Re: [-empyre-] Re: sedition and nationalism



I found a long and incredibly useful article by Paul Passavant that adds something important to the relation that Claire Pentecost drew between the new sedition and/or terrorist laws and the neoliberal mode of governance. Claire says: "as capital becomes more flexible, the state administers a compensating rigidity in order to govern the human dimension of wealth production and concentration, specifically that part of the labor pool that needs to be kept dammed in large reserves and managed through precise valves." What Passavant does is to show how the whole post-Fordist or neoliberal conception of society justifies the use of arrest and imprisonment by developing a conception of the abnormal individual, not as someone sick who should be cared for (that was the old psychiatric paradigm) but instead as a monster who should be put away, in the name of consumer security. The potential threat of the unpredictable individual becomes a focus of governance, determining the objects of suspicion, the kinds of policing procedures that are used and the way force is applied. Given the common associations between artistic activity and dissent, subversion, the abnormal and indeed the monstrous, this just might apply to the empyre discussion! Even if it is, once again, a study of current conditions in the USA.

I'll excerpt the basic ideas, then offer a few comments. Here goes:

"The Strong Neo-Liberal State: Crime, Consumption, Governance"
by Paul Passavant, in Theory & Event 8:3 (2005

....
Scholars have described a shift -- we can usefully if not somewhat arbitrarily date this shift to 1973 -- in the U.S. state from a Keynesian welfare state to a neo-liberal, post-Fordist state.... Fordism's state formation has a dominant political and legal mentality of social security and a politics of risk. The risk mentality as it is configured under welfare state conditions is importantly different from thinking in terms of good versus evil or the notions of legal responsibility prevalent in the 19th century. Rather than individualizing guilt for traffic or work-related accidents, or blaming the individual's morality for unemployment when the business cycle means that a percentage of the population will lose their jobs at certain points, these risk societies recognize a certain statistical probability within given populations for accidents or misfortune....
A condition of possibility for these risk societies is solidarity. Hence the significance that solidaristic risk societies place upon disciplinary institutions like the school, prison or helping professions. These institutions, as Michel Foucault has taught us, seek to normalize their subjects. Even with prisons, the emphasis is on corrections and reform in order to reintegrate the subject as a productive member of society....
During the era of the welfare state, imprisonment rates in the U.S. decreased in relation both to the number of crimes recorded and offenders convicted. In the period between 1973 and the late 1990s, however, the number of inmates incarcerated increased by more than 500 percent, the rate of incarceration per 1000 index crimes nearly quadrupled, and the prison population has become significantly racially disproportionate. In the U.S., we have witnessed, particularly in the 1990s, a period of falling crime rates and rising imprisonment rates. David Garland describes these trends by contending that the "prison has once again transformed itself," meaning that the prison fulfills a different function under post-Fordist economic conditions than it did under Fordist conditions. Rather than being understood as a correctional institution to reform individuals and to prepare them to return as productive members of society to the production line, the prison is seen now as an institution to incapacitate and to contain monsters....
As contemporary society has rejected a social welfare orientation to the governance of poverty, Fordist economic premises, a correctionalist approach to penology, and the solidaristic risk mentality of social insurance, different fragments of the state are now seen as more relevant to governance than during the mid-twentieth century. It also means that the status of different professions and institutions are reconfigured from their former positions within solidaristic risk societies that rested upon the disciplines. Under these conditions, scholars note that the increasingly dominant political mentality in American society is to "govern through crime." That is, crime and punishment are prioritized contexts and mechanisms for governance....
Moreover, within the post-Fordist state, security has become identified with consumption. Privatized spaces for consumption like shopping malls are secured spaces, while those zoned from such spaces secured for consumption or the spaces beyond the walls of the gated community (the feeling of security commodified) are viewed increasingly with apprehension by those with purchasing power. In other words, under conditions of neo-liberalism, there is a consumer-criminal double. Not only do we see this double at work in U.S. domestic policy, but we also see it projected outwards in U.S. security policy by the Bush administration's 2002 National Security Policy Strategy.


Securing the Homeland Against Danger Post-September 11

With the end of the Cold War, we have seen the reemergence of the racial discourse of Western civilization versus the savage or barbarian as the predominant mode for mapping the world and America's place within it. The Bush National Security Strategy makes clear a twist to this racial discourse that has become particularly prominent since September 11th. As this document indicates, the enemy of "civilized nations" -- and the American "homeland" -- is "terrorism." This document borrows from the racial discourse that underwrote 19th century colonialism and imperialism, but with an important difference. Now, the other is no longer represented merely as racially inferior but also as a criminal. The Bush National Security Strategy articulates together two strands of the present -- consumer capitalism and fear of crime. As William Finnegan has noted, it is both interesting and odd that a national security strategy would devote as much space as the Bush Strategy does to discussing economic policy. As is clear from the section entitled "Ignite a New Era of Global Economic Growth through Free Markets and Free Trade," however, it is in fact official U.S. policy to promote -- presumably through military means since this has been identified as a vital U.S. national security interest by its placement in the Bush National Security Strategy -- a neo-liberal global economic regime. Freedom to be a consumer is the form of freedom that U.S. policy seeks to make enduring through U.S. military operations as the strategy represents political difference -- those who oppose the promotion of the neo-liberal capitalist enterprise -- as criminal: the terrorists. This only makes clear what had been prefigured in the immediate aftermath of September 11th by The New Republic's Peter Beinart who also represented anti-global capital protesters as equivalent to terrorists in an article published in the September 24, 2001 issue of that magazine. Thus, U.S. national security policy is an external projection of the consumer-criminal double....

******

The text goes on to point out a lot of details about the way commercial databanks are now used by government security agencies to profile so-called risky individuals. Thus the consumer-criminal knot becomes even tighter. What Passavant doesn't do is to point out the usefulness for labor-force control that can be derived from this profiling and repression of the often racialized "potential terrorists". I think that's one of the key points, just as Claire said. What you do get from this text, though, is a very strong explanation for the way that a society foregrounding the right to unlimited consumer desire can also produce such a willingness to persecute people and lock them up. We're talking not just about a single law or policy, but about a political rationality of neoliberal societies which both reconfigures the objective forms of the state, and affects the way that people are subjectively encouraged to see the world. The transformation is expressed in the very architecture of consumption: malls, tourist complexes, Disnified city-centers, what I call "the urbanization of blindness." You don't even have to look at the immigrants who do the work - because in a good neoliberal society, you know that if they get out of line they'll go into jail, forever. And if a few artists or intellectuals go with them, that may be the price we are asked to pay for keeping the fundamentals of neoliberal society invisible.

Not a pretty picture but I believe it contains a grain of truth...

best, Brian





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