John Passant

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Canberra: Left Unity Public Forum
Left Unity: A Forum with Socialist Alternative and Socialist Alliance on Left Unity 6 pm Thursday 16 May Room G 52 Haydon-Allen Building ANU Socialist Alternative and Socialist Alliance are in talks about unity, and as part of that process we will hold a joint forum here in Canberra on left unity in Australia. If you are interested in this exciting development and want to learn more or be involved, come along to this public forum and hear the discussion and debate. https://www.facebook.com/events/452603648150763/ (0)

Labor's super back down: a party rotten to the core
Me on superannuation and the death rattle of the ALP in The  Conversation. (0)

Marxism 2013 Conference
“Marxism is one of the best forums for debate in Australia” John Pilger gives a glowing review of the Marxism Conference. He will be returning to speak at Marxism 2013. Buy your tickets online today at www.marxismconference.org The talk on Saturday at 4 pm about taxing the rich looks interesting too.  Wonder who is giving that one? (0)

Marx and taxing economic rent in Australia
A very amateurish first draft by me on Marx and taxing economic rent, with too much explanation of basic ideas and then off on tangents and misunderstood ideas. http://docs.business.auckland.ac.nz/Doc/51-John-Passant.pdf

(0)

An article of mine on superannuation tax rorts in the Canberra Times
This is an article of mine in the Canberra Times on Tuesday 12 February. I argue that the benefits of the superannuation tax concessions go disproportionately and overwhelmingly to the rich and that it’s time to end the super tax rorts. (3)

Me in the media recently on tax
‘Mining Tax shortfall: the experts respond’ The Conversation 8 February 2013 ‘Current super concessions favour the wealthy – so why aren’t we supporting reform?” The Conversation 8 February 2013 (0)

Tax the rich
I am speaking at Marxism 2013 on taxing the rich. I will be talking on Sunday 31 March at 11.30. The Conference is the biggest left wing event of the year, over Easter at Melbourne University. Others speakers among the 70 or more include John Pilger, Gary Foley, Billy X Jennings, Brian Jones, Bob Carnegie, Jeff Sparrow, Antony Loewenstein, Toufic Haddad, and speakers from parties from Indonesia, The Philippines, Pakistan, New Zealand, the US and many many more….Check out the link here. (2)

The 99 Passant
I am about half through compiling the first volume of my most read (readers’ view) or most interesting (my view) articles from this blog.  Keep an eye out for Volume I of the 99 Passant when it is published later this year. I’ll keep you updated. (0)

More threats
As some of you may know I have been censoring the posts of a serial pest who makes anti-Muslim and racist comments and has in the past threatened me. He has posted again saying that the next time he is in my area – he names my street – he’ll ‘drop in to say g’day’. Clearly this is an attempt to further intimidate me. If anything happens to me or my family here are his details to provide to police.  jack 58.96.105.106  He has a druid name email at txc. (0)

Doctors and other bruises
I am having various tests and analysis done with a range of doctors over the coming weeks so may not be as communicative as normal on this blog. Bear with me. Hopefully I will be back in the New Year fighting fit. (4)

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What’s wrong with conspiracy theories

What’s wrong with conspiracy theories? Just about everything argues socialist and blogger John Molyneux.

In recent months I have noticed conspiracy theories popping up with increasing frequency around, and sometimes within, the left. There is, I think, a serious reason for this. The world is in turmoil, society is breaking down in many different ways – the economic crisis or crises, the environmental crisis, the crisis of political alienation, the proliferation of scandals, the riots and so on.
It is very scary for many people and if, as in Ireland at the moment, the working class movement is not offering a clear way forward, they can turn in all sorts of directions looking for answers. This is particularly the case when people are newly radicalised in a situation where the left is relatively weak.

But however understandable this phenomenon is, it is also a problem because conspiracy theories are an obstacle either to making sense of the world or to changing it. This article, therefore, will look at what is wrong with the conspiracy theory approach to the world.

It will do this in general terms, explaining the differences in principle between a Marxist analysis and a conspiracy theory, and showing why the former is rooted in much deeper understanding of the structure of society and how power works than the latter.

I have adopted this approach because there are several difficulties involved in dealing with conspiracy theories. One is that there are a lot of them about so no sooner have you produced a credible answer to one theory than another is advanced to take its place. Another is that the amount of effort and knowledge required to disprove any theory, no matter how outlandish, is very considerable, e.g. try disproving the theory that aliens built the Pyramids. A third is that the difference between a Marxist analysis and a conspiracy theory is NOT that Marxists think there are no conspiracies. On the contrary it is plainly the case that politicians, business , media, police etc DO conspire from time to time, in the phone hacking affair for example, or to mislead the public over the Iraq war.

So what are the key differences between conspiracy theories in general and Marxism ? I suggest there are four that are pretty fundamental

1. Conspiracy theories rely on ‘special’ or ‘hidden’ knowledge. In contrast the case for socialism and for Marxism can (and should) be made on the basis of widely known and publically available facts. Clearly a book like ‘Capital’, or Trotsky’s ‘History of the Russian Revolution’ or Chris Harman’s ‘People’s History of the World’ contains a lot of information that most ‘ordinary’ people don’t know but it is the interpretation of the facts, the interconnections between them , that distinguish these classic works – not ‘amazing’ factual revelations. This matters because if a radical criticism of the existing system is to reach and influence a mass audience it has to connect with working people’s experience; in an important sense Marxism is a generalisation of and from working class experience. By the same token it is never going to be possible to win mass support for ideas which DEPEND on hours of special research to uncover buried evidence. This is by no means the central or key characteristic of the conspiracy theory but it is a useful first signifier.

2. Marxists and conspiracy theorists have a very different view of how society is run and who runs it. At the heart of most conspiracy theories lies a vision of the world being run by a very tiny, and secret, elite, all in touch with one another and controlling more or less everything important that happens. Marxism argues that societies are run by ruling classes who while constituting a small minority of total population, say 1%, nevertheless consist of quite a large number of people, maybe 40,000 in Ireland or half a million in Britain. Moreover they rule with the aid of state machines (army.police, courts, government departments etc) which are hierarchies headed by members of the ruling class. The conspiracy theory view is inherently implausible because such a tiny group would not be able to take or even monitor the multitude of decisions involved in running a complex modern society, and even if it could would be enormously unstable and easily overthrown. In reality the regimes of the major capitalist countries (especially the United States) have been remarkably stable and secure since the Second World War.

3. Underpinning the conspiracy theory view of the power structure is the idea that the ruling group cohere through personal contact and by all being ‘in on it’. Underlying the Marxist view is the idea that what holds the ruling class together is their common interests, especially their common interest in exploiting the working class. Grasping this enables us to understand why businesses and governments behave as they do without continually discovering secret conspiracies. They are both constrained and driven by the objective logic of capitalism which is the logic of competitive accumulation of capital. In conspiracy theories the system has no objective logic, which makes any understanding of its development dependent on uncovering the latest plot.

4. Grasping the logic of competitive capital accumulation, which Marx explored in such depth in ‘Capital’, enables us to understand not only what unites the ruling class but also what divides them, both one capitalist against another, and one capitalist state against another. This in turn is necessary for understanding the recurring inter-imperialist conflicts and wars which have played such a major role in modern history. Conspiracy theories consistently overestimate the unity (and the strength) of our rulers. Moreover, lacking any analysis of the objective contradictions of capitalism which drive it into crisis (such as the Marxist theories of overproduction and the falling rate of profit) conspiracy theories have to fall back on entirely ad hoc explanations of economic crises and often fall into the fanciful notion that they must be deliberate (because everything significant MUST have been planned by the secret rulers) as if it were in the interests of the system to plunge into a major recession in which trillions are wiped off share values and productive activity goes into decline. In general conspiracy theories greatly exaggerate the degree of control our rulers have over history in contrast to Marxism which explains why, in the final analysis, the system is not under the control of anyone.

5. Conspiracy theories are not founded on any overall theory of historical development beyond the conviction that history is a succession of hidden conspiracies. They are therefore no use at all in charting or explaining the broad patterns of social and historical change, such as the origins and rise of class society, the transition from feudalism to capitalism, the causes of the industrial revolution and such like. Specific Marxist analyses of current situations are founded on historical materialism – a general theory which has made possible innumerable historical studies of the highest quality such as Geoffrey de St.Croix , ‘The Class Struggle in the Ancient World’, E.P. Thompson, ‘The Making of the English Working Class’, and Christopher Hill, ‘The World Turned Upside Down’, as well as such a powerful synthesis as Chris Harman’s ‘People’s History of the World’. Conspiracy theories have nothing intellectually comparable to their credit.

6. Conspiracy theories generally do not generate any strategy for practical action to change the world, beyond trying to inform people of the conspiracy. In contrast Marxism has developed over one hundred and sixty years of continual practice a comprehensive strategy for revolutionary change which rests on Marx’s theory of class struggle, supplemented by, for example, the theory of the mass strike (Rosa Luxemburg), of permanent revolution(Leon Trotsky), of the role of the revolutionary party (Lenin) , of the united front ( Lenin and Trotsky) and much else besides. Marxism, therefore, has over conspiracy theory the great advantage of possessing a perspective for achieving the eventual overthrow of capitalism and the ability to say concretely what should be done today and tomorrow to advance the interests of working people. Conspiracy theories are completely lacking in this ability.

7. One of the most typical characteristics of conspiracy theorists is that they operate with blatant double standards of proof when it comes to comparing official interpretations of events with their own. They often poor considerable effort into casting doubt on, or showing inconsistencies in the government or media account of an event or situation, in the belief that having done this they can simply make up their own interpretation or explanation without any serious proof or evidence. For example, many conspiracy theorists seem to think that if they can establish that, contrary to official denials, an Unidentified Flying Object flew over Dublin last week, this then entitles them to declare with confidence (but without evidence) that it must have come from Mars. In contrast Marxists, while they certainly critique the standard bourgeois explanations of events put even more effort into establishing their own interpretations: the immense labour involved in Marx’s ‘Capital’ is the classic example of this but there are a multitude of other works that could be sited such as Lenin’s ‘Imperialism: the Highest Stage of Capitalism’, Trotsky’s ‘History of The Russian Revolution’ or Tony Cliff’s ‘State Capitalism in Russia’ or Chris Harman’s ‘Zombie Capitalism’.

8. Last but not least many conspiracy theories have at their heart an element of racism, usually anti-semitism. Very often it turns out that ‘the secret inner government’ claimed to be controlling the country or the world is actually a conspiracy of Jews or Zionists (though sometimes it is Catholics). One sign of this is the recurring obsession with the Rothschild family and the fantasy that that they own and control all or most of the world’s major banks. This notion of an international Jewish conspiracy to control the world has nothing to do with the Marxist and left wing critique of Zionism as a political movement leading to the establishment of the state of Israel and the oppression of the Palestinians. Rather it is a long standing feature of vile anti-semitic prejudice which is both nonsense and politically dangerous and which should be vehemently opposed by all progressive people.

These then are the main differences between the conspiracy theory approach as a whole and the Marxist approach. To return to points made at the beginning the popularity of conspiracy theories at present is very understandable, indeed Marxism contains a theory (the theory of alienation) which is very useful for explaining exactly why people would feel that the world is dominated by hidden forces beyond their control. It also constitutes the best framework for analysing the conspiracies that do exist, i.e. locating them within the fundamental objective drives and contradictions of the capitalist system, rather than seeing them as constituting the central drive of the system in themselves. In contrast conspiracy theories both get in the way of understanding the world and tend to leave people passive with no perspective for resistance or changing it.

John Molyneux
27 August 2011

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Comments

Comment from Sir Vivor
Time September 19, 2011 at 11:28 am

I do not think many people concerned about the inconsistencies in fact and opinion about a specific conspiracy theory (for example the destruction of the WTC on 11 September 2001) are likely to be swayed by the author’s very general argument.

He may consider for himself how well his dialectic approach applies to the “consensus questions” posted at
http://www.consensus911.org/the-911-consensus-points/#maps1

Another case would be how the general approach applies to specifics detailed in Mark Lane’s final volume on the JFK assination, published in the early 90s in Australia, as well as the corresponding story of the movie JFK, of the same period.

I’m sorry to have to say it, but the author’s opinions about conspiracy theory strike me as irrelevant to these two historical events, both deserving of far better resolution than they have received to date.

Comment from Terrance
Time September 19, 2011 at 11:56 am

Yep, tottally agree with this. I never get the object of the conspiract theory. Like the Mossad/9-11 theory. Why would Israel want the US to attack Iraq and Afghanistan, when their enemies are Iran and Syria! It defies logic.

The other one is the world take-over conspiracies. It ain’t no secret. The world has been dominated by one group or another – Romans, Greeks, Assyrians, Barbarians, Brits, French, AMericans and probably the Chinese next. They don’t hide this desire, they champion it.

Comment from Ross
Time September 19, 2011 at 6:16 pm

The problem is that many cannot distinguish conspiracy fact from theory.The scientific facts for 911 being and inside job are over whelming.http://www.ae911truth.org/

There is also solid evidence that the banking elites via the UN want a “New World Order” Even Bob Brown is on the bandwagon championing “Global Governance.”

Still some fools are in denial even when Gillard dedicates 10% of carbon taxes to the UN.

Comment from Seamus
Time September 19, 2011 at 8:22 pm

So Ross, other conspiracy theories are silly but mine is fact?

Comment from Terrance
Time September 19, 2011 at 8:25 pm

What is so funny Ross et al is WHY? The US hardly needed a reason to go to war -they had WMDs and the first WTC bombing, and a history of invasion and attacl (Vietnam, Libya, Panama, Cambodia, Somalia etc).

And if they wanted to destroy a building, blow it up like Oklahoma. No, it’s just too daft and silly to suggest these amazing and elaborate plans involving thousands of people all to achieve something that could be done directly and openly, like going to war.

I hope you’re still not playing your LPs backwards lookinjg for hidden messages?

Comment from Ross
Time September 19, 2011 at 8:55 pm

Seamus answer a simple question.How did 3 large buildings on 911,come down at near freefall speeds.WTC 7 no plane impacted.It defies the laws of physics for this to happen.How do you also explain copious quantities of molten metal when aircraft fuel cannot possible melt steel ? You obiviously have not studied the science.How about a $10,000 bet on the science?

Comment from Comrade Vissarionovich
Time September 20, 2011 at 12:39 am

Interesting. Points 6 & 7 sounded more like the writings of a gimmick salesman ,spruiking the virutes of Marxism over conspiracy theories, but otherwise many of the arguments presented in the article seemed valid.

One important point that I thought has been left out, and this is just me expressing my own unqualified opinion here, is that Conspiracy theories have taken over much of the function that Christianity used to have in the average person’s ideological edifice,say,prior to the World War 2 period. From the many conversations I have had with average people on the topic, most of whom I have considered to be slipshod thinkers, I’ve noticed a strong inclination toward their positing the existence of insidious, yet seemingly all-pervasive Cabals, such as the Illuminati, the Rothschilds, Freemasons, Zionists, nebulous groups of ‘International bankers’ etc. as being causes of many of the things ailing the modern World, and which I consider to be little more than magical thinking. This is opposed to a more hard-headed & fact based analyses that directed toward the casuality of events in Modern society, and that I believe Orthodox Marxism has some limited merit in doing. Many Conspiracy style beliefs seem to me as being analogous to thought processes that led our ancient ancestors to believe in Natural spirits being responsible for the vissictitudes of weather & the elements, for example, or the belief in an omnipotent God (an example being YAHWEH) in regards to the various trials and tribulations of the ancient tribes of Israel.

I’ll also add that tone of the initial statements in the article, that: In recent months I have noticed conspiracy theories popping up with increasing frequency around, and sometimes within, the left. is a massive underestimation. For example, Socialist Alternative seems to be rife with the sort of reasoning that states that the capitalist class seems to have a near-omnipotent ability to manipulate the ability of Working class people toward political’dead-ends’, such as Racism and Homophobia, supposedly as part of some sort of divide and conquer technique. I consider this to be fallacious, although technically not a conspiracy theory.

P.s. Commiserations WRT to your Father. I may find much of your politics loathsome, but it ain’t anything personal.

Comment from John
Time September 20, 2011 at 1:36 am

Socialist Alternative doesn’t say the capitlaist class can manipulate the working class into racism. It is much more complicated than that. You have to understand the elements within the totality. But it was Marx who said that the ruling ideas are the ideas of the ruling class and the point is to build a pole of resistance to those ideas and their consequences.

But I don’t think you can deny there are significant elements of the working class who are racist.

And yes, those ideas we have about democracy and the self-emancipation of the working class are I guess pretty loathsome to those with a different vision. Like Vissarionovich, aka Stalin.

My Dad is now OK. Thanks for the concern.

Comment from John
Time September 20, 2011 at 1:52 am

Maybe you should read this CV. Hot off the Socalist Alternative presses. Is the media all powerful? http://www.sa.org.au/index.php?option=com_k2&view=item&id=7061:is-the-media-all-powerful?&Itemid=545

Comment from John
Time September 20, 2011 at 2:04 am

Interesting point about religion/Christianity. I in my unformed view don’t think there is a replacement process going on here nor that they perform the same function. But I’ll think about it.

Comment from Comrade Vissarionovich
Time September 20, 2011 at 9:32 pm

TY for the replies. When I say loathsome, I mean in the same way that you may find the policies of the Liberal party repellent. I myself am certainly not a Stalinist (the handle is ironic, and I use it on other forums), although I have a some respect for old Koba in several regards, particularly in relation to his mass industrialization, his ruthless cunning in both Domestic & foreign policy and for his his stewardship of Russia’s Victory in World War 2, against Nazi Germany. I myself closely associate with many aspects of the “paleoconservative right,” but largely without the Christianity component.

That aside, I have absolutely no doubt that there are racists amongst the Australian Working class, and I will even venture to say that there is disporportionate amount of racists in comparison to other socioeconomic classes, though I can’t cite evidence for this offhand. Also, my claim wasn’t that socialist alternative (or its members) believe that the ruling class are responisible for the existence of racism within the working class. Rather, my problem is with the claim, and which I am certain has been made on this site before, that the ruling class uses wacism as a Divide & Conquer strategy. This runs contra to pretty much all of Australian govt’s policy and stances. You won’t hear Rupert murdochs’ The Australian gunning for large scale reductions in immigration, to give one trivial example.

Also, I read the article you linked to, and actually found myself agreeing with it. I won’t deny that SAlt has some very talented writers.

Finally,my theory on conspiracy theories is very rudimentary. If you want an example of the stuff I am talking about,
look at this guy, who is coming to Australia later this month.

I actually know people who believe this dreck.