ignorance and indoctrination, causing a sense of free floating anxiety and vague paranoia among the masses. Nonetheless, like Robert Kennedy Jr., many other Americans are becoming less ignorant about abusive corruption and less forgiving toward the purveyors of it (e.g., according to polls, most Americans acknowledge that racism is systemic among police departments and requires reform). That is part of why there has been decades of falling public trust in all major institutions (big government, big media, big biz, and big church; and now the military as well), a situation that is fomenting populist unrest and outrage. It obviously has nothing to do with partisan politics. Many of the same people who voted for Barack Obama stated they would’ve voted for Bernie Sanders, did vote for Donald Trump, and likely would vote for Robert Kennedy Jr.

The argument has been made that, given the admission in polls that many Trump voters said that they didn’t trust Trump to do what he promised, it seems that electing Trump was more of a ‘Fuck You’ to the entire political system; a desperate sense of frustration among a certain segment of the disempowered, disenfranchised, and dispossessed; the equivalent of throwing a grenade into a bunker (the Joker’s philosophy that, in chaos, there is equality). While distorted and misguided by dark fantasies of paranoia, hatred, and bigotry, there was a valid sense of protest, if only a kernel, even in the January 6 MAGA insurrection. With populism repeatedly sprouting up within the Democratic Party as well, this animosity can’t be blamed on just the far right and the politically disaffected. While most Americans have lost trust in major institutions, they also state in polls that they still support the ideal of good governance and want a strong and active government that supports democracy and the public good. For all the moral failure and political evil, the American public hasn’t merely fallen into cynicism, passivity, and indifference. Hence, the reason populism retains its ever stronger appeal, across party lines.

What this anti-elitism and anti-corruption ultimately comes down to is an opposition to high inequality. Such disparity is more of power, position, and privilege than only income and accumulated wealth. This is where it’s important to make a distinction between right-wing authoritarianism (RWA) and social dominance orientation (SDO). RWAs aren’t inherently inegalitarian, per se; that is to say not necessarily pro-inequality, in some ways quite the opposite. But that is the case among SDOs, specifically SDO-Es on the SDO-7 subscale. RWAs just want everyone within a given population to conform to the same norms and so in a sense equalize everyone, if inconsistent and hypocritical in practice; whereas SDOs don’t want people to conform at all but, rather, to be kept in their place. In studies, it’s demonstrated that SDOs seek out inequality and, when it’s lacking, will strive to create it. SDOs love rigid hierarchy where power is elevated, concentrated, and centralized within an elite; and hence the subordination and subjugation, suppression and silencing of the masses, the denial of autonomy and agency (i.e., democratic self-governance).

The US has the highest inequality in the world, at a time of the highest inequality in world history. It’s an social dominance utopia, which means a dystopia for the rest of us. Most Americans don’t accept this, even as they are largely ignorant of how bad it is. In surveys, most Americans severely underestimate how vast is inequality. Yet actual inequality is so far above what most Americans, when asked, state is tolerable. Imagine the populist outrage once Americans realize the full extent of the propaganda, indoctrination, and disinfo used to keep them in the dark. And place that in context of the American majority’s ignorance about being a left-liberal majority that is manipulatively divided, another truth that is slowly trickling out into public knowledge, though not yet forming as a shared public identity. If not fully informed, most Americans do get the gist of it. They grok the basic problem and support the policies that would solve it, such as greater democracy, universal healthcare, higher taxes on the rich, stronger corporate regulations, etc. Americans have repeatedly demanded this, as seen with Bernie Sanders having been the most popular candidate in 2016, whereas both Hilary Clinton and Donald Trump were the least popular since data was kept, but the elite repeatedly won’t allow majority leftist opinion to be heard or genuine populism to take hold, much less to gain entry into power.

Here is an important point of confusion. The thing is SDO is divided into two facets, that measure distinct and so can be separate in any given individual. Besides SDO-E (inegalitarianism), there is also SDO-D (dominance proper). The latter is about old school bigotry and oppression, with caste systems, ghettos, sundown towns, redlining, apartheid, a permanent underclass, class war, and such; but old school social dominance is politically incorrect at this point and less of a direct threat, though far from gone. So, authoritarians may or may not have high levels of SDO-D dominance tendencies, whether or not they’re high in SDO-E inegalitarianism. For example, when researched, authoritarians overall don’t perceive immigrants and foreigners as a threat, as long as they are portrayed as assimilating. But to SDOs, assimilation of the foreign is to be feared because it undermines the established hierarchical boundaries of division. So, while conservative Republican partisans indeed have higher rates of authoritarianism, it is primarily SDOs, if with the help of authoritarians, that rule the two-party state, which of course includes the corruption of the transpartisan and cross-administration deep state (CIA, FBI, Homeland Security, etc). This is how occasional token minorities and poor individuals can become politicians, presidents, administration figures, Supreme Court judges, intelligence agents, etc; while oppression of the masses remains, actual meritocracy is neutralized, and the banana republic goes on.

Populism, at its heart, is the simple insistence that it doesn’t have to be this way, that something better is possible, must be possible. Now whether populism takes beneficial or harmful form is dependent on how much pushback the elite give it, and dependent on which counter-elites, reformers and revolutionaries or demagogues and reactionaries, will put their support behind it. It’s a powerful force, but disgruntled populists can get lost down dark paths, just as optimistic populists can lead us toward a brighter future. What determines the outcome is not only what the public demands but also what the elite allows, and as well what the rest of us choose, either for or against the public good. To attack populists as mere right-wing reactionaries and useful idiots would only be to harm ourselves, would be to deny that we too are of the people and that we too share the same fate. Never doubt populism is always a movement of hope. Let us maintain that. Populism is a movement of the populace, of the people. And we, all of us, are the people. It’s for us to decide what becomes of it, what becomes of the possibility for freedom and betterment.

Homo Cursus, the Running Ape

Homo sapiens are a highly mobile species. Along with opposable thumbs and a specially-designed brain, not to mention a few other nifty capacities, our bipedal locomotion is what makes us uniquely effective as survivors (Human Adaptability and Health). Over long enough distances, particularly in the heat of midday, humans can outrun or run down almost any animal. This is why the earliest humans were persistence hunters, a practice some tribes still use. Humans have been constantly on the move. That is how homo sapiens ended up in nearly every corner of the world. Maybe we should be called homo cursus, instead.

Throughout our life, we’ve always been into running. As a kid, in being physically active and athletic, we were one of the fastest kids in our class; although running is something all kids will do naturally, assuming they aren’t crippled, obese, and/or sickly (that the present generation of kids does little running around doesn’t bode well). We continued playing soccer, a sport requiring leg fitness like few others, into high school. And running has remained one of our favorite activities. Though a relaxed and meditative jog is most enjoyable, we’ve also gotten back into the habit of doing wind sprints, a variation of high-intensity interval training (HIIT), something we used to do in soccer practice.

Being in shape does make one feel good, no minor positive outcome considering the epidemic of mood disorders in this modern age of stress and sickliness. And there is nothing quite like cardio exercise, in particular. There is no doubt about the health benefits, in decreasing the risk of nearly every category of disease, even if one can’t outrun a bad diet (besides, there are better ways for losing excess body fat). But aerobic exercise is also nice simply in having the full lung capacity for everyday breathing; let us just say that oxygen is a good thing and the more of it generally the better. Energy, alertness, and stamina is another a nice bonus.

There are still other potential benefits, some being less immediate. It’s recommended to get in shape, if for no other reason than preparing for the unpredictable — none of us knows what the future will bring. As explained in one popular movie, “The first rule of Zombieland: Cardio. When the virus struck, for obvious reasons, the first ones to go were the fatties.” Zombies typically are slow, easily outpaced by a moderate gait, about anything faster than a casual walk. When masses of zombies are everywhere, speed is helpful and endurance is key. Don’t risk fighting zombies when you can otherwise escape; and such escape would be a constant necessity.

Okay, okay. So, you don’t believe in zombies. Let’s say apocalypse is caused by a different global catastrophe, such as mass death from plague or mass destruction of nuclear war. Having good cardio still will be useful for running away from roving gangs of enslavers and cannibals, along with the occasional psychopath and robber, or maybe an invading army; not to mention various mutant creatures, in the case of nuclear apocalypse. Sure, there are plenty of vehicles left behind when most of the population dies off, but they are largely blocking all of the roads and, besides, gasoline eventually runs out (do you really want, as in Road Warrior, to be fighting others over dwindling stores of gasoline?) — you’ll be mostly hoofing it everywhere you go and running will get you there faster.

The Native Americans experienced another kind of apocalypse when Europeans came and kept on coming; bringing with them disease epidemics, genocidal slaughter, and constant terrorism. When horses weren’t available, all that the natives had to rely on was their own bodies. While on foot crossing arid lands and often without water, the freedom fighter Geronimo and his fellow warriors were able to outpace the cavalry of colonial oppressors, defying what Westerners thought was physically possible. He explained that, “I only trust my legs. They’re my only friends.” Don’t knock such praise of legs. The one and only time we were a victim of a violent crime, a mugging, we resorted to running away. He who runs away lives to see another day. It’s a highly recommended solution to almost any problem — try it sometime.

If all else fails, you are still ahead of the game as long as you have your legs, and lung capacity helps. Without civilization to take care of you, once your ability to walk and run is gone, you’re screwed! You don’t necessarily even have to always be the fastest runner, either. Just fast enough. This is emphasized by an old joke. In the movie The Imitation Game, the character Alan Turing (played by Benedict Cumberbatch) tells one version of it: There are two people in a wood, and they run into a bear. The first person gets down on his knees to pray; the second person starts lacing up his boots. The first person asks the second person, ‘My dear friend, what are you doing? You can’t outrun a bear. To which the second person responds, ‘I don’t have to. I only have to outrun you.'” Such wise words!

The naysayers will complain. They’ll say, But you can’t outrun everything. Even with the best cardio, few people survive in near total apocalypse or whatever. Besides, we’re all going to die anyway. Why get stressed out about it? Maybe we should just relax, take it easy, and accept an early death. Heck, who wants to survive in an apocalypse, anyway? You might as well get taken out earlier than to live through a horrific shit-show of suffering and death, right? That is one response and we aren’t here to judge. Indeed, that’s a fair point to make. Not everything is about mere survival.

That is the thing. Running doesn’t have to be always about running from death. Sometimes, it can mean the exact opposite; running right into the face of almost certain demise. In the infamous failed Picket’s Charge of the American Civil War, more than half of the Confederate soldiers died and most of the rest eventually were forced into retreat. Only a few made it across the field of slaughter. One such individual, the only survivor of those he fought with, was kindly helped over the stone wall by the enemy Union soldiers. So, he survived the field of battle only to become a prisoner of war, but his act was still heroic of sorts, if war is almost always meaningless. We should give credit to such an accomplishment. He must’ve had good cardio, one assumes.

It’s not even about necessarily making it across the enemy’s lines, as an heroic achievement against all odds. If you can simply make further than anyone else, it remains a small victory — there is some glory in that, just to see how far you can go before being mowed down. That is the ending to Gallipoli, a movie about World War I. Two friends, both competitive runners, join the military; but only one of them ends up on the frontline. The other guy is trying to get a message back to the commanding officer to stop the attack, while his friend is waiting to be sent over the top. The message comes too late and so, in following orders, he and his fellow soldiers enter no man’s land. He sprints at full speed, until he takes machine fire to the chest. The point is he got further than anyone else. He presumably would’ve died as one of the fastest sprinting casualties in the whole war. That is something.

We don’t have to go to such dark places, though. Running is even more wonderful in relation to celebration of victory. Take the famous example of Pheidippides. When the Greeks defeated the Persians in battle at the town of Marathon, he ran all of the way to Athens, 25 miles away, so as to deliver the message of victory; that was after having already run 150 miles to Sparta, to rally support, and back again in the prior days. Then he collapsed from exhaustion and died on the spot. But, hey, sometimes one gets carried away with the excitement. Now he shall be remembered for all time. Not bad for a simple messenger, although to be a military messenger in the ancient Greek world was to be a member of an elite corps (Dean Karnazes, The Real Pheidippides Story).

Running, like sports in general, has been a way for individuals, in particular the lowly, to challenge and prove themselves; often when few other opportunities are available. That is seen with Alan Sillitoes’ book The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Runner (1959), later adapted to a movie (1962), and still later to inspire an Iron Maiden song (2012). In the story, the protagonist, after being imprisoned, finds a love of running — he uses it as a way of self-determination and defiance. Death doesn’t always have to occur to attain personal greatness. Generally speaking, most of us want to live as long as we can and good aerobic fitness will help in that regard. There are many reasons to go for a run, jog, and spring, or go on a marathon

Whether escaping zombies or facing a storm of bullets or locked away in prison, take it like a man (or a woman) while on your feet. Better yet, run simply as an expression of being human, for the joy of it. That seems like a good philosophy of life. Be as healthy as you can, until the bitter end or, if possible, until the happy end. The average hunter-gatherer doesn’t reach their physical peak of running ability until their 40s and 50s, yet many modern urbanites these days begin experiencing major health decline by their 30s (Millennials Are Hitting Old Age In Their Thirties). One is better off having a long healthspan, to whatever age, than to have a long lifespan in a state of disease, disability, and decline. Just keep active for as long as you can. Death really is nothing more than the final act of no longer moving.

The Ground of Our Being Touches Us

“The foot feels the foot when the foot feels the ground.”

That quote by Ernest Wood is often misattributed to the Buddha. And it does express a Buddhist-like thought. Take the notion of co-touching from the Samyukta Nikaya:

“Who touches not is not touched. Touching he is touched.”

That being “touched by touch” (Thag vs.783) is a part of dependent co-arising and the bundle theory of mind, both central tenets of Buddhism (Robert Alvarado, The Foot Feels the Foot When It Feels the Ground). The separate, autonomous, and self-willed egoic-consciousness is not fundamentally real.

Everything that exists does so not as a ‘thing’ but as a feeling, a process, a movement, and a relationship. The self or any part of the self (e.g., the foot) emerges in awareness through interaction with the experienced world and perceived other. This is the sensory and social world as the ground of our being.

One theory in social science suggests that humans develop a theory of mind about others first before internalizing it as a self concept. So, the self is the introjected other. It’s similar to Lev Vygotsky’s private speech or self-talk, as a precursor to inner speech, that is the child’s imitation of adults talking to the child (Speaking Is Hearing).

We all begin life by first talking to ourselves as an other. And we carry this into adulthood. When you talk to yourself, who are you talking to and who is doing the talking? The other forever defines us, as if if the ground were to leave a print on our foot.

To the mind, the developing mind most of all, the world around us provides affordances (James J. Gibson) for actions and other behavior (The Embodied Spider; & “…just order themselves.”). These are known more for what they make possible and allow than for what they supposedly are, their socially constructed thingness.

We never know the world except as our experience of the world, since there is no self to know or experience without the world. The world is the primal self. The self is in and of the world. There is nowhere else to be.

That is why there is no foot in and of itself within awareness, no Platonic ideal of a ‘foot’, not without the ground that affords the foot the capacity to express it’s instinctual nature of footness. If one were to be so cruel as to completely bind an infant’s foot so that it could never move, it would shrivel up into crippled paralysis with little if any sensation.

The very sense of self would be constrained and the lesser for it. To emphasize this point, consider that the infant that is not touched at all simply dies. A foot is the touch and movement of the foot in relation to the ground. We aren’t separate from the world, not outside it, but immersed in it and an extension of it.

We need touch. We are touch. We touch by being touched.

“My hand, foot, and head behavior…are almost in a different world. In touching something, I am touched; in turning my head, the world turns to me; in seeing, I am related to a world I immediately obey in the sense of driving on the road and not on the sidewalk. And I am not [reflectively] conscious of any of this. And certainly not logical about it. I am caught up, unconsciously enthralled, if you will, in a total interacting reciprocity of stimulation.”
~Micah Allen & Gary Williams, Consciousness, plasticity, and connectomics

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There are two ways you can demonstrate such truths to yourself. The first method is to practice meditation and mindfulness for years, preferably under the guidance of a religious or spiritual teacher, guru, etc. That is arguably worth the effort. But it does require commitment, effort, and sacrifice; and, admittedly, most of us feel too lazy to try.

If you just want to get a small taste of it, sit or stand completely still while softly and unblinkingly gazing at an unchanging visual field (e.g., an indoor wall). Give it a minute or so and your entire vision will go blank, not even go black but simply to disappear as an experience. Sensory perception is dependent on movement and change, either in the environment or from our bodies.

There is another self-experiment one can do. The above quote about the foot feeling the ground can be taken literally. Take your shoes off and actually feel the ground. Walk around your lawn. Maybe even go for a jog, if you have somewhere nice and safe for your tender feet. Try that for a few weeks or a few months. Being barefoot is the normal state of humanity, quite likely what Ernest Wood was doing when he had the above thought.

Feel what it’s like to not have your feet bound and numbed in tight shoes, thick soles, and synthetic materials. Feel what it’s like to be electromagnetically grounded, physically connected, and sensorily in relationship to the earth. The affordance of the earth is far different than the affordance (or rather unaffordance) of modern footwear.

Each will elicit different ways of inhabiting one’s body, moving in the world, and perceiving reality; maybe even altering one’s very sense of identity. Then contemplate all the thousands of other ways we are disconnected, distracted, and numbed from direct sensory experience of the natural world. That is how the isolated self is socially constructed, supported, and maintained. These rigid boundaries of self are the defensive walls of egoic consciousness.

* * *

It’s interesting to consider the fact that Buddhism arose in an environment where most people in the past walked around barefoot, since is its a warmer clime and industrialization took hold much more slowly. That is true of other religious traditions, like Hinduism and animism, that question or refute or simply never acknowledge the ego-self. Would the bundle theory of mind even occur in a society where everyone had worn shoes for centuries or millennia?

Even Western philosophers like David Hume who have written about the bundle theory of mind, as some argue, likely learned of it from Christian missionaries having returned from the East. These were ideas that apparently never originated in the West or, if they did, it was so long ago they were forgotten; maybe back when Europe was still tribal and animistic, back when footwear would’ve been more akin to a moccasin that doesn’t desensitize the foot.

Shoes are only needed in colder regions, such as  Europe and North America; and only needed on rough ground, such as plowed fields. Maybe that is a causal or contributing factor to such a strong tradition of egoic individualism developing there. The European and American traditions of Christianity fear and disparage connection to nature. Maybe a long history of wearing shoes has predisposed people to that experience and worldview, identity and way of being.

That reminds one of the WEIRD cultural bias (Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, Democratic) that correlates to a unique profile of personality traits and social behaviors. One researcher and writer on the topic, Joseph Henrich (The WEIRDest People in the World), argues for various causes for this development in the modern West, from Catholic marriage laws to literacy rates. But maybe footwear should be added to this list.

Written laws and written texts are examples of media that are made possible by media technology (e.g., bound books and moveable type printing presses). Footwear likewise mediates our sensory experience of reality and hence footwear could be considered a media technology. It shapes not only the foot but also the foot-mind-eye axis, as a core dynamic function within the body-mind-world axis — proprioception and perception.

Besides Joseph Henrich, numerous others have theorized about mediated reality: Marshall McLuhan, E. R. Dodds, Bruno Snell, Julian Jaynes, Eric Havelock, etc. But the main focus has been on language, specifically written language. That is important in a literary culture with high rates of literacy. Nonetheless, footwear have been more central and earlier introduced to Western culture. And it’s the modern thick, bulky, and constraining shoe that has become so common over the past few centuries, in relation to our altering the environment so that such protective footwear is needed.

* * *

This post is another ripple in a river of thought. We’ve been slowly building upon a theory about the physical aspects of social constructivism: the infrastructure and apparatuses and systems that shape and confine us, the lifeway patterns and pathway dependencies that predetermine and preclude our individual and collective behaviors, the ideological interpellation that hails us with voices of authority and authorization, the metonymic and metaphorical framings that came with changes in media technology.

This involves agricultural system, food laws, and dietary ideology; land reform as moral reform and substance control as social control. One can show an increasing shift, across recent millennia (particularly starting in the axial Age but speeding up in modernity), from non-addictive psychedelics and evolutionarily-consistent foods to addictive sedatives, stimulants, and high-carb foods (alcohol, opium, cocaine, tea, coffee, sugar cane, grains, etc).

All of these things, it can be argued, rigidified psychological and social boundaries. Yet no single factor alone would likely have made possible and probable the emergence of the post-bicameral, post-axial, and post-traditional hyper-individualistic Jaynesian egoic consciousness of the body-mind as isolated-subject and container-object. It was also the continuing development along each technological line that forced the transformation.

Footwear has been around for millennia, whereas more recent is the invention of shoes that are highly-restrictive, thick-soled, and synthetically non-conductive.  Similarly, language existed for millennia prior to writing, bound books, printing presses, e-books, email, texting, etc. Even written language operated far back in the archaic world but only in a minimalistic fashion, primarily as bureaucratic accounting, before it ever developed into literacy as we know it. There are still other tools of identity formation like transitional objects (teddy bears, pacifiers, etc) that were or are not common in premodern or non-WEIRD societies.

The development and accrual of changes formed slowly, if the results sometimes only fully erupted following a triggering point (e.g., Bronze Age collapse). Those eruptions allowed for a destabilizing or destruction of some former pathway dependencies, in order to lay down new foundations, but always using the material of what came before. Still, some pathway dependencies were so entrenched they remained; if reshaped, restructured, and repurposed (e.g., written text).

This area of study also overlaps with with issues of physical health, mental health, and public health. Specifically, there is an interesting history of how dietary systems and food laws (e.g., Christianized Galenic humoralism) were used to enforce identity, culture, and social order. There has been an ongoing change in what is eaten that during modernity has led to disease epidemics, health crises, and moral panics. The relationship between diet and identity might’ve been more well appreciated in the past.

These contemplations are also mixed up with the study of archaic and ancient societies, along with the anthropological literature on animistic tribes. This particularly focuses on the transitional period from the late Bronze Age and it’s collapse to the Axial Age and the resultant post-Axial world. During the Bronze Age, there was what Julian Jaynes called the bicameral mind, a type of bundled mind, with voice-hearing traditions. Growth of size and complexity of the Mediterranean empires in the late Bronze Age is what caused their collapse, as overwhelmed by decades of natural disasters, refugee crises, and marauders.

That is what cleared the board to make way for the Axial Age, although the changes had already begun in the Bronze Age (e.g., written laws). One of the changes that didn’t happen until the Axial Age was the systematization of agriculture where former weedy farm fields became the focus of more intensive and controlled farming. This increased dependable surplus yields and so provided more agricultural foods in the diet, but it also meant better pest control, including eliminating most of the ergot that would take over unmanaged fields.

Ergot, as a psychedelic, was inevitably consumed on a more regular basis prior to this ancient agricultural reform, often unintentionally but sometimes on purpose as part of rituals. Interestingly, coinciding with lessening it in the food supply was also the appearance of cultivars of addictive substances like opium, sugar cane, etc. In Europe, there was a ‘regression’ after the fall of the Roman Empire. Some knowledge and practice of agricultural management was forgotten, as fields returned to being weedy again. Following that was what appears to have been regular mass ergot intoxications and sometimes deadly dancing manias, what is called ergotism or St. Anthony’s Fire.

Later agricultural reforms eliminated ergot again. Yet other psychedelics persisted in European culture. Medieval church imagery often portrays fly agaric ‘magic’ mushrooms. Such imagery continued into early modernity, as seen in Christmas cards.

* * *

Related to dietary practices and the food system, there is another connection that could be made. There were also agricultural differences between East and West. One study sought to discern agricultural differences as linked to socio-cultural and socio-cognitive differences. Yes, it’s true that Westerners grow more wheat and Easterners more rice; and it’s true that these agricultural systems require different relational patterns and practices. Wheat farming can be done by a single man with a plow, but rice farming requires numerous people working together and is more labor intensive in requiring twice as many hours of work. Furthermore, rice-growing communities have to collectively build and cooperatively maintain infrastructure (dikes and canals) for water management and irrigation.

Some have speculated that this constructs, encourages, and enforces divergent cultural identities and ways of thinking. This might be what underlies the stereotypical contrast between Eastern and Western thought. The former focuses more holistically, interdependently, and concretely on environment, background, and relationships; and the latter focuses more analytically, atomistically, and abstractly on the individual, foreground, and action. Also, descendants of rice-growers are more loyal to friends and family; while descendants of wheat-growers have more successful patents for new inventions. The thing is we don’t need to stop there with a simple hypothesis of causal link, since we can control some of the potential confounders by making a comparison within a single country, though still other confounders remained uncontrolled.

Wheat and other cereal crops (e.g., millet) are also grown in parts of Asia, specifically in northern China; while southern Chinese are rice farmers. Multiple studies have been done in comparing and contrasting the personalities, cultures, social practices, etc of these two agricultural populations. Even in the East, wheat farmers are more individualistic and rice farmers more communal. But also the same divide is seen in thinking styles with the Asian wheat farmers, as with European wheat farmers, in being more likely to use linear thought in focusing on isolated objects and subjects in the foreground while not noticing much about the overall context.

To return to the topic at hand, it might be useful to look at other aspects of what differentiates the two. Are Chinese wheat farmers more likely than Chinese rice farmers to wear shoes or boots more often and to wear shoes or boots with thicker soles and narrow enclosed toe boxes, as opposed to wearing thin, open-toed sandals or going barefoot? One suspects that would be the case.

It wouldn’t only be that the dirt clods of wheat fields are harder on the feet than the soft mud of rice patties. The colder climate of northern China would require wearing thicker shoes for a large part of the year for protection against coldness, discomfort, and frostbite. Interestingly, a similar pattern is seen in Europe as well with the concentration of wheat farming countries in the north with their long history of Protestant-style individualism, as contrasted to southern European Catholicism and communalism. A better and more comparable example is the United States.

Wheat-farming, of course, has been practiced in the northern states for a long time; but also rice-farming has been common in a large swath of the Deep South, what is called the Rice Belt. Similar to southern China, “even when the correlations were examined only within the Deep and Peripheral South, the correlations of collectivism with cotton and rice production remained strong” (Dov Cohen, Patterns of Individualism and Collectivism Across the United States). That is strong supporting evidence. To link it back to the main topic, for most of Southern history in the US, going barefoot was far more common. That has contributed to greater hookworm rates, as this parasite tends to enter through the sole of the foot from infested soil. Also, note that wheat-farming and industrialization has been concentrated in the northern states, as was the case in northern Europe. Industrialization, by the way, is the letter ‘I’ in the WEIRD acronym; and maybe the letter ‘W’ for Western could equally represent wheat-farming.

When we think of farming cultures and practices as affecting identity, personality, and mentality, we rarely think about what people are physically wearing as being causally significant or even relevant. But consider that the person in a colder climate is not only more likely to have restrictive, binding, and thick footwear but also restrictive, binding, and thick clothing and outdoor gear. Maybe it’s no mere coincidence that, for example, many animistic tribes with their extremes of a bundled mind tend to go barefoot entirely and often to barely wear any clothing at all, other than maybe a breech cloth (e.g., Piraha). Even among farming societies, some where heavy, cumbersome clothing and others lighter and looser (e.g., the sarong common in the East).

It is interesting how much our society, particularly among intellectuals and scholars (i.e., the literary elite), is obsessed with language and, most of all, written language. We have the most literary culture that has ever existed since language was invented. And it’s precisely populations with high rates of literacy that are the most WEIRD, to the extent that brain scans shows it alters the development of brain structure and neurocognition (see Joseph Henrich).

As such, we Weirdos see everything through language and text (e.g., this post here), and so that is the primary lens through which we understand the world and humanity. There is an obsession with the study of language, from text to new media: philology, postmodernism, linguistic relativity, metaphor theory, etc. So, language and the media of language gets disproportionate credit and blame for much of the changes, problems, and advancements in society. The differences between the cultures and mentalities of East and West are often placed within a linguistic frame.

But even when language isn’t the focus, what we emphasize is often something else that is equally less tangible. When farming is studied, what researchers tend to isolate out as causal are how people relate and act within different agricultural systems, the kind of thing that is harder to measure objectively. Oddly, it almost never occurs to them to think about the most basic and concrete factors like what is grown and eaten in affecting the body-mind, despite the vast knowledge we’ve accrued in nutrition studies. Diets determine nutritional profiles and biological functioning, one of the most powerful affects on neurocognitive development.

Or consider how one of the most transformative changes in all of human existence was the agricultural revolution in general, no matter if wheat or rice or whatever else. It increased size and concentration of human populations, increased size and concentration of domesticated animal populations, and increased contact between humans and animals. It also increased pathogen exposure and parasite load, both of which research shows to raise the measures of social conservatism and authoritarianism, insularity and collectivism, which are not only correlated to social behaviors but also altered personality traits (low openness, high conscientiousness, etc) and brain structure (e.g., larger amygdala).

Pathogen and parasite levels do follow a regional pattern as well, more near the Equator and less the further away; although this can’t entirely explain the agricultural differences. Thomas “Talhelm’s study found that Chinese students who lived just south or just north of the rice-wheat divide were as different from each other as students from the far south and the far north. And he noted rice-producing Japan scores uniformly high on the collectivist scale, even though the country is cooler and wealthier than most of China” (Bryan Walsh, In China, Personality Could Come Down to Rice Versus Wheat). Even rice-growing islands in the north fall in line with the southern pattern of behavior and personality (X. Dong, T. Talhelm, & X. Ren, Teens in Rice County Are More Interdependent and Think More Holistically Than Nearby Wheat County). Do people in all Chinese rice-growing populations, whether south or north, have similar footwear?

On the other hand, Walsh writes, “The rice theory isn’t foolproof. It’s almost certain that none of the young Chinese college students participating in Talhelm’s study have any direct experience with wheat or rice farming, which raises the question of how these psychological values are transmitted.” Maybe it’s not entirely about who is growing which crop and how it is grown, as part of a socio-cultural order. Instead, it’s possible that more important is who is eating which crop. Chinese, in general, are less individualistic than Westerners, no matter which region they live in. The simplest explanation could be that, as part of a national food system, all Chinese on average eat more rice and less wheat than Westerners. It might be about nutritional differences in each crop (e.g., gluten).

Then again, it could be something else not directly related to the crop or diet. Different kinds of farming in different environments and climates will incur different public health conditions and hence different physical health of individuals. The contrast between rice and wheat farmers goes far beyond merely how people socially organize within an agricultural system or what they eat within a food system. After all, what kind of footwear one wears or does not wear depends entirely on the agricultural system and all that is involved with it, such as infrastructure, housing, etc. Enclosed footwear, for example, could be protective against parasites and pathogens when the ground is covered in human and animal feces. So, it would depend also on the animal side of the farming equation.

None of the studies that we’ve seen, however, have ever been concerned with or curious about these kinds of confounding factors. This is a vast cultural blind spot. We forget that we are embodied minds that are co-extensive with the physical world around us, not to mention bundled minds in a bundled world. It rarely, if ever, occurs to us to think about something so simple as what we are wearing. Yet footwear, like a thousand other unrecognized factors, potentially has immense impact on us.

Spend some time observing people with modern synthetic shoes. Most of them walk stiffly, awkwardly, and often flat-footed; not to mention demonstrating an unbalanced and ungrounded way of physically holding themselves. Obviously, many people aren’t comfortable in their own bodies, absolute the opposite of barefoot indigenous people. Maybe simple things like footwear affect us far more profoundly than we are aware of, to the point of affecting our ability to grasp the Buddhist truth that to touch is to be touched.

Also, the combination of other unacknowledged factors could create a greater influence than any single factor alone. It would be a cumulative effect over a lifetime. So, yes, shoes will stunt and distort the bone and soft tissue development of the feet. There would be a lack of musculature and mobility that would make one prone to injury, not only in the feet but also from the stress caused in how it would throw off the movement of other joints, particularly the knees and hips. The feet are the foundation of the body, the contact and connecting point between body and world, and hence the mediating point in the sense of the embodied and enworlded self.

Diet and nutrition could exacerbate problems related to the feet and everything influenced by it. Dr. Weston A. Price, for example, observed that populations with deficiencies in fat-soluble vitamins had worse bone development: thin bones, asymmetrical features, narrow shoulders, narrow chests, caved-in chests, narrow jaws, crowded teeth, etc. But this also affected the bones in the feet: pigeon toes, flat feet, etc. This probably would make the feet narrower like all the rest.

Combine that with further squishing the feet even narrower into confining shoes. Most modern people are being crippled from a young age. We modern Westerners feel morally superior than the premodern Chinese who bound the feet of girls, and yet we also bind the feet of not only girls but also boys and then continue to do so into adulthood. No doubt, the premodern Chinese bound girls feet precisely because it alters behavior and is used for the social constructivism of particular personality traits and social roles, maybe not unlike hobbling a horse to make it more calm and controllable.

What might our own practice of foot-binding have on the entire population? When we personally observe or scientifically study our fellow humans, we tend to look to their faces, heads, arms, and upper bodies; in terms of their gaze, expression, tone of voice, gestures, etc. That is what we think most as defining who a person is, whereas their lower body of hips, legs, and feet is secondary as almost a mere extension of the upper body. We might be wiser to spend more time looking down to the literal ground of our being.

Wheat versus Rice:

Relating Well

Here is what one can learn about relating well by spending a lot of time around non-human animals, in particular. But all of it also involves and is applicable to human animals as well. This is based on our personal experience with animals of all sorts. These rules even more strongly apply to smaller animals like cats where there is a size and strength imbalance. Then again, wariness and circumspection is common in relating to others in general, across species divides or not, at least until a personal relationship is developed. Sometimes we easily connect with individuals while, at other times, it might take months or years to be allowed into someone’s personal world. But it all begins with simple behaviors in acting friendly. Below are guidelines to keep in mind, as gathered over a lifetime:

  1. Trust has to be developed and all relationships are about trust. Win over the trust of the other by acting and exhibiting that you are trustworthy. Be confident in your body and in the world, but don’t be intimidating, aggressive, confrontational, pushy, intense, or overwhelming. Be relaxed in that confidence, be relaxed in your body-mind. Soften your awareness and defocus or broaden your gaze. Open up all of your senses and take in the full experience of being in the presence of another. Let a smile naturally come to your face, a smile that includes the eyes, if the mood is right.
  2. Meet them on their level and get inside their space or mentality, sometimes literally and directly but often instead easing your way sideways. Observe what they do, how they act and interact, how they inhabit the world, and how they hold themselves. This requires close observation, empathy, and intuition. Sense your way into what it feels like to be that other. Viscerally imagine what it would be like to be inside their body. Seek rapport and resonance, sometimes by mimicking their behavior, body language, gestures, breathing, etc but without mockery. If needed, make yourself appear smaller or otherwise in conformance to the physicality of the other.
  3. Center yourself in positive intent and express positive regard. Fully empathize with the other. Embody, emanate, and communicate loving-kindness. Feel it in yourself, in your entire body. Allow your muscles to relax, your breathing to slow. Create a shared psychic space of relating. This requires openness and vulnerability in allowing yourself to be seen. Don’t hold back your emotion in fear of being judged or rejected. Be tender-hearted with genuine compassionate concern and attentive interest.
  4. Speak with focused intent to that other and, if you know it, use their name. Make sure you have their attention in return. Use whatever verbal and non-verbal communication necessary. And be acutely aware of the response you’re getting. Accommodate and change in each moment. Seek to elicit a positive response, however slight or subtle. Encourage two-way engagement, a sense of mutual regard. If the other communicates in whatever form, listen with your whole being and maybe even use active listening. Express back what they are expressing or otherwise indicate you’re heard and acknowledge it while holding a space of trust and safety, of kind-heartedness.
  5. Look for openings as invitations of relating more deeply. If possible and appropriate without offense or discomfort, make physical contact such as greeting them by shaking their hand, touching their shoulder, or simply being in close proximity. Treat them as you would a family member or an old friend. Enjoy yourself and enjoy their company. Show them that you want to be around them. Don’t be detached and cold, but be ready to back off if your advances are not welcomed. Trust is often built up over long periods of time. Building a relationship with someone new, whether a stranger or a stray, is a process. The initial meeting is often a mere acknowledgement. Patience is key.

We won’t claim to be experts about any of this. Admittedly, our success rate is low with human animals. It is far easier to accomplish relating well with certain domesticated species of non-human animals, of course. There is an upfront simplicity to relating to a cat, dog, parakeet, guinea pig, etc. Much of it extremely simple like speaking softly and maybe raising the pitch of one’s voice slightly. Really listen to yourself as if hearing from the perspective of another. What do you sound like? How would you feel and respond if someone spoke to you that way?

Such advice as entering the space with a sideways approach can often be taken literally, particularly with animals like cats and horses. Actually, stand or sit with the side of your body toward them and/or else with your eyes averted (with cats, try squinting and blinking slowly as you occasionally gaze at them). That can work with humans as well (think of two friends relaxing in chairs next to one another while sharing a view), although in some cultures one more often faces another directly when talking. A sideways posture is merely one possible way to show relaxation and hence trust, but other ways can include drinking a cup of tea, clasping one’s hands, sitting on the ground, grooming behaviors, etc.

It’s always important to sense what a particular individual expects and is used to, specifically in any given context and conditions. So, there are no hard and fast rules, just suggestions of things to try and ways of thinking. Every relationship is an ongoing experiment and exploration. What worked in the past might not work in the present. It’s too easy to get stuck in mindless habits and not fully appreciate the other individual as they are in the moment. Take it all as a mindfulness practice. Loosen your hold on the egoic identity. Reality is always about relationship, and relationship is always about a greater sense of inclusionary experience and identity.

When we were younger, a New Agey lady we knew would pet houseflies and she said she did it by sending them loving vibes. It worked, whatever she was doing, as the houseflies would always sit still. We can’t claim such an ability with insects, but we know it works well with so many other forms of life. It’s simply connecting to another being. In our experience as biological lifeforms, there is nothing like another biological lifeform to act as a biofeedback machine, in helping one to learn how to get into a particular affective state and mindset. Most important, there is something about relating gently that is at the heart of relating well, no matter the nature of the relationship. If nothing else, it’s a nice ideal to aspire toward.

The Great WEIRDing of the Jaynesian Ego-Mind as a Civilizational Project

“Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do.”
~ Luke 23:34

“I’m supposed to act like they aren’t here. Assuming there’s a ‘they’ at all. It may just be my imagination. Whatever it is that’s watching, it’s not human, unlike little dark eyed Donna. It doesn’t ever blink. What does a scanner see? Into the head? Down into the heart? Does it see into me, into us? Clearly or darkly? I hope it sees clearly, because I can’t any longer see into myself. I see only murk. I hope for everyone’s sake the scanners do better. Because if the scanner sees only darkly, the way I do, then I’m cursed and cursed again. I’ll only wind up dead this way, knowing very little, and getting that little fragment wrong too.”
~ A Scanner Darkly (movie)

Let us explore the strangeness of human nature and what it means in our society. For practical purposes, this will require us to use the examples of other people. The simple reason is that certain behavioral and identity patterns are easier to see in others than in ourselves. So, just because our present focus is turned outward, it does not imply that we are standing above in judgment, that we are casting the first stone. We will safely assume that, like all humans, we lack the requisite self-awareness to always see clearly what we do and how what we do is more inconsistent than we would prefer. The following is not about the moral failure of individuals but a reckoning with our shared species-being. The most blatant example we are aware of, in our personal experience, is that of someone we have known for about a quarter of a century. We have on multiple occasions, along with others present to confirm it, observed her say something to one person and then, upon walking into the next room, immediately say something completely contradictory to someone else. She seemed oblivious to the fact that she was still in ear-shot of those she just spoke to, suggesting it was not a consciously intentional act of deceit and manipulation. In all the years we’ve known her, she has repeated this behavior many times and she has never shown any indication of understanding what she did or any memory of what transpired. It’s as if she had been two different people, in apparently not carrying a portable and unchanging internal ego structure from one place to the next.

Along with other behaviors, this has led us to suspect she has borderline personality disorder or something along those lines, whatever one might call it; not that she has ever been diagnosed and it must be stated that, in her own perception, she thinks she is completely sane. But psychiatric diagnoses and debates about them are irrelevant for our purposes here. Indeed, maybe she is sane and labeling something does not protect us from what it represents, does not quarantine the perceived mental disease. The issue at hand implicates us all. What we’re discussing here has everything to do with how memory operates, with the narratives we create in retelling memories, forgetting them, and forming new ones. The same lady above, it might be noted, is talented at shaping narratives, not only in her own mind but in the moment of relating to others and so projecting those narratives onto the world, such as staging melodramatic conflicts (typical according to descriptions of borderline personality disorder; when an inner boundaries can’t be maintained, one turns to creating external boundaries in the world by projecting onto others and then controlling them). And she is masterful in creating and controlling her social media persona. The point for bringing all of this up is that, even if her case is extreme and obvious, that kind of thing is surprisingly not abnormal. All of us do similar things, if most of us are better at covering our tracks. We’ve come across numerous other examples over the years from a diversity of people.

Often memory lapses happen in more subtle ways, not always involving overt inconsistency. Amnesia can operate sometimes in maintaining consistency. One guy we know has a strange habit of how he eats. It’s so extremely methodical and constrained. He’ll pick up his fork, place a piece in his mouth, lay down the fork, and carefully chew for an extraordinary amount of time, as if he were counting the number of times chewed. It’s very much unnatural, that is to say we could tell it was trained into him at some point. We pointed this out to him and he didn’t realize he was doing anything unusual, but his wife told us she knew why he did it. Many years earlier, he had told her that his mother had made him thoroughly chew his food as a child and, indeed, she was a strict woman as he has shared with us. The thing is, even when told of this memory he once shared with his wife, he still could not remember it — it was gone and, along with it, any understanding about the origins of his behavior. The memory of his mother’s voice telling him what to do is absent, whereas the authoritative command of her voice still echoes in his mind. An external authorization is internalized as part of the individual ego-mind and simply becomes part of an unquestionable self-identity.

To emphasize the power this holds over the mind, realize this goes far beyond only one particular behavior as his entire identity is extremely controlled (controlled by his egoic willpower or by the authorizing voice of his mother repeating in his unconscious?). He had forgotten something from his childhood that has continued to unconsciously determine his behavioral identity. It was a total memory lapse; and maybe the erasure wasn’t accidental but an important mechanism of identity formation, in creating the sense of an unquestionable psychological realism, the way he takes himself to be as inborn character. It absolutely fascinates us. That kind of forgetting we’ve noticed so many times before. Let us share another incident involving a different married couple, one we’ve also known for a very long time. The husband told us of when his wife went looking for a dog at an animal shelter and he accompanied her. According to him, she told the shelter worker who helped them about how she had gotten her first dog, but the husband explained to us that she had made it up or rather she had told him an alternative version previously, whichever one was correct or whether either was. When he confronted her about this creative storytelling, she simply admitted that it was not true and she had made it up. As he told it, her manner treated the admission like it was irrelevant or insignificant, and so she offered no explanation for why she did it. She just shrugged it off, as if it were normal and acceptable behavior.

Yet it’s entirely possible that the whole situation was beyond her full self-awareness even in the moment of being confronted, similar to the case with the first woman mentioned above. Directly confronting someone does not always induce self-awareness and social-awareness, as identity formations are powerful in protecting against conflicting and threatening information. Amusingly, when we later brought up the animal shelter incident to the husband, he had zero recall of the event and having shared it with us. These transgressions of memory and identity come and go, sometimes for everyone involved. Let’s return to the first couple. There was another situation like this. The husband told us that his wife had been pro-choice when she was younger, but now she is rabidly anti-choice and calls those who are pro-choice baby-killers. This guy told us about this on multiple occasions and so obviously it had been something on his mind for years. Like all of us, he could see the inconsistency in another, in this case a woman he had been married to for more than a half century. He is an honest person and so we have no reason to doubt his claim, specifically as he himself is also now anti-choice (did he always hold this position or did he likewise unconsciously change his memory of political identity?)

The husband told us that his wife no longer remembered her previous position or presumably the self-identity that held it and the reasons for holding it; likely having originated in her childhood upbringing in a working class family that was Democratic and Protestant (note that, until the culture wars heated up in the 1980s, most American Protestants were pro-choice; in opposition to anti-choice Catholics at a time when anti-Catholic bigotry was still strong; by the way, her Democratic father hated Catholics). Not long after, when discussing this with him on another occasion, he stated that he had no memory of ever having told us this. The thing is this couple has become fairly far right, fear-mongering, conspiratorially paranoid, and harshly critical in their older age. They weren’t always this way, as we knew them when they were younger. Though they always have been conservative as an identity, they both once were relatively moderate and socially liberal; prior to the rise of right-wing and alt-right media (Fox News, Epoch Times, Rush Limbaugh, Laura Schlessinger, Jordan Peterson, etc). The husband used to be far less intellectual and, in his younger days, instead of reading books about religion and politics he read Time Magazine and Playboy. In their early marriage, they attended liberal churches, had pot-smoking friends, and were committed to a worldview of tolerance and positive thinking.

Over the decades, they had re-scripted their identity, according to a powerful right-wing propaganda machine (i.e., the Shadow Network started by Paul Weyrich, initially funded by the Coors family, and ushered in by President Ronald Reagan), to such a degree that it erased all evidence to the contrary — their former selves having been scrubbed from personal memory. So, it’s not only that they’ve dramatically changed their politics over their lifetimes but that they no longer remember who they used to be and so now will deny they were ever anything other than far right ultra-conservatives. The change has been so dramatic that they probably wouldn’t like their younger selves, if they could meet; and their younger selves might be appalled by what they’d become. It does get one thinking. To what degree do all of us change in such a manner with similar obliviousness? How would we know if we did? We are unlikely to see it in ourselves. And often those around us won’t notice either or else won’t mention it to us. There is typically a mutual agreement to not poke at each other’s illusions, particularly when illusions are shared, entwined, or overlapping. It’s a conspiracy of silence guarded by a paralyzing fear of self-awareness. Unravelling our own narratives or those of others can be dangerous, and people will often lash out at you for they will perceive you as attacking their identity.

[(7/9/22) Note: We recently talked to this man again about his wife and their early lives. He admitted that he wasn’t always anti-choice, in claiming he was undecided for the first 40-50 years of his life. He claims to only have become anti-choice in the 1990s — one might add, after years of rabid right-wing indoctrination from culture war propaganda (i.e., angry right-wing talk radio and the Fox News effect). That was the same period he and his wife left same the liberal Unity Church they had raised their children in, and they did so specifically over the issue of same sex marriage, despite the fact that the Unity Church had long been a proponent of LGBTQ rights in doing marriage services for same sex couples. The Unity Church didn’t change. This older couple did. But to their minds, they remained where they were and all the world shifted around them. It is true that the majority of Americans did move far left and continues to move further left, and yet it’s also true that many older Americans in turning reactionary (fearful, paranoid, etc) went far right. To give an example, this man became a Republican because of Barry Goldwater’s libertarianism, but later on Goldwater stated regret that he had opposed an important civil rights bill, even if he had genuine libertarian reasons at the time. Also, Goldwater later came to fear and despise the religious right that this older conservative couple has become identified with. Conveniently, the man in question still holds Goldwater up as a hero while not following his moral and political example. All of this has exaggerated the sense of this couple being out of sync. It also created a further disconnect from their own past selves. The American majority is now more in line with their past selves than now are their older selves. To be in conflict not only with most other people but also with oneself would, indeed, feel like an untenable and intolerable position to find oneself in. That they lash out with a disconcerting sense of uneasiness now is unsurprising.]

This perfectly normal strangeness reminds one of anthropological descriptions of the animistic mind and porous self. In many hunter-gatherer tribes and other traditional societies, self-identity tends to be more open and shifting. People will become possessed by spirits, demons, and ancestors; or they will have a shamanic encounter that alters their being upon receiving a new name. These changes can be temporary or permanent, but within those cultures it is accepted as normal. People relate to whatever identity is present without any expectation that individual bodies should be inhabited continuously by only a single identity for an entire lifetime. Maybe this animistic psychology has never really left us, not even with the destruction of most tribal cultures so long after the collapse of bicameral societies. That other way of being that we try to bury keeps resurfacing. There are many voices within the bundled mind and any one of them has the potential to hail us with the compelling force of archaic-like authorization (Julian Jaynes’ bicameralism meets Louis Althusser’s interpellation). We try to securely segment these voice-selves, but every now and then they are resurrected from the unconscious. Or maybe they are always there influencing us, whether or not we recognize and acknowledge them. We just get good at papering over the anomalies, contradictions, and discontinuities. Julian Jaynes points out that we spend little of our time in conscious activity (e.g., mindless driving in a trance state).

What we are talking about is the human nature that evolved under hundreds of millennia of oral culture. This is distinct from literary culture, a relatively recent social adaptation layered upon the primitive psyche. This deeper ground of our species-being contradicts our highly prized egoic identity. To point out an individual’s inconsistencies, in our culture, is about the same as accusing someone of hypocrisy or lying or worse, possibly mental illness. The thing is maybe even psychiatric conditions like borderline personality disorder are simply the animistic-bicameral mind as distorted within a society that denies it a legitimate outlet and social framework. That said, we shouldn’t dismiss the achievements of the egoic mind, that is to say Jaynesian consciousness (interiorized, spatialized, and narratized). It isn’t a mere facade hiding our true nature. The human psyche is flexible, if within limits. There are genuine advantages to socially constructing the rigid boundaries of the literate ego-mind. This relates to the cultural mindset of WEIRD (Westernized, Educated, Industrialized, Rich and Democratic or pseudo-Democratic). Joseph Henrich, in his book The WEIRDest People in the World, argues that it is literacy that is the main causal factor. He points to research that shows greater amounts of reading, presumably in early life, alter the structure of the brain and the related neurocognition. More specifically, it might be linguistic recursion, the complex structure of embedded phrases, that creates the complexity of abstract thought — this is lacking in some simpler societies and indeed it increases with literacy.

Importantly, what the research on the WEIRD bias tells us is that most people in the world don’t share this extreme variation on the egoic mind and a few remaining populations don’t have an egoic mind at all as they remain fully adapted to the bundled mind, although surely this is changing quickly as most of humanity is becoming some combination of Westernized, modernized, urbanized, and educated; specifically in how literacy spreads and literacy rates go up. We are only now reaching the point of mass global literacy, but it’s still in its early stages. Literacy, for the average person, remains rudimentary. Even in Western countries, the civilizational project of Jaynesian consciousness, in its WEIRDest form, is still partial and not well established. But, in recent centuries, we’ve begun to see the potential it holds and one cannot doubt that it is impressive. The WEIRD egoic mind is obviously distinct in what it makes possible, even in its present imperfections. Studies on WEIRD individuals do show they act differently than the non-WEIRD. Relatively speaking, they are more broadly consistent and abstractly principled (uniform standards and conformist norms), with a perceived inner voice of a supposed independent conscience (as originally reinforced through the moralizing Big Gods that were believed to see into the soul); and that relates to why principled consistency is so idealized in WEIRD society. Even when WEIRD subjects think no one is watching, they are less likely to cheat to help their families than non-WEIRD subjects. And, when asked, they state they’d be less likely to lie in court to protect a loved one. This is what the egoic structure does, as an internalized framework that is carried around with one and remains static no matter the situation. The WEIRD mind is less context-dependent, which admittedly has both strengths and weaknesses.

It’s not clear that this mentality is entirely beneficial, much less sustainable. It might be the case that it never will become fully established and so could always remain wonky, as the above examples demonstrate. The bundled mind is maybe the permanent default mode that we will always fall back into, the moment our egoic defenses are let down. Maintaining the egoic boundaries may simply be too much effort, too much drain on the human biological system, too contrary to human nature. Yet it’s too early to come to that judgment. If and only if we get to a strongly literate society will egoic WEIRDness be able to show what it’s capable of or else its ultimate failure. Consider that, in the US, the youngest generation will be the first ever majority college-educated and hence the first time we will see most of the population fully immersed in literary culture. It’s taken us about three millennia to get to this point, a slow collective construction of this experimental design; and we’re still working out the bugs. It makes one wonder about what might further develop in the future. Some predict a transformation toward a transparent self (integral WEIRD or post-WEIRD?). Certainly, there will be a Proteus effect of mediated experience in shaping identity in new ways. Building off of mass literacy and magnifying its impact, there is the Great Weirding of new media that might become a Great WEIRDing, as there is a simultaneous increase of text, voice, and image. Will the egoic mind be solidified or fall back into the bundled mind?

The challenge for the egoic identity project is that it takes a long time for the external infrastructure of society to be built to support internal structures of identity (e.g., private property and the propertied self), since individualism does not stand alone. That is what modernity has been all about; and most of us have come to take it for granted, in not realizing the effort and costs that went into it and that are continually invested for its maintenance, for good or ill. This is what the Enlightenment Age, in particular, was concerned about. Science and capitalism, democracy and technocracy involve constructing systems that reinforce egoic consistency, principled morality, and perceived objectivity. Liberal proceduralism, within democracy, has been one such system. It’s the attempt to create a legal and political system where all are treated equally, that is to say consistently and systematically. That is far unlike traditional societies where people are intentionally not treated as equal because context of social roles, positions, and identities determine how each person is treated; and that would be especially true of traditional societies where identity is far more fluid and relational, such that how even a single person is treated would vary according to situation. Much of what we think of as corruption in less ‘developed’ countries is simply people acting traditionally; such as what the WEIRD mind calls nepotism and bribery where one treats others primarily according to specific context of concrete relationships and roles, not abstract principles and legalistic code.

Obviously, liberal proceduralism doesn’t always work according to intention or rather the intention is often lacking or superficial. Even conservatives will nod toward liberal proceduralism because, to one degree or another, we are all liberals in a liberal society during this liberal age; but that doesn’t indicate an actual shared commitment to such liberal systems that promote, support, and defend a liberal mindset. Still, sometimes we have to pretend something is real before we might be able to finally manifest it as a shared reality; as a child play-acts what they might become as an adult; or as a revolution of the mind precedes revolution of society and politics, sometimes preceding by a long period of time (e.g., the transition from the English Peasants’ Revolt and the English Civil War to the American Revolution and the American Civil War). This is what we are struggling with, such as with the battle between science and what opposes and undermines it, mixed up with crises of expertise and replication, and involving problems of confirmation bias, backlash effect, etc. The scientific method helps strengthen and shape the egoic structure of mind, helps an individual do what they could not do in isolation. We need systems that create transparency, hold us accountable, incentivize consistency, and allow us to more clearly see ourselves objectively or at least as others can see us, that force us into self-awareness, be that egoic or otherwise.

All of this relates to why it’s so difficult to maintain liberalism, both in society and in the mind; as liberalism is one of the main expressions of the literary WEIRDing of Jaynesian consciousness. Liberalism is an energy-intensive state, similar to what Jaynes argues; a hothouse flower that requires perfect conditions and well-developed structures, such that the hothouse flower requires the hothouse to survive and thrive. Do anything to compromise liberal mentality, from alcohol consumption to cognitive overload, and it instantly regresses back into simpler mindsets such as the prejudicial thinking of the conservative persuasion. This is precisely why inegalitarian right-wingers and reactionaries (including those posing as liberals and leftists, moderates and centrists; e.g., DNC elite) are forever attacking and undermining the very egalitarian foundations of liberal democracy, what makes liberal-mindedness possible at all; and so casting doubt about the radical and revolutionary possibility of the liberal dream. To be fair, there are real reasons for doubt; but the dark alternative of authoritarianism, as advocated on the reactionary right, is not a desirable option to be chosen instead; and there is no easy path open, besides maybe total collapse, for returning to the animistic and bicameral past.

This is a highly problematic dilemma for we have become committed to this societal aspiration and civilizational project, based on centuries and millennia of pathway dependence, layers upon layers upon layers of interlocking cognitive introstructure (metaphorically introjected structure), organizational intrastructure, societal infrastructure, and cultural superstructure. If we come to think this has been the wrong path all along, we’ll be scrambling to find a new way forward or sideways. In the conflict between what we are and what we pretend and hope to be, we will have to come to terms with the world we have collectively created across the generations. But maybe we are not actually schizoid and psychotic in our fumbling in the dark toward coherency, maybe we are not splintered within an internal self and not divided from external reality. If the bundled mind is and will always remain our psychic reality, our selves and identities have never not been pluralistic. Still, we might find a way of integrated balance between the bundled mind and the egoic identity, according to the integralist motto of transcend and include. It might not be a forced choice between two polar positions, a conflict between worldviews where one has to dominate and the other lose, as we’ve treated it so far. Until that changes, we will go on acting insane and denying our insanity, not recognizing in our fear that insanity itself is an illusion. We can never actually go against our own human nature, much less go against reality itself.

“When you know yourselves, then you will be known, and you will know that you are the sons of the living Father. But if you do not know yourselves, then you are in poverty, and you are poverty.”
~ Gospel of Thomas, Saying 3

“Barfield points to an “inwardization,” or a simultaneous intensification and consolidation of subjectivity, that has transpired over the evolution of humanity and whose results characterize the structure of our souls today. In fact, just because of this represents what is normal to us, we hardly notice it, having no foil to set it off.”
~ Max Leyf, Mythos, Logos, and the Lamb of God: René Girard on the Scapegoat Mechanism

“Crazy job they gave me. But if I wasn’t doing it, someone else would be. And they might get it wrong. They might set Arctor up, plant drugs on him and collect a reward. Better it be me, despite the disadvantages. Just protecting everyone from Barris is justification in itself. What the hell am I talking about? I must be nuts. I know Bob Arctor. He’s a good person. He’s up to nothing. At least nothing too bad. In fact, he works for the Orange County Sheriff’s office covertly, which is probably why Barris is after him. But that wouldn’t explain why the Orange County Sheriff’s office is after him.

“Something big is definitely going down in this house. This rundown, rubble-filled house with its weed patch yard and cat box that never gets emptied. What a waste of a truly good house. So much could be done with it. A family and children could live here. It was designed for that. Such a waste. They ought to confiscate it and put it to better use. I’m supposed to act like they aren’t here. Assuming there’s a “they” at all. It may just be my imagination. Whatever it is that’s watching, it’s not human, unlike little dark eyed Donna. It doesn’t ever blink.

“What does a scanner see? Into the head? Down into the heart? Does it see into me, into us? Clearly or darkly? I hope it sees clearly, because I can’t any longer see into myself. I see only murk. I hope for everyone’s sake the scanners do better. Because if the scanner sees only darkly, the way I do, then I’m cursed and cursed again. I’ll only wind up dead this way, knowing very little, and getting that little fragment wrong too.”

Capitalist Realism, Capitalist Religion

”One can behold in capitalism a religion, that is to say, capitalism essentially serves to satisfy the same worries, anguish, and disquiet formerly answered by so-called religion.”

Walter Benjamin, Capitalism as religion

“Avarice — once one of the seven deadly sins — morphed into the ‘self-interest’ or ‘initiative’ indispensable to wealth and innovation, while the inscrutable ways of Providence yielded to the laws of supply and demand.”

Eugene McCarraher, The Enchantments of Mammon

“Even a quick glance at the self-improvement, management, spirituality, and Christian guidance genres reveals their thematic similarities: exhortations to “discover your inner strength,” “call the good into your life,” and “live without limits.” How could such disparate categories become nearly identical in their message?”

Regina Munch, Capitalism as Religion: How Money Became God

We are part of a family where, when gathered, there is much discussion and analysis of social responsibility and personal accountability in terms of finances, parenting, education, etc. Our parents are conservative, but our brothers are liberal. The views shared are not entirely ideological in a partisan sense and there is often much agreement about premises, as most Americans share an unquestioned faith in the dogma of hyper-individualism, captialist realism, and natural consequences — all of the accoutrements of WEIRD bias at the extremes of Jaynesian egoic-consciousness. It’s an all-encompassing worldview for those within it. Alternatives are not entertained, much less acknowledged. Such moral-tinged talk always implies that the world is a certain way, that it should not and cannot be otherwise, or else simply can’t be imagined to the contrary. There is no suggestion, of course, that anything is wrong or lacking within the system itself.

The lives of those individuals who fail according to the enforced social norms and rules are offered up as exemplary morality tales of what not to do, along with just-so narratizing of their failure and inferiority, although the condescension is couched within superficial non-judgment and neutral observation. After all, those others have no one to blame other than themselves, as isolated and self-contained moral agents. Or else, assuming they were simply born that way because of some combination of genetic predilection and inborn personality, familial patterns and inherited culture, there is nothing the rest of us can do about it, other than to express our sense of pity in noting how they acted wrongly or inadequately within the established system of social reality as given through the inevitable and unalterable link from cause to effect. To attempt to intervene would likely make things worse, as it would circumvent capitalism as a pedagoical system, one variety of the conservative morality-punishment link as social control. Each individual must learn or else suffer, as God or Nature intended. Still, much concern and worrying is offered.

Yet, for whatever reason, this ideological worldview as totalizing mazeway and habitus makes absolutely no sense to some of us. The indoctrination never quite took full hold in our psyche — maybe a personal failing of ours, as we are the least outwardly and normatively ‘successful’ in the family. In listening in on the talk of other family members, we can feel like an alien anthropological observer of strange cultural customs and religious practices. We can’t help but imagine that future historians will portray our present society in the way we look back on slavery and feudalism, humoral temperaments and miasmic air, witchburnings and bloodletting, an economically and scientifically backward period of societal development, like the pimples of an awkward and gangly teenager who is no longer a child but not quite an adult, if pimples involved mass oppression and suffering. But it goes beyond the outward social order itself. The underlying belief system can seem the strangest of all. The power it holds in socially constructing a reality tunnel is amazing, to say the least.

We’ve previously noted how humans will go to great effort, even self-sacrifice, to enforce social norms. A social order as an ideological lifeworld doesn’t happen on accident. It doesn’t develop organically. It has to be created and enforced, and then continuously re-created and re-enforced again and again across time. It’s an endless project that requires immense investment of time, effort, and money (trillions upon trillions of dollars are spent every year to fund the system of social control to punish the guilty and reward the worthy). For at least a decade, we’ve had the tentative theory that bullshit jobs are simply busywork to maintain the system or rather they are ritual activity like monks going through their daily routine of prayers, chanting, and monastical maintenance. Most work likely doesn’t serve any practical value other than upholding and enacting the very system that is dependent on the worker identity, where non-workers are non-entities or of questionable status to be used, punished, controlled, or dismissed as needed and by whatever means necessary. Yet when, pandemic panic shut down large swaths of the economy, it starkly demonstrated what was and was not essential work while the economy lumbered on just fine. The fears proved false. The forecast of doom never came.

As always, this brings us to thoughts on the ruling elite that are themselves ruled by their own elitism, taken in by their own culture of propaganda, the first victims of viral mind control to be spread like a plague from pussy rags thrown into the town well. The indoctrination is trickledown, if not the wealth and resources. The point is the oligarchs and plutocrats are in many ways sincerely paternalistic, elitist and supremacist in believing their own fevered rantings, as dementedly hypocritical as it can seem from an outside perspective. Obviously, this society is not the best of all possible worlds and, in some ways, the very point is to suppress progress, where the destabilizing consequences of creative destruction mostly apply to the victmized permanent underclass. Yet the costs of maintaining the social order, although disproportionately offloaded onto the dirty masses, also harms the monied classes. But one suspects that most social dominators take it as a good deal for there could be no value in a superior lifestyle of privilege, prestige, and power if benefits could not be denied to others — the scarcity principle of value. It’s simply the costs of doing business and business, as such, is doing well within the American Empire. That more value might be destroyed (endless war, imperial bureaucracy, suppression of competition, wanton destruction of human potential, etc) than created is not a concern, as long as the profits and benefits get concentrated among the deserving.

Capitalism is simply a modern religion, far from being an original insight. And the assumption of inborn selfishness within homo economicus is a variant on the belief in an Original Sin that marks all of humanity as a shared curse that justifes the system of punishment and sufferng that, accordng to doctrine, cleanses the soul and strengthens character. Economics is theology and economists the clergy. The cult of the market is operated according to various rites and rituals, theological doctrine and clerical law upheld by the mysterious authorities of Wall Street, US Chamber of Commerce (USCC), Internal Revenue Service (IRS), US Department of the Treasury (USDT), Federal Trade Commission (FTC), Federal Reserve System (“Fed”), International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank (IBRD & IDA), World Trade Organization (WTO), Group of Eight (G8), etc. The consumer-citizen seeks their salvation and redemption through workplace observence within corporate-churches and economic transactions of buying product-indulgences at market-shrines.

One could analyze it endlessly, as many others have already done. But what motivated our thoughts here was the basic observation of how it operates in such a casual and thoughtless manner. The theology of capitalist realism rolls off the tongue as if a comforting prayer invoking Divine Law. It’s such a simple and compelling faith that has such power because there is a vast institutional hegemony, if mostly hidden, enforcing Natural Law-and-Order. Even the economic sinners, the lost souls, and the excommunicated who fall under the punisment of debt, poverty, and homelessness rarely question the moral justification of their fate nor the system that sentenced judgment upon them, in the hope they might regain Divine Favor of material fortune, to be welcomed back by the Invisible Hand into the congregation of the saved. We so easily internalize this ideological worldview and identify with it. The even worse fate, so it seems, would be to lose faith entirely and find oneself in the ideological desert with no shared moral order to offer certainty, no shared moral imagination to offer comfort.

“Critics of the disenchantment narrative have long noticed that if you look closely at western modernity, this ostensibly secular and rational regime, you find it pretty much teeming with magical thinking, supernatural forces, and promises of grace. Maybe the human yearning for enchantment never went away; it just got redirected. God is there, just pointing down other paths. As scholars like Max Weber have noted, capitalism is a really a religion, complete with its own rites, deities, and rituals. Money is the Great Spirit, the latest gadgets are its sacred relics, and economists, business journalists, financiers, technocrats, and managers make up the clergy. The central doctrine holds that money will flow to perform miracles in our lives if we heed the dictates of the market gods.”

Lynn Parramore, The Gospel of Capitalism is the Biggest Turkey of All

“…capitalism is a form of enchantment—perhaps better, a misenchantment, a parody or perversion of our longing for a sacramental way of being in the world. Its animating spirit is money. Its theology, philosophy, and cosmology have been otherwise known as “economics.” Its sacramentals consist of fetishized commodities and technologies—the material culture of production and consumption. Its moral and liturgical codes are contained in management theory and business journalism. Its clerisy is a corporate intelligentsia of economists, executives, managers, and business writers, a stratum akin to Aztec priests, medieval scholastics, and Chinese mandarins. Its iconography consists of advertising, public relations, marketing, and product design. Its beatific vision of eschatological destiny is the global imperium of capital, a heavenly city of business with incessantly expanding production, trade, and consumption. And its gospel has been that of “Mammonism,” the attribution of ontological power to money and of existential sublimity to its possessors.”

Eugene McCarraher, The Enchantments of Mammon

“While the economist community that is comprised of economists sanctioned by the religion acts as the clergy of the religion, modern media which took the place of individual church buildings as a medium of communication acts as their medium to preach the religion to the society. This setup is amended by the education institutions and scientific institutions which act as the appendages to the Church, where children are educated/indoctrinated to the religion and its tenets from an early age by instilling them with ideas of competition, consumerism, materialism based success and in general a complete worldview that is created based on the religion’s tenets. The higher education and scientific institutions continue the education/indoctrination, creating the subsequent generations of clergy to preach the religion and run the institutions.”

Ozgur Zeren, Capitalism is Religion

“In the Spirit of Our People”

“Unlimited tolerance must lead to the disappearance of tolerance. If we extend unlimited tolerance even to those who are intolerant, if we are not prepared to defend a tolerant society against the onslaught of the intolerant, then the tolerant will be destroyed, and tolerance with them. 

“ In this formulation, I do not imply, for instance, that we should always suppress the utterance of intolerant philosophies; as long as we can counter them by rational argument and keep them in check by public opinion, suppression would certainly be unwise.

“But we should claim the right to suppress them if necessary even by force; for it may easily turn out that they are not prepared to meet us on the level of rational argument, but begin by denouncing all argument; they may forbid their followers to listen to rational argument, because it is deceptive, and teach them to answer arguments by the use of their fists or pistols. We should therefore claim, in the name of tolerance, the right not to tolerate the intolerant.”

Karl Popper, The Open Society and Its Enemies

We’ve come to a new point in life, maybe approaching something vaguely resembling maturity if not yet wisdom. A change in attitude was recently expressed in changes made to this blog’s comment policy, specifically about what is off-limits. There are certain issues that have gone beyond the realm of meaningful, worthy, and useful debate (race realism, genetic determinism, etc); sometimes entirely beyond the pale (white supremacy, eugenics, etc). That is to say there is nothing left to debate, as far as we’re concerned, not in the broad sense, if there might remain points of honest disagreement. One of those fruitless and dissatisfying areas of conflict involves false equivalency. So, on the pages of this blog, there is now a total ban on false equivalency arguments and rhetoric, although that partly comes down to interpretation and hence discernment. The point is that, no, the two sides of ‘left’ and ‘right’ are not the same, not even close. In making comparisons along these lines, tread lightly and think carefully before speaking. We’ve grown tired and bored with a certain kind of bullshit. We’ve had a thousand debates along these lines and we’ve reached our limit. We are moving on to newer and greener pastures.

The hour is later than some realize. Anyone who still doesn’t grok it by now is probably beyond being reached by fair-minded argument and open dialogue; or, anyway, it’s not our duty to enlighten their ignorance, remedy their inadequacies, or to save their lost souls. Nor will space be given to their words and time wasted in responding — life is too short. Been there, done that; and now we retire from the fray, like an old soldier joining a monastery. But for the purpose here, we will kindly offer an explanation. Part of the problem is the language itself (and we are entirely open to critique of terminology, definitions, and framing). Though an ancient and powerful metaphor, the egocentric (i.e., non-cardinal point) view of ideology as bipolar directionality along a linear spectrum is, well, simplistic. And the metaphorical frame was simplistic for a reason as a simple distinction was being made. Originally, all that it meant was literally on which side of the French king one sat, in indicating whether one was a supporter or a critic. Once the king was deposed, this seating arrangement continued in the National Assembly during the French Revolution. Then later on the distinction was applied to political factions, parties, movements, and ideologies.

To put it in basic terms, the original dualistic categorization of ‘right’ vs ‘left’ was about whether one favored or opposed naked authoritarianism as unquestioned power held with and enforced by a monopoly of violence (though articulated precursors of this distinction went back to the Axial Age, then later with the English Peasants’ Revolt and English Civil War). But, to be fair, the metaphor got muddy quite early on when the most reactionary, anti-democratic, and authoritarian of the Jacobins seized power and so the radically progressive, democratic, and anti-authoritarian Thomas Paine ended up sitting on the ‘right’ side with the Girondins who were initially part of the Jacobins (the ‘left’/’right’ divide took a while to be more clearly formulated following the revolution). As a side note, there is even more confusion in trying to apply the Western political spectrum to non-Western societies, such as Lebanon, that don’t share Western history, culture, and politics. Such things get quite messy and confused, even in the original context of meaning. Let’s not try to pretend to categorize the whole world in one of two categories, ‘right’ and ‘left’. On the other hand, at least within the Western world, let’s not dismiss these labels and what they’ve historically represented across centuries, as important meanings have been established.

Anyway, the latter position of opposition to unjust authoritarianism and/or rigid hierarchy came to be associated primarily with the core concept of egalitarianism that incorporates freedom and fairness (further related to communal principles of demos, democracy, fraternity, solidarity, class consciousness, global citizenry, commons, public, public good, public trust, and culture of trust, along with a more relational individualism); and liberty as well that, although distinct, became conflated with freedom in the English language (liberty was a legalistic concept of not being a slave in a slave-based society, whereas freedom was being a member of a free people; but, even early on, liberty had developed an alternative meaning of internal independence and autonomy). Egalitarianism was never opposed to authority in its entirety for there are other dynamic, flexible, responsive, accountable, temporary, conditional, and even anarchistic forms of authority besides the rigidly-structured and violently-enforced hierarchy of authoritarianism as monarchy, patriarchy, theocracy, feudalism, caste systems, imperialism, dictatorship, plutocracy, natural aristocracy, paternalistic liberalism, corporatism, social Darwinism, ethno-racial supremacy, law-and-order police state, etc; or even right-libertarianism. In line with such authoritarianism, we might as well throw in the the ‘liberty’-minded and ‘republican’-oriented but anti-democratic and anti-freedom Jacobinism, under Maximilian Robespierre, that led to basically a new monarchical-like empire with Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte having replaced King Louis XVI (a republic, by the way, is any government that isn’t a monarchy; most modern authoritarian regimes have not been monarchies). This is not unlike how Stalin’s personality cult replaced Emperor Nicholas II and re-created the Russian Empire with an industrialized neo-feudalism involving peasant-like ‘communist’ laborers that were put back into place after revolting. In America and France, both radical revolutions for egalitarianism were co-opted by anti-egalitarian reactionaries and authoritarians who used the demagoguery of fake egalitarian rhetoric. Are we to call that the ‘left’? Similarly, just because the business-friendly, corporatist-promoting, and individualism-fetishizing Nazis (i.e., fascists) called themselves national ‘socialists’, are we also to include them as part of the ‘left’? If so, all meaningful distinctions are moot and we should give up; but we don’t accept that.

As another side note, originally republicanism was the ‘leftist’ challenge to the ‘rightist’ defense of monarchy, in the context that all authoritarian regimes at the time were monarchies. But, with monarchy eliminated in the founding of the United States and republicanism having become normalized, many post-revolutionary conservatives and right-wingers embraced republicanism which sort of became a near meaningless word in how it describes nothing in particular (like the United States, both Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union were republics). Thomas Jefferson observed, “In truth, the abuses of monarchy had so much filled all the space of political contemplation, that we imagined everything republican which was not monarchy. We had not yet penetrated to the mother principle, that ‘governments are republican only in proportion as they embody the will of their people, and execute it.’ Hence, our first constitutions had really no leading principles in them” (letter written to Samuel Kercheval; Monticello, July 12, 1816). This relates to how the subversive ideal of republican federalism was originally the radical position in the American Revolution as it was the insurrectionist opposition to the monarchy of the British Empire. Then reactionary authoritarians co-opted the republican ‘Federalist’ label for themselves. This created the odd situation where the so-called Anti-Federalists were more pro-federalist than those who identified themselves as Federalists, while some of those pseudo-Federalists became nostalgic about imperialism and even monarchy. Going back centuries, there has been a continuous pattern of reactionaries co-opting the language of the ‘left’ which endlessly complicates matters (one might call them ‘Faceless Men‘). The first ‘libertarians’, for example, were French anarchist/anti-statist socialists who were part of the ‘left-wing’ workers movement that included Marxists and communists. Yet today the right-‘libertarian’ Koch brothers (one now dead) are the leading power and funding source behind a libertarian movement to replace democracy with neo-fascism.

The rightist position, no matter the language and labels co-opted within reactionary rhetoric, has emphasized a metaphorical view of the political head (or capitalist head; or religious head) as ruling over and held above or otherwise controlling and being superior to the body politic (or body economic; or Body of Christ as church body), whereas the leftist view has tended to consider the metaphorical head as merely a single part of a metaphorical whole body not to be prejudicially prioritized. So, the leftist emphasis has been on the communal, collective, systemic, holistic, and co-creative; that the parts are inseparable and that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts; as expressed in more modern theories of historical materialism, sociology, anthropology, ecology, integralism, intersectionality, etc (in Spiral Dynamics, presently somewhere between green, yellow, and turquoise vmemes, although earlier incorporating more from orange vmeme). As such, the detached head or any other part cannot metonymically stand in for the whole body. In democracy, like many tribal societies where the leader follows, authority represents the public will through consent of the governed toward the public good but cannot enforce anything upon the public or else it no longer is democracy (similar to the reason the Soviet Union was not ‘leftist’ precisely to the degree that it became a neo-feudal Russian Empire built on a Stalinist personality cult, not to dismiss that many Soviet citizens and officials genuinely sought to promote egalitarian leftism as communism that gave workers freedom, autonomy, and agency; similarly not to dismiss that many in the American founding generation actually did advocate and support democracy).

To get back to the metaphor of the ‘head’ and ‘body’, we can also consider it non-metaphorically. The idea of the ‘head’ ruling the ‘body’ was an old scientific theory of human biology that lingers in folk scientific understandings of folk psychology about the egoic individuality — the brain (or some part of the brain; e.g., pineal gland) as the seat of the self, soul, or consciousness. Yet modern science has, instead, found that neurons exist in other parts of the body (gut, heart, etc), that multiple links operate between brain and other areas (e.g., gut-brain axis), and that neurocognition is more embodied and diffuse than previously recognized, not to mention a bio-electromagnetic field that extends several feet beyond the physical body. The rightist conviction in separation and division, an ideology of the atomistic individual self, atomistic body, atomistic material world, atomistic private property, atomistic nuclear family, atomistic worker-cog, atomistic consumer-citizen, atomistic God, atomistic relationship to God, and atomistic authority figures (an often regressive blue-orange vmeme alliance of the New Right and MAGA, but sometimes shifting toward an orange-green alliance such as Russel Kirk’s unconscious postmodernism, Karl Rove’s social constructivism, Donald Trump’s post-truth, and Jordan Peterson’s self-loathing pluralism) is far less scientifically plausible and morally compelling than it was when early scientific thought (e.g., Newtonian physics) had yet to be challenged by later scientific research, knowledge, and theory.

There is an understandable attraction to visually simplistic metaphors that capture the imagination. And there is inspiration to be taken from the wing metaphor, since two wings are part of a single bird, often used as a symbol of nobility and natural freedom, such as the bald eagle being the primary symbol of the United States. As elegant and inspiring as it might be to think of society like a great feathered creature requiring a linked pair of wings moving in balanced unison to gain lift and soar through the sky, it becomes readily apparent where the metaphor of a ‘left’ wing of egalitarianism (i.e., non-rigidly non-hierarchical authority) and a ‘right’ wing of authoritarianism (i.e., rigidly hierarchical authority) fails us. In the world we actually live in, a small ‘right’ wing ruling elite controls both ruling parties and has come to dominate all of society through plutocratic and kleptocratic, corporatocratic and oligarchic capitalist realism (fungible wealth of ‘capital’ etymologically as head; related to ‘cattle’ and ‘chattel’; hence, chattel slavery was part of early capitalism and still is). The metaphor in question would only describe reality if a stunted ‘right’ wing had somehow become bloated and cancerous, grown a monstrous demonic mouth-hole with razor-like teeth, began beating to death the massive but paralyzed ‘left’ wing, futilely struggled to detach itself from the body, and then sadistically and self-destructively attempted to devour the rest of the bird. The metaphor breaks down a bit at that point. Hence, the problem with false equivalency between ‘left’ and ‘right’. I hope that clears things up.

We are well into a new century and the older generations that held power since the Cold War, too many with minds locked into backlash, are finally retiring, turning senile, and dying off. As a society, it is time for the rest of us to move on. Although silenced and suppressed, disenfranchised and demoralized, the vast majority of Americans already agree on basic values, aspirations, and demands (a 60-90% supermajority of the population, depending on the particular issue; in some cases, 90+%). That a hyped-up and over-promoted minority in the ruling elite and on the far right fringe disagrees is irrelevant. Even most Americans supposedly on the political ‘right’ to varying degrees agree with ‘leftist’ and liberal positions on many key policies; albeit a diverse and pluralistic supermajority. So, the many average Americans on the so-called ‘right’ are not enemies and one might argue they’re not even really on the ‘right’, despite false polarization pushed by corporate media and corporatist parties to manipulate and control us, divide and disempower us. Though many have been indoctrinated to believe the ‘left’ is their enemy, we invite them to consciously join the moral (super-)majority they might already belong to without knowing it. This is what leftists, in opposition to false consciousness, refer to as class consciousness and other forms of group consciousness or shared consciousness; the impulse behind intersectional politics that, if imperfectly, poses a worldview where the oppressed majority could feel unity and solidarity amidst overlapping disadvantages, rather than the splintering division of competing identity politics (whites vs minorities, one minority group vs another, men vs women, LGBTQ vs cis-heterosexuality, able-bodied vs persons with disabilities, Americans vs foreigners, WASPs vs ethnic-Americans, Christians vs everyone else, and on and on); and, in our reactionary society, this also applies to left vs right and liberal vs conservative, and hence the reason we’ve emphasized the public as a supermajority with the potential of unified solidarity.

To put some numbers to it, John Sides has a decent 2014 article, Why most conservatives are secretly liberals. He reports that, “almost 30 percent of Americans are “consistent liberals” — people who call themselves liberals and have liberal politics.  Only 15 percent are “consistent conservatives” — people who call themselves conservative and have conservative politics.  Nearly 30 percent are people who identify as conservative but actually express liberal views.  The United States appears to be a center-right nation in name only” (with another 25% that is some combination of independent, indifferent, apathetic, frustrated, cynical, confused, uninformed, misinformed, contrarian, and trollish; i.e., crazification factor). In referencing Ideology in America by Christopher Ellis and James Stimson, Sides points out how this disjuncture has been longstanding: “When identifying themselves in a word, Americans choose “conservative” far more than “liberal.” In fact they have done so for 70 years, and increasingly so since the early 1960s. […] On average, liberal responses were more common than conservative responses. This has been true in nearly every year since 1956, even as the relative liberalism of the public has trended up and down.  For decades now there has been a consistent discrepancy between what Ellis and Stimson call symbolic ideology (how we label ourselves) and operational ideology (what we really think about the size of government).”

Here in this blog, our mission is to defend the broad and majoritarian ‘leftism’ (i.e., pro-egalitarianism) of this inclusionary big tent movement; and that is why we are making important and necessary distinctions. The reason the political right opposes majoritarianism is because, consciously or unconsciously, they realize they are a very small minority; that is to say they not only oppose majoritarianism but also oppose the supermajority itself, and particularly oppose the supermajority developing group consciousness of being a supermajority. Whatever one wants to call it and by whichever metaphor one wants to frame it, this is the same difference that makes a difference. We the free People are the demos of democracy. After asserting the founders and framers had failed to create and protect a free society, an aging Thomas Jefferson asked where was to be found republicanism (as he defined it: democratic, popular, direct, and majoritarian self-governance; if he was hypocritical in his racism and sexism) and he answered: “Not in our constitution certainly, but merely in the spirit of our people.” The American public, the American majority is the rampart upon which democracy must be defended, the line that we cannot back down from, the ground that can never be ceded for it would be a mortal wound, collective soul death. There is no compromise on this point. We face an existential crisis, a moment of do or die. Here we stand or separately we will hang, to echo one famous founder. We are quickly running out of opportunities to avoid the worst and, in knowing history, we realize the worst can get quite bad — not to mention that each iteration of the worst is likely to be worse than the last.

This is why, in this blog, we are not going to portray or allow the portrayal of both sides as equal or equivalent. We are not going to treat fascism, theocracy, and bigotry as equally valid as anti-fascism, secularism, and tolerance. We are not going to pretend that those opposed to some authoritarianism in favor of other, often worse, authoritarianism are the same as those who oppose all authoritarianism on principle. Social domination and social democracy aren’t merely two reasonable options of how to govern society. Either there is freedom or not. And any liberty that denies democracy is just another name for slavery. Also, to get at a specific point, no, the comparably rare violence, typically property damage, of recent leftists defending egalitarianism, countering injustice, standing up to oppression, protesting wrongdoing, and fighting authoritarianism is no where near the same as the widespread commonality of right-wing terrorism, hate crimes, violent oppression, police statism, and war-mongering. If you don’t understand what is at stake, we won’t be bothered to give you the time of day. If you’re still going on about false equivalence, you have fallen into an evil mindset, a psychotic fantasy that disconnects you from real world suffering of others.

To cite actual United States data from the past decade (2012-2021), right-wing non-Islamic extremists have committed 75% of extremist-related killings, “including white supremacy, anti-government extremism of several types, right-wing conspiracy theory adherents and toxic masculinity adherents”; and the next largest group is that of right-wing Islamic extremists at 20%; while left-wing extremists are falsely portrayed at 4%, but that includes black nationalists who are typically right-wingers in terms of advocating socially conservative ethno-nationalism and fundamentalism (e.g., Nation of Islam); which leaves only anarchists, both left-anarchists and right-anarchists, who have committed no extremist-related killings in decades (Anti-Defamation League, Murder and Extremism in the United States in 2021). Notably, there is absolutely no violent deaths from left-wing Christians and Muslims, multicultural advocates, pro-government and pro-democracy types, left-wing conspiracy theory adherents, and toxic femininity adherents. So, basically, 100% of recent deaths by extremism are attributed to one sector or another of the religious and socio-political right. With that in mind, fuck off about spiritual violence, in rationalizing moral cowardice, while people in the real world are suffering and dying from physical violence, usually coming exclusively from one side.

Nonetheless, intelligent and informed distinctions will be made, rather than overly simplistic black/white judgements. Yes, the transparitisan stranglehold of both main (right-wing) parties unfortunately pushes a forced and false choice of two greater evil varieties of right-wing authoritarianism of corporatocratic capitalist realism, if one side prefers milder paternalism and the other outright oligarchy (“Stragedy? Is ‘stragedy’ the right word to describe how the DNC corporate Democrats strategically connive to set it up that they always ‘have to’ concede to Republican demands?” queries National Notice). But, even in that, there are finer distinctions to be made, other differences that also do make a difference and so we won’t tolerate false equivalency with that either. For example, some politicians are undeniably and irrefutably more dangerous than others; and the pattern does largely fall along partisan lines, which does somewhat support that there really are greater evils in the world, not that we should tolerate the lesser evils that end up making the greater evils more likely and justified (e.g., pseudo-liberal media elites using the propaganda model of perception management as social control and acting as boundary-defenders and gatekeepers who give covering fire for the political right to push the Overton window further right). And, for all the devious corruption of the Clinton Foundation, there simply is no extensive left-wing equivalent to the right-wing Shadow Network. Still, the fact remains that most Americans are to the left of the DNC elite. Heck, a surprisingly large swath of Republican voters are to the left of the DNC elite, on issues from economics to environmentalism. The Biden administration is morally questionable and anything to the right of that is morally unacceptable, beyond the bounds — that far right and no further and even that is too far right. As a society, we have to have norms and standards. Most Americans have come to an agreement on this and now it’s time we Americans recognize our status as citizenry, take collective responsibility, demand consent of the governed, and enforce our moral majority, albeit a pluralistic majority.

In conclusion, let us be clear in stating our purpose, in declaring where we stand. Most importantly, we in this blog will always side with the underdog. Absolutely fucking always! If you are not on the side of the underdog, you are our mortal enemy and we will treat you as such. But when right-wingers are oppressed or their rights infringed, we will defend them just the same; and we will always defend everyone’s right to free speech, if not always giving them a platform to freely promote that speech in this personal and private blog. We are devoted to a fierce compassion, emphasis on both ‘fierce’ and ‘compassion’. The greatest condemnation will be reserved for moral cowards. As the pacifist Mahatma Gandhi declared with no equivocation, moral cowardice is worse than violence and death. “There is hope for a violent man to be some day non-violent,” Gandhi argued, “but there is none for a coward.” Yet, obviously, non-violence and non-aggression is always preferable and will be sought as a first option (even second and third option). And self-chosen self-sacrifice can be noble, as Gandhi held up as the highest ideal, if victimhood identity politics of romanticized martyrdom can be dysfunctional. Still, the point remains that Gandhi brooked no false equivalency between the violence of aggression and the violence of self-defense, between spiritual violence and physical violence — neither will we.

We must hold to moral courage in all ways, particularly in defense of what is morally right, to not back down from a fight, to not avoid uncomfortable conflict. Within this protected space, there will be no tolerance of intolerance — that will not be an issue of debate. Any and all reactionary rhetoric and authoritarian views are simply forbidden, even when used by those who identify as ‘leftist’, liberal, Democratic, independent, or whatever else. We will no longer play that game. This is the end of the age of bullshit. Yet, in relationship to those who have been pulled into the dark side of reactionary fear and fantasies, we will always be willing to welcome them back into the fold of moral society and respectable politics, if and when they are ready. We understand that the Fox News effect, the Mercer media machine, and the corporate propaganda model of the news has virulently afflicted millions of Americans with a reactionary mind virus that causes psychotic disconnecton from reality and generally maladaptive behavior, false identities and confused thought processes, even pulling more than a few ‘leftists’ into misleading and harmful rhetoric.

That saddens us, but there appears to be little we can do to save those others from that horrible fate, if they do not recognize the trap they are in and if they refuse all help. They will have to take the first step out of their own darkness. Until then, we will strive too hold this space of light and truth with the door always open to those of shared moral concern for freedom and fairness. We will do so to the best of our ability, however imperfect and inadequate that may seem under the oppressive circumstances of the greater problems we are all immersed in. That is the necessity for holding a basic standard for allowable participation here in these pages. This blog is a small refuge from a world gone mad. We can’t pretend to be ideological physicians offering promises of an antidote to the mind plague, but we can offer a brief respite, a sanitarium of fresh air and sunlight. Please respect these intentons. But also join your voice with ours, if you feel inspired. At times like these, we need to support each other in speaking out and in giving voice. Whatever might actually be ‘left’ and ‘right’, egalitarianism is the center, the beating heart. Anyone who denies this is a dangerous extremist not to be trusted or tolerated, an enemy of the people. Egalitarianism is not merely a word, not an abstract ideal, not yet another ideology. As an archaic moral impulse, this moral vision does matter. We are all egalitarians now, if many of us don’t yet realize it. We always have been egalitarians, at the core of our shared human nature.

* * *

4/29/21 – This post was written at the beginning of the month and we’ve had the past several weeks to mull it over. We remain basically satisfied with it, as it turned out better than expected. It was something that has been on our mind for a long time and it needed to be said. We had immense satisfaction once the piece was completed. But, as always, our thoughts never really end. We did revise the post slightly, although it was mainly minor corrections of errors and changes in wording. Besides polishing it up, there is some additional commentary rumbling around in our braincase. We’ll just tack it on here at the end. We are overly self-conscious of our audience, real and prospective. In this case, there was no negative response and, if anything, mostly agreement or apparent neutrality. Then again, maybe some were too concerned about our own potential response to leave a more critical comment. We’re certainly not seeking to suppress and silence dissent. There are no doubt thousands of alternative and challenging views one could express without falling foul of this blog’s new false equivalency ban.

Most powerfully, one could simply and directly challenge the entire framing of the post and that would be more than welcome. To be honest, we don’t much like the framing either. But until something better comes along, that framing is our shared cultural inheritance from these past centuries of modern ideological thought as the end result of the more than two millennia of prior change, as initiated by the collapse of the Bronze Age bicameral mind and its replacement with Axial Age Jaynesian consciousness. One doesn’t so easily toss aside the foundation of one’s civilization, even when it’s imperfect. Much else is built upon it. But that doesn’t mean we can’t point out the cracks, particularly in order repair them. And, meanwhile, nothing is stopping anyone from attempting to design and construct a new foundation. Following the precautionary principle and the words of Franz Kafka, we shouldn’t wantonly destroy what already exists before we have something better to replace it with. Furthermore, as Carl Jung wisely advised, even if it seems madness, it might be serving a purpose of preventing something far worse.

So, here we are. Even our own stance of critical judgment is not intended as mere attack. The political right does not represent the dark, evil, and demonic polar extreme of Manichaean dualism. As such, the entire right-wing is not our collective enemy. Only those who act as our enemy are our enemy. In the above post, we went so far as to suggest that most people portrayed and/or self-identified as ‘rightists’ (of whatever kind) are not even really ‘rightist’ in the conventional, traditional, and historical sense of Western social, economic, and political thought. That is a major point, if not the primary focus of this post, but maybe it should’ve been given greater emphasis. It further supports and explains why equivalence is false. It’s not merely that the ‘right’ is the minority of Americans and other Westerners. Even on the so-called ‘right’, the actual hardcore ‘right-wing’ is a minority. It’s that minority within a minority that is fully embracing and expressing the extremes of the reactionary mind, nostalgic backlash, historical revisionism, xenophobic bigotry, violent hatred, dogmatic closedmindedness, social domination, and the Dark Tetrad (authoritarianism, narcissism, Machiavellianism, sadism); particularly as expressed among the Double Highs (high right-wing authoritarianism and high social dominance orientation), the worst of the worse.

As we like to endlessly repeat, the public mind has gone far left (in terms of social liberalism, economics, environmentalism, etc), if the public imagination remains suppressed and stunted. Most people today are far left of liberals from a century ago. And most people a century ago were far left compared to the liberals a century before that. When the left and right labels were first used, the ‘right’ defended theocracy, monarchy, aristocracy, imperialism, slavery, patriarchy, and worse (e.g., genocide); meanwhile, the original ‘left’ was a bit mixed or confused on issues like democracy, universal suffrage, rights of commoners, etc. So, even the oldest ‘left’ is, by today’s standards, too right-wing extreme to be acceptable and respectable to most present right-wingers. Of course during the colonial and early modern revolutionary periods, Americans had become the most left-leaning population in the West. They had grown accustomed to a social norm of free and open access to land and natural resources (practically, an informal commons), a wealthier lifestyle that increased socioeconomic mobility, and semi-autonomous self-governance because of a distant imperial capitol and weak military force.

This is why the United States is the only country in the world specifically founded on documents that espoused liberal principles and many of them still radical to this day. Right from the beginning, the US started far left of the rest of the world, particularly left of the British Empire; and even the French Revolution didn’t have any voices or leaders as radically leftist as Thomas Paine (well, not until Paine himself showed up in France after fleeing persecution in England). The original rightist ideology of the French was simply unacceptable in being too far right even to most early American conservatives. For Anglo-American thought, this was the initial point of confusion. It’s not only that all of us Americans are now liberals for we always were. That is what makes American society stand out. What goes for American conservatism is simply a variety of Western liberalism, if heavily revised and distorted by the reactionary mind. It’s precisely because there is no native tradition of a genuine American traditionalism that the ‘rightist’ ideologies that took its place are so radically modern and sometimes postmodern, in desperately and impossibly attempting to distinguish itself as something else.

This is hard for Americans to see because liberalism frames everything and so is taken for granted. Even American ‘conservatives’ occasionally admit this state of affairs in claiming they are the real and original ‘classical liberals‘, a false but telling argument. This first became apparent to us in being confronted by the Continental European view of Domenico Losurdo presented in his counter-history of liberalism, which we initially disagreed with but eventually came around to. Maybe this is more apparent within Catholic tradition that maintains a living memory of old school traditionalism, not to mention a historical memory of premodern and pre-Protestant ancien regime — Father Brent Shelton wrote: “To be clear, the term ‘Liberal’ is used here in its philosophical sense to refer to a constitutional order which protects the rights of individuals, specifically, the rights to “life, liberty and property”, and is philosophically opposed to Conservatism, which prefers either rule by landed aristocracy, or rule by an imperial bureaucracy. In the USA, both the Republican and Democratic parties are philosophically Liberal, emphasizing competing aspects of Liberalism, although modern electoral polemics have altered the term in the popular imagination.”

Original and actual Western ‘conservatism’ as traditionalism is so far outside the bounds of American social norms as to not even be acknowledged in mainstream media and politics, not even for sake of historical context, much less discussed and defended in public debate. Yet it’s always lurking as a typically unspoken and ever threatening authoritarianism in the American reactionary mind, regularly re-emerging as a demagogic return of the repressed (e.g., Donald Trump’s MAGA). It’s precisely this hidden nature that makes it so dangerous because its not part of any respectable and stable Old World cultural tradition that could redirect it toward the public good (e.g., Scandinavian conservatives supporting social democracy). This is the reason so many American conservatives, while preaching liberal rhetoric of libertarianism and laissez-faire, are ever ready to shore up neo-imperialism as neo-conservatism, neo-colonialism as neo-liberalism, and neo-feudalism as neo-fascism.

American conservatives have no traditional roots to ground and stabilize the reactionary forces that possess them. They can never honestly speak about what are their true intentions and agendas, since these disreputable impulses aren’t established within a shared consciousness of ideological understanding and traditional meaning. American political thought was born abruptly in the modern world, not having had the slow shift out of the ancien regime as happened in much of Europe. Even the Euopean enclosure movement took centuries to complete in finally and fully ending the feudal commons and the laws that went with them. The reactionary is bad enough in Europe, as attested to by the modern nostalgic revisionism of ethno-nationalism and fascism. But only in the US has the reactionary taken hold as a new kind of absolutely anti-conservative and anti-traditional capitalist realism, social Darwinism, hyper-individualism, materialistic consumerism, and market fetishism.

In how early European conservatism is the shadow of American ‘conservative’-minded liberalism, American reactionary ‘conservatism’ as regressive liberalism is the shadow of American liberalism as progressive radicalism. This is what makes false equivalency so misleading and dangerous. This often leads to another minority group of reactionary extremists (typically Democrats or ‘independents’) that, in portraying everyone else as extremists, pretends to be ‘moderate’ and ‘centrist’. That is related to how the American ruling elite has always included bourgeois semi-liberals and pseudo-liberals, (Cold War McCarthyists, Blue Dogs, Clinton Democrats, etc), holding to anti-leftist rhetoric while punching left and pushing hard right. Such is the need for a strong left that, without quibbling and in-fighting, pushes back hard. And so all the more reason we shouldn’t tolerate false equivalency in the slightest. Yet even the most adamant of leftists need to recognize that none of us is immune to the reactionary in a society that has become overwhelmed with inequality and injustice, division and conflict, anxiety and fear. It’s never just about those other people, the ‘basket of deplorables’. The reactionary shadow falls upon us all and so we all have much collective shadow work to do in processing deep wounds of transgenerational trauma.