Liberalism and Leftism are Synonyms

“The infancy of the subject at that moment, and our inexperience of self-government, occasioned gross departures in that draught from genuine republican canons. 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. But experience and reflection have but more and more confirmed me in the particular importance of the equal representation then proposed.”
~Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826), letter to Samuel Kerchival (1767-1845), July 12, 1816

Table of Contents

  • Early History of Liberalism and Leftism
  • Prototype of Radical Left-Liberal
  • Religious Dissenters, Political Dissidents
  • Anti-Federalism, Anti-Authoritarianism
  • Leftist Hope of Red Republicans
  • A Blurred Distinction
  • Notes and Additional Thoughts

Thomas Jefferson in 1800. Wikimedia Commons.

Early History of Liberalism and Leftism

It’s too bad that more people, left-wingers most of all, don’t know the early history of liberalism and leftism, as related to Jefferson’s above republicanism. Many classical liberals are sometimes labeled as classical radicals. That’s because they opposed for-profit corporations, monopolies, land consolidation, plutocracy, high inequality, etc. But in line with the original leftists (who were indistinct from the original liberals), they existed before communism, socialism, Marxism, and such; as well as before capitalism proper, in their first opposition having been to mercantilism and imperial trade networks. So they knew nothing about such ideologies that supposedly would later distinguish between leftists and liberals. This is where we must separate the original common principles of liberalism and leftism from the various ideologies they spawned over the centuries.

Early radical left-liberals were mostly motivated by principles of freedom, liberty, and autonomy; of which applied equally to all, especially including the Proletariat as against a monied class as exploitative ruling elite. As such, their notion of free markets was liberatory (Marc-William Palen, Pax Economica) where a market was only free to the degree everyone involved in or impacted by the market was free. Hence, individual laborers, small business owners, yeoman farmers, etc controlled the means of their own production or else had genuine bargaining power. That was back when an individual or a family could provide for themselves from natural resources of the land and water, most of it still having been treated as the commons. It filtered into the concept of free labor.

Some liberals of the Radical Enlightenment, such as Baruch Spinoza** (1632-1677), likely had little or no opinion on economics, especially not capitalism that didn’t yet exist — besides, economics was less of a topic for public debate at the time. But it is interesting that Spinoza wasn’t an individualist, as he believed that collectives could also act as singular wholes — maybe related to his pantheism or panentheism. This kind of thought probably underlies some of the early liberal ideas about the ‘People’, not merely a conglomeration of individuals but a whole that’s greater than the sum of its parts. In similar fashion, patriotism originally referred to loyalty to the People, not to country or government. This kind of liberal collectivism many present left-wingers ignore or would declare non-existent.

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Mayday at Merrymount. Wikimedia Commons.

Prototype of Radical Left-Liberal

The prototype of the Anglo-American liberal as radical leftist would be Thomas Morton (1579-1647), having first visited America in 1622, again in 1624, a third time in 1629, and lastly returning in 1644. He was the first American known to have made a fart joke and a dick joke (Ronnie Pontiac, The Pagan Pilgrim and the First American Maypole). But his name to fame was his having established Ma-re Mount (or Merrymount), not a colony but a meeting place of Europeans and Native Americans. Along with the indentured servants and slaves he freed after a rebellion, they set up a pagan maypole and partied. He wrote of the natives with genuine respect: “the uncivilized people are more just than the civilized” (New English Canaan, 1637). In his utopianism, Morton was everything that the nearby Puritans feared and hated. So, of course, they felt compelled to arrest him and destroy Merrymount. His legacy wasn’t only that of general freedom-loving licentiousness — what the Puritans saw as dreaded heresy of paganism and atheism — but also a challenge to much of Western culture, politics, and economics, although his beliefs and motives were mixed.

“Most English thought it ironic that the natives lived a life of what Europeans thought was poverty amid the abundance of the New World. But Tom, who could not resist imagining all the ways the abundance could be exploited, nevertheless understood that the natives were not to be dismissed, as John Locke dismissed them, for “wasting” the natural resources of the new world. He understood their contentment, living simple lives in harmony with nature. He even wondered if the native lifestyle made the European idea of wealth wrong. What good were piles of possessions that required constant protection? The natives lived without want, in communities of mutual trust. Tom wondered if that might be the true definition of wealth” (Pontiac).

Interestingly, the conflict between Morton and the Puritans was part of an old set of geographical and cultural divisions in England that would come to be inherited by America (David Hackett Fischer, Albion’s Seed; Colin Woodard, American Nations; & Kevin Phillips, The Cousins’ Wars). Morton was a product of the culture in Greater London, specifically the Inns of Court. Whereas the Puritans originated in East Anglia. In being persecuted, many of them had for a time fled to the Netherlands and elsewhere in Europe. The Inns of Court was a far different place than East Anglia. It’s where lawyers gathered, but such lawyers included many great thinkers and philosophers. At the time, London had a more tolerant atmosphere and the remnants of paganism were still in the air. This was the same time period as of William Shakespeare (1564-1616), with Morton running in the same social circle.

“On one side were the royalists or Cavaliers. Like Tom they wore their hair long. They sported dashing beards and mustaches. Their costumes were lavish and romantic. Large codpieces were the fashion equivalent of the tight pants and bulge brigade of 70’s rock. The royalists were unrepentant drunks and fornicators, but they were also students of philosophy, inspired by all cultures of history, not only Christian. Their experiments in alchemy and astrology evolved into modern chemistry and astronomy.

“Their opposition, the Puritans, were a younger generation rebelling in every way against their fathers whom they considered irresponsible, reprehensible and downright pagan. The Puritans were sober. They forbid dancing. Laughter was right out. And they couldn’t run or walk too fast, only proceed at a measured pace.” (Pontiac).

Two decades after Morton stepped foot on American land, this cultural divide would break out into open violent conflict during the English Civil War (1642), as part of the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. Some might argue, as does Pontiac, that the basic pattern was set in place: “America’s split personality from the very start: dour businessmen vs. dirty hippies, ruthless Wall Street cliques vs. Burning Man. Tea Party vs Occupy Wall Street, isn’t it all still Plymouth vs. Ma-re Mount?” But it wasn’t, at that point, yet a clear ideological divide of left versus right, liberal versus conservative. Though the dour Puritans played the leading role of opposition as part of the so-called Roundheads, their side also included the egalitarian and anti-authoritarian Quakers, along with more radical groups that fought corruption and elitism: Levelers, Diggers (True Levelers), Ranters, etc. Some of these dissidents were even proto-communists and proto-anarchists. This radicalism was carried forward by the Real or Radical Whigs who, in combination with the likes of Isaac Watts (1674-1749), would inspire the American Revolution.

The title page of Watts’s Guide to Prayer, fourth edition, 1725. Wikimedia Commons.

By the way, in response to an inquiry about their motivations, one old Revolutionary veteran, Captain Levi Preston (1756-1850), explained that, “Oppressions? I didn’t feel them. I never saw one of those stamps, and always understood that Governor Bernard put them all in Castle William. I am certain I never paid a penny for one of them. Tea tax! I never drank a drop of the stuff; the boys threw it all overboard. We read only the Bible, the Catechism, Watt’s Psalms and Hymns, and the Almanack. Young man, what we meant in going for those redcoats was this: we always had governed ourselves, and we always meant to. They didn’t mean we should” (Spirit of ’76). Following the English Civil War when the Crown was re-established, Watts’ Puritan family was persecuted. It led him to anti-authoritarianism, along with preaching a God who was above worldly power and treated all equally.

But in moderating his Puritan upbringing, Watts praised education, reason, independent-mindedness, tolerance, and an irenic spirit. If maybe not exactly liberal and leftist, Watts was ahead of his times. His theology of natural law (i.e., divine truth) was believed to stand above human law. It was the source of much radicalism, the reason later conservatives and counter-revolutionaries, such as the Catholic-raised Edmund Burke (1729-1797), would oppose it. Revolutionary deists like Thomas Paine (1737-1809), Burke’s opponent, would come to reinterpret natural law through a scientific lens, as part of a harsh critique of organized religion, clerical rule, state churches, and supposedly divine-sanctioned monarchy (Nature’s God and American Radicalism).

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A Catalogue of the Severall Sects and Opinions in England and other Nations: With a briefe Rehearsall of their false and dangerous Tenents, a propaganda broadsheet denouncing English dissenters from 1647. Wikimedia Commons.

Religious Dissenters, Political Dissidents

For a truly far-out religious dissenter of this variety, there is the non-conforming Puritan Samuel Gorton (1593-1677) who was a principled civil libertarian, antinomian, and universalist (Libertarianism.org, Samuel Gorton: Antinomian Radical). It was precisely his heretical beliefs that made him such a political dissident and practitioner of civil disobedience. “He believed in equality for women, and he eschewed the formal church leadership. He accepted that all people are imbued with the spirit of God. His beliefs mirrored those adopted by the Quakers. […] Gorton embraced an unorthodox strain of Puritanism. He believed in the equality of all humans and in the presence of the Holy Spirit in everyone. And he opposed slavery” (Dan Landrigan, Samuel Gorton Insults the Puritans, Goes to Jail, Founds Warwick, R.I.).

With the support of Puritan-turned-Free-Baptist Roger Williams (1603–1683), Gorton was the primary author for the 1652 legislation that legally abolished slavery in Rhode Island and, though it passed, it was only briefly enforced (EBSCO, Rhode Island Colony Acts to Prohibit Perpetual Slavery). It was the first attempt in North America; although sometimes that credit is given to Francis Daniel Pastorius (1651-1719), Quaker and founder of Germantown, who wrote the first major anti-slavery petition in 1688 (Wikipedia, 1688 Germantown Quaker Petition Against Slavery; & Harry Schenawolf, Wrong Governor DeSantis! Fact – Millions Had Questioned Slavery Prior to the American Revolution). It’s all in the same period, anyhow; and all led by religious dissenters.

Here is a key takeaway. Gorton’s notion of equality and universal rights truly included everyone, in defiance of the authoritarian claim that property rights superseded human rights. That anti-authoritarian egalitarianism would eventually become a core position of modern leftism, especially in the United States. His egalitarianism, one might surmise, was inspired by Galatians 3:28: “There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Stephen J. Patterson, The Forgotten Creed). Rather than a product of the French Revolution, such extreme egalitarianism arose out of the ancient radicalism of early Christianity, as inherited from the earlier Axial Age prophets, visionaries, philosophers, and teachers.

19th century depiction of Gorton on trial in Portsmouth. Wikimedia Commons.

This demonstrates one of the many ways, including town hall democracy in New England (an inheritance of Germanic tribal politics), through which some Puritans would influence a more open culture, in spite of the infamous puritanical tendencies of oppressiveness within mainstream strains of orthodoxy. There was a surprising number of these dissenting Puritans, albeit some of them turned away from Puritanism in having sought a more accommodating religiosity elsewhere. As a case in point, before the English Civil War, Roger Williams arrived in 1631, less than a decade after Morton. He was another classical liberal and lawyer who came out of the Inns of Court.

In not being welcomed among his fellow Puritans, Williams escaped house arrest and, after wintering among a nearby tribe, founded Rhode Island with its self-described ‘democratical’ constitution. This is why his fellow Puritan heretic Anne Hutchinson (1591-1643) sought refuge there, if an opinionated troublemaker like the prickly Gorton was a challenge to such social tolerance. In a letter to John Winthrop (1588-1649), Williams wrote of him, “Master Gorton having abused high and low at Aquidneck, is now bewitching and bemadding poor Providence…” Still, Rhode Island was the only colony where Gorton gained freedom. Unsurprisingly, some religious dissenters fell into the habit of always looking for a fight, even among themselves — surely, they would’ve measured low on the personality trait of ‘agreeableness’ (FFM) and maybe high on ‘neuroticism’. It reminds one of fractious left-wingers today.

As a Free Baptist, Williams had no personal interest in organized religion, instead maintaining his faith as private conscience and allowing others the same right — instead of arresting, punishing, or banishing critics and challengers, he invited them to public debate. Going beyond even Morton’s radicalism, if maybe not beyond that of Gorton, he advocated in his writings for collective land rights of the indigenous; as a well known and influential thinker before John Locke had published anything on property rights. Having considered the natives to be friends and neighbors, he refused to side with the other colonists during King Philip’s War. So, William’s liberal, multicultural, and secular democracy wasn’t merely about individualism either. I’m not sure where anyone got the idea that all liberals are and always were individualists and that they based everything on individualism, as opposed to leftists as collectivists. It’s historical amnesia, as well as ignorance of the diversity of left-liberalism into the present.

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The Articles of Confederation, ratified in 1781. This was the format for the United States government until the Constitution. Wikimedia Commons.

Anti-Federalism, Anti-Authoritarianism

As open to socialism, anarchism, and libertarianism, my own left-liberalism takes inspiration from this radical tradition of left-liberalism, specifically in the above described Anglo-American lineage. I’m particularly influenced by Thomas Paine who, though he conceded that the economic changes were likely irreversible, wanted to compensate with a citizen’s dividend. As to be paid for by progressive land taxation, it would’ve been a combination of old age pension, universal basic income, and a never-ending reparations for the stolen commons. He also favored transnational revolution, a global citizenry, total freedom, universal suffrage, and direct majoritarian democracy; as well as being a fellow traveler with feminists. He was an abolitionist toward all forms of oppression: slavery, plutocracy, aristocracy, monarchy, theocracy, etc. That’s far left, even by today’s standards.

One of the first commentators on a basic political divide was Paine’s friend and collaborator, Thomas Jefferson. He described leftism and liberalism as synonyms: “for in truth the parties of Whig and Tory are those of nature. they exist in all countries, whether called by these names, or by those of Aristocrats and democrats, coté droite [right side] or coté gauche [left side], Ultras or Radicals, Serviles or Liberals” (letter to Marquis de Lafayette (1757-1834), November 4, 1823). He wasn’t shy about who he sided with. Jefferson’s opposition to slavery and other forms of exploitation “is vital for contextualizing the French connection in that he had no problem considering himself a republican of the Jacobin type” (M.A. Iasilli, A Left-Wing History of the Republican Party).

“Jefferson without reservation proclaims that the unequal distribution of property is in direct violation of natural rights. This is a significant deviation from the traditional consensus of laissez-faire economics that pervades American history. This experience shaped Jefferson’s views on equality and introduced a strain of egalitarianism into the lexicon of anti-Federalist thought. Unlike the Federalists, who upheld the principle of property as the keystone of natural rights, Jefferson offered a critique that sparked consciousness of social class divisions and the need to mitigate such inequality through progressive reform, including taxation on the value of assets.”

Paine and other Anti-Federalists shared that negative view toward land consolidation and wealth concentration, hence the perceived need for some kind of redistribution or equalization such as progressive land taxation, but of course through democratic process. They saw a link between all forms of freedom, both negative and positive, in relation to: economic, social, religious, and political. That’s also why liberalism (non-authoritarianism) and leftism (non-dominance) are inseparable in practice. Such an understanding was more common in the past. That mixing of and alliance between what we now think of as leftism and liberalism continued later into the 19th century (Marxism Within Capitalism).

By the way, one should always keep in mind that the ‘Anti-Federalist’ label is a misnomer. The Anti-Federalists were actually the real federalists, whereas many of those who self-identified as Federalists were, instead, nationalists, imperialists, and neo-monarchists (Federalist’s “Vigorous Executive” and Project 2025’s Imperial Presidency). The original federal document was the Articles of Confederation that placed most political power in the hands of the state governments, as the closest representatives of the people in governing themselves. The (pseudo-)Federalists feared democracy, which is why the counterrevolutionary Constitutional Convention resulted in the percentage of US residents with voting rights having been lower than under the British Empire. So, it was taxation with even less representation.

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Karl Marx, 1875. Wikimedia Commons.

Leftist Hope of Red Republicans

Karl Marx (1818-1883) supported the presidency of Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865) and the United States Republican Party, then known as the Red Republicans because of their radicalism, including advocates of: free labor, abolitionism, suffragism, feminism, libertinism, libertarianism, temperance, dietary reform, vegetarianism, pacifism, labor unionism, socialism, Marxism, etc (Al Benson Jr. and Walter Donald Kennedy, Red Republicans and Lincoln’s Marxists; John Nichols, The S Word; & A Child of Stonewall, The Marxist Origins of the GOP — and How they Turned Away from Radicalism). Marx was so smitten with the United States that, at one point, he began planning to immigrate. On behalf of the International Working Man’s Association, Marx wrote a letter to Abraham Lincoln congratulating him on re-election and abolition of slavery, to which Lincoln responded with appreciation through his London ambassador.

So, Lincoln was well aware of Marx. In fact, he regularly read the leading Whig-turned-Republican newspaper, The New York Daily Tribune, that hired Marx as a foreign correspondent. Over a decade, more than 500 of Marx’s writings (if some ghostwritten by Friedrich Engels (1820-1895)) were published and mostly under his own name (but others put under the Tribune owner’s name, Horace Greeley (1811–1872)), more than in any other publication of that period. Many of those newspaper articles formed material for his book Das Kapital (William Harlan Hale, When Karl Marx Worked For Horace Greeley). It helped Marx formulate and articulate many of his ideas, as no other widely distributed newspaper would publish him, especially not in London.

The owner Greeley was a utopian socialist, abolitionist, feminist, and vegetarian — Lincoln referred to him as “an old friend” (letter, August 22, 1862). And the newspaper’s editor, the socialist Charles Anderson Dana (1819-1897), personally knew and corresponded with Marx. After leaving the newspaper, Dana was brought into Lincoln’s administration, first as as a special commissioner in the War Department and then as the Assistant Secretary of the War Department, and in that position he reported directly to President Lincoln. Greeley never worked professionally with Lincoln, but he did get involved in politics. He became a collaborator with the radical Alvin Earle Bovay (1818-1903) who earlier was a left-wing founder of the Republican Party.

Tribune editorial staff. Horace Greeley (second from the right in front). Charles Anderson Dana (center back). Wikimedia Commons.

Interestingly, an 1854 meeting about abolitionism in Ripon, Wisconsin*** is sometimes considered the origin of the Republican Party. Ten years earlier, based on the principles of French philosopher Charles Fourier (1772-1837), a socialist commune was established nearby in Ceresco, known as the Wisconsin Phalanx. It was later incorporated into Ripon. Along with former Whigs, Free Soilers, Liberty Party members, and disgruntled Democrats, some of the ex-commune members attended that meeting in Ripon’s Little White Schoolhouse, literally blocks away from the disbanded commune. Keep in mind that ‘republican’ was originally one of those words that was interchangeable with radical, left-wing, and liberal.

Bovay “was the head of the National reform Association. He also was editor of Young America newspaper. It’s interesting that Friedrich Engels, the co-author of the manifesto with Karl Marx, wrote another publication called “The Principles of Communism.” And in that volume he mentioned that the Marxist, the communist, had formed a common cause with Alvin Bovay’s National Reform Association” (Bill Young, U.S. Republican party had its roots in Marxism). Greeley and Bovay were active in an organization that established communes across the United States. Later, they worked together to establish a new socialist party. That might’ve been the party in which Greeley ran as a socialist candidate.

At the time, there were a lot of Marxists, socialists, and social democrats. Following the failed 1848 revolutions, an estimated 4-10,000 Forty-Eighters fled to the United States as refugees. They tended to be highly educated and socially liberal, with the majority having been artists, intellectuals, academics, scientists, journalists, professionals, and politicians — the visionaries, leaders, and influencers of their era. Besides holding positions in Lincoln’s administration, these leftists and left-liberals also filled the Union army, most as soldiers and officers but also including major military leaders like General August Willich (1810-1878), a communist, and Colonel Joseph Weydemeyer (1818-1866), a Marxist.

First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln, an 1864 portrait by Francis Bicknell Carpenter. Wikimedia Commons.

It’s from Marxists that Lincoln learned of the labor theory of value, which he publicly defended: “Labor is prior to, and independent of, capital. Capital is only the fruit of labor, and could never have existed if labor had not first existed. […] Labor is the superior of capital, and deserves much the higher consideration.” That was from his first message to Congress, in which he criticized the “effort to place capital on an equal footing with, if not above, labor in the structure of government.” Lincoln came out swinging. As he was in many ways more radical than Bernie Sanders, his views stated then are certainly far to the left of the DNC elite. He was carrying forward the radical left-liberalism of Paine and others.

Having been born working poor, Lincoln hated elitism and exploitation, specifically having opposed the mudsill theory. It was premised on a belief that a natural aristocracy inevitably and rightly ruled over a subjugated permanent underclass, with the latter’s presumed sole purpose being to serve the elite and support their wealth and power, interests and lifestyle. So, though a capitalist in supporting private property rights (with the expectation that property should be more evenly distributed), this gave Lincoln a shared agenda with left-wingers. As part of the broad left, many early left-liberals were strong advocates of freedom in all senses, including radical ideals like free labor and free markets — freedom in practice, not just words.

But it wasn’t only an ideological affinity in his role as a professional politician. When a boy in southern Indiana, Lincoln was inspired by a nearby socialist commune, that of the Owenites at New Harmony. As a lover of books, he never forgot the time when the socialists transported their ‘Boatload of Books’ to their new community, as he watched them pass by on the river. Later, he got to know the Scottish-Welsh Owen family and remained close to them for the rest of his life. Although it’s hard to imagine today, a major hotbed of radicalism in the past was the Midwest, including southern Indiana that also gave birth to the famous socialist Eugene V. Debs (1855-1926) (Radicals & Reformers of Indiana).

One of the Owen sons, Robert Dale Owen (1801-1877), became a reformer and politician. He prodded Lincoln toward abolitionism in a letter that arrived days before the Emancipation Proclamation (Sept. 17, 1862.). Some think it finally pushed the reluctant Lincoln to make that hard decision, as he so feared the breaking of the Union. The Owen sons were major political actors in promoting the establishment of national museums, land grant colleges, etc. If often more moderate in his own politics, Lincoln was a fellow traveler of such radicals that he had been surrounded by his entire lifetime. As such, after being assassinated, “The defeat of Lincoln’s vision of a unified, democratic, and authoritative republic was a defeat for the socialists too” (Robin Blackburn, Lincoln and Marx).

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Two-axis political compass chart with a horizontal socio-economic axis and a vertical socio-cultural axis and ideologically representative political colours, an example for a frequently used model of the political spectrum. Wikimedia Commons.

A Blurred Distinction

Even into the early 1900s, liberalism and leftism weren’t as clearly demarcated. It was similar to how Progressives and municipal socialists both favored public health policies, opposed corruption, pushed democratic reforms, fought organized crime, etc. Even the right-wing Theodore Roosevelt understood the lines were blurry between reformers, radicals, and revolutionaries (Capitalists Learning From Socialists). Part of it was that there were so many third parties that coalition politics was far more common. People also forget that many early socialists were Christians, such as the the author of the Pledge of Allegiance, the Baptist minister Francis Bellamy (1855-1931). Secularism is also a product of Christianity, especially supported by early evangelicals and other religious dissenters who had been oppressed under the rule of state churches and often the targets of religious persecution.

Numerous issues like these crossed over between liberalism and leftism, between theists and atheists (or deists, etc). Whereas many of the divides that dominate today weren’t significant back then. Or else they took different form. One example is abortion. Until the politicized culture wars of the right-wing shadow network (Anne Nelson), organized and orchestrated by Paul Weyrich (1942-2008), Catholics and first wave feminists were anti-choice while Protestants and second wave feminists were pro-choice. Then the Machiavellian masterminds of the religious right realized most ordinary conservatives no longer wanted to rally around racism, much less be openly identified with it, if they may have been fine with casual racism that was the norm. So, they shifted their rhetoric to abortion as baby-killing and thus began the present culture war with its dog-whistle politics.

As an important clarification, Jefferson made a point about the distinction between left/liberal and right/conservative. He lamented that, “we imagined everything republican which was not monarchy” (Kerchival letter). The same basic problem still applies. Sadly, some of us left-wingers (or those falsely claiming to be), especially tankies and campists, have imagined that everything left-wing which was not corporate capitalism. So, they’ve lowered their standards to an aspiration of state capitalism. It’s ironic that they’re stronger proponents of capitalism than many of the earliest liberals. Their only disagreement with right-wing capitalists is the kind of capitalism they’d prefer and hence the kind of capitalist class they want to rule.

Rev. Francis J. Bellamy, American minister and author of the U.S. Pledge of Allegiance. Wikimedia Commons.

So, Stalinism, Marxist-Leninism, and the vanguard elite was mistakenly conceived as left-wing. That was in spite of the USSR effectively having been, besides state capitalist with a capitalist class, an authoritarian state-empire, a dictatorship, a personality cult, neo-feudalism, and red fascism. That contradicts and betrays every leftist principle — liberty, egalitarianism, and solidarity — along with having denied direct, democratic worker control of the means of production (the non-negotiable, defining principle of communism). Such people are counterrevolutionary pseudo-leftists who have co-opted and recuperated leftist ideology and rhetoric, identity and labels (The Threat of the Fake Left). Leftism isn’t defined by mere collectivism, as right-wing ideologies too can be collectivist. The distinction is whether it’s non-authoritarian, egalitarian collectivism (left-wing) or authoritarian, inegalitarian collectivism (right-wing).

By the way, it’s precisely because I’m strongly and radically liberal, by principle and personality, that I sometimes identify as far left. Arguably, the key shared principles of both liberalism and leftism are anti-authoritarianism and anti-dominance. Some claim that liberalism is just one variety of leftism and I partly agree with that. But I sometimes put it the opposite way. Liberalism is the dominant paradigm, with which leftists either embrace or react to, although this probably more often happens unconsciously than with awareness. It’s why, in unconscious reaction, so many supposed ‘left-wingers’ end up sounding like right-wingers by adopting illiberal authoritarianism.

Still, I sometimes think about it in an entirely other way. The two may be considered as operating in separate areas or on different levels. Maybe leftism is more about specific ideological principles. That is ideology proper, as it’s most commonly understood. Be it communist, anarchist, left-libertarian, liberal democratic, or whatever, they all share the values of non-authoritarianism and non-dominance: freedom, liberty, autonomy, agency, self-determination, self-governance, etc; as applied equally (egalitarianism) to all (solidarity, class or group consciousness, citizens of the world) — Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité. That’s the original broad left, prior to it being fractured into supposedly competing ideological groups.

Liberalism, though, has more the connotation of a mentality and attitude, a way of being and relating. It’s a descriptive quality, be it of an individual or group, that can be tacked onto an ideological identity. Most fundamentally, it’s to be liberal-minded in terms of the personality trait ‘openness to experience’ (FFM): negative capability, intellectual curiosity, aesthetic appreciation, cognitive empathy, etc. It’s to be open to others and the world. The original sense of liberalism was to be open-minded, freedom-loving, trusting, kind, sympathetic, tolerant, inclusive, and generous. But of course, the distinction between the liberalism and leftism has always been overlapping. Liberal, liberty, libertine, and liberation are all cognate. It all comes down to freedom.

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Notes and Additional Thoughts

5 May 1789 opening of the Estates General of 1789 in Versailles. Wikimedia Commons.

*Note 1:

It’s useful to return to first principles, as Jefferson was doing. And living at the time when the broad left was taking form, first principles were much more clearly potent in his mind. He asserted that the mother principle of republicanism, as fundamentally identical to that of liberalism and leftism, is that “governments are republican only in proportion as they embody the will of their people, and execute it.” Though not rolling off the tongue in the same way, that would be more clear if we reinterpreted it with greater breadth and precision:

Any system, organization, or institution (political party, governing body, etc) is only legitimate, according to leftist and liberal principles of non-authoritarianism and non-dominance, to the extent there is direct democratic control, transparency, and accountability as expressed in collective self-determination and self-governance, and as balanced with universal and equal rights of freedom and liberty, autonomy and agency, access and empowerment, fairness and justice.

In essence, that defining standard would apply equally to a social democratic state, a democratic socialist confederation, a municipal socialist city, an egalitarian commune, a worker cooperative, a labor union, or any number of other leftist possibilities. This is the ideological scaffolding that, for example, holds up the defining principle of communism: worker control of the means of production. And it’s what puts the lie to Soviet state capitalism and red fascism being portrayed as actual communism.

Baruch Spinoza. Wikimedia Commons.

**Note 2 (5/29/26):

While writing pieces like this, I’m well aware that I have an Anglo-American bias. That’s simply because it’s the history I know in the greatest detail. Plus, it’s not only that the American Revolution was the precedent for the French Revolution, Haitian Revolution, etc. Even earlier, the English Civil War — what some consider the first modern revolution, specifically of class war — was the precedent for the American Revolution and the entire early modern revolutionary period. (See: Christopher Hill, The Century of Revolution 1603-1714 & The World Turned Upside Down; Brian Manning, The English People and the English Revolution; Lawrence Stone, The Causes of the English Revolution 1529-1642; Michael Braddick, God’s Fury, England’s Fire; John Rees, The Leveller Revolution; Steve Pincus, 1688: The First Modern Revolution; Jonathan Healey, The Blazing World & The Blood in Winter; etc.)

But I do have knowledge beyond that. There was a lot of cross-cultural influences back then, including waves of immigrants and refugees. That meant much movement and mixing of ideas. It’s important to note that the first major Enlightenment thinker was not English, neither Welsh, Scottish, Scots-Irish, nor Irish. Instead, it was a Dutch Jewish heretic,  Baruch Spinoza (Jonathan Israel: Radical Enlightenment, Enlightenment Contested, A Revolution of the Mind, Democratic Enlightenment, Revolutionary Jews, & Spinoza, Life and Legacy). One might note that, besides John Locke, many Puritans spent time in Netherlands as Marian Exiles. It was there that Puritans became aligned with and influenced by Calvinists like the French Huguenots who also were in exile. So, though the Protestant Reformation never reached the British Isles, those exiles upon return brought that influence back with them and then imported it to the American colonies.

If in a different vein from Spinoza, the earliest classical liberal in the Americas might’ve been Samuel de Champlain (1574-1635), more of a man of action than of thought. He was a French explorer, founder of Quebec City, and the Father of New France (David Hackett Fischer, Champlain’s Dream). Though a colonizer, he saw the New World as an opportunity to escape the violence, persecution, bigotry, and authoritarianism of Europe so as to establish a new kind of society. Though a battle-hardened soldier, and though willing to fight on behalf of allies, he went to great lengths to live peacefully among the neighboring natives. Rather than conquering and ruling over or else eliminating them with genocide, he championed mutual tolerance and trade with indigenous peoples, not just coexistence but cohabitation. He encouraged intermarriage and the radical practice of exchanging children to be raised in the other’s culture, which would’ve created familiarity and a shared sense of society. His colony was one of the first secular experiments in North America, as neither did he show any interest to convert the natives. His friendly relations established a culture of trust that later benefitted Thomas Morton, Roger Williams, and William Penn.

Cover shows one half of a male figure from the neck down, wearing kilt and long, chequered stockings

Wikimedia Commons.

The French had other influences as well. The Scottish Enlightenment was also important. But one must acknowledge that some of the greatest Scottish thinkers of that period were educated or taught in French Universities, specifically Protestant/Huguenot academies and institutions (Mark L. Hulliung, Enlightenment in Scotland and France; Alexander Broadie, Scottish Philosophers in France; Alexander Broadie, Scottish Enlightenment Links with France; & Alexander Broadie, Agreeable Connexions). Arthur Herman argues that the Scottish invented the modern world (How the Scots Invented the Modern World). But if that’s the case, we must understand that, in the British Isles, Scotland had one of the strongest ties to the European mainland, if England was closer in geographical distance. The French helped shape Scotland as a modern country, and vice versa. The Enlightenment was an international project. So many Enlightenment and post-Enlightenment thinkers were cosmopolitan figures who knew multiple languages and traveled broadly.

As common in that era, religious dissenters, often as radical non-conformists (see more below in additional thoughts), were among the greatest of political dissidents or elsewise deemed threats to society. Some French Huguenots, as refugees, joined the Scots-Irish and came to the American colonies (Catharine Randall, From a Far Country: Camisards and Huguenots in the Atlantic World). Like French Camisards, they had immense influence on early Scottish, English, and American thought. As a rough third of colonists and a near majority in Pennsylvania, Germans also had much influence, specifically that of Pietists, Familists, Brethren, Hutterites, Mennonites, and Amish. William Penn was one of those shaped by this international milieu of protesters, reformers, secularists, egalitarians, multiculturalists, pacifists, liberationists, anti-authoritarians, and civil libertarians. “His father descended from Welsh and his mother was Dutch. As a youth, he spent many years in Ireland where he first learned of Quakerism. Also, as a young adult, he studied with a French Huguenot theologian at a French academy and was strongly influenced by French culture. Later on, he spent many years as a missionary in Germany” (General American and the Particulars of Our Origins).

Here is another example of overt syncretism. The French Camisards were a charismatic, ecstatic sect of Calvinist peasants. In response to state persecution after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685, they took up arms in rebellion and were put down (1702–1706). They then fled to London where they came into contact with many other religious dissenters. A Quaker splinter group merged with some of the Camisards. They came to be known as the Shakers. After coming to America, their leader Mother Ann Lee (1736-1784), the Second Coming of Christ, became one of the most powerful and influential figures (mentioned again below). They were extreme egalitarians and pacifists, treating all people equally, no matter gender or race. They would even take in blacks, including escaped slaves. This brought them into conflict with others, especially in slave areas. Like the First Coming of Jesus as a man, they refused any human law that contradicted divine law. They would experience centuries of persecution for their faith.

Johann Reinhold Forster and Georg Forster, by John Francis Rigaud, London 1780.[75] The plant in the brim of the hat is a Forstera sedifolia and the bird in Johann Forster’s hand a New Zealand bellbird, locating the scene in New Zealand.[76] However, the painting has been commonly called “Reinhold and George Forster at Tahiti” or similar. Wikimedia Commons.

During the same period, there is another major figure, Johann Georg Adam Forster or more commonly known as Georg Forster (1754–1794), who I just discovered (Andrea Wulf, The Traveler). With partial Scottish ancestry, he was a German-Polish explorer, geographer, naturalist, ethnologist, artist, travel writer, journalist, linguist, translator, teacher, professor, librarian, and revolutionary. Besides his travels, he worked in numerous countries: Russia, England, Poland, and various German countries. But he had no national loyalties, considering himself a citizen of the world. By the time the American Revolution began, he had already been traveling to foreign lands with his father on scientific expeditions, including as part of Captain James Cook’s second voyage to the Pacific (1772–1775), about which he wrote a popular account, A Voyage Round the World. He stood out in his time for being able to observe other cultures without overt Western and Christian bias, and without Romantic interpretation of Noble Savages; setting a precedent for the later anti-racism and cultural relativism of the anthropologist Franz Boas.

Forster met with Benjamin Franklin (1706–1790) in Paris during the American Revolution (Scott Horton, Georg Forster’s Recollection of Benjamin Franklin). He also corresponded with numerous Enlightenment figures, such as Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (1729–1781), Johann Gottfried von Herder (1744–1803), Christoph Martin Wieland (1733–1813), and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749–1832). In 1790, the young Alexander von Humboldt (1769–1859) traveled with and was inspired by him. Having previously translated Rights of Man, Forster several years later met his own hero Thomas Paine, in Paris (1793). Friedrich Engels dubbed Forster “the German Thomas Paine.” In opposing racial supremacy and imperialism, both men were radical pamphleteers who supported cosmopolitanism, liberation, transnational revolution, slave abolition, and universal human rights. Also, similar to Paine’s association with women’s rights advocates, Forster admired strong women, including accepting his wife’s independence and affairs. But also like Paine, he became a pariah for his radicalism and was written out of the history books.

As of some these diverse examples demonstrate, even if we focus on early modern history outside of the Anglosphere, all of it overlaps and forms into confluences, often inspiring and spawning changes in the British Isles and American colonies. That was even more true as time went on. One of the side effects of colonial imperialism was a new kind of cosmopolitanism, multiculturalism, and often multilingualism. Upon the trade routes, there were not only raw goods and the products made from them but also ideas, carried by individuals and in books. It also made possible an interlinking, across borders, of philosophers, scientists, and writers that formed into an increasingly common vision and identity; including but not limited to the gentlemanly Invisible College and Republic of Letters. For example, American aristocrats and intellectuals like Thomas Jefferson didn’t only read John Locke but also Baruch Spinoza, along with a wide array of other texts, such as the Koran. In Jefferson’s America, all were welcome, if some of his more radical friends and associates took that promise to a further extent.

State Level Performance for Robert La Follette’s Presidential Campaign, 1924. Wikimedia Commons.***Note 3:

On a related note, Wisconsin was, arguably, once the most progressive state in the Union. But as the above history indicates, this progressivism was grounded in and inspired by radicalism. The Progressive Movement began on the state level and, with the earlier power of third parties in state politics, it was often more ambitious and visionary in local politics where it was easier to get major projects done. Wisconsin was one of those places where social democracy met and merged with democratic socialism.

Take the Milwaukee sewer socialists who governed almost continuously for a half century. The popular tv show Happy Days was set in the last era of socialist rule. That’s why they were happy. Like those municipal socialists, Progressives had similar aims of democratic reform, ending political corruption, stopping organized crime, and public health programs — all bread and butter issues to improve the everyday lives of residents and workers. Indeed, Progressivism arose out of the Red Republicans. As the famous Progressive politician Robert M. La Follette (1855-1925) put it,

“In no partisan spirit I contend that the Progressive movement began within the Republican Party. It rapidly advanced its control, shaping policies of state administrations, and stamping its impress upon national legislation as a distinctly Progressive Republican movement. And upon this fact in recent political history I appeal to Progressive Republicans everywhere to maintain their organization within the Republican party” (La Follette’s Weekly Magazine, Volume 4, 1912).

How far the Republican Party has fallen! Then again, we might hope that this is a cycle that will swing back to progressivism again, as has happened before.

  • To Make Men Free: A History of the Republican Party
    by Heather Cox Richardson
  • When Republicans Were Progressive
    by David Durenberger & Lori Sturdevant
  • Unreasonable Men: Theodore Roosevelt and the Republican Rebels Who Created Progressive Politics
    by Michael Wolraich
  • Turning Right in the Sixties: The Conservative Capture of the GOP
    by Mary C. Brennan

An Agreement of the People, a series of manifestos, published between 1647 and 1649, for constitutional changes to the English state often associated with the Levellers. Wikimedia Commons.

Additional Thoughts (6/4/26):

About religious non-conformists, there were some strange ones from the 1600s onward. It wasn’t only high-born intellectuals who were the voices of the Enlightenment. Intriguingly, it was precisely religion that often allowed expression of the most extreme forms of egalitarianism, presumably going back to some of the crazy stuff in New Testament, such as the abovementioned Galatians 3:28. Stephen J. Patterson notes, in The Forgotten Creed, that Christians had been taking that divine proclamation seriously since the first generation of Christians, as attested to in the Pauline Epistles. In opposition to both Jewish and Roman tradition, custom, and religious law, woman and slaves held high positions of authority, men let their hair grow long and Christian women let their hair hang loose, and the two genders danced ecstatically together–scandalous! Plus, they refused to participate in the official imperial religion, as an early expression of proto-secularism that was a punishable offense.

It went back further actually, as demonstrated in the 14th century English Peasants Revolt when the demand was “On earth as it is in heaven” (Lord’s Prayer, Matthew 6:10). When the peasants looked around at the flagrant inequality, corruption, and abuse, they didn’t see anything resembling the heaven of the Bible. So, they rampaged across the countryside killing elites of all sorts, just stopping short of killing the king, as the king was still (incorrectly) perceived as being on the side of the people. The reason the modern right-wing elite prioritize co-opting religion and recuperating theology is specifically because they fear its power. Jesus himself was a radical (Fulfillment of the Law). Those early Christians breaking and betraying Jewish commandments and Roman law  were doing so by following the example of Jesus who did the same himself on a regular basis. Though he didn’t come to replace the law as a new lawmaking ruler or theocrat, he did come to fulfill the law and make it moot. It wasn’t that he was attempting to attack or refute human law of worldly power, including that of priests. Rather, he simply ignored its interpellative hail, its voice of authority. It was superseded (i.e., fulfilled) by natural law.

One suspects that Galatians 3:28 had influenced many of the religious malcontents and visionaries of the early modern revolutionary period. The most famous example being Mother Ann Lee, as the Shaker prophetess and godwoman, the Second Coming of Christ. The implications are obvious and stated openly. Christ — and hence God — was transgender, both man and woman. She drew a large following who seriously took her as the female embodiment of the divine. In setting a powerful example, the Shakers established a compelling precedent for radical egalitarianism that, in many ways, remains radical to this day. If such a religious figure were alive now, she would terrify the religious right more than Stalin rising from his grave. But as there are only a few Shakers remaining in the world, the religious right can dismiss them as quaint.

Portrait of the Public Universal Friend by J.L.D. Mathies. Wikimedia Commons.

Besides the Shakers, the Quakers created other radicals as well. Born female to Quaker parents in Rhode Island, Jemima Wilkinson (1752-1819) suffered a severe illness in 1776 (Nina Sankovitch, Not Your Founding Father), the same year that the American colonies declared independence and the Quakers prohibited members from owning slaves. After that, this individual claimed to have died, been reborn (as a “genderless evangelist,” “transgender evangelist,” or “spiritual transvestite” ~Wikipedia), and reanimated with a new spirit. Then the individual self-identified as the Public Universal Friend (AKA ‘the Friend’ or ‘P.U.F.’), no longer acknowledging the birth name. Besides dressing androgynously, the Public Universal Friend and followers were mixed on pronouns, sometimes avoiding them altogether. Talk about a Woke Social Justice Warrior!

The Friend founded the Universal Friends, largely a splinter group of the Quakers. Though disowned by the Society of Friends (i.e., Orthodox Quakers), many Free Quakers welcomed and supported the Universal Friends. Having been raised Quaker, the Friend maintained a similar set of beliefs and values, similar as well to the contemporary Shakers. In reference to scholarship, it’s written in the Wikipedia article that, “[Susan] Juster and others state that, to followers, the Friend may have embodied Paul’s statement in Galatians 3:28 that ‘there is neither male nor female’ in Christ.[139][141] Catherine Wessinger, Brekus, and others state that the Friend defied the idea of gender as binary and as natural and essential or innate[142][143][144]“. Like some earlier radicals, the Friend treated everyone equally, even Native Americans: “the Friend gave a speech to the US government officials and Iroquois chiefs about ‘the Importance of Peace & Love’.” If extremely unconventional for the mainstream at the time, this kind of stuff continually cropped up among the religious fringe. And more:

“The Public Universal Friend rejected the ideas of predestination and election, held that anyone, regardless of gender, could gain access to God’s light and that God spoke directly to individuals who had free will to choose how to act and believe, and believed in the possibility of universal salvation.[73][74] Calling for the abolition of slavery,[77][78][79] the Friend persuaded followers who held people in slavery to free them.[80][81] Several members of the congregation of Universal Friends were black, and they acted as witnesses for manumission papers.[80][81] The Friend preached humility[82] and hospitality towards everyone;[83] kept religious meetings open to the public, and housed and fed visitors, including those who came only out of curiosity[83] and indigenous people, with whom the preacher generally had a cordial relationship.[84] […] The preacher also held that women should “obey God rather than men”,[86] and the most committed followers included roughly four dozen unmarried women known as the Faithful Sisterhood who took on leading roles of the sort which were often reserved to men.[88] The portion of households headed by women in the Society’s settlements (20%) was much higher than in surrounding areas.[89]

Leftism Points Beyond the Right and Beyond Itself

Table of Contents

  • Introduction and Summary
  • Political Spectrum, Liberal Framework
  • Origins: Tribalism and Pseudo-Tribalism
  • From Axial Age to Modernity: Universalism, Egalitarianism, etc
  • Traditional Values Are Not Culture Wars
  • Freedom to Belong, Responsibility to Others
  • Reactionary Right, Leftover Liberalism, and Leftist Supermajority
  • Conclusion: Egalitarianism and Abundance

Introduction and Summary

Despite having conservative parents, we spent most of our lives in liberal communities and we were raised in liberal churches. By our twenties, we were drawn toward social liberalism and increasingly leftism, although we were already becoming familiar with the reactionary before we knew what it was (from discovering Art Bell, Alex Jones, etc in the late 1990s).

But we’ve never been strongly attached to particular labels, except to the extent they are useful means. If anything, we’ve constantly questioned issues of social and political identities. So, with that in mind, we’d be more than happy if the conflict between right and left simply disappeared or became moot. That is the aim of leftism, as we see it. Leftism aspires to a world where explicit leftism is no longer necessary, that is to say a world no longer afflicted by the reactionary mind.

Summary – In a particular take of left-wing ideology, it is affirmed that:

  • Humans interrelate with and are affected by conditions, systems, processes, structures, and environments in society and the world.
  • Social experience of identities, roles, and relationships are socially constructed, context-dependent, flexible, and intersectional.
  • Situated cognition is embodied, embedded, extended, enacted, and ecological (5E).
  • The body, mind, and world are multitudinous and bundled, fluid and open.
  • People are interrelated and interdependent with each other, society, and the larger world.
  • Humans need health, happiness, safety, security, trust, relationship, belonging, and connection.
  • The human species is inherently social; freedom is communal and collective, responsibility is shared and mutual.
  • A good society is achieved through culture of trust, cohesive solidarity, group consciousness, mutual support, and collective action.

And it is affirmed that:

  • Egalitarianism, fairness, justice, liberty, and freedom is central to human nature, is the center of any worthy politics and good society.
  • High inequality is unhealthy, stressful, traumatizing, dangerous, deranging, and unsustainable.
  • Artificial scarcity, authoritarian conformity, dominance hierarchy, social division, and illiberal intolerance should always be challenged.
  • Ideological realism and false consciousness are social control through perception management.
  • The reactionary mind is abnormal and unnatural, insubstantial and deceptive, sickly and harmful.
  • The right-wing is a reaction to leftism and liberalism; it denies, obscures, undermines, weakens, co-opts, and subverts what it is reacting to.
  • A revolution of the mind and society began in the Axial Age and continues to this day.
  • Liberalism is the ideological framework and dominant paradigm of modern Western civilization by which left and right are defined.
  • Leftism is a placeholder for something else, the finger pointing at the moon.

* * *

Political Spectrum, Liberal Framework

What does ‘left-wing’ ideology refer to? What was the original and basic meaning? The main element and motivating force of leftism has been to perceive the world and society, people and groups more as interdependent systems or processes than as reified things, unchanging categories, and isolated units; much less in terms of fixed and immutable laws, known certainties, absolutist dogma, and authoritarian institutions (or, if you prefer, unquestioned and unchallenged institutional authority as received truth, conventional wisdom, and ideological realism; that is to say, enforced norms as normative enforcement, as social control through what Louis Althusser called ideological interpellation or hailing; i.e., the enclosure of the mind).

By ideology, this implies not only ‘ideas’ in the narrow sense as principles, values, and belief structure but also ‘ideos’ as worldview, mindset, and imaginary (i.e., a leftist conception of ideology; rooted more in an ancient conception of the power of ideas as a psychic force). This is based on thinner boundaries of mind that promote experience and identity that is more fluid in allowing things to overlap, shift, and merge (i.e., liberal-mindedness as expressed in social liberalism; or: FFM openness, MBTI intuition and perceiving, and Ernest Hartmann’s thin boundary type). In creating and promoting the conditions for greater empathy, compassion, and inclusion, it is what derogatively gets called ‘Bleeding Heart Liberalism‘ (a slur originally used to describe, disparage, and dismiss radically egalitarian social justice warriors who sought to illegalize lynching, vigilante justice, and mob violence; in contrast to the right-wing pseudo-libertarians who thought government shouldn’t intervene to allow private citizens to resolve their own problems), similar to being a ‘tree-hugging hippy’ and ‘sympathizing with the enemy’.

This distinguishes it from the political right where everything is defined by what evaluatively, hierarchically, and dualistically separates one clearly demarcated category from another (us vs them, ingroup vs outgroup, worthy vs unworthy, superior vs inferior, pure vs impure, good vs evil), within the rigidified boundaries of the egoic mind (FFM conscientiousness, MBTI judging, and Ernest Hartmann’s thick boundary type) — even left vs right, treated as a black/white division and ruling paradigm, falls prey to the reactionary right-wing; something we will try to carefully avoid. This is why conservatives more strongly obsess over narrow and/or exclusionary group identities (race, religion, ethno-nationalism, etc) and atomistic conceptions of identities (lone individuals, consumer-citizens, capitalist actors, social Darwinian competitors, nuclear families, etc); and why those on the left can become more conservative and reactionary when they become pulled into similar identities. One can begin to sense how, in being framed within post-Enlightenment liberalism, the modern political right is inherently and inevitably opposed to the actual traditionalism of the past, from earliest communal Christianity to Medieval communal feudalism.

This modern right-wing dogmatism and groupthink lends itself to conventional thought that gives an appearance of certainty and orderliness, a sense of predictability and familiarity, a demand of hierarchy and control; based upon various simplifying heuristics (e.g., stereotypes). A place for everything; and everything in its place — which means anything out of place better be put back into place and kept in place, by any means necessary and at any cost. On the global stage, this plays out in Manichaean narratives like the Catholic Crusades, Manifest Destiny, White Man’s Burden, Cold War, and Clash of Civilizations; not to mention the overuse of the war metaphor that always means a war on the public and particularly a war on the poor and powerless; such as War on Poverty, War on Drugs, and War on Terror (how does one have war on an emotion like ‘terror’?). This is where there must be a winner and loser; the winner, of course, is presumably the good guys and they take all in a final victory against the forces of evil, or else the bad guys win and all that is good is destroyed. There is little, if any, room for moderation, tolerance, and cooperation toward shared vision and common benefit or simply a middle ground of mutual respect (other than convenient and often fleeting alliances), much less equality, fairness, justice, and freedom.

Lockstep solidarity is intentionally constrained to an insular group identity, what could be called pseudo-tribalism because of how it mimics tribalism but without the intimacy of actual tribes. In the reactionary right-wing mind, to be some combination of a Westerner, American, White, and Christian, particularly to be a native-born WASP, is to be part of an exclusive and exclusionary group that includes vast numbers of strangers who otherwise have nothing in common since most of the members have never met or shared any experience beyond mass media, nationalistic propaganda, religious apologetics, and such. This is what makes pseudo-tribalism reactionary, neither leftist nor traditional; and so this gives the modern and increasingly postmodern right-wing a distinct flavor. The actual past is erased and replaced with nostalgic fantasies, invented traditions, and historical revisionism, but where the face of the past is worn like a bloody mask skinned from the corpse of tradition.

Let us make a further distinction or rather non-distinction. Liberalism, as we’ve argued, is not really so much left or right. Instead, it is the frame of both, of the whole ‘spectrum’. That is why conservatives and other right-wingers should, at least sometimes, be taken at face value when they claim to be classical liberals (rather than classical conservatives), even when their nostalgic rhetoric is historical revisionism, opportunistic realpolitik, and manipulative spin. When reactionaries co-opt from the left, as they do in using old liberal ideas and language, they essentially become what they are pretending to be and so, to some degree, make it real (i.e., hyperstition); the con man who first must con himself. But the radicals on the left also operate within the liberal sphere of our shared society, even when they contest this claim. Calling someone a liberal or not doesn’t really tell us much, since it can as easily and as validly be embraced by reactionaries and regressives as by radicals and progressives.

As such, many leftists prefer to deny any association with liberalism or else maintain a wariness of distance, whether or not such a stance is realistic within the ruling liberal paradigm that also rules inside our minds. If they’re not careful, in reacting to liberalism, leftists can end up just another variety of reactionary and so begin to display the right-wing traits of a reactionary (e.g., the Leninist revolutionary vanguard that, in fighting bourgeois liberals, became a Stalinist ruling elite that enforced yet another socially conservative hierarchy within the Soviet Union, and so basically re-created the Russian Empire with Joseph Stalin as the new czar and the working class as a new peasantry). [Then again, the bourgeois liberals in reacting against leftists can likewise fall to the dark side (e.g., in post-WWI Germany, many of the middle class ‘liberals’ sided with the capitalist class to join the Nazis in having had fought against radical artists, freethinking intellectuals, free speech advocates, labor activists, social democrats, communists, and Marxists; or, if one prefers an example closer to home, think of the American Cold War liberals who were among the greatest enemies of the political left and ended up promoting illiberalism).]

Simply put, when reacting to reactionaries, the reactionary mind always wins because both sides offer no alternative; just two claims of lesser evil that inevitably leads to greater evil (closely related to the problematic dynamic between authoritarianism and anti-authoritarianism, where authoritarianism ends up defining even those who oppose it; e.g., the sad and strange phenomenon of authoritarian right-libertarians using anti-authoritarian rhetoric). This is ideological realism as epistemic closure, a totalizing narrative, a hermetically-sealed reality tunnel; forever mired in mind games of symbolic conflation and indoctrination. The reactionary is the shadow of liberalism and so everyone is vulnerable to infection from the reactionary mind virus; perfectly symbolized by Two-Face in the Batman mythos (this represents the whole reactionary worldview in how both Two-Face and Batman are not only enemies but two competing varieties of reactionary, since the entire dynamic between them is reactionary as is the entire Gotham story-world, specifically as fleshed out in the Dark Knight movies). Nonetheless, it could and maybe should be maintained that leftism, by definition and practice, is not reactionary and neither is it opposite of nor in opposition to the reactionary. Rather, leftism, if it is to be meaningful at all, is offering an entirely different understanding, a genuine alternative that is at the heart of the liberal project. Leftists, along with anyone else who disidentifies with the right-wing and/or disagrees with right-wing views, would do well to remember this.

Considering the complications and confusions, it is fair that some complain about the problems and limitations of these broad ideological labels; in particular the broadly amorphous and typically non-identifying left-liberal supermajority that has been suppressed and silenced into a state of public ignorance, as public identity can only form with public knowledge — the ruling elite in politics and media portray and attack left-liberals as a minority; causing mass psychosis in how people’s private selves become splintered from public experience and mediated reality through the perception management of indoctrination and propaganda campaigns, a form of gaslighting — so, what is the ‘Left’ when it can’t be seen or heard? That is all the more reason for us to pinpoint the distinctions that do matter, the distinctions that have remained relevant and potent across the centuries. The leftist difference that makes a difference keeps reappearing, no matter how often it is attacked and dismissed or mimicked and appropriated by the reactionary right, including by those using respectability politics to pose as ‘centrists’ and ‘moderates’. But it is often easiest to see something by looking back to a time when it was still young and fresh, not yet grimy and scarred from historical accretions.

There is a thinking style — fundamentally communal and collective, broadly systemic and holistic, potentially integrative and integral — that consistently shows up as one of the defining features of the left-wing that influenced, informed, and inspired the earliest and most radical of Enlightenment thought (e.g., Baruch Spinoza‘s panentheism) and post-Enlightenment thought (e.g., Karl Marx’s historical materialism). It’s what underlies Germanic communal and cultural ‘freedom’, as opposed to Latin individualistic and legalistic ‘liberty’ (although liberty also has a radical side, going back to the Stoic liberty of the soul); along with capturing the essence of egalitarianism and fraternity, particularly in terms of the Axial Age ideal of a universal humanity and the Enlightenment Age ideal of a global citizenry, but resonating with an aspect of tribal belonging as well. As for the latter, one might suggest all leftist politics begins not in abstract ideas but in the concrete lived reality of small local communities that give meaning to ideas (e.g., the labor organizing and strikes of factory workers in a factory town, as part of a community where people live in the same neighborhoods, shop at the same stores, belong to the same churches, and whose kids go to the same schools); the communities and associations that William Godwin, a reactionary-minded progressive reformer (i.e., bourgeois classical liberal), feared as the “common mass” and “organized society” (what later reactionary right-wingers would call ‘mobocracy’). That certainly was the early history of the left, a populist movement that initially formed from the bottom up.

* * *

Origins: Tribalism and Pseudo-Tribalism

This basic distinction between left and right is ancient, although not archaic — it does have a beginning point. There doesn’t appear to be any clear evidence of this divide in thinking styles during the Bronze Age or in the following dark age, although it might have been carried as a seed of possibility within the early city-states as they began to merge into the first multicultural empires. But it was only with the Axial Age that there was a sudden and undeniable flourishing of radically new thought, specifically egalitarianism and universalism, along with emergent understandings of democracy, freedom, liberty, rights, justice, tolerance, compassion, etc; as recorded in the words of real or fictitious prophets, philosophers, teachers, wise men, and salvific figures. Proto-leftism was born, if only as a promise of what was to come, along with the proto-reactionary quickly following (e.g., Plato’s authoritarian republicanism as a reaction to Athenian democracy).

Let us consider a historical example. In presaging Classical Greece, the Presocratics were the first to speak of a universal and singular kosmos that acknowledged a larger sense of a shared world inhabited by diverse people across a continuous landscape and contained within the same immense universe (literally, one verse; i.e., one story of the world and of humanity; what today would be called a meta-narrative, to which postmodernism responds and metamodernism reframes). That is to say we all look up at the same stars, something that may seem obvious to the point of being banal but wasn’t commonly understood until long-distance travel became common. At the same time, it’s the ability to think about the world abstractly in this manner that makes possible map-making where the known world can be divided up by abstract boundaries that defined larger socially constructed identities (a Greek or a Jew, a Roman or a Barbarian), and thus make possible one variety of reactionary pseudo-tribalism — tellingly, in the ancient world of mostly oral cultures, abstract categories had less influence over identities of group belonging (Racism, Proto-Racism, and Social Constructs; Ancient Complexity; Ancient Social Identity: The Case of Jews; & Who were the Phoenicians?).

Such pseudo-tribalism took many millennia until it finally formed as modern racialized nation-states now so favored by the reactionary right-wing. Even up to the World War era, most people instead identified with a non-reactionary or less reactionary and more organic sense of local community that included ethnicity, language, religion, and regionalism. Consider that, as feudalism came clashing into modernity with the French Revolution, the French population was still so fragmented with distinct dialects that they weren’t always able to understand those in neighboring regions, much less able to have comprehended the respectable speech in the French Assembly. The modern French nationality had to be invented and socially constructed. That was even more true of the Italians when the majority at the time of the nation’s founding didn’t speak Italian at all. The once feudal serfs had to be forced into modern ethno-nationalism, having resulted in the reactionary disease of nostalgia, a sometimes literally paralyzing and deadly disease.

This is pseudo-tribalism not only because it’s different than tribalism but, more importantly, because it erases the reality and memory of tribalism, overwriting it with invented traditions and false consciousness. One can see the path of the reactionary mind having passed by in the traces left behind of romantic nostalgia and historical revisionism. This so often leads not to national unity but endless division, as anything that is invented and enforced with artificial social constructions will ever be challenged and changed by new inventions (e.g., the Nazis deciding who was German and not, no matter how many generations or centuries one’s family may have resided there; i.e., conservatism opposing traditionalism). Pseudo-tribalism annihilates, co-opts, and replaces traditional cultures with their much more complex and shifting identities, as was seen in the ancient world. The earliest Jews, for example, would not have recognized the social identity projected upon them by most modern Jews — the two worlds are alien to each other, to such an extent that one scholar noted that it would’ve been near impossible to determine who was and was not a Jew in the ancient world. That traditionalism, having survived in large parts of the world fairly late in history, has since mostly disappeared from living memory (e.g., isolated cultures of European tribal paganism survived into the Middle Ages).

Modern ethno-nationalism is a result of the reactionary mind and, once established, it is a further contributing factor in establishing and entrenching the conditions for the reactionary mind to spread; even as the liberal mind might use this as a jumping off point for a greater sense of identity (e.g., humanity as a single species and people with a common human nature and universal human rights). In being a component of liberalism, it was the radical potential of modern nationalism that made possible the multicultural American that extended into the yet more radicalized potential of a global citizenry, as envisioned by the progressive Thomas Paine, that transcended the insular bigotry of the mere rights of Englishmen and so was effectively wielded as a weapon against British authoritarian claims of rule. As he wrote in ‘Common Sense’, it was undeniably “absurd, in supposing a continent to be perpetually governed by an island,” especially when “Not one third of the inhabitants, even of this province, [Pennsylvania], are of English descent” (other British colonies were likewise majority non-English). Paine took his being a citizen of the world even further in aspiring to a revolution that would spread — Benjamin Franklin supposedly told him that, “Where liberty is, there is my country,” and Paine’s response was that, “Where liberty is not, there is my country.”

Prior to all of these modern changes, progressive and reactionary, people in traditional tribes and villages took their own immediate communal experience and territory as an autonomous self-contained world largely separate from that of others, each community with its own local ruling deities and spiritus loci. Consider, for example, the Semitic henotheism that can be discerned behind later Yahwist interpolations of the Tanakh; or the traces surviving into the Middle Ages when local spirits were still worshipped and appeased, such as the wintertime wassailing of the presiding spirit of the orchard. Hence, going back far enough into the past, everyone was able to have claimed their own population as the first people and their own place as the center of the world without having had asserted any hegemonic intentions upon others. It was a pluriverse, not a universe — a world of worlds.

That was the original conception of something akin to social and moral relativism, if more indifference and ignorance than tolerance, acceptance, or celebration of diversity. Consider the Amazonian Piraha’s friendly but aloof attitude towards strangers. As a Piraha explained, Piraha culture is good for Piraha, foreign cultures are good for foreigners; and hence there is no need for cultural hegemony as ideological realism to be proclaimed as absolutist dogma, much less enforced through authoritarian and violent conquering and genocide, social control and assimilation. To be Piraha simply means to be Piraha with no greater claims on all of reality, quite opposite of monotheistic fundamentalism (the latter being incomprehensible to the Piraha, as generations of failed missionaries have discovered). That once was a more common experience of the world. At the level of individual persons, one thing was not separate from another for the shared ground of cohesion was the larger network of kinship and community. In the case of animistic and bicameral societies, this included the bundled mind with a shared voice-hearing tradition as opposed to the privatized egoic voice trapped in each person’s skull (a few surviving animistic tribes still maintain such a cultural mentality). This relativism lingered in areas of Axial Age thought.

Keep in mind that what some think of as ancient proto-racism really wasn’t racism at all. It was a common belief that a people’s culture and collective personality was determined by their environment: weather patterns, food, etc (e.g., dark skin was caused by living in sunnier climes); an almost Larmarckian or epigenetic understanding of real or perceived population-wide phenotypic plasticity. The experience of world and the experience of self were inseparable, such as how the animistic personal space of hunter-gatherers extends into the surrounding sensory space and perceptual field far beyond the physical body. This is the embodied and extended mind, closely related to the bundled mind. This still dwells within the modern mind and it regularly reasserts itself, however much most modern people pretend they are isolated and self-contained individuals — hence, the reactionary impulse of the splintered modern psyche.

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From Axial Age to Modernity: Universalism, Egalitarianism, etc

This archaic sense of reality probably influenced the basis of Greco-Roman humoral theory and later on elements of Christian thought, the belief that we are shaped by external factors and hence, with a post-animistic/bicameral twist, that systems (e.g., written laws) could be used as social control that determined behavior. This was seen in medieval food laws that banned red meat before and during Carnival to prevent the excess heating of ‘blood’ that it was feared would cause people to be rowdy and rebellious; an ideology, later formulated as veganism, that was adapted by Seventh Day Adventists to supposedly prevent sinfulness, moral depravity, and physical dissolution (as part of a public health moral panic and anti-masturbation crusade). Archaic and ancient traditional thought has never really disappeared for it constantly gets reinterpreted and redirected, if the forms it takes increasingly diverge from traditional experience and understanding, in how it’s expressed in both the progressive mind and the reactionary mind.

As filtered through the stronger universalizing impulse of modern thought, this particularly came to shape 20th century leftism. It was very much informed by anthropology and social science (e.g., the study of traditional cultures by anthropologist Franz Boas and his students), in articulating a shared human nature that consisted more of flexible potentials than of deterministic laws (e.g., Carl Jung’s personality types that influenced the theories of cultural relativity espoused by some of Boas’ students, such as Ruth Benedict who in turn influenced those like Julian Jaynes). This general development in Western thought shaped new understandings like social constructivism and intersectionality, not to mention even more interesting theories about linguistic relativity and consciousness. As divergent as some might take them, there has always been a creative dynamic on the left between universalism and relativism. But, as always, this has been just as easily co-opted by the reactionary right, if in more constrained forms that were used to prevent collective consciousness instead of promoting it (Peter Augustine Lawler: “conservative thought today is authentic postmodernism”; for example: “Russel Kirk’s unconscious postmodernismKarl Rove’s social constructivismDonald Trump’s post-truth, and Jordan Peterson’s self-loathing pluralism“).

About universalism specifically, such thinking had become more common as alphabetic languages, written texts, literary traditions, and abstract thought became widespread in the Axial Age and post-Axial Age empires (the precursors of modern WEIRD culture that took hold with mass literacy; see Joseph Henrich, The WEIRDest People in the World). This was seen also in natural law and liberty of the soul, as formulated by Stoics and later adopted by early Christians. These were initially radical ideas and one can still sense what, at various points in history, made them such a threat. The first generation of Christians, similar to the Stoics before them, flouted the laws and social customs of both Jews and Romans, and they did so according to the belief in a higher truth of natural law that stood above human law, the basis upon which psychic and spiritual reality could be experienced as unconstrained (e.g., the Kingdom of Heaven all around us). This was an early expression of universalism as radical egalitarianism, specifically grounded in communitarianism and often literal communes with shared work and resources, not to mention positions determined by egalitarian lots (i.e., egalitarian authority). This was in direct conflict with the rigid authoritarian hierarchies if worldly power (dividing rulers from ruled, free from slave, upper caste from lower caste, civilized from barbarian) in the Roman Empire, hierarchies of status that determined privilege and oppression in having made clear that all were not equal before God or man.

Among those early Christians, the egalitarian way of living and relating was specifically demonstrated in what some consider the original baptismal creed proclaiming that there was no Jew or Gentile, no slave or free, no male and female; for, it was believed, we are all children of God, all one in Spirit; to the extent that, as Jesus put it, “you are all gods” (Stephen J. Patterson, The Forgotten Creed). Universal divine law trumped even the social constructs of identity and so denied them any reified legitimacy as ideological realism. The earliest Christians, in their charismatic practice, took this literally in how everyone, even the most lowly enslaved women, had equal access to leadership and authority within the church community. This was concretely expressed in how all congregants, in communal ecstasy, danced with their long hair allowed to flow freely, in direct contradiction to gender norms where Roman men kept their hair cut short and Roman women kept their hair bound up. This was one of the many things that worried Paul because he wanted to make Christianity more respectable, in conformance with normative social expectations; but he didn’t understand that this is precisely what made such charismatic faith so inspiring to the oppressed and downtrodden.

Many radicals since that time, from the English Peasants’ Revolt to the American Revolution, often drew upon natural law rhetoric to challenge human legal institutions (although some, like the deist Thomas Jefferson, had a less certain relationship to such beliefs). That was also part of the power of the Protestant Reformation in taking on the Catholic Church. Yet, despite its ever present potential of radicalism, it has been increasingly held up as a favorite principle of conservative-minded fundamentalists and other right-wingers, one of the many cases where once radical thought is increasingly used and monopolized by the reactionary mind. There is a mixed history to natural law, as the conservative-minded sometimes understood that it was a two-edged sword. The Catholic Edmund Burke opposed natural law specifically because of the radical threat it posed. But, for other reasons, the egalitarian and often radical Quakers have long favored an alternative to natural law since, as heretics, they sought higher authority through a personal relationship with a living God, rather than an impersonal and unreachable God of laws that required intercession by a priestly class — a different route to the same end of challenging unjust worldly power. As a historical note, Quaker constitutionalism appears to be the earliest major predecessor of liberal living constitutionalism, that a constitution is a living document agreed to by a living generation as a covenant with a living deity, truth, or principle; and such radicalism of the Quakers came out of the radical English Civil War that ended with the regicide, the overthrow and beheading of the king. This is one of the many ways the English Civil War set the pattern for the American Revolution.

There have been many kinds of radicalism over time and, importantly, most of them originated within religion. It’s historically complicated, but over time the specific radicalism of natural law seems to have faded almost entirely. As so often happens, the radicalism that takes hold as a revolution of the mind quickly becomes normalized and so becomes the new social norm as status quo to be defended by the reactionary right. That is how natural law has become neutered in being largely identified with the reactionary and regressive at this point. Fundamentalist apologists have come to treat their beliefs about social order, gender, family, abortion, etc as an ideological realism of natural law and so seek to enforce it through human law (i.e., theocracy); in spite of the fact that Jesus offered very little light on the subject or, if anything, a rather anti-fundamentalist view in his having heretically challenged the Jewish fundamentalism of his own era. Jesus went so far as to deny his own mother on multiple occasions; not to mention having told one man about his father’s corpse to let the dead bury the dead; having declared that he came not to bring peace but to turn son against father, daughter against mother; and we can’t forget his repeated challenge to wealth and power, including a direct attack on the established elite in overturning the moneylenders tables in the temple. As for abortion and homosexuality, he was silent, as was the Old Testament. Are these Christian moral values and family values?

Traditional Values Are Not Culture Wars

This is another area where traditionalism stands in stark contrast to the reactionary right and, at times, finds resonance with a progressive left. Think about how, prior to the 1960s, abortion was a non-issue among Christians with a long history of theological arguments actually justifying it, not to mention Christian communities condoning the practice that was common in the past. The Bible does speak against infanticide, but that is referring to the killing (exposure or abandoning) of babies that were already born, not the terminating of pregnancies which was a standard practice at the time. Abortifacients have existed in nearly every traditional society, for being able to control when to have children was even more important in the past when unneeded children to feed could be a threat to the survival of family and community. There is even an abortifacient recipe in the Old Testament. Odd as it may sound in this era of reactionary culture war, most early-to-mid 20th century American Christians, specifically Protestants and including Evangelicals, saw no conflict between family values and abortion; and instead they often saw these as closely related because family planning was seen as central to family responsibility.

About another topic, when we look at historical texts and anthropological records, it’s amazing how many past societies had much more nuanced understandings of gender and sexuality, to the point of including multiple gender identities/roles. That is far from saying that traditionalism has typically been socially liberal, as three or more genders could be as strict and oppressive as only two, although not necessarily. But what it does demonstrate, contrary to conservative claims, is that a binary gender belief system is not an ideological realism of natural law that was created by God and emblazoned upon human nature and biology. That is to say gender realism is as much bullshit as ethno-nationalist realism, capitalist realism, domestic realism, etc. This has always been the line of critique by the left, the dismantling of false assumptions, the puncturing of the obfuscatory hot air that bloats the reactionary moral imagination.

We must take the past on its own terms, not ours. If we go back to the traditional societies, the fluidity of social identities sometimes included, besides temporary or permanent shifts in name and personality (at least among people who were animistic and possibly bicameral), gender fluidity and sexual variation as well. People could hold amorphous or divergent identities in ways that are hard for us to imagine and sometimes that meant people changing gender or identifying with two genders (e.g., Two Spirits). This is because, in many older cultures, gender was not always equated to sexual anatomy or sexual activity. At the time of European first contact with Native American tribes, there were over a hundred recorded instances of non-binary gender expression, including in Mexico that has since become identified with Christianized macho culture. This was seen all over the world: Polynesia, Hawaii, ancient Iran, ancient Egypt, and on and on. It might be safe to say gender fluidity and/or diversity was closer to the norm than an exception.

In the ancient world, many deities had mixed anatomy, such as goddesses with erect penises. Also seen were androgynous deities. Even older portrayals of Jesus sometimes showed him as androgynous, occasionally including breasts. In the ancient world, many salvific godmen took on the feminine traits (physical, psychological, and spiritual) associated with the archaic agricultural goddesses who still were or had previously been the virgin mothers of such godmen, as the goddesses became demoted (e.g., the Egyptian Isis had been worshipped in her own right throughout the Roman Empire, only to have her statues co-opted as the Black Madonna and so she was replaced with worship of a merely human Mother Mary who played a secondary role). Unsurprisingly, many of those individuals traditionally perceived as a third gender or two-gendered could become shamans, healers, priests, or otherwise played important roles in society and rituals; as someone who transcended gender might be believed to also be able to cross other boundaries such as into the worlds of spirits, the dead, and non-human beings.

There was even open homosexuality in the pre-modern world, such as in Africa (e.g., an apparently ancient Egyptian gay couple buried together in a lover’s embrace). All of this was far from limited to only gender identity or sexuality. In the Americas, research on burials indicate that 30-50% of big game hunters might’ve been anatomically female, demonstrating gender specialization of work did not necessarily always exist. Similarly, some hieroglyphs in the Americas can be interpreted as showing both men and women holding hands of children; according to the number of fingers shown on hands, a way of symbolizing gender; possibly indicating that childrearing was not limited to one gender (info from a display at the Florence Indian Mound and Museum in Alabama). Such a finding should be unsurprising, as many hunter-gatherer societies demonstrate something similar with all kinds of work being done by both anatomical women and men, even ignoring the complexity of gender issues. This wasn’t limited to the non-Western world. There were Viking and Germanic shield-maidens and they were apparently treated with respect and honor, indicating gender identities were not absolute in entirely limiting social role, position, and opportunities.

Gender fluidity or else complexity, along with multiple forms of sexual relationships, seems to have persisted quite late into history; maybe having indicated acceptance, tolerance, or indifference. In England, there was no official position on homosexuality until the 1533 Buggery Act, what one might interpret as the first sign of a modern reactionary culture war. That was about right when the Protestant Reformation (i.e., fundamentalist nuclear family values and heteronormativity) and colonization (i.e., the militarization of the heroic hyper-masculine figure) began, while the traditional order of feudal Church and villages was in the process of being dismantled (i.e., the decline of Carnival practice of role-reversals and gender-bending). Prior to European colonization in Africa, there was no known cases of anti-LGBT laws or persecution. So, conservative gender and sexual bigotry is only a few centuries old, as compared to entirely different notions of gender that were widespread for millennia before that.

As far as all of that goes, marriage and monogamy are likewise a lot more complicated than it typically gets portrayed, as based on modern Western biases. Yes, monogamy does appear to be quite common among many cultures, but such monogamy doesn’t seem to preclude promiscuity; and, for the sake of simplicity, we’ll ignore the large number of openly polygamous and polyandrous societies that have existed. To return to one concrete example, the Piraha are informally monogamous, if in practice this means serial monogamy. Basically, whenever two Piraha are having sex, they are considered married; and when one Piraha goes off to have repeated sex with another then the original couple are then de facto divorced. There are no laws or authorities to enforce monogamy and no punishment, other than hurt feelings, to dissuade individuals from having multiple sexual partners. Also, they are far from prudish. Young Piraha children learn about sex early from direct observation and sexual play, including between adults and children. And serial monogamy is so rampant, in how most people in a tribe have had sex with so many others in the tribe, that the tribes are closely bonded together by overlapping carnal knowledge, even including homosexual play among among adults.

Is this what conservative Christians mean by traditional monogamy and family values being the social norm of the human species? We’re reminded of an incident in early America where a white man visited a Native American tribe. He noticed how common was promiscuity and so asked how did a man know who his children were. The answer was that no one knew and no one cared, as all children were considered to belong to the whole tribe. Yet many of these tribes might have been recorded as ‘monogamous’ and so falsely used as evidence to strengthen the reactionary claims that conflate traditionalism with modern conservatism, as voiced in modern WEIRD culture.

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Freedom to Belong, Responsibility to Others

This supports the leftist counter-claim that gender, sexuality, and marriage are socially constructed to a fair degree and obviously so in diverse ways; despite overgeneralizations made about superficial observations. But it also verifies the leftist view of how powerfully we are shaped by environment, particularly socio-cultural and material conditions. This goes back to the main point being made here. The political left perceives humans as embedded in dynamic systems, both communal and collective or otherwise interdependent. We are in and of the world. The world is us. We the People are a plural, not a collection of individuals; and that is why we are greater than the sum of our parts, but it is also what offers an escape from the prison of the reactionary mind, the key to the lock.

We aren’t victims or passengers, much less lone actors. Our identities and roles in society aren’t imprinted into our genetics as essentialism and determinism. And, since the world we know was created by past generations, we are forever in the position to create our world again, as the Anti-Federalist Thomas Paine so wonderfully put it. This was a central concept to the American founding, that the dead hand of past generations could not and should not compel authoritarian submission of the living generation. Prior to written texts that trapped the past like an insect in amber, traditional societies as oral cultures always treated traditions as organic practices brought to life by voice and invocation, not immutable laws and unchanging doctrines. This remains fundamentally true, as human nature is still the same, even if the media and culture alters its expression.

That is to say we are and always have been free as a people, but this freedom is not individualistic and legalistic liberty, not the mere civil rights written on a piece of paper or upheld in a court of law. We are free according to our own human nature, something that can’t be denied or destroyed, can’t be taken away from us. We verify and prove this freedom in our own experience. And, importantly, we are not lost souls wandering in an alien land, not lost souls waiting for the afterlife in order to return somewhere else. Our shared humanity is part of larger systems of a living world in which we are enmeshed and immersed in, a world to which we belong as our home. We are social creatures by nature, not disconnected as lone individuals or nuclear families, as worker-citizens or capitalist owners. We are not separate and isolated, and so we are not powerless. The world we were born into is not inevitable. Near infinite possibility is before us, the extent of which we can only discover through experimentation and exploration. We are free through acting freely, in knowing the strength of our shared freedom.

We could end on that inspiring note. But our purpose here is not to preach to the choir or rally the forces of good. More fundamentally, we are curious about what this all means and so we seek compassionate understanding, for others as much as for ourselves. Why do such divides of the mind get formed and persist? In some ways, the whole left vs right framing could be part of the problem, as inherently dualistic and oppositional, and hence reactionary. Although this is not a new insight, the political spectrum remains a powerful way of understanding our present conflict because it isn’t just an idea. The left/right dichotomy has become built into every aspect of our society and mind. We carry it and so dismissing it is not an option. Some more powerful metaphor will have to organically emerge as a more compelling meme. That is the reason to emphasize the leftist view, since it points beyond to another possibility, a third way. In the end, the ‘leftist’ ideals of egalitarianism and solidarity (or fellowship) are not about one ideology fighting against another ideology. Rather, these words speak to the truth within us that can’t be negated. It’s simply who we are.

This is demonstrated by the so-called political issues. There is a reason the most heated debates involve such things as environmentalism, systemic racism, and class consciousness. These touch upon the leftist understanding of systems that the political right, in order to sustain their illusion of separation and division, must deny. The thing is this is not one belief system against another but rather a choice between embracing reality or an illusion, to accept our shared humanity or deny it. This is a truth known in our direct experience and also known in science. Systems are not ideas for they are how the world actually operates. Nothing is really separate, in ways that are quite profound, as quantum physics has shown us but also demonstrated in every other field of science. This is both a human truth and a scientific fact.

Whether one believes in and supports environmentalism or not, for example, the environment remains a stark reality explaining what is happening to the natural world we are inseparable from. Climate change continues to get worse with measurable shifting weather patterns and increases in extreme weather events, as part of a single world with a single atmosphere. Ecosystems continue to be destroyed, rainforests cut down, species gone extinct, toxins having polluted the water and air, and on and on. This isn’t a leftist claim. It’s an objective and verifiable fact that also is a knowable in human experience. Anyone who has lived long enough will have noticed how monarch butterfly populations have declined, as one recollects a childhood where such creatures once were seen everywhere. Or take the opposite where invasive species spread further north where they never were before found because of global warming. No left-wing ideologue or scientific elite needs to tell us this is true. We can confirm it for ourselves and thousands of other similar observable changes in the world around us. It is part of our lived experience — personal, direct, and concrete.

Similarly, whether or not one acknowledges racism and class war, it remains the social reality enforced upon so many. The victims of it know it in their bones and can see it in the world all around them, even if they don’t always have the terminology to articulate it. So, it may come out as distorted conspiracy theories and get co-opted by other reactionary fear-mongering. Think about the QANON conspiracy theory that, through dark fantasies, expresses the very real sense of a world divided by vast inequalities of wealth and power that are determined by ruling systems. But what the reactionary mind does not grasp is the first victims of propaganda campaigns are those in the ruling class. That is how ideological realism dominates, in being internalized, such as how even the victims of systemic oppression act according to the incentives and disincentives built into the systems of oppression. And, ultimately, in a victimization culture everyone is a victim of the same unfreedom (e.g., the wealthy, in high inequality societies, having higher rates of social problems and health issues; compared to those in low inequality societies).

The reactionary right is a funhouse mirror that both shows and obscures the truth given voice by the political left. That is what we get when we’ve lost our ability to see clearly because we feel alone in a fractured society. We look for enemies in those other people, rather than realizing the trap we are all caught in. So, we follow the maze looking for our cheese, instead of looking for a way out. Leftist ideology emphasizes and prioritizes the relative; and so it is not to be taken as a final truth but as a dynamic learning process, as a finger pointing toward something else. From a leftist perspective, the only value in thinking about a linear political spectrum of two polar positions is to help us create a new society where a left vs right framing would no longer makes sense. While the political right typically proclaims itself as an answer and conclusion, the political left at its best offers a beginning point that opens up to an unknown future that simultaneously gives us new insight into the past, brings light into our shared humanity. Accordingly, we are more than we’ve been told we are.

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Reactionary Right, Leftover Liberalism, and Leftist Supermajority

This has been a somewhat hard post to write. And it’s not clear how successful it has so far turned out. The actual writing was more involved than the simplicity of the original impetus. We’ll go for broke with further explanation and, hopefully, we won’t add more confusion in the process (if nothing else, maybe this post will serve as an intriguing thought experiment about experienced reality, according to metaphors and memes, social construction and perception management). The central observation in mind was that of leftist thought about systems and similar things. This occurred to us in thinking about the symbolic value of issues like environmentalism and systemic racism, as discussed above.

It has long stood out how those on the political right take systems thinking as one of their primary targets. What is feared about something like Marxism is that it brings to light systems of oppression so that they can be seen and challenged, analyzed and debated. Even if all leftist alternatives so far proffered are wrong and impossible, the leftist critique might remain true or at least compelling and hence dangerous. Similarly, it is understandable that systemic racism gets dismissed so easily because social conservatism has always been mired in racist systems, at least so far. Racism, after all, is simply one particular expression of social conservatism; and central to American society from the beginning. But maybe we can dream of a day when American conservatives become anti-racist in both words and deeds. Admittedly, it has been a small achievement to get the political right to declare that “All Lives Matter” since, in finally pretending to believe what they previously denied, they might continue going further left. Do all lives really matter in how they are treated? Really? What if that actually was how everyone was treated?

The political right, indeed, has become more egalitarian or else less rabidly and openly inegalitarian over time. If this continues, would there come a point where the reactionary right that we presently know essentially stops existing? As for now, the reactionary right is alive and well; and all right-wing hierarchy involves various forms of rigid authority and privilege, which inevitably lead to unfairness and injustice and oppression (i.e., inegalitarianism). This right-wing hierarchy is a socially constructed system, demonstrating and proving that reactionaries understand systems just fine. So, the general attitude in outwardly dismissing all that which is systemic seems strange because how can conservatives be so unconcerned about conserving the environment, the basis of all life and civilization. But then one realizes that, with historical revisionism, the political right has never been all that concerned about conserving. All of that is besides the point because reaction always plays out in the immediate moment. The past is a mere convenience, a stage upon which to project nostalgic visions.

The real point is not only about if this or that system gets acknowledged as real but whether this entire leftist way of thinking about systems is even included in allowable thought and collective consciousness. The political right wants to shut down the public imagination before it gets to that point, to prevent public debate before it happens — strangle dangerous ideas in their crib. The moment there is actual inquiry about systems the political right has already lost the battle, and they know this. In symbolic conflation, systems must remain obscured by the fantasizing of the moral imagination. That is the basic argument Edmund Burke made about the moral imagination. So, it’s not that systems don’t also operate in the reactionary mind, but by nature they never can operate openly, honestly, and forthrightly. They must be presented as an unquestioned or unseen reality (i.e., ideological realism), often being claimed as something else (i.e., symbolic conflation).

The political right, as portrayed on the political right, in a sense doesn’t really or fully exist. It is a mirage of the moral imagination for the reason it has been promoted by perception management, the most powerful method of social control. Even though most Americans are far left-leaning in their views, the majority when given a forced choice continue to self-identify as ‘conservative’. This belies the social reality of a leftist supermajority. That is why one can, in all fairness, question the existence of the political right. Most Americans on the political right are, in many ways, further left than was the case among most American leftists a century ago and definitely as compared to the centuries prior. This is shown by how such a significant number of Republicans have come to agree with the general majority in recognizing racism in the police and in supporting stronger environmental regulations; other examples have been given elsewhere. It wasn’t that long ago that such ideas were radical not only to liberals but leftists as well, back when the political left was mainly focused on economic issues. As such, the disagreement, at present, is not about the reality of the situation but our response to it or else reaction.

That said, there might be a small genuine right-wing, what elsewhere in this blog has been called the ‘Ferengi‘ (based on the acronym FER that refers to the overlapping demographics of Fox News viewers, white Evangelicals, and Republicans). But even there, it’s not clear to what degree most of this hardcore minority holds the beliefs they claim, as appears in polls. The reactionary mind is defined by what it reacts to, not by what it affirms. When reactionaries aren’t co-opting from the left, they are sometimes simply declaring the complete opposite for rhetorical effect and strategic positioning. So, other than being reactionary, what exactly can we know about the political right? Not much, one might argue. The vast majority of conservatives and Republicans often privately admit to holding many views that, according to the political and media elites, would be considered rather liberal and leftist. The main body of the political right mostly evaporates upon close scrutiny, leaving little behind besides the emotional reflex of nostalgia and resentment; of anxiety, fear, and paranoia. But is psychological reaction, no matter how rhetorically narratized, enough to be called an ideology?

That has been the key question others have asked, such as the political scientist Corey Robin. Basically, he comes down with the view that the reactionary is simply a modern defense of entrenched hierarchy, but where the reactionaries as an aspiring elite seek to replace the prior hierarchies in order to seize power and privilege, wealth and resources. According to the analysis here in this post, the reactionary is nothing more than inegalitarianism (SDO-E on the SDO7 scale), the void of an egalitarianism gone missing; or what Robin describes as the denied agency of the subordinate class. This still doesn’t tell us much, other than reactionaries are not egalitarians, further defining them by negation, by what they lack. Then we are left with figuring out what might be the project of entrenched hierarchy, other than opportunistic realpolitik. That leads us back to what exactly do we mean by ideology. Is it just a vague psychological stance or does it require a specific political project that seeks a clear vision and agenda about an ideal society?

Pretty much all of the political right has embraced the leftover liberalism of past generations, but done so in the typical mix-and-match style (i.e., bricolage) of the reactionary mind. There doesn’t appear to be any consistent principle behind all of it, no reason for why this aspect of liberalism is co-opted and another attacked and still another distorted in unrecognizable form. It can seem like ideology as a fortress where what is hidden and protected behind the defensive wall remains unknown, assuming anything at all is to be found. Yet, going by the argument of this post, we would stand by the view that the reactionary is fundamentally liberal in being inseparable from the liberal paradigm, as it is defined in its reacting to and co-opting of liberalism. Among the most reactionary of reactionaries, the right-wing elite and the staunch alt-righters, one senses that many and maybe most have come to agree with broad liberalism, as well as much of leftism. They’re not really arguing for something entirely different, as in articulating a distinct vision, for their main purpose is to defend the prevailing ideological realism itself toward a specific agenda and in serving particular interests.

One would be naive to celebrate this victory of liberalism as an End of History. The reactionaries may have gained the upper hand, given that reaction is an easier task with nothing really to achieve other than constantly causing difficulty by obstructing what others are trying to achieve (e.g., anti-democratic tactics, from voter suppression to voter purges). There is a suspicion that many of the seemingly active debates have already ended and, at this point, have become mere political spectacle. The most reactionary extremists — the social dominators, Machiavellian demagogues, opportunistic psychopaths, and narcissistic poseurs — maybe already know, to some degree, that the left has been right in its analysis and judgment. That is sort of the conclusion Corey Robin comes to, in that reactionaries agree the past has been a failure for otherwise they wouldn’t constantly seek to replace it with historical revisionism (e.g., falsely denying that the political right once was openly defined by racism). But it goes further than that, as seen with how the political right accepts large swaths of social liberalism (e.g., the political right stopped talking much about same sex marriage once it became undeniable that the vast supermajority of Americans took this basic gay right as a non-issue).

Yet here we are. The right-wing systems, structures, and institutions remain in place. It really doesn’t matter what someone like Donald Trump or Steven Bannon personally believes in actuality, since it’s almost guaranteed that they wouldn’t care about one of their own family members getting an abortion or getting gay married. They aren’t anti-liberal ideologues, but they realize pretending to be so is convenient rhetoric for manipulating a segment of the public. The strange thing is most of those being manipulated probably also are fine with these issues on a personal level. This is all about symbolic politics and symbolic identities — it’s a story being told. What views and opinions, values and ideals are held by individuals is irrelevant and moot. That is the power of systems over the mind, which is understood across the political spectrum but it’s only leftists that speak this truth. Right-wingers understand that right-wing systems work precisely by being taken as a given, by being left in the background where they cloak themselves in the shadows of moral imagination; otherwise, the emperor will be seen as having no clothes, the great Wizard of Oz just a feeble man behind a curtain.

The political left may appear to have lost the war of political power and social control, even as it won the battle over the public mind, although change always begins in the public mind where it might not see effects until generations or centuries later, as the somewhat reactionary John Adams admitted about the revolution of mind preceding the revolution of politics, although a revolution of mind that began much earlier than he realized. This is demonstrated by the immense amount of time that passed across the relevant history; starting with the egalitarian rhetoric of the 14th century peasants’ revolts, continuing with the emergent radicalism of the 17th century English civil War, and finally coming to fruition with the egalitarian action of the 18th century political revolutions (although the deeper history of egalitarianism originates much earlier in the Axial Age). Systems change slowly because systems have a way of taking on lives of their own. They are hyperobjects that begin acting like hypersubjects — they are the demiurgic forces that rule over us, more than does any ruling elite; but also the utopian ideals that inspire us with promises of freedom. The memetic power of ideas only gradually percolates throughout a system.

What the left dreams of is a time when the demos (the public, the people) once again regains its position as the leading hypersubject, the public mind within the body politic. The left wants to bring this all into collective consciousness, to manifest the victory that, one hopes, has already been achieved within the human heart. With a firm foothold in the public imagination, how might we lift ourselves by our own bootstraps? Then maybe we can stop talking about a left and a right.

* * *

Conclusion: Egalitarianism and Abundance

After writing all of the above, we thought of a post we’d written before and another post we’re still working on. The previous post came to the bold conclusion that we are all egalitarians, similar to an earlier more humorous assertion about all of us being white liberals now. The point is that such things have come to define our whole society, either in embracing or reacting to them. Ultimately, there is no inegalitarianism, in the way there is no illiberalism. Rather, a modern Westerner can choose between being a progressive egalitarian-liberal or a regressive egalitarian-liberal. But reaction can’t escape what it’s reacting to. As we put it in the post about egalitarianism:

“Egalitarianism isn’t and never was simply about modern left-wing ideology as formed out of the revolutionary philosophies of post-Enlightenment thinkers, dreamers, and activists. Egalitarianism isn’t an abstract ideal for it is rooted within us. To attempt to remove it would be to destroy our collective soul, an act akin to ripping out our heart. We don’t hold egalitarianism as a value and principle, as a vision and worldview. Egalitarianism, rather, is who we are. There is no ‘left’ and ‘right’, no division between a set of egalitarian political ideologies and what supposedly opposes them. To oppose egalitarianism would be insanity because it would be to oppose ourselves. Egalitarianism can’t be denied. Rather than a ‘left’ and ‘right’, there is simply and fundamentally the egalitarian center of our being. To embrace this revolutionary radicalism (i.e., to return to the root) would mean to become fully human. That is the only centrism, moderate or otherwise, that has any meaning.”

That argument is biased by our spiritual inclinations and religious upbringings. In high school, we read A Course In Miracles. The theology of the text isn’t relevant, per se, but there is one statement that has stuck in our mind all these decades later: “The opposite of love is fear, but what is all-encompassing can have no opposite.” That is basically how we’ve come to think of the left and right, as respectively motivated by love and fear. This extends into our understanding of the social sciences, such as not seeing egalitarianism and authority as opposites for not all authority is authoritarianism, the latter being a distortion of the former. For most of human existence, egalitarianism has been the norm where most hierarchies were moderate, flexible, and temporary. This is why egalitarianism is so deeply embedded in human nature, as both inclination and aspiration. It requires tremendous amounts of fear and anxiety to go against this inborn tendency and default mode.

This leads us to the post we’ve been working on for a while and still plan to finish. It brings in the health angle. We are a sickly society and so, combined with high inequality and artificial scarcity, it makes perfect sense that we are drowning in anxiety and fear. There has never been such overwhelmingly stressful societies as seen in modern industrialized states, and it’s an entirely new kind of set of stressors; chronic stress as unresolved tension and unhealed trauma. This is shown in the growing rates of psychosis among urbanized youth and growing rates of disease in general at ever younger ages. Our entire social order, lifestyle, and food system is out of sync with our evolved nature. An example of this is our being literally ungrounded from the earth. It wasn’t until the post-war period that humans started using synthetic material for shoes that disconnects the human body from the immense source of electrons and the site of electromagnetic cycles in the earth (as enmeshed with the atmosphere and the sun), possibly why we’ve become so obsessed with antioxidants that are able to loan electrons in preventing body-wide damage from free radical cascades.

In observing people, it is obvious how disconnected, sickly, stunted, malformed, and mentally disturbed is the average person — a genuine reason for moral panic and existential crisis. So many people feel crappy in both their minds and bodies, and so they act in ways that are personally and socially dysfunctional. This is not a normal state of humanity and it might explain why our society, in having a weakened social immune system, has become so vulnerable to the reactionary mind virus (what one might call the terrain theory of memetics, metaphorically likened to the terrain theory of immunity). It’s not only about powerful ideas but an alteration of how the human body-mind functions. Even low levels of stress from sickliness can trigger personal and social responses of authoritarianism, as shown in the research on communities with higher parasite load. What if most of the framing of right vs left is simply a confused attempt to grasp the distinction between a healthy society and an unhealthy society, pro-social behavior and anti-social behavior, societal progress and societal decline? It’s one thing for a society to temporarily fall into reactionary mode as a survival response to an immediate concrete threat. But to become stuck continuously in reaction is abnormal, unhealthy, and dangerous.

That is how we’ve come to see this whole issue. We all react at various points in our lives and that is perfectly normal. That is a healthy and necessary survival response. But remaining permanently in a state of fight or flight is unbearably stressful. Research has found that low levels of chronic stress are more traumatic than a single much worse traumatic event. That is what living in a high inequality society does to us. It potentially can be worse than a war or a famine, being violently attacked or raped. The reason is because it never ends and so never can be escaped. There is no respite and refuge, no moment to rest and de-stress, no place of protection and chance for healing. It often leads to learned helplessness or, worse still, various dysfunctional mental illnesses and personality traits: psychosis, mood disorders, personality disorders, the Dark Triad (Machiavellianism, authoritarianism, and narcissism; or Dark Tetrad if sadism is added), etc. The reactionary mind, one might argue, is simply the pattern of symptoms seen in severe unhealed trauma. And right-wing ideology is simply the political, economic, and social reaction of the most traumatized in a society of the severely traumatized.

We see this in decades of data that compares societies that are high and low in inequality. It matters less if this involves poverty or wealth. Many of the physically and mentally healthiest populations are traditional cultures like hunter-gatherer tribes where they have little outward wealth. But what they also lack is the authoritarian enforcement of artificial scarcity. We’ve noted how modern Americans act as if they live in a world of scarcity, despite stores full of stuff. This is because the basic human needs are not being met. Inequality creates an environment of stress, anxiety, and fear where there is a constant sense of vulnerability to danger and threat. We are disconnected from the world in a way that is not true in traditional societies. The Piraha, to return to a favorite example, live amidst great abundance of food and resources that are easily obtained from the surrounding jungle and nearby river. That is why they don’t worry about survival nor even store food. They eat when they want, but can go days without eating for no particular reason. As Daniel Everett observed, they seem to have no fear of the world around them, a world that objectively we modern Westerners would perceive as threateningly dangerous. Yet, to the Piraha, they feel relaxed and at home, with unswerving confidence that they belong.

Not only do the Piraha lack scarcity, real and imagined, but also they lack authoritarian hierarchy. They have no permanent positions of authority or even expertise; council of elders, no chiefs, war leaders, healers, shamans, etc. To occasionally achieve some practical end involving cooperation, a single individual might temporarily take leadership but it doesn’t continue beyond the activity itself. It’s not merely that their life is simple for they do possess immense knowledge that requires a level of memory few modern Westerners are capable of. What results from this? The Piraha are happy, friendly, gregarious, kind, generous, and welcoming; including toward strangers who visit them. There is no signs of long-term stress or unhealed trauma, no known cases of depression or suicide. They are one of the few remaining egalitarian tribes that shows us the conditions under which human nature evolved. They show us the potential that exists within us all.

This isn’t about some nostalgic past but about the present and, if we allow it, it could also be about our future. That is what is imagined in the world of Star Trek: The Next Generation. What might it be like to live in fully functioning democratic socialism that is not based on sickness, fear, and punishment? We don’t have to limit ourselves to science fiction utopias. We already know, to some extent, what is possible. The more successful social democracies have many elements of democratic socialism about them, including wide-scale public ownership and government operation of numerous areas of the society and economy — not only welfare, education, and infrastructure, but also childcare, job training, healthcare, utilities, natural resources, and much else. These socialist-leaning social democracies are, importantly, low-inequality with all that goes with that: better public health, lower rates of violent crimes and mental illness, high rates of public trust, and such.

All of the factors that feed into the reactionary mind are much more muted in these societies focused on the public good. That is what allows the egalitarianism within human nature to fully express. Healthy environments create healthy people and healthy cultures. This is a world where differences are allowed to a greater extent within a shared concern and motivated by a shared humanity. When people are no longer trapped in fear and scarcity, then even public disagreement and debate doesn’t have to result in reactionary polarization and pseudo-tribalism. This is the leftist vision of humanity that, instead of offering a final conclusion and totalizing answer of totalitarian ideology, offers new beginnings and opens up to new possibilities. What this specifically would mean for any given society at any given time would be determined through a culture of trust and democratic self-governance, an inspiring potential that can’t be guaranteed or proven in advance.

Is there a balance point in a society of extremes?

“That decadence is a cumulative thing. Certainly, it is nurtured both by dogma and nihilism. Only a sceptical meaningfulness can push forward in a creative way.”
~ Paul Adkin, Decadence & Stagnation

Many liberals in the United States have become or always were rather conservative in personality and/or ideology. This is an old complaint made by many further to the left, myself included.

Quite a few liberals maybe would have identified as conservatives at a different time or in a different society. The US political spectrum is shifted so far right that moderate conservatives appear as liberals and typically portray themselves as liberals, but even these moderate conservatives long to push society further right into neoliberal corporatism and neocon authoritarianism. That is how so much of the political left gets excluded from mainstream respectability and legitimacy for, in big biz media and plutocratic politics, even a moderate liberal gets portrayed as a radical.

But the other thing about our society is how reactionary it is, not merely right-wing in the way seen a century ago. This forces the entire political left into an oppositional position that gets defined by what it isn’t and so leftists are forced into a narrow corner of the dominant paradigm. This causes many left-wingers to be constantly on the defensive or to be overly preoccupied with the other side.

And it is so easy to become more like what is opposed. There is a surprising number of left-wingers who become right-wingers or otherwise fall into reactionary thinking, who become obsessed with fringe ideologies and movements that feed into authoritarianism or get lost in dark fantasies of dystopia and apocalypse. Many others on the political left simply lose hope, becoming cynical and apathetic.

In a society like this, it’s very difficult to remain solidly on the political left while maintaining balance. One hopes there is a sweet spot between what goes for liberalism and the far left, these two in themselves forming extremes on a spectrum.

The danger on the political right is far different. Conservative, right-wing, and reactionary have all become conflated into an ideological confusion that is held together by an authoritarian streak. This is a vague set of overlapping visons involving dominance and oppression, fear and anxiety, righteousness and resentment, nostalgia and pseudo-realism, theocracy and nationalism, crude libertarianism and fascist-like futurism.

This scattered political left and mixed-up political right is what goes for American politics.

How does an individual as a member of the public gain enough distance from the very social order that dominates the public mind and frames public debate, manages public perception and manipulates public behavior? And where does one find solid ground to make a stand?

* * *

Let me add some thoughts.

We Americans live in an authoritarian society. There is a long history of authoritarianism: genocide, slavery, land theft, population displacement, reservations, internment camps, re-enslavement through chain gangs, Jim Crow, sundown towns, race wars, redlining, eugenics, human medical testing, tough-on-crime laws, war on drugs, war on the poor, racial profiling, mass incarceration, police brutality, military-industrial complex, near continuous war-mongering, anti-democratic covert operations (foreign and domestic), intelligence-security state, plutocratic corporatism, inverted totalitarianism, etc.

In America, there were openly stated racist laws on the books for several centuries. Of course, we inherited this authoritarian tradition from Britain and Europe. They have their own long histories of imperialism, colonialism, genocide, pogroms, Holocaust, eugenics, ghettoization, exploitation, oppression, prejudice, violence, state terrorism, wars of aggression, world war, and on and on. We can’t rationalize this as being just human nature, as not all humans have acted this way. There are societies like the Piraha that wouldn’t even understand authoritarianism, much less be prone to it. But even among modern nation-states, not all of them have an extensive past of conquering and dominating other people.

Anyway, what other societies do is a moot issue, as far as dealing with one’s own society and one’s own culpability and complicity. So you say that you’re an anti-authoritarian. Well, good for you. What does that mean?

Our lives are ruled over by authoritarianism. But it’s not just something that comes from above for it is built into every aspect of our society and economy. On a daily basis, we act out scripts of authoritarianism and play by its rules. Our lives are dependent on the internalized benefits of externalized costs, the latter being mostly paid by the worst victims of authoritarianism, typically poor dark-skinned people in distant countries. The cheap gas and cheap products you consume were paid for by the blood and suffering of untold others who remain unseen and unheard.

Even to embrace anti-authoritarianism is to remain captured within the gravity of authoritarianism’s pull. The challenge is that maybe authoritarianism can’t ever be directly opposed because opposition is part of the language of authoritarianism. Opposition can always be co-opted, subverted, or redirected. There is either authoritarianism or there is not. For it to end, something entirely new would have to take its place.

This is where radical imagination comes in. We need entirely different thinking made possible through a paradigm shift, a revolution of the mind. We aren’t going to debate or analyze, petition or vote our way out of authoritarianism. That puts us in a tricky spot, for those of us dissatisfied with the options being forced upon us.

Magical Marxism & Other Alternative Visions

I noticed the book Magical Marxism by Andy Merrifield (links at the end to give some understanding about the book and author). I don’t want to spend a lot of time on this post. I simply was interested in the basic idea as presented in the title.

I was thinking about how this could be taken in a slightly different direction: Imaginal Socialism, Fortean Anarchism, Zetetic Leftism, Gnostic Radicalism, Taoist Revolution, etc. My thought was combining two aspects: 1) the unknown and murky, desire and imagination, curiosity and wonder, questioning and seeking, etc; and 2) revolutionary politics, radical visions, ways of relating that challenge the status quo, etc.

The failure I see of left-wing politics seems connected to an overly masculine worldview. This made me think of the differences between a thick boundary type and a thin boundary type, and how these differences relate to the liminal, the imaginal, and the Trickster archetype. I see many left-wingers go back and forth between two masculine attitudes: 1) willful plans of action and tactics of directly challenging power; and 2) abstract intellectuality with in-group terminology to clearly define the boundaries and distinctions. The feminine aspects of being in the world are forgotten or dismissed or simply de-emphasized.  Politics, society and the larger world isn’t just about individuals acting. There is a being-in-the-world that goes beyond mere passivity toward a fecund creativity.

What if it isn’t about intellectually or tactically willing something into reality? What if, instead, there was some unknown to lure us forward into realms we could never find on purpose? Maybe the best way forward is to lose the path we’ve been following.

These are just thoughts. I haven’t cleared up my thinking. I was just wondering about a particular angle. I just wanted to pick at this crack I noticed at the foundation of leftist politics. I see some light shining out of the crack and it made me curious about what this light might be.

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0JQP/is_442/ai_n57755935/

http://www.envplan.com/abstract.cgi?id=d2703eda

http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13604813.2011.595116

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=12233

https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&q=cache:Qg8PHs9tG6EJ:www.amerikanistik.uni-muenchen.de/ip_60s/finalpapers/duncan_kjoelholt.pdf+&hl=en&gl=us&pid=bl&srcid=ADGEESh2hFN_bq5d9QuQfvJot8NOGsTPMBS4Oi9_s0QawavZwVGPSX98cnQsrqbpRJ99w7HQKWViBCejmSpu6pmg4kMHkQU_fE0AwgS0vOWHWLUu_ApDNgAibFtvCJ0IAiChTevyC34W&sig=AHIEtbRFJodqqntFCimQ1wLqQJJwdkSc4A