Why Academic Philosophy is Dead for White
Racialists
by Victor Wolzek
"The idea behind deconstruction is to
deconstruct the workings of strong nation-states with powerful
immigration policies, to deconstruct the rhetoric of nationalism, the
politics of place, the metaphysics of native land and native tongue...
The idea is to disarm the bombs...of identity that nation-states build
to defend themselves against the stranger, against Jews and Arabs and
immigrants..." -- Jacques Derrida
"The privilege granted to
unity, to totality, to organic ensembles, to community as a homogenized
whole -- this is a danger for responsibility, for ethics, for politics."
-- Jacques Derrida
"What Derrida advocates, in a nutshell, is
democracy, which is supposed to be a very generous receptacle for every
difference imaginable." -- John D.Caputo
Part I: Deconstruction By Any Other Name -- Don't
Underestimate the Problem...
Recently, David Horowitz's
popular neoconservative online journal Frontpage Magazine
featured an article called "Deconstructing Deconstructionism" by Robert
Locke. The article brilliantly illustrates many of the problems and
pretensions of French philosopher Jacques Derrida's deconstructive
technique in a lucid and accessible fashion (the two adjectives are not
commonly associated with this arcane interpretative strategy; the noun
"fashion," on the other hand, perfectly defines the shallowness of its
appeal).
But Locke drastically underestimates the influence of
deconstruction in American colleges, particularly philosophy programs. "To
their credit," he says, "America's actual philosophy departments in the
universities aren't very interested in it and tend not to teach it."
Deconstruction, he continues, "is big in English, anthropology, and
anything else that studies culture, but not in philosophy itself."
Even if this were true, the situation still would be bad enough.
Students attend a variety of classes in a given semester, frequently
importing and exporting (we hope) ideas and assumptions from one into
another as they develop a "well-rounded," holistic education. Even if
deconstructive blather about various tyrannical "-centricisms" of the West
(e.g., logocentrism, phonocentrism, phallocentrism, to name a few) were
strictly relegated to English courses, it would be absurd to think
students would leave such trendy, exciting concepts at the door when they
entered philosophy class.
But unfortunately it is not true. And
the situation is far worse than Locke suggests or most of us imagine.
American philosophy professors are very interested in deconstruction and
its various offshoots, such as gender theory, queer theory,
post-colonialism, etc. And they are teaching it. The single criterion
Locke offers for measuring the degree of interest in the subject -- its
general absence "in the online course catalogue of your local college" --
is inherently deceptive. Derrida and deconstruction themselves do not have
to be the explicit subject of a course, or even appear on its reading
list, for their assumptions to run the show. Students signing up for
"Greek Philosophy 101" can expect their professor to engage Plato in a
manner far closer to Derrida or similarly deviant, Jew-inspired theorists
like Judith Butler or Richard Rorty than Aristotle or today's remaining
classicist philosophers.
Deconstruction, as Locke pointed out, is
silly and "looks stupid" when fully exposed, and its central texts are
preposterously arcane. For these reasons it is rarely made the explicit
focus of an undergraduate or even graduate course. The "postmodern"
agenda, however, is pervasive and is far too politically useful to be
dismissed by leftist ideologues simply because it doesn't make sense.
Colleges are filled with such young ideologues. They may teach undergrads
the Western "canon" Monday through Friday, but know this: they do so
through a Jewish filter, one passed off euphemistically as "progressive"
or "enlightened" and of course "postmodern." And on weekends they are busy
at conferences clumsily vilifying and "deconstructing" all forms of White
Western culture to various political ends, not to mention a highly coveted
tenure-track career opportunity.
Intermission: The
Philosophy Industry in America - A Bit of Relevant Context...
Academic philosophy in America, for those who do not know, is
divided into two camps: Analytic and Continental philosophy. Analytic
philosophy aims to clarify language and analyze the concepts expressed in
it. The movement has been given a variety of names, including "linguistic
analysis," "logical empiricism," "logical positivism," "Cambridge
analysis," and "Oxford philosophy." It aims to be a "science" with
rigorous rules and criteria for "truth." Continental philosophy, on the
other hand, is the more "meta-philosophical" penumbra under which
deconstruction falls. It is concerned with how social disciplines and
intellectual structures -- including philosophy itself -- evolve and
function culturally. Largely it consists of efforts to redescribe the
world in ways that reveal previously hidden layers of meaning or aspects
of reality (cf. the descriptive vocabularies of Kant, Hegel, Nietzsche,
and Heidegger, as well as the figures mentioned below). In this sense, it
is generally more "poetic" in its language and more political,
sociological, and psychological in its aim, which is why staunch Analytics
have often said it is not philosophy at all. Most university philosophy
departments are dominated by adherents of one of the two camps.
Though Analytic philosophers may dismiss deconstruction as the
latest example of Continental nonsense, it has a stranglehold on
Continental philosophy, and has for decades, since the late 60s. The
relativity of perspectives and the "tyranny imposed by the West" on the
rest of the world (two ideas that are together logically inconsistent but
nonetheless politically attractive to the left) are the operating
intellectual assumptions in most, if not all, Continental philosophy
departments today.
A former graduate student of philosophy myself,
I have numerous friends fighting their way through annual APA (American
Philosophical Association) conventions trying to get a job-any
job-teaching. It is a ferociously competitive market -- currently there
are approximately 200 applications for every available position in the
U.S. Since I left philosophy and entered the business world, I've gotten
weekly reports from old grad school buddies, curriculum vitae-wagging
soldiers on the frontlines of the hiring wars in contemporary academia.
For years the word has been the same: voguish, ultra-liberal
deconstructive "culture critics" -- particularly those with less penis and
more pigment -- are getting the jobs, while even-handed traditional
scholars are dismissed as "old hat." To be a traditional scholar in
today's market not only means you're intellectually boring, but that
you're politically repugnant. Scholars not onboard with today's anti-West
party line are seen as defenders of a morally indefensible racist, sexist,
Anti-Semitic, homophobic, misogynistic and xenophobic regime. Attend any
given Continental philosophy conference today, and you'll see the rotten
fruits of this ideological bias, as I will now illustrate.
Part II: Bastards, Africans, and Derrideans. Laying My Cards
on the Table...
Professor Mirungi, a philosopher and chair
of an East coast philosophy department, recently presented a paper called
"Bastardisms." It was a provocative critique of The Purest of Bastards,
well-known philosopher David Farrell Krell's book on Derrida,
deconstruction, and art. Mirungi addressed how Derrida and Krell both
champion Derrida as the "purest of bastards"; that is, the one truly
liberated writer not fathered by the same "misguided" Western philosophers
he deconstructs. However, Mirungi argues that, from his perspective as a
native African, Derrida is as Western as Hegel. Despite pretensions to the
contrary, Derrida is talking about Westerners to Westerners, and there is
not an African in sight. Derrida's work is as Western as the Louvre
through which he and Krell guide the reader, and his ventures outside the
West are as "touristy" and "colonial" as the African art exhibits found in
the Parisian museum. Yet, because Derrida is unrelentingly critical of the
West, he and his followers (such as Krell) presume he is open to all forms
of difference and has an ear bent toward all voices, no matter how
foreign. In short, though it is widely held that Derrida is the first to
truly evoke the supposed virtue of "otherness," Mirungi argues Derrida's
promise of true openness to otherness is a disappointment.
As for
Derrida, I should lay my cards on the table: I think he's a philosophical
red herring who has gained a great deal of fame because of his political
usefulness. As a graduate student I wasted months wrangling with his work
and distilling his balderdash into comprehensible positions. Conclusion?
Theoretically, his work boils down to a convoluted Kantianism without a
transcendental object; he's a literary Husserl minus the world, left with
only the contents of the phenomenological brackets, viz., assumptions and
prejudices. When the rubber hits the road, Derrida is a Rabbinical
Heidegger establishing the transcendental conditions for the possibility
of Zionist Israeli nationalism, instead of German National Socialism (Yes,
Heidegger was a German Nazi; and Derrida is a Zionist Jew).
I know
Derrida denies this, and I know his many American followers deny it. But
everything philosophical Derrida has written -- his landmark Introduction
to (fellow Jew) Edmund Husserl's The Origins of Geometry, as well as his
own early books, Speech and Phenomena, Writing and Difference, Margins of
Philosophy, and Of Grammatology -- shows that he is precisely the
reductive, dead-end red herring he and his American followers are
desperate for him not to be.
Villanova University professor of
philosophy John D. Caputo is a prime example of an American scholar making
a name for himself on Derrida's coattails. Caputo has already written at
least five books explicitly about or inspired by Derridean deconstruction.
Caputo is the Energizer Bunny of Derrida's American sycophants -- he just
keeps writing and writing and writing. In each one of his shamelessly
redundant books, Caputo repeatedly makes ad-hominem attacks on various
straw-critics who dare to dismiss deconstruction as a facile ontology, the
reduction of all reality to language. He conveniently pretends M.C.
Dillon's Semiological Reductionism, by far the most lucid and devastating
critique of Derrida's methodology, doesn't exist. Yet, he himself never
illustrates why deconstruction isn't a relativist reduction -- merely
asserts it and quotes Derrida's denials.
But of course Derrida and
his lackeys will deny this interpretation! To admit it would be to render
his thought intellectually amusing but philosophically untenable (viz.,
false). Like Sartre before him, Derrida then would become an undergraduate
novelty, filed away by serious thinkers as one more philosophical misstep.
Pro-Derrideanism in America is based more on what his work
symbolizes or "represents," and the political vocabulary it offers, than
its substantive philosophical arguments, which very few understand.
Leftist, politicized academics embrace him because he "destabilizes power
structures" and "makes room for minorities." Yet ask them for a reasonably
coherent exegesis of his Introduction to Husserl's The Origins of
Geometry, and how his points relate to the subtle but foundational
elements of Husserl's phenomenological theory, and they have no idea.
None. I've seen it first hand at conferences. Confronted with specific
questions, Derrideans are often dumbstruck and resort to pre-packaged
statements like, "Husserl was ontotheological. He unconsciously presumed a
God's eye view while professing to describe finite experience. Derrida
shows it." But that's rote mantra. It's a bumper-sticker slogan, not
exegesis. Caputo is the god of such sloganeering (cf. Demythologizing
Heidegger, Against Ethics, More Radical Hermeneutics, The Prayers and
Tears of Derrida, and, Deconstruction in a Nutshell-the last is an essay
and a transcription of a roundtable discussion with Derrida at Villanova
University that I attended in 1994).
Interestingly, Derrida has
always said that his work was political. For a long time this stymied many
readers because his work, until recently (especially his very early work),
contained no expressly political commentary. And yet, in my view, his work
has always been principally political. He was brutally honest about his
political agenda and I commend him for that, though I think his politics
is a confused, wrongheaded, and dangerous mess.
As Kevin MacDonald
has illustrated in great detail, Derrida follows a long line of
theoreticians whose work has been much more effective in shifting and
creating a politically liberal anti-Western worldview than it has been in
enriching formal philosophy or the social sciences per se. Derrida follows
cultural anthropologist Franz Boas, psychoanalytic theorist Sigmund Freud,
father of Marxism Karl Marx, economic and social Marxists in general, and
the Frankfurt School and Theodor Adorno in particular. Derrida is simply
the latest and most bizarrely creative of them.
Each of these
figures has built on and broadened a language of "liberalism" that has
effectively sedimented in Western culture. That liberal language has made
what Richard Rorty claims is the most powerful transformation an idea can
make: the transition from private metaphor to public reality; poetic
originality to unconsciously mass-accepted truth. Today all Americans,
most of whom have never formally read the theorists I've mentioned, think
with their concepts, live in a world they've sculpted. In a very literal
way, Gentile Americans inhabit a concrete and steel version of these
Jewish theorists' poetic, anti-Gentile imaginations. And it's not to our
benefit.
Like MacDonald, I'm highly critical of this chain of
theorists and the worldview they've honed to a kind of Judeo-fascist
perfection. While it is "liberal" in a pedantically political sense, as a
White American man I don't find it liberating at all. In fact, I find it
not only suffocating but also threatening. McCarthyism was once denounced
as an outrage, as an awful exception to the rule of freedom of thought and
speech in a free American society. But today an accepted form of
politically correct McCarthyism runs the show. (As always, a force
directed against Jewish/Communist interests is demonized; the same force
in favor of Jewish/Communist interests is lauded.)
I like
Derrida's concept of "original repetition" because it has rich
metaphorical significance beyond his theoretical use of the term. As this
is how almost all American philosophers use, or misuse, Derrida's work,
you can consider this misuse an act of patriotism. "Original repetition"
is an oxymoron in which what originally appears must have already been. It
seems apropos to say I find conversation and intellectual exploration
crushed in the grip of academia's "original repetition." Everyone knows in
advance what he is allowed to say and what he isn't; what he is allowed to
believe and what he's not; what he's allowed to question and what's better
left alone. Everyone already has the answer because the scope of
questioning has been so drastically narrowed. Everyone "always already" --
another Derrideanism, though Heidegger used it first -- knows the limits
of acceptable discourse and, worse, what discourse will quite literally
get him in trouble (e.g., cost him tenure or get him tagged an "ist" of
some sort).
Part III: Intellectual Terrorism...
"Terrorism" has been the word of the day for a few months now, so
I'll use it: the politicized academic climate essentially wrought by the
string of theorists named above strikes me as a form of intellectual
terrorism. The twin towers of freedom -- of thought and of expression --
have been attacked so rabidly that they've incinerated and collapsed.
Originality and honesty are lost; crushed and buried in a vast amalgam of
hyper-politicized rubble. An empty void now stretches out to the horizon.
For many the tragic absence of these "phallic" pillars may offer fresh new
vistas. I, however, do not feel so Summer's Eve fresh. Perhaps I need a
hearty douche of New World Order ideology, but what I see is a gaping hole
where there used to be intellectual protection. And, supposedly, according
to the Patriot Act, this is for "our own good."
A perfect example
is the current state of political conservatives and conservatism. Now, I
certainly don't consider myself conservative in the general sense (what
exactly would I wish to conserve?). In fact, for most of my life I ignored
politics. But I always liked the idea of having a choice, of various
perspectives being allowed and encouraged. I was comfortable being
apolitical because I assumed folks with more interest in and knowledge of
the subject were out there in the world arguing about politics. And I do
mean ARGUING. When I hear a politician champion himself as a "uniter not a
divider," I cringe. When I hear that Democrats and Republicans are united
on an issue, I'm immediately suspicious. They have no business being
united on a subject! They are supposed to be different, to hold down
different parts of the fort. Today, now that my ear is pressed to the
door, they sound exactly the same. Republicans complain a little more
about taxes. But a very little more. Leaving his Clintonesque allegiance
to Israel on the sidelines, consider that "Dubya," supposedly a hardcore
Republican with deep roots in oil and big business, champions the
Republican cause by proclaiming Americans should give no more than 33% of
their pay in taxes. What? That's practically socialism. Since when has
that been ok with Republicans? Aren't they supposed to be for the federal
government providing military protection and otherwise staying out of the
way? How have they become so liberal?
Answer? Jew-sculptured
liberalism has won the day. "Conservatism" simply is no longer allowed. A
conservative who isn't actually a liberal is an "ist" of some sort, and is
smeared out of his seat. Jessie Helms may have been a total crackpot
(which is not to say I think he was) -- but that's what made his
resignation so sad. Now someone who sounds nothing like Jessie Helms, that
is, who sounds exactly like everyone else, will fill his seat. Only in
terms of the Jewish agenda can I understand why some think this is a good
thing, why they think it is progress. It's "progressive" because it's a
hegemonic collective front that opposes the only hegemonic collective
front liberals are actually in opposition to, which happens to be the one
many think Jessie Helms represents:
X: But I thought "hegemony"
itself was bad? Y: Oh no, we only said that when it wasn't our team
running the show. X: But aren't we doing the same thing to them that we
said was wrong when they did it to us? Y: Yes, but with one key
difference. X: What? Y: We're right.
My point, specifically,
is not that I don't want to pay taxes or anything particular like that
(although for reasons beyond the scope of this essay, it's fairly clear
that the government is illegitimate, has waged genocidal war on whites,
and therefore deserves white retribution, not white tax dollars). My point
is that all positions seem to be collapsing into one -- the wrong one!
Alternative positions are not only deemed obscure, but more and more are
becoming subject to punishment. Intellectually, it's terminally boring.
And it appears to me to have evolved out of the influence of Marxists,
neo-Marxists, and "I'm not a Marxist" Marxists like Derrida.
This
critique of the current philosophical scene and intellectual climate is
one you are not likely to hear at a Continental philosophy conference
today, despite all of its self-critical posturing. Consider this year's
meeting of the Merleau-Ponty Circle, held just after the 9/11 attacks. It
was like a meeting of the communist party. As if the Cold War and the
horrors of communism weren't known by all, every paper delivered was a
polemical tract bashing the West, America, and White-Capitalist-Oppression
in overt "evil empire"-speak. In itself, that's fine. Anti-White American
communism is a position one has a right to have, however outdated and
unworkable history has proven it to be. The problem is that no alternative
view was allowed. In fact, when Professor Gary Madison read a paper
suggesting French phenomenologist Merleau-Ponty would have defended
traditional American republicanism and capitalism, and Western culture in
general, he was shouted down. I'll say that again, lest you think I'm
speaking metaphorically: he was shouted down. Literally. After the
audience's embarrassing descent into chaos, was Madison shocked,
flustered, appalled? Hardly. "I expected it" was his response. He expected
it? What has Continental philosophy come to when dissenting views are
shouted down-and are expected to be?
In case it isn't clear how
problematic this is, keep in mind, Madison was not delivering a radical,
"far-right" speech. He simply refrained from bashing White Western culture
as evil incarnate and dared to suggest that Merleau-Ponty would have quite
likely-and correctly-preferred Western culture to a worldview the world
itself has proven doesn't work. But this transgression, largely due to the
line of theorists I've mentioned, and most recently Derrida, is today the
purest of transgressions. He was shouted down just the same as if he'd
stood up and said Merleau-Ponty was a Nazi and praised him for it! (How
that idea -- or any other at a philosophy conference -- can in principle
be taboo is exactly the problem). Continental philosophy is currently so
politicized and unbalanced that in some ways, in the minds of those in
attendance, what Madison argued was morally equivalent to promoting
genocide (which is, to the academic left, moral outrage unless it's the
genocide of Whites and the "hateful" culture they represent). That is what
the West is, after all, right: the world's greatest genocidal regime? Is
it really?
Part IV: Judge a Book By Its Cover, Especially
Its Back Cover...
On the back of Krell's book there is yet
another quote (a highly unoriginal repetition) saying Krell "dispels the
myth that Derridean deconstruction is negative." Like a thousand other
quotes before it, the jacket scribbler made a comparison to a similar
"misreading of Nietzschean nihilism." On the contrary, we are told, as if
we hadn't heard it hundreds of times already, "both are affirmations!"
Really? yawwwwwwn.
The problem with Derrida or deconstruction is
not that it's negative or affirmative. It's that it is simply political.
In the sphere of the purely political, the words "negative" or "positive"
can mean anything the confederacy of dunces wants them to mean. They can
affirm what is negative and negate what is affirmative now, and change the
rules and meanings tomorrow to whatever fits their immediate agenda.
"What's good for the Jews" is the consistent measure, and it's
consistently against White, Gentile culture.
If this critique
bespeaks a passion unwelcome in the rational realm of philosophy, it is
because I love philosophy, but my views, apparently, are no longer welcome
by Continental philosophers. Those who shouted down Professor Madison must
mean something different from what I mean when they use the word
"philosophy." I still believe philosophy has something to do with truth,
and it is liberal, viz., "liberating," insofar as it enables thinkers to
speak truth to power. Neither Derrida, nor his intellectual lineage, has
done anything to strengthen this kind of liberalism. Rather, they've
created a lexicon now used quite effectively to forward a highly hegemonic
agenda, and to silence all dissident voices. Philosophers wanted? White
men interested in preserving Western culture need not apply.
In
Mirungi's paper he discusses the experience of being an African in the
presence of Christian missionaries, that being escorted through the Louvre
by Derrida and Krell is reminiscent of that experience. It may sound
strange, but I related to that tremendously. Indeed, in the presence of
the Derridas and the Krells and the Caputos I feel like I imagine a native
African might feel in the presence of missionary Christians. If I have not
yet been converted, if I do not chant the accepted mantra, than I
represent something "primitive," "savage," and "barbaric." I have not yet
"seen the light" and therefore know not what I speak and ought not to be
allowed to speak. Not until I can speak in Christian -- or in the present
case anti-White "progressive" -- verses.
Derrida seems to promise
emancipation from such tyranny, but in failing to deliver, in underscoring
and rewriting the tyranny, Mirungi is correct: he disappoints. It's time
to see beyond the postmodern "good for the Jews" horizon and think
radically, individually, and in a way that defies ZOA (Zionist Occupied
Academia)-approved "appropriate speech." The Third World gets all the
press, but it's White men who are marginalized in America today. The ivory
towers are turning to dung.
VICTOR
WOLZEK
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