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- ________________________________________________________________________
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- The ALEMBIC
- second edition / Summer 1989
- a magazine dedicated to superseding pre-fabricated ideologies
-
-
- WARNING! Contains controversial material.
- Parental discretion should be exorcised.
-
-
- CONTENTS:
-
- Automobiles: Public Enemy Number One (Rick Harrison)
- The Libertarian as Conservative (Bob Black)
- Everyone Talks about the Weather... (from 'Bentwood')
- On Business (David Castleman)
- Solar Cooker May Help Third World (Laura Wilkinson)
- Nietzsche and the Dervishes (Hakim Bey)
- XORcrypt: Low Budget Data Security (Rick Harrison)
- Retorts (from the audience)
-
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- NOTICES AND EXPLANATIONS
-
- Copyright 1989 by Tangerine Network. Permission is hereby granted for
- non-profit distribution or reproduction of this ascii file, provided it
- remains intact and unaltered. (Compression allowed, if necessary.)
-
- _The_Alembic_ is simultaneously distributed on paper and as a computer
- textfile which you can download from the more enlightened electronic
- bulletin boards. The paper version can be had by sending two dollars to
- the editor at the address given below. The electronic version is
- presently available from these and other enlightened boards:
-
- Factsheet Five BBS 518-479-3879 {300/1200 baud}
- (The file is stored here in the 'electronic zines' section.)
- The System <tm> 407-859-2243 {300/1200/2400 baud} FidoNet node 363/69
- (The file is stored here compressed in .ZIP format. Available for
- automatic file request from other FidoNet boards.)
-
- _The_Alembic_ is made possible entirely by donations of articles,
- publicity, money and distributive technology. Written and financial
- contributions should be directed to Rick Harrison, Box 547014,
- Orlando FL 32854 USA.
-
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- AUTOMOBILES: PUBLIC ENEMY NUMBER ONE
- by Rick Harrison
-
- Automobiles are probably the worst thing that has happened to human-
- ity in this century. Car crashes kill more Americans in one year than
- AIDS kills in five years; cars have killed many times more people than
- atomic bombs have killed. The hysteria, protests, fund-raising and re-
- search directed against AIDS and nuclear weapons might be better spent
- on trying to wipe out cars.
-
- The 45,000 Americans killed by cars every year seem to quietly
- vanish into thin air. It is remarkable that there is so little outcry
- about so much bloodshed. Perhaps this is because cars are considered an
- unquestionable fact of life. Indeed, they are often referred to as a
- "right" and a "necessity."
-
- Cars are only "necessary" to those who profit from them. People
- lived well enough without cars before World War 1, and in some parts of
- the world they still do. So why are Americans, almost without exception,
- unable to imagine life without cars?
-
- Car dealers run several full-page ads in every edition of the daily
- newspaper. During local, non-prime-time hours of TV programming, about
- half of the commercials shown are advertisements for car dealers, in-
- surance protection rackets, and lawyers who capitalize on car carnage.
- No broadcaster or print journalist can question our society's fetish
- for automobiles; the editors would never allow it for fear of losing
- their sponsors. In TV shows, cars are pictured as the best vehicles for
- love-making, high speed chases, pleasure cruising, basic transportation,
- and of course for running over anybody who irritates you.
-
- A large part of the economy is based on assembling, maintaining and
- replacing automobiles. So cars _are_ necessary, but only necessary to
- sustain this style of capitalism, which, like a bureaucracy, seems to
- have no purpose other than perpetuating its own existence. From the
- profiteer's point of view, cars that have accidents are more worthwhile
- than totally safe vehicles would be. Car accidents mean big money for
- towing services, junkyards, repair shops, hospitals, doctors, lawyers,
- insurance companies, municipalities that collect money from fines and
- tickets, funeral homes, cemeteries and the ambulance-chasing news media.
-
- In the face of all this brainwashing and profiteering, it's no
- surprise that automobiles have come to be seen as indispensable.
-
- As for the claim that people have a "right" to drive cars, this is
- absurd. Since we all need to breathe, who has a right to spew any amount
- of toxins into our atmosphere? And who has a right to launch two-ton
- unguided missiles that careen crazily through the streets of our cities?
- Considering the fact that almost all Americans use drugs ranging from
- caffein to cocaine, virtually nobody has the mental alertness or unim-
- paired reflexes necessary to drive safely at speeds above 10 miles per
- hour. (I'm sure you think _you_ are the exception.)
-
- Children, pets, and even adults aren't safe outside their homes
- because there are so many assholes driving four-wheeled death machines
- through the city. (If you live near an intersection or a sharp turn,
- you aren't even safe _inside_ your home!) And, let's face it, _everyone_
- becomes an asshole the minute they put their hands on a steering wheel.
- I've ridden in cars driven by my apparently-rational friends and have
- seen the process of driving transmute them into aggressive, over-con-
- fident maniacs. But perhaps this is the only emotional adjustment that
- can enable people to face the extreme risks of driving. Imagine zooming
- down a highway at 60 miles an hour with about 18 inches between
- yourself and vehicles going equally fast in the opposite direction. A
- foot and half between you and sudden death. If you, or one of the
- oncoming drivers, should jerk the steering wheel to the left just a
- little bit, you'll be squashed like a bug in a head-on collision. I can
- live without that kind of vulnerability and "excitement."
-
- If motorists didn't make life unsafe for the rest of us, I wouldn't
- complain so bitterly. Streets designed for and filled with motor
- vehicles are unsafe for bicycles, horse-drawn carriages, skateboards,
- and other forms of transportation. Cars squeeze out the competition
- through intimidation and sheer force. Their monopoly on personal trans-
- portation has thus been maintained through coercion, and it is an
- affront to all freedom-loving individuals.
-
- I have heard people complain about cigarette smoke or air pollution,
- and then these complainers drive away in cars! What hypocrites!
- Motorists should be locked in garages with their engines running. I've
- met a few people who rarely venture out of their homes because car fumes
- make them sick. To these people, the deadly vapors pouring out of your
- exhaust pipe are not something to be shrugged off and forgotten!
-
- Motorists use various rationalizations to excuse themselves for
- turning the earth into a gas chamber -- excuses like "My car doesn't
- pollute as much as a military jet" or "my modern car doesn't pollute
- as much as older cars do." When I corner these motorist rats with the
- truth, by asking if they would like to put their mouths on their
- exhaust pipes and take a deep breath, they respond by pathetically
- whining "I _have_ to drive a car. I can't get along without it."
-
- It seems motorists have come to believe they "need" their cars as
- fervently as I believe that I don't need one. For several years I've
- managed to buy groceries, hold down a job, and engage in travel for the
- sheer pleasure of it without ever impoverishing myself by owning a car.
- Folks act like it would kill them if they had to walk, ride a bicycle
- or take a bus. In reality, driving cars is more likely to kill them.
- Cardio-vascular disease caused by lack of exercise is a major cause
- of death. And no doubt driving-induced stress contributes to the death
- toll. Personally, I am willing to go out of my way to support life and
- resist the machinery of death.
-
- Cars are supposed to be "convenient." Careful thought reveals that
- they are amazingly inconvenient. Look at a traffic jam, for example,
- or examine the facial expression of someone standing on the roadside
- next to their car which has unexpectedly died. As for economic con-
- venience, let's say our hypothetical friend Joe Shmo is a short-order
- cook, earning $4.75 an hour and taking home about $4 an hour. Joe's car
- is already paid for. If he spends $10 a week on fuel and oil, $400 per
- year on insurance and licenses, and $500 a year on repairs, driving his
- car costs $1420 a year. He has to work almost 7 hours per week to sup-
- port his car! What's so convenient about that?!?! If he'd sell the car,
- he could work one day less each week, and he'd be happier and healthier
- as a result, partly for the reasons given above, but mainly because
- work stinks. Generally, people who make more money spend more on their
- cars, so if you sit down and calculate all the expenses involved, you
- might also find that 1/5 of your paycheck goes toward supporting your
- automobile. Is it worth it?
-
- To drive a car is to be taxed, registered, licensed and watched.
- The entertainment media and high school peer pressure systems, which
- are subsidiaries of the corporate establishment, force young people to
- lust after car ownership because it benefits the police state to have
- everyone's name, address and photograph on file. Leave your driver's
- license at home and try to cash a check; you'll see what I mean. The
- driver's license, like a necktie or work uniform, is a universally-
- recognized symbol of submission to the system.
-
- To drive a car is also to be at the mercy of mechanics, many of
- whom have questionable ethics. High technology is being used to make it
- more difficult for people to repair their own vehicles, so that car
- manufacturers and chains of repair shops can monopolize the profits made
- from fixing automobiles which are designed to self-destruct at frequent
- intervals. Micro-computers are now part of most ignition systems, and
- unless you're a computer repairman it's unlikely that you'll have the
- necessary tools to diagnose and fix any electronic problems that might
- arise. This means that having a car these days makes you dependent on
- others for transportation -- and that is almost as dangerous as being
- dependent on others for food. (Got your five-year stockpile of food
- ready to last through the coming holocaust?)
-
- All these arguments against car ownership would be obvious if
- people were capable of thinking about the matter objectively. Thanks
- to religion, TV, lust, drugs, advertising and work, most people have
- been reduced to distracted conformists, so -- fortunately for the
- capitalists -- there is no danger that an outbreak of rational thinking
- will occur anytime soon. As long as the majority of people are un-
- concerned about behaving ethically or creating a better world, cars will
- remain popular.
-
- {Footnote: After drafting this essay about two years ago, I was
- mugged while bicycling home from work one night, and resorted to obtain-
- ing a motor scooter for slightly safer transportation. It sounds and
- smells like a lawn-mower, but suddenly, when I started riding the
- scooter, the motorists around me no longer honked, threw things at me,
- pretended they couldn't see me, or tried to run me off the road, as
- they had frequently done when I was a bicyclist.}
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- THE AUTOMOBILE: AN INSTRUMENT FOR SELF-PUNISHMENT
- from _L'Encyclopedie_Des_Nuisances_
-
- ...It is well known that expressway construction and the motoriza-
- tion of the labor force was one of the components of the mobilization
- of the German proletariat under National Socialism. Both the Volkswagon
- and the Panzerwagon could circulate on the expressways, with the
- military excursion constituting the other original blemish that dom-
- inates the modern journey. Everything submits to the same demand for
- speed and efficiency, and to the same reality of slowness and waste. One
- can be certain to lose time, at best, and at worst, life itself. During
- the elaborate maneuvers of going on vacation, which for the great major-
- ity of motorists is the only opportunity for a real trip, everything is
- organized in military fashion. On "D" Day, the general staff organizes
- radio guidance for the legions of vacationers. From the weather report
- to light aircraft reconnaissance flights, from reminders about necessary
- discipline to extrication itineraries in case the offense gets bogged
- down, everything has been foreseen for traversing hostile lands, from
- rescue squads to the installation of special tribunals.
-
- Then the balance sheet is drawn up. Naturally, the losses are in
- proportion to the undertaking: during one year in a reasonably bellicose
- country like France, fatalities amount to the equivalent of a large in-
- fantry division, and the number of injured to several army corps. Such
- a criminal slaughter is perfectly accepted by the population as a
- natural disaster about which, by definition, nothing can be done. This
- incredible fatalism well demonstrates, once again, the general loss of
- common sense in our era.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- newspaper clipping, dated 1988/6/12:
-
- The automobile was once an efficient way to get around but now
- causes such traffic woes and health hazards that people must learn to
- use other transportation methods, according to a study released Satur-
- day. "Excessive reliance on cars can actually stifle rather than advance
- societies," said the study by Worldwatch, a private think-tank. The
- study estimated the number of passenger cars in use worldwide grew from
- 53 million in 1950 to 386 million in 1986. As a result, motorists in
- hundreds of cities creep forward at speeds slower than a bicycle's, the
- study said, adding that more than 200,000 people died in 1985 in traffic
- accidents worldwide. In the United States, 30,000 people die each year
- of diseases resulting from the use of gasoline and diesel fuel. "It is
- time to build a bridge from an auto-centered society into an alternative
- transportation future... in which cars, buses, rail systems, bicycles
- and walking all complement each other," the study said.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- "A study shows that commuters who drive the Los Angeles freeways are
- exposed to four times the amount of cancer-causing chemicals normally
- found in the air outdoors."
- - ABC Radio News 1989/05/06
-
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- THE LIBERTARIAN AS CONSERVATIVE
- by Bob Black
- (essay based on a speech delivered to the Eris Society in 1984)
-
- I agreed to come here today to speak on some such subject as "The
- Libertarian as Conservative." To me this is so obvious that I am hard
- put to find something to say to people who still think libertarianism
- has something to do with liberty. A libertarian is just a Republican
- who takes drugs. I'd have preferred a more controversial topic like
- "The Myth of the Penile Orgasm." But since my attendance here is sub-
- sidized by the esteemed distributor of a veritable reference library
- on mayhem and dirty tricks, I can't just take the conch and go rogue.
- I will indeed mutilate the sacred cow which is libertarianism, as
- ordered, but I'll administer a few hard lefts to the right in my own
- way. And I don't mean the easy way. I could just point to the laissez-
- faire Trilateralism of the Libertarian Party, then leave and go look for
- a party. It doesn't take long to say that if you fight fire with fire,
- you'll get burned.
-
- If that were all I came up with, somebody would up and say that the
- LP has lapsed from the libertarian faith, just as Christians have in-
- sisted that their behavior over the last 1900 years or so shouldn't be
- held against Christianity. There are Libertarians who try to retrieve
- libertarianism from the Libertarian Party just as there are Christians
- who try to reclaim Christianity from Christendom and communists (I've
- tried to myself) who try to save Communism from the Communist parties
- and states. They (and I) meant well but we lost. Libertarianism _is_
- party-archist fringe-rightism just as socialism is what Eastern European
- dissidents call "real socialism," i.e., the real-life state-socialism
- of queues, quotas, corruption and coercion. But I choose not to
- knock down this libertarian strawman-qua-man who's blowing over anyway.
- A wing of the Reaganist Right has obviously appropriated, with suspect
- selectivity, such libertarian themes as deregulation and voluntarism.
- Ideologues indignate that Reagan has travestied their principles. Tough
- shit! I notice that it's _their_ principles, not mine, that he found
- suitable to travesty. This kind of quarrel doesn't interest me. My
- reasons for regarding libertarianism as conservative run deeper than
- that.
-
- My target is what Libertarians have in common -- with each other,
- and with their ostensible enemies. Libertarians serve the state all the
- better because they declaim against it. At bottom, they want what it
- wants. But you can't want what the state wants without wanting the
- state, for what the state wants is the conditions in which it flourish-
- es. My (unfriendly) approach to modern society is to regard it as an
- integrated totality. Silly doctrinaire theories which regard the state
- as a parasitic excrescence on society cannot explain its centuries-long
- persistence, its ongoing encroachment upon what was previously market
- terrain, or its acceptance by the overwhelming majority of people
- including its demonstrable victims.
-
- A far more plausible theory is that the state and (at least) _this_
- form of society have a symbiotic (however sordid) interdependence, that
- the state and such institutions as the market and the nuclear family
- are, in several ways, modes of hierarchy and control. Their articulation
- is not always harmonious but they share a common interest in consigning
- their conflicts to elite or expert resolution. To demonize state
- authoritarianism while ignoring identical albeit contract-consecrated
- subservient arrangements in the large-scale corporations which control
- the world economy is fetishism at its worst. And yet (to quote the most
- vociferous of radical Libertarians, Professor Murray Rothbard) there is
- nothing un-libertarian about "organization, hierarchy, wage-work, grant-
- ing of funds by libertarian millionaires, and a libertarian party."
- Indeed. That is why libertarianism is just conservatism with a
- rationalist/positivist veneer.
-
- Libertarians render a service to the state which only they can
- provide. For all their complaints about its illicit extensions they
- concede, in their lucid moments, that the state rules far more by con-
- sent than by coercion -- which is to say, on present-state "libertarian"
- terms the state doesn't rule at all, it merely carries out the tacit or
- explicit terms of its contracts. If it seems contradictory to say that
- coercion is consensual, the contradiction is in the world, not in the
- expression, and can't adequately be rendered except by dialectical
- discourse. One-dimensional syllogistics can't do justice to a world
- largely lacking in the virtue. If your language lacks poetry and para-
- dox, it's unequal to the task of accounting for actuality. Otherwise
- anything radically new is literally unspeakable. The scholastic "A = A"
- logic created by the Catholic Church which the Libertarians inherited,
- unquestioned, from the Randites is just as constrictively conservative
- as the Newspeak of Orwell's _1984_.
-
- The state commands, for the most part, only because it commands
- popular support. It is (and should be) an embarrassment to Libertarians
- that the state rules with mass support -- including, for all practical
- purposes, theirs.
-
- Libertarians reinforce acquiescent attitudes by diverting discon-
- tents who are generalized (or tending that way) and focusing them on
- particular features and functions of the state which they are the first
- to insist are expendable! Thus they turn potential revolutionaries into
- repairmen. Constructive criticism is really the subtlest sort of praise.
- If the Libertarians succeed in relieving the state of its exiguous
- activities, they just might be its salvation. No longer will reverence
- for authority be eroded by the prevalent official ineptitude. The more
- the state does, the more it does badly. Surely one reason for the
- common man's aversion to Communism is his reluctance to see the entire
- economy run like the Post Office. The state tries to turn its soldiers
- and policemen into objects of veneration and respect, but uniforms lose
- a lot of their mystique when you see them on park rangers and garbage-
- men.
-
- The ideals and institutions of authority tend to cluster together,
- both subjectively and objectively. You may recall Edward Gibbon's
- remark about the eternal alliance of Throne and Altar. Disaffection
- from received dogmas has a tendency to spread. If there is any future
- for freedom, it depends on this. Unless and until alienation recognizes
- itself, all the guns the Libertarians cherish will be useless against
- the state.
-
- You might object that what I've said may apply to the minarchist
- majority of Libertarians, but not to the self-styled anarchists among
- them. To my mind a right-wing anarchist is just a minarchist who'd
- abolish the state to his own satisfaction by calling it something else.
- But this incestuous family squabble is no affair of mine. Both camps
- call for partial or complete privitization of state functions but
- neither questions the functions themselves. They don't denounce what
- the state does, they just object to who's doing it. This is why the
- people most victimized by the state display the least interest in liber-
- tarianism. Those on the receiving end of coercion don't quibble over
- their coercers' credentials. If you can't pay or don't want to, you
- don't much care if your deprivation is called larceny or taxation or
- restitution or rent. If you like to control your own time, you dis-
- tinguish employment from enslavement only in degree and duration. An
- ideology which outdoes all others (with the possible exception of
- Marxism) in its exaltation of the work ethic can only be a brake on
- anti-authoritarian orientations, even if it does make the trains run
- on time.
-
- My second argument, related to the first, is that the libertarian
- phobia as to the state reflects and reproduces a profound misunderstand-
- ing of the operative forces which make for social control in the modern
- world. _If_ -- and this is a big "if," especially where bourgeois Liber-
- tarians are concerned -- what you want is to maximize individual
- autonomy, then it is quite clear that the state is the least of the
- phenomena which stand in your way.
-
- Imagine that you are a Martian anthropologist specializing in Terran
- studies and equipped with the finest telescopes and video equipment. You
- have not yet deciphered any Terran language and so you can only record
- what earthlings do, not their shared misconceptions as to what they're
- doing and why. However, you can gauge roughly when they're doing what
- they want and when they're doing something else. Your first important
- discovery is that earthlings devote nearly all their time to unwelcome
- activities. The only important exception is a dwindling set of hunter-
- gatherer groups unperturbed by governments, churches and schools who
- devote some four hours a day to subsistence activities which so closely
- resemble the leisure activities of the privileged classes in industrial
- capitalist countries that you are uncertain whether to describe what
- they do as work or play. But the state and the market are eradicating
- these holdouts and you very properly concentrate on the almost all-
- inclusive world-system which, for all its evident internal antagonisms
- as epitomized in war, is much the same everywhere. The Terran young,
- you further observe, are almost wholly subject to the impositions of the
- family and the school, sometimes seconded by the church and occasion-
- ally the state. The adults often assemble in families too, but the
- place where they pass the most time and submit to the closest control
- is at work. Thus, without even entering into the question of the world
- economy's ultimate dictation of everybody's productive activity, it's
- apparent that the source of the greatest direct duress experienced by
- the ordinary adult is _not_ the state but rather the business that
- employs him. Your foreman or supervisor gives you more "or-else" orders
- in a week than the police do in a decade.
-
- If one looks at the world without prejudice but with an eye to
- maximizing freedom, the major coercive institution is not the state,
- it's _work_. Libertarians who with a straight face call for the
- abolition of the state nonetheless look on anti-work attitudes with
- horror. The idea of abolishing work is, of course, an affront to common
- sense. But then so is the idea of abolishing the state. If a referendum
- were held among Libertarians which posed as options the abolition of
- work with retention of the state, or abolition of the state with reten-
- tion of work, does anyone doubt the outcome?
-
- Libertarians are into linear reasoning and quantitative analysis.
- If they applied these methods to test their own reasoning they'd be in
- for a shock. That's the point of my Martian thought experiment. This is
- not to say that the state isn't just as unsavory as the Libertarians say
- it is. But it does suggest that the state is important, not so much for
- the direct duress it inflicts on convicts and conscripts, for instance,
- as for its indirect back-up of employers who regiment employees, shop-
- keepers who arrest shoplifters, and parents who paternalize children.
- In these classrooms, the lesson of submission is learned. Of course,
- there are always a few freaks like anarcho-capitalists or Catholic
- anarchists, but they're just exceptions to the rule of rule.
-
- Unlike side issues such as unemployment, unions, and minimum-wage
- laws, the subject of work itself is almost entirely absent from liber-
- tarian literature. Most of what little there is consists of Randite
- rantings against parasites, barely distinguishable from the invective
- inflicted on dissidents by the Soviet press, and Sunday-school platitud-
- inizing that there is no free lunch -- this from fat cats who have
- usually ingested a lot of them. In 1980, a rare exception appeared in a
- book review published in the _Libertarian_Review_ by Professor John
- Hospers, the Libertarian Party elder state's-man who flunked out of the
- Electoral College in 1972. Here was a spirited defense of work by a
- college professor who didn't have to do any. To demonstrate that his
- arguments were thoroughly conservative, it is enough to show that they
- agreed in all essentials with Marxism-Leninism.
-
- Hospers thought he could justify wage-labor, factory discipline and
- hierarchic management by noting that they're imposed in Leninist
- regimes as well as under capitalism. Would he accept the same argument
- for the necessity of repressive sex and drug laws? Like other Libertar-
- ians, Hospers is uneasy -- hence his gratuitous red-baiting -- because
- libertarianism and Leninism are as different as Coke and Pepsi when it
- comes to consecrating class society and the source of its power, work.
- Only upon the firm foundation of factory fascism and office oligarchy
- do Libertarians and Leninists dare to debate the trivial issues dividing
- them. Toss in the mainstream conservatives who feel just the same and we
- end up with a veritable trilateralism of pro-work ideology seasoned to
- taste.
-
- Hospers, who never has to, sees nothing demeaning in taking orders
- from bosses, for "how else could a large scale factory be organized?" In
- other words, "wanting to abolish authority in large-scale industry is
- tantamount to wanting to abolish industry itself." Hospers again? No,
- Frederick Engels! Marx agreed: "Go and run one of the Barcelona factor-
- ies without direction, that is to say, without authority!" (Which is
- just what the Catalan workers did in 1936, while their anarcho-
- syndicalist leaders temporized and cut deals with the government.)
- "Someone," says Hospers, "has to make decisions and" -- here's the
- kicker -- "someone _else_ has to implement them." _Why?_ His precursor
- Lenin likewise endorsed "individual dictatorial powers" to assure
- "absolute and strict _unity_of_will_. But how can strict unity of will
- be ensured? By thousands subordinating their will to the will of one."
- What's needed to make industrialism work is "iron discipline while at
- work, with _unquestioning_obedience_ to the will of a single person, the
- soviet leader, while at work." _Arbeit_macht_frei_!
-
- Some people giving orders and others obeying them: this is the
- essence of servitude. Of course, as Hospers smugly observes, "one can
- at least change jobs," but you can't avoid having a job -- just as under
- statism one can at least change nationalities but you can't avoid
- subjection to one nation-state or another. But freedom means more than
- the right to change masters.
-
- Hospers and other Libertarians are wrong to assume, with Man-
- chester industrialist Engels, that technology imposes its division of
- labor "independent of social organization." Rather, the factory _is_
- an instrument of social control, the most effective ever devised to
- enforce the class chasm between the few who "make decisions" and the
- many who "implement them." Industrial technology is much more the
- product than the source of workplace totalitarianism. Thus the revolt
- against work -- reflected in absenteeism, sabotage, turnover,
- embezzlement, wildcat strikes, and goldbricking -- has far more
- liberatory promise than the machinations of "libertarian" politicos
- and propagandists.
-
- Most work serves the predatory purposes of commerce and coercion
- and can be abolished outright. The rest can be automated away and/or
- transformed -- by the experts, the workers who do it -- into creative,
- playlike pastimes whose variety and conviviality will make extrinsic
- inducements like the capitalist carrot and the Communist stick equally
- obsolete. In the hopefully impending meta-industrial revolution,
- libertarian communists revolting against work will settle accounts
- with "Libertarians" and "Communists" working against revolt. And then
- we can go for the gusto!
-
- Even if you think everything I've said about work, such as the
- possibility of its abolition, is visionary nonsense, the anti-liberty
- implications of its prevalence would still hold good. The time of your
- life is the one commodity you can sell but never buy back. Murray
- Rothbard thinks egalitarianism is a revolt against nature, but his day
- is 24 hours long, just like everybody else's. If you spend most of your
- waking life taking orders or kissing ass, if you get habituated to
- hierarchy, you will become passive-aggressive, sado-masochistic,
- servile and stupefied, and you will carry that load into every aspect
- of the balance of your life. Incapable of living a life of liberty,
- you'll settle for one of its ideological representations, like liber-
- tarianism. You can't treat values like workers, hiring and firing them
- at will and assigning each a place in an imposed division of labor. The
- taste for freedom and pleasure can't be compartmentalized.
-
- Libertarians complain that the state is parasitic, an excrescence
- on society. They think it's like a tumor you could cut out, leaving the
- patient just as he was, only healthier. They've been mystified by their
- own metaphors. Like the market, the state is an activity, not an entity.
- The only way to abolish the state is to change the way of life it forms
- a part of. That way of life, if you call that living, revolves around
- work and takes in bureaucracy, moralism, schooling, money, and more.
- Libertarians are conservatives because they avowedly want to maintain
- most of this mess and so unwittingly perpetuate the rest of the racket.
- But they're bad conservatives because they've forgotten the reality of
- institutional and ideological interconnection which was the original
- insight of the historical conservatives. Entirely out of touch with the
- real currents of contemporary resistance, they denounce _practical_
- opposition to the system as "nihilism," "Luddism," and other big words
- they don't understand. A glance at the world confirms that their
- utopian capitalism just _can't_compete_ with the state. With enemies
- like Libertarians, the state doesn't need friends.
-
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- Everyone Talks About the Weather...
-
- Reprinted from the Lammas 1988 edition of Bentwood,
- 4807 50th Avenue, Seattle WA 98118.
-
- Unless you've been living in a cave somewhere on the astral plane,
- you should be aware of the "Drought of 1988." The images of it are
- everywhere: parched fields with only a stubble of growth; the cracked,
- dried earth of empty river and stream beds; the news reports of
- sweltering temperatures and no rainfall. And while many people just
- seem to take it all in stride, or view it as just another piece of bad
- news on TV (and after all, the news is always bad), as pagans weâ•’re
- keenly aware of what's happening, what it means for ourselves, the
- plant and animal life we share this planet with, and for the Earth
- Mother herself.
-
- Those who live in the South and Midwest have a most profound
- experience of how our climate is changing. It is most evident in the
- corn, that plant so sacred to Native American cultures. The usually
- broad, lush leaves are instead mottled and curled. And where the corn
- usually stretches towards the sunlight, it is now stunted and
- shriveling, almost recoiling from the burning rays. Even those of us
- who live in areas not so hard hit this year by the drought can see the
- effects: in the Pacific Northwest, intermountain regions, and Alaska,
- forest fires rage this year, blackening thousands of acres.
-
- We pagans are growing sensitive to the deeper meanings of this
- drought. We can sense something more profound, more significant in this
- disaster; it is almost palpable. To some, fear is one element; we are
- like a child who is constantly afraid that they will be abandoned by
- their mother. And there is fear of not knowing what is going to happen;
- we see this etched on the faces of farmers and others who live on the
- land. Even though we may feel that we're insulated right now, we have a
- sense that these climactic changes are going to affect us all.
-
- And they will. Whether we live in an urban setting, out in the
- woods, or in a rural farming area, these climactic changes are going to
- affect us. The bounty of the supermarket may not be so bountiful in the
- future. Recently there have been news reports of growing concerns over
- intermittent shortages of certain food products as early as next year.
- In the West, water is becoming more and more scarce in some areas, and
- contingency plans for rationing are being drawn up in some urban areas.
- And there is growing evidence that the hot and dry summers of the past
- two years are not just random or freakish occurrences, but rather the
- beginning of a global warming trend. What weâ•’re seeing in 1988 could
- possibly be the harbinger of greater climactic extremes to come.
-
- While the physical effects of these meteorological changes are
- quite evident, the psychological and psychic responses seem much more
- varied. Some born-again and fundamentalist Christians see the drought
- as part of the wrath of a patriarchal god who will put the Earth through
- great tribulations and suffering as a prelude to the establishment of
- the kingdom of heaven. Others with a "New Age" orientation see what is
- happening as "the Earth Changes," an inevitable period where the Earth
- cleanses or purges herself of the awful things humans have done.
-
- While these two responses may seem different, they are in fact
- almost identical. Both presuppose that the tribulation/Earth changes
- are inevitable and unavoidable, (prophecy plays a major rÖle in many
- Christian and New Age philosophies), indicate that only a chosen few
- will survive the great destruction, and that after all the mayhem is
- over, those who remain will live a life of peace, love, and harmony,
- usually due to the influence of some external source (the return of
- God, universal consciousness, or contact with beings from other planets
- or planes of existence). The idyllic ending is as inevitable as the
- destruction to come.
-
- Many pagans are taking a somewhat different tack towards what is
- happening to the world. The reason for drought, famine, and environ-
- mental deterioration is not because of some mysterious, supernatural
- force but has a rather simpler cause: human actions. Five thousand years
- of a power-over, domination-oriented philosophy have laid the foundation
- for what we see manifesting in the changing climate, the scarred Earth,
- the poisoned ocean. The results of the last 150 years of irresponsible
- industrial society is the cause of what we're seeing today. As pagans
- we understand the intent and the "mechanics" of the law of manifold
- return: what we put out into the world comes back to us magnified. This
- is true for what we do whether individually or collectively. It may take
- a long time to return, and perhaps it may manifest in a form that might
- not be immediately evident, but return it does. And we're seeing it now.
-
- A hundred years of extensive burning of fossil fuels, massive
- deforestation, the establishment of a resource- and energy-intensive
- lifestyle for a small minority of the Earth's inhabitants, are the
- direct cause of the baked fields and dry streams. We don't need a
- vengeful god to send us tribulations. We do just fine on our own.
-
- Yet we are discovering that isn't the end of the story. We
- are coming to learn that one of the differences between a pagan
- viewpoint towards this drought and its consequences, and the
- fundamentalist/New Age approach, is that the latter essentially takes
- us out of the equation. In the tribulation/Earth Changes scenarios,
- the environmental destruction we are witnessing is inevitable,
- {Editor's note: maybe this is why so many businessmen and politicians
- promote Christianity.} and has been foretold in prophecy. (After all,
- what is more useless than a prophecy that doesn't come true?) What we
- do or have done is irrelevant. And thus we don't really have to take
- responsibility for what we're doing to the Earth, and can continue our
- destructive ways without a second thought. Of course, the tribulation
- or Earth Changes will interrupt it all at some point, but (fortunately)
- that is sometime out in the nebulous future. Pagans, on the other hand,
- see the climactic changes as a direct result of human activity, both
- material and psychic. Therefore we can have a direct influence on what
- happens to the environment, and ultimately, to us.
-
- With this knowledge we're making changes. Some are subtle, some are
- more evident. In our meditations we are visualizing a clean atmosphere,
- lush rain forests, and a land free of industrial scars for the Earth.
- We are visualizing lifegiving rain falling in abundance on the fields
- and filling the rivers and lakes. And we meditate on human change,
- seeing our attitudes change to those of love and harmony with those we
- share the Earth with, living in balance with nature and enjoying the
- rewards that such a life can give to all.
-
- Understanding that the internal work alone is not enough, the
- meditative, psychic, and ritual work we do is serving as the energy
- for changes in our material lives. Some of us are beginning to evaluate
- the effect that we personally have on the Earth, our contribution to
- pollution. For some it may mean curtailing the use of our cars. For
- others it may mean making efforts to recycle what we would normally
- throw out. Another response for some is to become directly acquainted
- with the Earth, air, and weather by digging in the ground, planting
- something green, and caring for it. And for still others it may mean
- learning more about the political and sociological aspects of food,
- energy, and resource distribution and becoming involved to change
- them. There is a great variety of things pagans are doing to materially
- turn the tide of human irresponsibility. What is important is that
- we're doing it, and our understanding that we, in fact, can make a
- difference.
-
- The Drought of '88 may be just the beginning of changes for all of
- us. Many will feel helpless about these changes, but pagans will see
- themselves as active partners in it.
-
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- On Business
- by David Castleman
-
- Our human psyche is like a horse with many masters, and ranked
- among them is Government, and Media, and Business. One master sees that
- the blinders never fail in their task of administering blindness. One
- master investigates the reins constantly, to guard against an
- encroachment by the individual will. One master tests the harness
- constantly, that the servile brute may not forget its allotted and
- proper burden. Other and subtler masters note the aspects of the terrain
- and the feed and the healthy future of the breed: they stand aloof.
-
- The facility for business is a reasonably constructed and physical
- extension of the primal hunting instinct of the carnivore, and is
- itself as clearly a tool of physical contest as is a spear, a trained
- dog, a nuclear explosive, or a padded bosom. It is a tool whose use
- extends the power of the animal beyond the borders of naked animality.
- Its function is of acquisition and of destruction. It kills, that the
- animal may eat, and the animal is to eat, that it may kill.
-
- All who share the privilege and the responsibility of life, live
- upon this wheel of natural whim. As the mind is the function of the
- brain, so this special tool hidden among folds in the fisted brain, has
- as its function that aspect of the mind which equips the physical body.
- The carnivore without it is doomed to be a brief and sorry meat for its
- fellows.
-
- What traits of personality are required for business? One must be
- intelligent and single-minded, and troubled by no untamed conscience.
- Monomania is crucial. Imagination is dangerous and useless. An abundance
- of energy is vital. Scruples are decorative, not functional.
-
- The activity of a real and vigorous imagination poisons the will,
- by suggesting too many alternatives, and kills single-mindedness.
- Single-mindedness depends on the channeled presence of the personal
- portion of communal will, and if the channel enlarges, the will can get
- no grip, and flounders.
-
- What are the social skills required to participate effectively in
- this chattering session of business? A person must be able to mimic
- the reactions of one's peers, must be malleable as a chameleon, so that
- none will be aware if one chance to have qualms of conscience or
- stirrings of humanity, and so that none will be aware if one chance to
- have a moment of individual awareness. To wake surrounded by the
- inhabitants of a dream, would be dangerous as to swim with sharks.
-
- One must lie easily, remembering always the essential falsehoods of
- one's profession, and believing the lies as they are invented on the
- tongue. If you do not believe your own lies as you speak them, nobody
- else will believe them, and you will have withdrawn sufficiently from
- the game that you may not believe the lies of your peers.
-
- Truth will never be as popular as lies, because it seems harder,
- and bleaker. Almost invariably, we prefer the phonies among our
- contemporaries, rather than folks of truth or genius. In superficiality
- is happiness, when we fear the truth, and feel belittled by genius.
- Little people love displays of littleness, because littleness allows
- them to feel real, and nobody loves to feel substantial as a bubble.
-
- One who perceives the surface clearly enough, will understand the
- depths beneath the surface comfortably, though inarticulably, and may be
- uninterested in those depths. To be a successful seller, one must
- ignore anything beyond the surface of reality. One must believe in the
- surface with unfeigned sincerity.
-
- Sincerity is prized, while honesty is abhorred, and sincerity must
- have the appearance of sincerity or it counts as nothing. Every
- intelligent and civilized society values the appearance of sincerity
- more than it values sincerity itself. The appearance of reality is more
- important than is actual reality. Appearance is the only thing that
- superficials dare to trust, the only thing that may be discussed
- easily.
-
- The appearance is real and exists on the superficial plane of
- reality, and is the nearest thing of substance that is available to
- normal folks. The appearance of things is the clearest indicator of
- truth and reality and substance, that normalcy is permitted, and this
- is healthy. To ignore the appearance and the superficial, is unhealthy.
-
- This plane of the superficial is the domain of those three masters
- we spoke of. Business, and Government, and Media, each has a fine and
- imposing abode on this level, and each has many servants and formidable
- affairs.
-
- To be excellent at business, one must enjoy it utterly, and one must
- consider it a fine game to be played well. To be a champion at business,
- beyond mere excellence, it must be religion. Somebody who is so good at
- being bad must pay an awful price for the privilege. Why do so many
- people pay such a devastating price, forsaking conscience, family, and
- self?
-
- Every religion requires martyrs, and martyrs work for nothing. Their
- bosses reap the glory.
-
- We strive to succeed in business because acquisition is the human
- pursuit, and we would match our fellows. What pleasure would be found in
- life apart, striving for baubles our various authority figures have
- preached against, striven to suppress, and mocked? The fruits of
- acquisition seem tangible. They can be held in hand like Faberge eggs.
- They can be walked upon, like beaches in an earthly paradise. Their
- acquisition permits us to forget the coming and the gnawing precipice,
- the yawning reward, the sleep without rest.
-
- Our fear dissolves when we confront the acceptedly real and the
- acceptedly desirable, and if later it proves a mirage, that is
- irrelevant.
-
- Pursuing what our fellows pursue, we forget our smallness,
- insignificance and loneliness. What comfort had Galileo though he was
- right? What comfort had Gauguin? What comfort had Christ? The human
- needs went unanswered, and each must have been a focal point of cosmic
- doubt, an arena of the psyche. The loneliness must have been fraught
- with horror, and fear.
-
- In the night our terrific human loneliness crawls across the
- ceiling and stares down at us, and though we cannot see it, we feel
- that it is there. It mocks us as we watch it through our closed or open
- eyes, or through our fingers which splay like trembling fans upon our
- faces. We hear it scuttling and we hear it whimpering and whispering
- like the beating of a heart. We are reminded of the basis on which all
- illusion shimmers awhile, and it is unmindful of us, and unkind. We want
- the great basis to confide with us, and its tongue is unmoved.
-
- Honorable suffering is humanity's only possible gift to Deity, and
- it is not enough.
-
- It is our normal desire to escape the offering of that gift, and we
- attempt this when we choose to remain always on the surface of desire,
- the surface of reality and life. Therefore a reasonable society embraces
- the march of business and of war. War is only business with its sleeves
- rolled up.
-
- All of the world's business has one goal, and efforts made in
- business have been attempts pulsing toward that goal. To define the goal
- precisely would require the use of many words, and two aspects would be
- implicit in any definition, and would be explicit in any honest
- definition. Despite any decorative digressions, the goal of business
- and of war includes the enslavement of the human race and the
- destruction of the planet.
-
- The best people among the devotees to commerce, these myrmidons to
- Mammon, prefer to pretend that their personal goals are somehow short
- of this grand goal, but in their hearts and brains they know that
- nobody is fooled. Each can tell easily what the others do, and each
- permits a mantle of confusion to settle over all.
-
- Lying doesn't bother them. They are good at it. The unluckiest among
- them pale with disgust every morning when they confront the bathroom
- mirror. The luckiest among them are scarcely ashamed at all. The
- proudest among them are frightened because they know they have betrayed
- themselves, and somewhere the almost inaudible voice of conscience
- still murmurs.
-
- While it's true that those who are too susceptible to society's
- punctilio may be disgusted by business, it's also true that we are
- easily disgusted by things we are not in sympathy with. For many folks,
- and usually for the poorest of us, business is just the science of
- cheating people, a mindless obscenity; and yet to a business buff, the
- act of being in business justifies one's existence to oneself and to
- one's Deity. Sometimes businessfolks wonder that they are unable to
- appreciate the uncommon, and yet is that truly so odd, since they revel
- so in the common?
-
- Does a robber-baron truly believe that a lifetime dedicated to the
- crippling and assassination of whole families by the thousands is
- balanced by building a concert-hall as he is about to die? Do such
- acts of dishonor go unrecorded into the dawn of prehistory and the
- dusk of post-history?
-
- "As mere human knowledge can split a ray of light and analyze the
- manner of its composition, so sublimer intelligences may read in the
- feeble shining of this earth of ours, every thought and act, every vice
- and virtue, of every responsible creature on it." Amen.
-
- And yet their desperate hope and prayer is for a Ptolemaic and
- all-inclusive silence, silent as a perfectly managed conscience, even
- on Sunday.
-
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- Solar Cooker May Help Third World
- by Laura Wilkinson
- (Associated Press 1989/01/15)
-
- A simple box of cardboard, foil and glass is being promoted as a
- means to free Third World women from the time-consuming search for
- firewood and get them out of the unhealthy smoke.
-
- The solar cookers, designed by two Arizona women, are being
- introduced in the Third World by Pillsbury Co. "We feel the potential
- of solar cookers is so great that it could truly alleviate some of the
- global problems," said William Sperber, a senior research microbiologist
- at the food conglomerate.
-
- The cooker is an insulated box within a box topped with a glass pane
- and a reflector that directs sunlight. It can be made out of cardboard
- or wood, and aluminum foil. Food is cooked in dark, covered metal,
- glass or ceramic pots.
-
- The temperature peaks at 250 to 275 degrees F., meaning food takes
- longer to cook than in electric ovens. Users save time by no longer
- having to collect firewood and by not having to stir the food because
- of the low heat.
-
- Simplicity may be an obstacle to widespread adoption, supporters
- say. "It doesn't look as high tech as other things that have been
- tried," said Chris Flavin, vice president of research at Worldwatch
- Institute, a private non-profit research group that focuses on global
- resource issues. "There's an actual bias in development agencies
- against anything that's small and decentralized," said Flavin. "They
- like to support big projects because they're easy to manage."
-
- Barbara Kerr of Taylor, Arizona, a nurse, and Sherry Cole of Tempe,
- a former free-lance writer and neighbor of Kerr's, created the design
- in the mid-1970s. Since then, Cole said, they've sold about 3,000 kits
- and cookers ranging from $40 to $275.
-
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- Nietzshce and the Dervishes
- by Hakim Bey
-
- _Rendan_, "the clever ones." The sufis use a technical term _rend_
- (adj. _rendi_, pl. _rendan_) to designate one "clever enough to drink
- wine in secret without getting caught": the dervish-version of
- "Permissible Dissimulation" (_taqiyya_, whereby Shiities are permitted
- to lie about their true affiliation to avoid persecution as well as
- advance the purposes of their propaganda).
-
- On the plane of the "Path", the _rend_ conceals his spiritual state
- in order to contain it, work on it alchemically, enhance it. This
- "cleverness" explains much of the secrecy of the Orders, altho it
- remains true that many dervishes do literally break the rules of Islam,
- offend tradition and flout the customs of their society -- all of
- which gives them reason for _real_ secrecy.
-
- Ignoring the case of the "criminal" who uses sufism as a mask -- or
- rather not sufism per se but _dervish_-ism, almost a synonym in Persia
- for laid-back manners and by extension a social laxness, a style of
- genial, poor but elegant amorality -- the above definition can still be
- considered in a literal as well as metaphorical sense. That is: some
- sufis do break the Law while still allowing that the Law exists and
- will continue to exist; and they do so from spiritual motives, as an
- exercise of will (_himmah_).
-
- Nietzsche says somewhere that the free spirit will not agitate for
- the rules to be dropped or even reformed, since it is only by breaking
- the rules that he realizes his will to power. One must prove (to
- oneself if no one else) an ability to overcome the rules of the herd,
- to make one's own law and yet not fall prey to the rancor and resent-
- ment of inferior souls which define law and custom in ANY society. One
- needs, in effect, an individual equivalent of war in order to achieve
- the becoming of the free spirit -- one needs an inert stupidity against
- which to measure one's own movement and intelligence.
-
- Anarchists sometimes posit an ideal society without law. The few
- anarchistic experiments which succeeded briefly (the Makhnovists,
- Catalan) failed to survive the conditions of war which permitted their
- existence in the first place -- so we have no way of knowing empirically
- if such an experiment could outlive the onset of peace.
-
- Some anarchists however, like our late friend the Italian
- Stirnerite "Brand," took part in all sorts of uprisings and revolutions,
- even communist and socialist ones, because they found in the moment of
- insurrection itself the kind of freedom they sought. Thus while
- utopianism has so far always failed, the individualist or existentialist
- anarchists have succeeded inasmuch as they have attained (however
- briefly) the realization of their will to power in war.
-
- Nietzsche's animadversions against "anarchists" are always aimed
- at the egalitarian-communist narodnik martyr-types, whose idealism he
- saw as yet one more survival of post-Xtian moralism -- altho he
- sometimes praises them for at least having the courage to revolt
- against majoritarian authority. He never mentions Stirner, but I
- believe he would have classified the Individualist rebel with the
- higher type of "criminals," who represented for him (as for Dostoyevsky)
- humans far superior to the herd, even if tragically flawed by their
- obsessiveness and perhaps hidden motivations of revenge.
-
- The Nietzschean overman, if he existed, would have to share to some
- degree in this "criminality" even if he had overcome all obsessions and
- compulsions, if only because his law could never agree with the law of
- the masses, of state and society. His need for "war" (whether literal
- or metaphorical) might even persuade him to take part in revolt,
- whether it assumed the form of insurrection or only of a proud
- bohemianism.
-
- For him a "society without law" might have value only so long as it
- could measure its own freedom against the subjection of others,
- against their jealousy and hatred. The lawless and short-lived "pirate
- utopias" of Madagascar and the Caribbean, D'Annunzio's Republic of
- Fiume, the Ukraine or Barcelona -- these would attract him because
- they promised the turmoil of becoming and even "failure" rather than
- the bucolic somnolence of a "perfected" (and hence dead) anarchist
- society.
-
- In the absence of such opportunities, this free spirit would
- disdain wasting time on agitation for reform, on protest, on visionary
- dreaming, on all kinds of "revolutionary martyrdom" -- in short, on
- most contemporary anarchist activity. To be _rendi_, to drink wine in
- secret and not get caught, to accept the rules in order to break them
- and thus attain the spiritual lift or energy-rush of danger and
- adventure, the private epiphany of overcoming all interior police while
- tricking all outward authority -- this might be a goal worthy of such a
- spirit, and this might be his definition of crime.
-
- (Incidentally I think this reading helps explain Nietzsche's
- insistance on the MASK, on the secretive nature of the proto-overman,
- which disturbs even intelligent but somewhat liberal commentators like
- Kaufman. Artists, for all that Nietzsche loves them, are criticized for
- _telling_secrets_. Perhaps he failed to consider that -- paraphrasing
- A. Ginsberg -- this is _our_ way of becoming "great"; and also that --
- paraphrasing Yeats -- even the truest society becomes yet another mask.)
-
- As for the anarchist movement today: would we like just once to
- stand on ground where laws are abolished and the last priest is strung
- up with the guts of the last bureaucrat? Yeah sure. But we're not
- holding our breath. There are certain causes (to quote the Neech again)
- that one fails to quite abandon, if only because of the sheer insipidity
- of all their enemies. Oscar Wilde might have said that one cannot be a
- gentleman without being something of an anarchist -- a necessary
- paradox, like Nietzsche's "radical aristocratism."
-
- This is not just a matter of spiritual dandyism, but also of
- existential commitment to an underlying spontaneity, to a philosophical
- "tao." For all its waste of energy, in its very formlessness anarchism
- alone of all the ISMs approaches that one _type_ of form which alone
- can interest us today, that strange attractor, the shape of _chaos_ --
- which (one last quote) one must have within oneself, if one is to give
- birth to a dancing star.
-
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- XORcrypt: 'basically' a low-budget text encryption routine
- by Rick Harrison
-
- Many persons have information in their personal computers that they
- would like to keep to themselves. Radical magazines have their mailing
- lists, tax evaders have their financial records, and people engaged in
- adultery, drugs, pornography, or other activities have sensitive records
- and correspondence. The wisdom of keeping vital or incriminating data
- safe from the eyes of cops, spouses, parents, or business competitors
- cannot be over-estimated. Computers make it fairly easy to accomplish
- this goal. Just use an encryption program to encode those sensitive
- documents and they become relatively inaccessible to the unauthorized.
-
- Personal computers also make it possible for ordinary people to
- have secure telecommunications. Just type up your correspondence,
- encrypt it, and send it on its way via telephone modem or packet radio.
- There are federal regulations restricting the transmission of coded
- messages, but sneaky people simply compress the encoded file, label it
- as a machine-language program meant to be run on an unspecified type of
- computer, and transmit with impunity.
-
- Below is a listing for XORcrypt, a program designed to provide data
- security for users of personal computers. There are slicker, faster
- programs around that do this sort of thing, but if you haven't got
- access to any such programs, here's one you can type in and run.
-
- The first step in using XORcrypt is to take the menu option that
- writes a 'key' file to disk. A key file is really just a textfile
- containing random integers separated by commas. Here's an example of
- a key file:
- 9, 36, 55, 119, 63, 21, 76, 89, 111
- 1, 81, 8, 126, 74, 37, 64, 101
- 29, 118, 35, 128, 53, 88, 13, 20, 54 ...et cetera.
-
- Next take the 'encrypt' option. You can select any file of the text
- variety and encode it. (You'll have to experiment a bit and see what
- kinds of files you can open on your system. This version, running on a
- Macintosh, will open text files but not binary data files.) The program
- XORs each byte of text against one of the integers from the key file.
- (XOR, pronounced 'exclusive or', is a binary bitwise operation.) The
- resulting output is your encrypted file. After you've tested the program
- and you're positive that it's working to your satisfaction, you can
- erase the plaintext file, leaving only the incomprehensible coded file
- on disk. Decryption is accomplished by repeating the process; the coded
- bytes are XORed against the key, producing the original file again.
-
- If the numbers in the key file are sufficiently random and the key
- file is longer than the text being encoded, XORcrypt is similar to a
- "one-time pad" cipher. In a best-case scenario, all possible bytes in
- the encrypted file occur with nearly-equal frequency and the cipher is
- theoretically unbreakable. (Of course the key file needs to be
- physically secured and/or encrypted by some other encryption scheme.)
-
- Since the key is a textfile of numbers, it could be disguised as a
- list of statistics or something. Key files can also be entered by hand
- using a text editor program, in case you want a custom-made key file,
- say for example one that contains a perfectly even mix of all integers
- from 1 to 255.
-
- BASIC, as a programming language, has the advantage of being
- available on almost all personal computers. It has the disadvantage of
- running with amazing slowness. The version shown here was written on a
- Macintosh using MicroSoft BASIC, and processes about 3000 characters per
- minute. (If anyone gets inspired to translate this into C or Pascal,
- send me the source code and I'll print it.) To port the program to other
- computers, start by deleting lines 10, 14, 110, 122, 142, and 161.
- Then add the following lines:
- 110 INPUT "Filename";FIN$
- 122 INPUT "Filename";KEYN$
-
- If your computer's version of BASIC doesn't have an XOR function,
- you'll have to define it using DEF FN or a subroutine. Functions like
- WHILE-WEND, DEFINT, LOCATE and INPUT$(1, #1) are not available in all
- versions of BASIC, so some improvising may be required. Since the key
- file is stored in a memory array, you may encounter a different size
- limit on your computer; adjust lines 16 and 320 accordingly.
-
- 5 REM XORcrypt - public domain 1989 - a Tangerine Network production
- 10 WINDOW 1,"",(8,28)-(505,332),2:TEXTFONT 0:TEXTSIZE 24
- 12 CLS:PRINT CHR$(13):PRINT TAB(11) " XOR Crypt"
- 14 MENU 2,0,0,"":MENU 3,0,0,"":TEXTSIZE 12
- 16 OPTION BASE 1:DEFINT A-D:DEFINT K:DIM K(30002), A(5000):WIDTH 65
- 18 PRINT:PRINT:GOSUB 3000
- 20 CLS:PRINT
- 21 PRINT TAB(10) "E=encrypt D=decrypt G=generate 'key' file Q=quit"
- 25 X$=INKEY$:IF LEN(X$)<1 THEN GOTO 25
- 30 IF X$="Q" OR X$="q" THEN CLS:BEEP:SYSTEM
- 31 IF X$="e" THEN X$="E"
- 32 IF X$="d" THEN X$="D"
- 35 IF X$="E" OR X$="D" THEN GOTO 100
- 36 IF X$="G" OR X$="g" THEN GOTO 300
- 40 GOTO 25
- 100 WAY$=X$:CLS:PRINT
- 105 IF WAY$="E" THEN CLS:PRINT TAB(12) "Select a file to encrypt...."
- 106 IF WAY$="D" THEN CLS:PRINT TAB(12) "Select a file to decrypt...."
- 110 IF WAY$="E" THEN FIN$=FILES$(1, "") ELSE FIN$=FILES$(1, "XORC")
- 113 IF LEN(FIN$)<2 THEN PRINT "*ABORT*":GOSUB 3000:GOTO 20
- 120 CLS:PRINT
- 121 PRINT TAB(12) "Select a 'key' file...."
- 122 KEYN$=FILES$(1,"TEXT")
- 129 C=0
- 130 OPEN KEYN$ FOR INPUT AS #1:PRINT "Reading 'key' file."
- 131 WHILE NOT EOF(1)
- 132 INPUT #1, KN:C=C+1:K(C)=KN
- 133 WEND
- 135 K(C+1)=-1:CLOSE #1:CLS
- 140 IF WAY$="E" THEN PRINT:INPUT "File name for encrypted data";OUTN$
- 141 IF WAY$="D" THEN PRINT:INPUT "File name for decrypted data";OUTN$
- 142 CALL OBSCURECURSOR
- 145 OPEN FIN$ FOR INPUT AS #1
- 146 OPEN OUTN$ FOR OUTPUT AS #2
- 147 CLS:PRINT "The files have been opened. Please wait."
- 148 M=1
- 149 LOCATE 10,1:PRINT "Bytes processed so far:"
- 150 WHILE NOT EOF(1)
- 151 A$=INPUT$(1, #1):REM get one byte of text
- 152 A=ASC(A$+CHR$(0))
- 153 B=A XOR K(M)
- 154 M=M+1:IF K(M)=-1 THEN M=1
- 155 PRINT #2, CHR$(B);
- 156 D=D+1:IF D/100=INT(D/100) THEN LOCATE 10, 25:PRINT D
- 159 WEND
- 160 CLOSE #1:CLOSE #2
- 161 IF WAY$="E" THEN NAME OUTN$ AS OUTN$, "XORC"
- 200 PRINT:PRINT "select: <R>un again or <Q>uit"
- 201 CH$=INKEY$:IF LEN(CH$)<1 THEN GOTO 201
- 202 IF CH$="R" OR CH$="r" THEN RUN
- 203 IF CH$="Q" OR CH$="q" THEN BEEP:CLS:SYSTEM
- 300 CLS
- 301 PRINT:PRINT "Generate 'key' file...":PRINT
- 302 INPUT "Filename for output";N$
- 303 OPEN N$ FOR OUTPUT AS #1
- 304 PRINT:PRINT "To increase the randomness of the output,"
- 305 PRINT "press keys on the keyboard at random intervals."
- 306 PRINT "Press the 'Q' key to conclude the operation."
- 307 RANDOMIZE TIMER
- 308 LOCATE 12,1:PRINT "Number of random integers:"
- 309 LOCATE 12, 30:PRINT "1"
- 310 X=INT(RND*255):IF X<1 OR X>254 THEN GOTO 310
- 320 C=C+1:IF C>30000 THEN PRINT "Finished.":GOTO 390
- 330 IF C/15=INT(C/15) THEN PRINT #1, X:GOTO 360
- 340 PRINT #1, X ",";
- 350 IF TIMER/7=INT(TIMER/7) THEN GOSUB 2000:GOTO 370
- 360 H$=INKEY$:IF LEN(H$)<1 THEN GOTO 310
- 370 RANDOMIZE TIMER:LOCATE 12,30:PRINT C
- 380 IF H$="Q" OR H$="q" THEN GOTO 390 ELSE GOTO 310
- 390 PRINT #1, CHR$(13):CLOSE #1
- 391 PRINT "Mission accomplished."
- 392 GOSUB 3000:GOTO 20
- 2000 FOR Z=1 TO X:NEXT:RETURN
- 3000 FOR Z=1 TO 2500:NEXT:RETURN
-
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- ------------------------------- RETORTS --------------------------------
- ---------- audience contributions to the distillation process ----------
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- Dear Rick,
-
- I agreed with the particulars of virtually everything in _The_
- _Alembic_ (except for the anti-intellectual, anti-educational crap on
- page 20), yet on a more abstract plane I am dissatisfied with the
- mentality dominant in the magazine. The message seems to be: "I am too
- smart to participate in any social institution. I can pretend that I
- live in a vacuum, self-determined, immune from the brainwashing that
- holds all the suckers in the world in bondage except my fellow elitist
- buddies and me." People who think like this think they are smart, yet
- this view is as socially determined as any other. It is not a rare
- view; in fact, it is characteristic of many subcultures consisting of
- alienated individualist middle class white males. This elitist phil-
- osophy is itself part of the status quo: such individuals never change
- anything, since they show no interest in educating anyone outside of
- their own race and social class, particularly those who have been
- deprived of the very educational opportunities they take for granted.
-
- We can look forward to future "merciless attacks" on everything
- "that the average ignoramus takes for granted." You say you are "open
- to non-dogmatic material from anywhere on the political spectrum." You
- say that you hold no kind of "ism" and that you tend not to respect
- those who do.
-
- I find this attitude both dishonest and morally irresponsible.
- Having no philosophy is impossible. You most certainly do have a
- philosophy, and a very typical, philistine one at that. You think that
- you are not a dupe, but you are, a dupe of nihilism.
-
- ...Since you are open to the entire political spectrum, are you
- open to publishing articles promoting racism and fascism? Do you think
- that such views are deprived of a public forum (eg. on the talk shows)?
- Is the establishment inimical to such views?
-
- If you are really offended by liberal hypocrisy, if you are worried
- about totalitarianism and oppression as are some of your writers, if
- you really want to defend the human mind and the quality of life from
- degradation, then you will have to take sides. You can't promote
- fascism and anti-fascism at the same time. Nor intellectualism and
- anti-intellectualism. You ought to think about what philosophies and
- isms make possible an allegiance to critical and rational thinking and
- which philosophies will destroy it. And what social groups one should
- ally oneself with in pursuing such aims. Many smartasses who brag about
- their independent superior minds have hopped on board the fascist
- philosophy of Ayn Rand. Do you want to go that way? Maybe the ignorant
- masses you so despise have some objective interests in common with
- yours.
-
- Now here are my detailed comments on the magazine.
-
- "Feminism as Fascism." Bob Black's analysis is almost 100% correct.
- Yet his title is too imprecise, as feminism or women's liberation
- encompasses a whole spectrum of political ideologies and stances. He
- should have used 'radical feminism' (in quotes) in the title. The
- particular brand of radical feminism discussed is in fact the creation
- of an elite group of middle-class intellectual women (and men) and does
- not represent the material interests of the vast majority of women who
- really do suffer oppression. Black should have more clearly defined the
- distinctions in the women's movement and especially the middle class
- nature of feminist ideology.
-
- The middle class in general lives in a vacuum and is incapable of
- acknowledging conflicting class interests. Hence middle class white
- women (and I do mean white) who themselves have ambitions of advancing
- in the corporate world are not likely to emphasize social class in
- their discussions of power: it is more convenient to speak of
- 'patriarchy', of women vs. men in the abstract. Hence bourgeois white
- females eager to gain the opportunity to exploit workers (and who love
- to complain about discrimination suffered by white women but never by
- black people) are not likely to be honest about just who has and has not
- power. And in the universities, the feminist metaphysicians promote the
- same antirational, antiscientific, and antihumanist attitudes as do the
- ruling elite in general. One prominent feminist philosopher of science
- referred to the _Principia_Mathematica_ as "Newton's rape manual." (I
- am getting sick of white women's rape fantasies.) I have publicly
- denounced such thinking, arguing that it will lead us to fascism. Hence
- I love Black's statement "'When God was a Woman' it was already
- necessary to abolish her." Unfortunately, Black has been keeping
- company with anarchist riffraff, so his bad experiences serve him right.
- He still has not relieved himself of his anarchist heritage: "to be a
- Trotskyist or a Jesuit is, in itself, to be a believer, that is to say
- a chump." Anyone who so bad-mouths anyone holding a systematic
- philosophy is himself a fool.
-
- "Flush the family" had me in stitches. I largely agree with Smythe's
- debunking. Yet there is still a lack of realism. Some people will
- continue to have children (I vainly hope those who really fit that
- vocation rather than acting out of blind habit), and those children will
- have to be brought up somehow -- letting them run wild is just as
- reactionary as authoritarianism. A practical alternative to the nuclear
- family will necessitate mass organization to realize support for the
- welfare of children (nuclear family or no) who are being crushed to
- death under Reagan-Bush-ism.
-
- "The Power of Negative Thinking" is quite correct: ability is not
- enough in the modern corporate bureaucratic form of organization --
- attitude is, because "attitude" is now a necessary totalitarian form
- of social control. You can't be trusted until you have been spayed.
- You must be white, join the appropriate tennis and raquetball clubs,
- and join the good old boys or you will never rise beyond the stray
- middle management position. The argument unfortunately deteriorates
- toward the end of the article with a stupid diatribe against all
- organization. More infantile anarchism.
-
- "The coming food crisis in America" -- great article!
-
- "Methods as message, or, religion as rabies." As a militant atheist,
- I love this article. I would love to translate this article into
- Esperanto and publish it in the magazine I founded, _Ateismo_.
-
- "Language and liberty" is an important topic -- unfortunately this
- extract lacks detail. I would like to see the author's ideas fleshed
- out. I don't know much about the situation in Bonanno's country, but
- there is much to be considered here in the U.S. Differences in language
- are also tied up with differences in access to information (the most
- crucial problem). The language differences between social groups have
- existed for thousands of years. How is the situation different now?
- How are the languages of the different social groups faring these days?
- In the U.S. the great divide is the language of the professional classes
- vs. the language of the ghetto. Are either or both of these language
- varieties and their mutual comprehensibility deteriorating?
-
- In conclusion, the magazine has some good material, but its
- limitations exemplify the childish and intellectually vacuous heritage
- of anarchism: the political philosophy of the self-indulgent, decadent,
- escapist refuse of the middle class.
-
- Sincerely,
-
- Ralph Dumain
-
-
- reply from Rick Harrison:
-
- 'Systematic philosophies' are philosophies of the System.
-
- I would suggest that if you agreed with the vast majority of the
- particulars in _Alembic_ #1, you have already made half the journey to
- independent thought and the argument really concerns _attitude_
- rather than facts. Instead of wondering about the "difficulties of
- those who are afraid of being swallowed up in theoretical systems,"
- you might investigate the difficulties of those who are afraid to let
- go of such systems. Ideological systems, identified by words ending
- with the suffix "-ism," generally serve as substitutes for religion,
- and the arguments used in defense of the various 'isms are often no more
- logical than those utilized by proponents of, say, Creationism.
-
-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-
-
- Dear Alchemists,
-
- I was surprised by your sympathetic treatment of the Loglan move-
- ment evidenced in the article "Announcing Lojban." Loglan has been an
- embarrassment to the artificial language movement because of its ad-
- herents' factionalism and their tendency to make major alterations in
- the grammar just when a few people thought they had learned it.
-
- Loglan/Lojban is pretty lame compared to other artificial languages,
- and I have to wonder why anyone would study it. It is ugly-looking and
- ugly-sounding, structurally irrelevant to the everyday needs of human
- communication, and riddled with inconsistencies. Those who write letters
- to the editor of the language's newsletters repeatedly point out these
- imperfections, and are repeatedly assured that obvious drawbacks should
- be viewed instead as advantages. Loglan's most rabid promoters come off
- sounding like computer programmers who excuse the defects in their work
- with elaborate rationalizations of how "it's not a bug, it's a feature!"
-
- Lojban, now the best-publicized faction of the logical language move-
- ment, has several hundred rules of grammar. Its promoters try to excuse
- this by saying the rules of English are even more numerous and haven't
- been totally elucidated or enumerated. What they overlook, however, is
- that Esperanto only has 16 official grammatical rules, and in practice
- you only need to know about 30 rules to be able to construct Esperanto
- sentences fairly fluently. There are some natural languages, like Malay,
- which have a similarly small number of grammatical regulations. This
- makes Loglan relatively non-competitive among language students who
- would like to get "up and running" as quickly as possible in a new
- language.
-
- Loglan claims to be culturally neutral, but it is, in fact, derived
- from the culture of nerds -- most of its advocates are sci-fi nuts,
- computer-philes and other pale white creatures likely to be found wear-
- ing eyeglasses and having college degrees. To actually create a cultur-
- ally neutral language, I would suggest having a computer create words
- from randomly-chosen phonemes. Then _everyone_ woulde on an even
- footing as far as recognizability of the lexicon is concerned. Loglan
- and Lojban, however, have shredded the six "most popular" languages to
- create hideous, Chicken-McNugget-style words. This is an acquiescence
- to colonialism and imperialism; after all, how did those six languages
- become so widespread? Mainly through the military subjugation of native
- peoples and the extermination of hundreds of their natural languages.
-
- Loglan is doomed to remain obscure because the movement provides no
- compelling reason for people to inconvenience themselves by attempting
- to learn such an irritating language. Some say Loglan provides a means
- of testing the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, a linguistic theory stating that
- the syntax and lexicon of a language constrain the thoughts of the
- people who speak it. Yet, the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis has been thoroughly
- debunked in the linguistic community, and can be easily shown to be
- false simply by thinking about it. What is a 'thought'? It is a
- combination of experience, information, images and meanings. The average
- thought carries more data and covers more lexical territory than any
- reasonably brief sentence could contain. Using language forces us to
- distill and excerpt our thoughts down to a communicable form. It's like
- trying to draw a picture using a typewriter instead of a pen; cute
- pictures can be made out of asterisks and other typewriter characters,
- but this will never come close to art, just as language will never come
- close to conveying thought. Thought is much more powerful and freer-
- ranging than language could ever hope to be; every poet knows this. But
- the Loglanic Whorfists deny it.
-
- Other proposed uses for Loglan include international communication
- and the facilitation of human-to-computer communication. Since inter-
- national communication is being taken care of just fine by languages
- like English and French, it should be painfully obvious that people will
- not trouble themselves to learn an unreal language like Loglan any more
- than they did Esperanto. And strangely, or maybe not so strangely,
- Loglanists have never acknowledged the ethical questions raised by
- trying to constrain human language to make it accommodate the needs of
- our retarded children, i.e. computers.
-
- By practically making a religion out of predicate logic, Loglanists
- have demonstrated a hatred of spontaneous human nature. This hatred is
- quite apparent in the way they snarl about "irrationalities" and
- "ambiguities" in natural languages. So they, like religionists, attempt
- to apologize for being human by adhering to rigid behavioral guidelines
- which will ultimately make them something less than human.
-
- Sincerely,
-
- Mark Tierisch
- Public Ptomaine Software Co.
-
-
- reply from Rick Harrison:
-
- What "sympathetic treatment"?? I reprinted part of their pamphlet
- and allowed them to expose themselves.
-
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- Whew! We made it through another issue without a single mention of
- "alternative music" or other trendy fads which more cynical editors
- use to capitalize on the sheep-like tendencies of their audiences.
- Coming up in future editions of _The_Alembic_: Is music a drug? ~ The
- ideology of "Star Trek - The Next Generation." ~ Henry David Thoreau's
- most radical essay. ~ Is reality an authoritarian concept? ~ and more!
-
-
- ____o_____________________________________________________________________
-
-
- Thus endeth the second Alembic.
-
- END OF FILE
-