[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Sign-in] [Mail] [Setup] [Help]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
History See other History Articles Title: Conspiracism as a Flawed Worldview "Our society and our culture is not a conspiracy. There are no cynics at the top of the pyramid who use their power to maintain an unnecessarily unequal society. Stratified society is perpetuated because of the self-interest that everybody has in not sinking down." --Noel Pearson, Aboriginal activist (Read the quote in context) Preface People with unfair power and privilege generally try to hold onto that unfair power and privilege. Sometimes they make plans that are not publicly announced. Sometimes they engage in illegal plots. Real conspiracies have been exposed throughout history. History itself, however, is not controlled by a vast timeless conspiracy. The powerful people and groups in society are hardly a "secret team" or a tiny club of "secret elites." The tendency to explain all major world events as primarily the product of a secret conspiracy is called conspiracism. The antidote to conspiracism is Power Structure Research based on some form of institutional, systemic or structural analysis that examines race, ethnicity, gender, sexual identity, class and other factors that are used to create inequality and oppression. We do not criticize conspiracism because we want to shield those with unfair power and privilege, but because we believe that conspiracism impedes attempts to build a social movement for real social justice, economic fairness, equality, peace, and democracy. Conspiracy theory as a theory of power, then, is an ideological misrecognition of power relations, articulated to but neither defining nor defined by populism, interpellating believers as the people opposed to a relatively secret, elite power bloc. Yet such a definition does not exhaust conspiracy theorys significance in contemporary politics and culture; as with populism, the interpellation of the people opposed to the power bloc plays a crucial role in any movement for social change. Moreover, as I have argued, just because overarching conspiracy theories are wrong does not mean they are not on to something. Specifically, they ideologically address real structural inequities, and constitute a response to a withering civil society and the concentration of the ownership of the means of production, which together leave the political subject without the ability to be recognized or to signify in the public realm. Fenster, Mark (1999). Conspiracy Theories: Secrecy and Power in American Culture Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press Conspiracism as a Flawed Worldview: An Essay by Chip Berlet Every major traumatic event in U.S. history generates a new round of speculation about conspiracies. The attacks on 9/11/01 are no exception. The tendency to explain all major world events as primarily the product of a conspiracy is called conspiracism. Conspiracism can be used to critique the current regime or an excuse to defend the current regime against critics. David Brion Davis noted that "crusades against subversion have never been the monopoly of a single social class or ideology, but have been readily appropriated by highly diverse groups." When the government and its allies use conspiracism to justify political repression of dissidents, it is called "countersubversion." Frank Donner perceived an institutionalized culture of countersubversion in the United States "marked by a distinct pathology: conspiracy theory, moralism, nativism, and suppressiveness." The article Repression & Ideology explains how conspiracism works when it is part of a campaign against dissidents. Conspiracism as part of an anti-regime populist movement works in a different fashion. Populist conspiracism sees secret plots by tiny cabals of evildoers as the major motor powering important historical events. Conspiracism tries to figure out how power is exercised in society, but ends up oversimplifying the complexites of modern society by blaming societal problems on manipulation by a handful of evil individuals. This is not an analysis that accurately evaluates the systems, structures and institutions of modern society. As such, conspiracism is neither investigative reporting, which seeks to expose actual conspiracies through careful research; nor is it power structure research, which seeks to accurately analyze the distribution of power and privilege in a society. Sadly, some sincere people who seek social and economic justice are attracted to conspiracism. Overwhelmingly, however, conspiracism in the U.S. is the central historic narrative of right-wing populism. The conspiracist blames societal or individual problems on what turns out to be a demonized scapegoat. Conspiracism is a narrative form of scapegoating that portrays an enemy as part of a vast insidious plot against the common good. Conspiracism assigns tiny cabals of evildoers a superhuman power to control events, frames social conflict as part of a transcendent struggle between Good and Evil, and makes leaps of logic, such as guilt by association, in analyzing evidence. Conspiracists often employ common fallacies of logic in analyzing factual evidence to assert connections, causality, and intent that are frequently unlikely or nonexistent. As a distinct narrative form of scapegoating, conspiracism uses demonization to justify constructing the scapegoats as wholly evil while reconstructing the scapegoater as a hero. The current wave of conspiracism has two main historic sources, irrational fears of a freemason conspiracy and irrational fears of a Jewish conspiracy. There are many purveyors of the conspiracist worldview and the belief structure is surprisingly widespread. Conspiracist ideas are promoted by several right-wing institutions, the John Birch Society, the Liberty Lobby, and the Lyndon LaRouche networks. These groups are examples of right-wing populism in which conspiracist narratives such as producerism are common. In Western culture, conspiracist scapegoating is rooted in apocalyptic fears and millennial expectations. Sometimes conspiracism is secularized and adopted by portions of the political left. It is interesting to note that on both the left and the right (as well as the center) there are critics of the apocalyptic style and flawed methodology of conspiracism. In highlighting conspiracist allegation as a form of scapegoating, it is important to remember the following: * All conspiracist theories start with a grain of truth, which is then transmogrified with hyperbole and filtered through pre-existing myth and prejudice, * People who believe conspiracist allegations sometimes act on those irrational beliefs, which has concrete consequences in the real world, * Conspiracist thinking and scapegoating are symptoms, not causes, of underlying societal frictions, and as such are perilous to ignore, * Scapegoating and conspiracist allegations are tools that can be used by cynical leaders to mobilize a mass following, * Supremacist and fascist organizers use conspiracist theories as a relatively less-threatening entry point in making contact with potential recruits, * Even when conspiracist theories do not center on Jews, people of color, or other scapegoated groups, they create an environment where racism, anti-Semitism, and other forms of prejudice and oppression can flourish.
Poster Comment: Conspiracism is based on the belief, "I am right, you are not only wrong but evil, so in the long run it is okay to murder you." In the Soviet Union, since Communism would not work, they had to find scapegoats, so they blamed hundreds of thousands of innocent "wreckers," said they were a conspiracy, and murdered or imprisoned them for up to 25 years. Conspiracists always choose people who they dislike, and who are richer nd more powerful than they are. No one ever claims Clint Eastwood or John Wayne was involved in a conspiracy, or someone harmless like the late Liberace. Sometimes I think the conspiracist worldview is based on envy: "You're smarter and richer than I am, but I've figured you out, and turned the tables. I've symbolically taken your power away." Whatever the reason, Vincent Bugliosi was right: the belief in impossible conspiracies -- remote-controller airplanes, explosive in towers -- is poison. Yhe author is wrong about conspiracism being mostly the province of the right. It's the left more than anything else.
Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 11.
#3. To: YertleTurtle (#0)
True, but trying to blame the fact that junior isn't learning in school on the "Illuminati-Jesuit-Israeli-Secret Chinese Emperor-Queen of England Axis" and that "they've been at it for 4000 years successfully!" is a bit farfetched. Real conspiracies don't run for thousands of years much less centuries. Real conspiracies are finite, with definable players, and are either busted or find success quickly. Many people do equate conspiracy with success or even formula. The Rothschilds, for example, have no power except that which people give them by taking their money. That's less a conspiracy than it is a bank. Likewise, the Fed would implode quietly if the greedy public wasn't constantly expecting goodies to be handed to them - paid for by someone else, of course. A lot of "politics as usual" and reflections on human nature are ascribed to conspiracy because nobody wants to believe they themselves or their neighbors are just a bunch of hypocritical petty controlling greedy bastards at heart. This bit will get me in trouble, but its pure psychology. A lot of leftists are atheists who recoil in horror at Christianity. Mostly that's because they were brought up with it. So, when 9/11 comes along, it HAS to be Bush's doing because they're reacting to his being an "out" Christian. The Muslims could NEVER have done it -- because the atheist has had no contact with them. Besides, promoting Islam degrades Christianity so the atheist convert gets his kicks that way. Its how the world works in a lot of ways. The official explanation CANNOT be correct (many times it is not -- this is true) but the zanier the theory, and the less tangible evidence there is, the more one should look for an AGENDA on the part of the theory writer. Some folks, I am certain, believe 9/11 to be an inside job NOT because there is hard evidence, but because they loathe Bush/Cheney to the point where they will believe anything evil about them. Indeed, some of the 9/11 theories were cooked up simply to feed internal hatred. Anyhow, hope that makes some sense.
Atheists make up well under 1 percent of the U.S. population. The term you're looking for is agnostic, or perhaps nondenominational. Or even freethinker. You have a flawed outlook on the spirituality of the left. Most Christians are liberals; it's the evangelicals who tend to be right-wing, and even there, it's only a small majority, about 60 percent. As an agnostic, I don't recoil from any religion. I just don't believe 100 percent in any book, much less one that was severely rewritten a dozen times by Rome. I react to Bush because he's a slimeball fascist, not because he belongs to any one religion. And besides, the guy is about as religious as my cat. He only uses it to get votes from the rubes.
#12. To: Mekons4 (#11)
You haven't been to a Catholic Mass outside of New England, have you? :-)
Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest |
||
[Home]
[Headlines]
[Latest Articles]
[Latest Comments]
[Post]
[Sign-in]
[Mail]
[Setup]
[Help]
|