Categories
Futures

Aye

A political-theological work on eternity, in dedication to the legacy of Reiner Schürmann

Premissa Propositio

Once upon a time there were human beings,
and they lived happily ever after…

Being

I like being with everyone so much. We are nothing but each other’s happiness.
We are not time, and the future does not matter if one grasps the eternal moment.

God

We don’t fear God anymore,
and this is the cause of our benothinging.

Life and Death

Where we feared God, we felt death.
Without the feeling of death, and thus without God,
reality became an unreality in the name of the ‘real’.
Let us turn towards life and death again.

Introduction: Time and Eternity

The future: whose time is allowed to cast it? Which time matters? For if the future is a time, it must be measured! But what if time is just bad eternity? Aye! If that were so, there would be no need for all its categories of measure. With no time, there is no future, no pessimism or optimism, no progress or decline. Time is the judge and the telos. But eternity, not even opposed, but wholly affirmed, is always (all ways), the good forever affirmed. Aye!

Science Won’t Save Us…

You can learn all the science you want, but things of ‘reason’ and ‘cause’ have their ends. You can learn all the science you want: it won’t make you a ‘good’ person! How you ought to live and how we ought to live with one another have little to do with it, at least not in the sense that there is some rigid moral order: ‘if only we could just find it’. No! What did Heidegger learn when he closed the case on Being? Ahh! What a blunder! The only morality is thus: leave open the question of being; be worthy of it. If not, in any moment of distress (and each moment is always distressed at some scale), we devastate and resent. But science could never allow such ‘open mindedness’. Those scientists are detectives – always closing cases. Unfortunately so, for it will be our permanent openness, truly wide-eyed and guileless, that saves us.

but Religion

Let us say our future will be met with disaster. It doesn’t matter how, but let us say there is significant distress on people that causes mass migration and mass unrest (this is already our plight, no?). What will likely happen then? The destitute will intrude upon ‘privately owned’ resources. They will ‘steal’ and ‘illegally’ cross borders. State forces will produce additional crises. They will protect property owners and their borders. Here’s my solution to doomsday, and this is my answer for any doomsday – imagine the worst as you like! My solution is stupid and simple: be Christian.

Christianity?

I don’t fear our ‘time’ and its supposed travesties. I fear people. I fear those with any interest in the future of the human being. I fear the minds of metaphysics and the sciences. That amounts to saying I fear their instrumentalism, theticism, and reason. With metaphysics and science, one can benothing anything, even nothing! To think the vulgar, bastardized children’s games of what are called economics and international relations could ever be called science. Everywhere realism manifests itself is a moral void, but a moral void does not make a science, despite too many at university being taught just that! When veritable plight arrives, the ‘scientist’ will reach the telos of their ‘rational mind’ and become an inhuman brute (that is, a ‘scientific consequentialist’, and the supposed ‘social’ scientist already doctrinally is this brute), but the righteous will not succumb to laying waste to this earth ‘in the name of…’. The latter will suffer as true Christians do. They will not dehumanize. They will sacrifice in absolute self-denial. They refuse to benothing a thing, even nothing! For all is creature of God, nothing in itself, but God.

Christianity

Should there still be history and should we have regret for adding a few more ‘cides’ to this history, we will see we’ve learned nothing throughout it. The Christian: murdered like a sickly and stupid mutant in our darkest moments, exalted posthumously.

Religion I

Christianity is somewhat a case, and the above could be written for a number of well-established religions. Most religions, it is true, may lead us out from that abyss of self-certainty in metaphysics and science (that includes their uncertainty!). Most religions may teach us to find God and ultimately the Godhead. It is religion that makes us who we are, for it strips us of everything and gives us nothing else.

Religion II

But let me stop with the nonsense! I’ll be homely, earnest, and even a realist if it suits you. A practical example is what you want! Why should we place faith over logic and technology? Where have these latter brought us, us having once been so firmly rooted by faith? Why is it Leftists, typically well-educated and privileged by their own measures, demonize the religious? Leftists have criticized religion (and outright persecuted the religious) for being bourgeois. Yes! The thing that unites most of the global destitute and powerless is bourgeois! This has been Leftists’ greatest failure, the one thing for which they most greatly need to atone.

Religion III

I will only give a partial answer to what religion ‘is’. For now, I will say this: we are to love others as oneself, but our truths are only our own. To be a religious one, is to live in truth, which has no reference or ‘for’ beyond itself. The child is the truth. Children have no reason for anything that they do (any answer they may give to the contrary is only intellectual, a mediator introduced only in retrospect, or a forced and thus false confession), yet they know exactly what they ought to be doing, and they do it without reference to anything external. They do not mediate. Whether we cite Jesus or Nietzsche, the (Dionysian) child is the religious one. Jesus invites us to be a child of God as he himself is a child of God.

Bad Religion

However, undeniably there are those who claim to be religious – in name only! They are likely the majority. Religion would not be so off-putting otherwise. Allow me simply to point to where I am worried. Beware the rise of conservative Evangelical Christianity (the world’s fastest growing ‘religion’), and anything that resembles it in other religions.

Eternity: Antithesis for a Non-Future

Kairos

As I say, there is no good future for that entails calculative ethics, ‘bad timing’. But there is still a good time: the kairos, the magnum tempus. But this ‘time’ is eternal, something that therefore has no past and no future as no action acted and no disposition disposed is either past or future. It can fall into no schema. The kairos only presents itself and is indeed always present. What it requires is simply its eternal affirmation. Aye! Most simply, the eternal affirmation means, no matter the time, no matter the circumstance, make all times good times.

Eutopia

The kairos relates essentially to a faultless disposition – the child’s disposition. Eutopia – the good place – is the complement of the good time. We ought always to have a good time regardless of place. Eutopia concerns what one calls the political or the social (which are both incorrect terms for the environmental). For the religious one, eutopia concerns the religious ‘some’ (which is ultimately a plural singlularity or ‘one’). Every good religious thinker knows that what is needed is permanence, or eternity. Thus, production in the good place must be indefinitely sustainable, without environmental consequence. Eternity is perhaps today the more challenging aspect of eutopia, as we live in a place that functions according to its near opposite, but it is not the only aspect.

The other is perhaps a conceptual impossibility and is thus better described through the history of several terms rather than any concept on its own. Take several groups of words: whole, healthy, and holy, on the one side, and host, gast, hospodar, and heer on the other side. These seem to have never been conceptually combined, although they are clearly combined without word (and perhaps this is for the best; the Orthodox theologian knows that all the conceptual understanding in the world is infinitely inferior to experience, nothing without pódvyh). What is wholesome became what is holy and revered. Host in English means a servant of guests: devoid of its capitalist misappropriation, one who is religiously welcoming or loving, if you like. Guest (gast in Dutch or German) has the same origin as host. In Italian, host and guest are the same word, ospite. Guest and host are thus essentially the mirror of one another: one is both a host and guest. In other cultures, one who is host is the Lord himself. In many places in Eastern Europe, this is either Gospodar or Hospodar (note the fluctuation between the ‘g’ and the ‘h’). In Dutch and German, host is heer, which also refers to the Lord (Dutch: de Heer). Thus, the most holy, is also the one who is host and guest. Strangely, an unrelated term captures this connection between wholesomeness and hospitality, and even sounds almost as if it were connected, hygge in Danish and Norwegian. Hygge originates in thinking and reflecting (Old Norse, hyggja, is ‘to think’; the modern Icelandic verb for ‘to think’ is hugsa), and again unrelated, Heidegger has elsewhere shown that thinking is thanking, a commemoration, and a feast (gedenken). Finally, if we really wish, we may also include ‘economy’, or oikos, which essentially refers to ‘homemaking’ or ‘family-making’.

All of these terms should be reflected in eutopia, and thus, the topos is good in that it is eternal, wholesome (as all are host and guest), and holy, for it is known that what is wholesome and hospitable comprises the intelligible whole of the highest good.

Just words! Yes? I only say thus: eutopia is no intellectual exercise. Become these words in action and in person and see how we settle into eternal life.

The Person

We exist amongst innumerable human beings and things, but where are the people? Place someone conceptually or numerically and they are nothing. Give them a name and a history and they become sacred. To ensure eutopia, one must abandon the concept and the quantity (i.e., calculation) and experience relations. Relations are simply real. We all have them. We call those in these relations friends and family. Many people also extend their relations to their communities or nations, that is, to a people. Alas, the person is absent! Look around you in this very moment. You are almost certainly in a building built by unknowns, which is filled with things made by unknowns, whose materials were also made by unknowns, and the things from which those materials derive is equally unknown. There is no eternity if one does not see the person in the thing and the thing as a person. Maxims for maintaining the ‘personhood of the world’ are two. One, the economic, is know who produced something and how (including with what). All being has a history, and all else is incomparably secondary. Two, the philosophical, is see things singularly, not conceptually as species, genus, ethnicity, statistic, etc. The life and death of the single person inherently resonates. Thinking is a thanking, and this is displayed when a loved one passes away or when something momentous (e.g., the birth of a child) occurs. This singular, personal vision must also extend to the earth. Every mineral, plant, and animal must bear the same personal relationship.

Finale: Eternal Life

The last enemy of freedom is chronos. Let us leave it. The call to eternal life is (always) upon us!

Epilogue

A place nearby
the sea in the woods
peaceful and serene
while the world around encroaches
They saw Good within
They knew where it dwelled
The eternal is
there, is the moment
and they found a Good Place
and found a Good Time
upon it


Mariah is a fish deity (distantly) related to Proteus who is shown minor reverence among the peoples who sought refuge from the Indo-Europeans millennia ago. Mariah normally dwells at the bottom of arctic lakes and is a quiet and peaceful god. Mariah is concerned for human beings (as a shapeshifter, Mariah too is human). Mariah hopes we will find our peace and is trying to help us reconcile with ourselves, one another, other creatures, the gods, God, and the Godhead. Mariah is flattered by all third-person pronouns. Mariah worries people have already forgotten the gods as it stands…

Categories
Futures

Exodus and Ecclesia

Clasp tightly to the hand of St. Bernard;
Invoke the Virgin, humanity baring forth Divine Light,
Remember the earth, for behold, dust brings forth
Salvation and Eternal Life,

And all have become silent,
Imperceptive of the totality of self beloved
In the love of God.

These things I say that you may remember the Locus of the Apophenesthai; these things must you dwell upon, that at the third crying of the flightless bird, the Gestell will be in mind, in and from and towards an unformed matter touched upon by numinous fear.  Rectification of the momentary leads towards the desert, and there do we dwell not for forty years, but forty times forty: all the generations of man. By the rivers of Babylon we sat down and wept.

For it is the Theotokos, the maternal over and towards both changing flesh and Unmoved Mover, who testifies of all Revelatory perception both in this age, and in the age to come. I am in the midst of the disastrous;

“Let the day perish wherein I was born, and the night in which it was said, There is a man child conceived.
Let that day be darkness; let not God regard it from above, neither let the light shine upon it.”

Job 3:3-4

“Acute consciousness of having a body – that is the absence of health…Which is as much as to say that I have never been well.”

Cioran

I am in the midst of Eternity:

“Before Abraham was, I Am.”

John 8:58

“Thou brakest the heads of leviathan in pieces, and gavest him to be meat to the people inhabiting the wilderness.”

Psalm 74:14

It is needful for us to consider this: that the heartbreak of existence is the crushing power that breaks Leviathan. I will begin now with a hermeneutic of humanity, and if the rest must be a mystery, it is well for us that it be so.

“I have never been well,”

for to be well is to be in communion with what is highest, and the highest excludes itself from the beginning of language, and, as we know, all connection with the flesh is corrupted by language. We do not recognize illness before we have already declared to ourselves, “I feel ill.” Similarly we do not become overwhelmed by loss without the unfortunate intrusion of the thought, “I am alone.”

Language is the grand disaster which torments us as we attempt life.  It is the invasive species which is always a thorn in the flesh. So long as language is needful, flesh is inseparable, and we become lost in the struggle for apathy.  But to say it is different for the Christian as for the heathen is preposterous, for the Supreme Subject of fear and awe, the Logos, the gathering together of all things into one, is at all times asserted upon us as we are subject to Him regardless of creed. We can not delineate the truly religious from the hopelessly atheistic, for both have come unto a state that is fully aware of the oppression of Signification.  Both seek reprieve from this torment in the cloud of unknowing, and the harder each strives towards it, the farther away it falls from them and rises above them and parts from East to West.

But whether we follow from morning til night the pillar of cloud and the pillar of fire, or whether we wander forever in the wilderness which we have chosen, yet at no point do we become farther away or closer to the promised land, for it is neither space nor time which separates, but the reprieve of God is only as close as our willingness to be silent before Him.

How can man will this? When the will of man is united in the will of God. From whence can this Will emerge? From the divine maternity, when out of the dust Light is perceived. The Unmoved Mover is the source of this Will which comes to us as the recognition of life is perceived as unspacial Unity. Yet in all places, this Unspaciality influences and moves the affairs of men, and who can deny this? For all men are formed in the Unspacial realm of thought, ever unable to realize the incapacity to unite with the momentary. Everything dwells for us in a doubled darkness of Cartesian self-delusion until the day we realize that if all men are incapable of placing themselves in the world, that this is unity: unity in the Unspacial. Yet this wondrous idyll of universality in our time is null because of the surplus of signification. 

The Divine gift of Logos is not to be found in the hypersignification of capital. It is not in the surplus of sign but in the surplus of Signified wherein the truly religious and the hopeless atheistic unite in fervor. The Word of infinitude swallows up the Ouroboros of infinite words, with finite meaning devouring itself over and again in an eternal recurrence of aesthetic infatuation. Here in the Ouroboros, the self relates to itself in relation, but the relation cannot return to the selfsame relation; so it returns over and over into the sea of memory. But with the rise of Leviathan the cycle of self-consumption collapses, and the overbearance of memory is cut short. This forces a collapse of language, and this collapse of excess produces an inevitable revival of Logos as gathering together of the totality, and we have expectation of the Sign of Jonas: we are swallowed up, we are entrapped by the desire for escape, and we land upon a foreign shore.

Leviathan swallows the Ouroboros, and we are only aware of desire to come out of ourselves for the first time. When we realize that the entrapment is the only freedom accessible, in this moment of revelatory consideration of radical pessimism, we become free in a way which was before as unseen as it was unnecessitated. Darkness gives us the rich silence, the fertile soil of despair, and this despair is the Gate which thieves would climb over. But possession, or Ousia as possession and being, of this despair, can only be accessed through the Gate of the rich darkness created by Leviathan. The future holds for us this pattern of Unspacialization: wherein collapse ignites universalities. 

Now this is not merely an outlining darkness; true horror can not be justified as a contrast for light to appear. This horror is not necessitated by any goal of transcendence. For the actualized horror is in the realignment of Logos itself. The reconnection and realignment of the self-relating relation of the self comes to us always as true numen when we convert to the narrow path of the definitive Word. Yet it is this horror which is as much drawn out of us as it is drawing us unto it, and the source of this is beyond comprehending: the mystery not of Being, but veiled by being.

“I have never been well,”

and to know that we never will be well is the first designification on the pathway towards the Cross. But this is a road which we must go down at another time, in another place, and by then it is my hope that I myself shall be found as somehow more realized in the closeness of the Divine Light borne out of dust, and that I shall be partway designified from this wasteland, this heap of broken images where the sun beats.

But let us come under the shadow of this red rock
And perhaps He shall show us something different.

There may we find fear in a handful of dust.


H. Ellis Williams was born in Regensburg, Germany, and is a Marine veteran who currently works in outdoor lighting. They have been writing for the last several years. Among their favorite authors are Heidegger, St. Bernard, and Ezra Pound. They reside in the state of Texas with their wife, Rachel.

Categories
Futures

The Salt Branches

“And in those days men shall seek death, and shall not find it: and they shall desire to die, and death shall fly from them.”
Apocalypse 9:6

I

Though I cried out
From beyond the gulf,
I was as mute,

And though I stood so near to her
There was only a sign of motion
Collapsing into the utter silence.
Despair was met with
The singular cause, and
All things being uninterrupted,
There was no final end, only
The shying glances of the inward man
Now broken by the perpetual trees
That grow in no unnatural order
Along these stony grounds.

I am older now,
Yet I am no more myself
Than before this wreck.
Two streams of consciousness
That do not intersect
May have begun their course again, further,
But will not meet again
By this tree, for if all was lost
At least there would have been
No more of this dying sun,
No more of this sky soaked in
The fallow cries of cranes
That may yet reach the golden herds.

II

We have no mother, and
No hour of birth is known
By these stars,

Falling out of the aether in
Streams of white fire,
Existing yet in memory.
These were the totems of our life;
Our path was tread lightly by the passage
Of these frail bodies.
When the last one falls,
There will be no more gods
Who stand sure and steady.

Only the drops of rain,
Only the clapping hands of Jove
Will pass for signs.
In all this will I make my bed of thorns
And pray for death.


H. Ellis Williams was born in Regensburg, Germany, and is a Marine veteran who currently works in outdoor lighting. They have been writing for the last several years. Among their favorite authors are Heidegger, St. Bernard, and Ezra Pound. They reside in the state of Texas with their wife, Rachel.

Categories
Futures

After Lucretius

A Naive Program

If the system breaks down the consequences will still be very painful. But the bigger the system grows the more disastrous the results of its breakdown will be, so if it is to break down it had best break down sooner rather than later.

Ted Kaczynski

The banality of Einstein’s remarks in matters outside his specialty is as astonishing as his genius within it. It seems as though the specialized application of all one’s faculties in a particular area inhibits the consideration of things in general.

Jacques Ellul

Despite being a mathematics prodigy with an IQ of 165, the Ted Kaczynski of Industrial Society and its Future is breathtakingly naïve. To take just one example before we grind our main axe, here is Kaczynski on how the anti-tech “revolutionaries” should approach political power: “The revolutionaries should not try to acquire political power until the system has gotten itself into such a mess that any hardships will be seen as resulting from the failures of the industrial system itself and not from the policies of the revolutionaries.” Otherwise, he tells us, they risk being voted out!

The Unabomber has tunnel vision. There is so much focus on the gruesomeness of the future of industrial society that Kaczynski never stops to wonder exactly how much future civilisation has left. There are two futures present in the Manifesto,This is how Kaczynski likes to refer to Industrial Society and its Future, e.g. ‘Letter to an Anonymous German’ on the Anarchist Library: “As the Manifesto argues . . .”; “I should add that the remarks about leftism, here and in the Manifesto . . .” one in which the system’s precipitous growth threatens a terrible collapse if it falls, and one in which the system is made stable through the success of cybernetics. Kaczynski’s fear concerns the latter “possibility”, though we must ask whether or not it ever occurred to him to consider external causes of civilisational collapse. There is a vulgar and uncanny Marxism present in the Manifesto, where non-human nature is completely ignored as an object of serious analysis. Instead, Kaczynski focuses on what anti-tech revolutionaries may need to do in order to bring the system down. His recommendations, all laughable, include:

  1. Promote social stress and instability in industrial society to make a revolution against technology possible. Sow division between the power-holding elite and everybody else. Revolutionaries ought not to condemn the public for their consumption habit, but rather explain to them that they are victims of the advertising industry. Avoid identity politics at all costs.
  2. Avoid assuming political power. Any green party would see itself quickly removed from office for crashing the economy. Political power can be seized only when the public understands that the industrial system’s continued existence is worse than the alternative.
  3. Revolt worldwide and simultaneously, defeating the entire industrial system in one stroke. Trying to cut back on a nation-by-nation basis can only lead to nationalist hysteria as the public loses its nerve: “Holy robots! The world will fly off its orbit if the Japanese ever sell more cars than we do!”
  4. Support measures which bind the world economy into a unified whole. Global economic integration makes the industrial system easier to destabilise—a breakdown in one major nation will cause all industrialised nations to break down.

To be clear, this program is so ill-conceived it doesn’t really need to be critiqued, and I reference it only to demonstrate the truth of Ellul’s assertion that a mathematical genius need not have any particular wisdom in politics. It is obvious that a vanishingly small band of social outcasts and cranks are not going to be able to topple even one nation before the industrial system drives the human race to extinction. Capital is more than capable of recuperating itself, such that even if a systemic collapse occurred, we can reasonably assert it wouldn’t be long before the machines were up and running again. And what is all this nonsense about simultaneous worldwide anti-tech revolution? The communists couldn’t pull it off despite having a world-historic superpower on their side and a utopian vision of the future. What are the anti-tech revolutionaries offering? ‘Well, you’ll die. But at least you won’t be on anti-depressants.’

What Kaczynski didn’t realise is that by the time the system is truly struggling to the extent that it is unable to defend itself, famines, droughts, extreme weather, sea level rise and ecological collapse will have already foreclosed any possibility of a liberated future for the small number of people who may be able to struggle on as runaway warming takes over from industrial activity and pushes the Earth system into an unliveable hothouse state. Kaczynskian eschatology, just like its socialist equivalent, is religious—it consists in crossing one’s fingers and hoping for the best, when anyone serious knows to only ever expect the worst.

The Leviathan and the Herd

‘Well, it’s no good screaming now. We’ve already sawn the cap off.’

The scalp dropped into the metal bin with a muted thud. The procedure lasted about five minutes. By the time the inside of the skull had been vacuumed and scrubbed clean, the rest of the cadaver had already been shipped to the putrefactorium for processing.

The workers used to tell morbid jokes as they watched the bodies liquefy in the putrechamber. That was before they were all subjected to genomic lobotomy. CRISPR tech. Delivered by injection one morning at clock-in. It was easy enough for the technicians to design the RNA sequences. In the old days, the managers would have at least needed a pretext to placate the public with, but the class struggle was permanently settled a while ago thanks to gene drives for docility and obedience. Consequently, there is no longer any need for PR.

A good thing too. It just held things up.

In some industries, workers are modified to remove their mortality salience. This is necessary for jobs like mining and construction, where resources have long since become too scarce to be wasted on luxuries like safety equipment and healthcare. You order a few hundred workers with the appropriate base specifications and make the necessary edits on-site. In other industries, mortality salience remains useful, either as a weapon of fear or simple amusement for the overseers. It sounds ridiculously, eye-rollingly sci-fi to imagine torture-as-entertainment, until you remember the lurid glee with which thousands watched ISIS militants torture and murder Jordanian pilot Muath Safi Yousef al-Kasasbeh by placing him inside a cage, dousing him with gasoline, and setting him on fire. There isn’t a whole lot to do during industrial society’s final act but produce the essentials and enjoy the torture. Hence the scalps in buckets, the putrefactorium, and the babbling, neutralised workers, who are good only for repetitive tasks and screaming as they die. Highest bidder gets to take the skull home.

Beats a walk in the desert.


Friedrich Nietzsche thought humankind could go down two routes: either it could become the bridge to the Übermensch, or succumb to its worst—its most human—impulses and drift through the end of history as the Last Man. At our current juncture, it’s pretty clear what path was taken. To say this path was chosen, however, is to make the bourgeois error, to assign agency where there is none, to invoke the obscene notion of the freedom of the will, first principle of the hangman’s metaphysics. Good Spinozists that we are, we understand that there is no room in this world for guilt, evil, wrongdoing, or error—only the chain of necessity of perfect nature.

Still, what a thing it is to be a herd animal. And there really is no question here that you and I both are herd animals. Even the toughest survivalist exists by tacit permission of the state, and would be quickly shot or jailed if they seriously tried to defend their “property” from the sovereign authority. If you think that anything can shield you from the universal becoming-bovine of the 21st century, you are coping. Petty politics is an open invitation to imagine yourself better than others because you happen to have nobler reasons than they do for supporting your ill-thought out policy prescriptions. Great politics is the future’s cynical antidote, a closed invitation for your owners to let you perish—and it is really no good bringing up your rights here, civilised one. As ecological collapse and political dementia bring the system as we know it to a screeching halt, despotic metastasis turns the lights back on, but not before jettisoning the decaying fragments of the liberal-democratic order once and for all—“The time for petty politics is over.”Friedrich Nietzsche, Beyond Good and Evil, tr. J. Norman (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002), p. 102; §208.

With that, we enter the age of the Neoleviathans. While we cannot predict what these states will do, being, by their very nature, completely novel, we might be able to get an idea by looking at one of their predecessors, which I call Anteleviathans.

ISIS: A Case Study

Taking advantage of the weakness of Iraq and Syria’s governments, ISIS rapidly became a world-renowned and formidable force, at one point claiming 8 million subjects, with thousands of foreign fighters recruited from across the world with the help of slick propaganda videos—essentially snuff porn with high production values, which the Western media was more than happy to share as long as it brought in the ad revenue. ISIS unleashed genocide against Yazidis, Shia Muslims, and Christians; assassinated political enemies and executed POWs; took control of dams and displaced communities through deliberate flooding and drought;Tobias von Lossow, ‘Water as Weapon: IS on the Euphrates and Tigris’ (2016). “In April 2014, after IS had the Falluja Dam floodgates closed, the retained water flooded large areas upstream and submerged Iraqi government facilities on the banks . . . Between Falluja and Abu Ghraib over 10,000 houses and around 200 square kilometres of fertile farmland were destroyed; almost the entire harvest was wiped out; and livestock was killed. Up to 60,000 locals who had lost their livelihood in the flood were displaced.” inspired numerous terror attacks abroad; and established a widespread, violent fundamentalist state with captured military technology. For a group most people hadn’t heard of before the summer of 2014, and which had lost 98% of its territory by late 2017, this is an impressive and horrific record, one we can nonetheless expect to be outdone by the Neoleviathans of the future without even breaking a sweat.

See, a Neoleviathan has no qualms about making do with whatever falls into its lap. Its soldiers and commanders aren’t scared of international courts or a bad reputation—they know they’d sooner die than face what the enemy calls “justice”. They don’t hesitate or worry, and they know beggars can’t be choosers. Unimpeded by the institutional gangrene that plagues democratic states, that is, unimpeded by a lazy, entrenched, ill-incentivised political class and the capitalists who own them, Neoleviathans and their Anteleviathan counterparts are capable of the sort of vigour and creativity only a starving proto-state or a sovereign territory on the edge of survival can muster up.In truth, the distinction between a Neoleviathan and an Anteleviathan is really nothing more than context. Neoleviathans exist amongst Neoleviathans. When everyone treats each other as if they are Neoleviathans, the process is complete. Until then, for as long as the majority play pretend, there are only good, decent, legitimate states, and the Anteleviathan rogues. This will be elaborated on in a future instalment of my monograph on the subject. There was an unmistakable sense of bloat watching European government leaders wonder how to stop ISIS propaganda falling into the hands of their citizens while ISIS crowdsourced execution methods on Twitter. In the end, foreign powers were able to bomb ISIS back into oblivion, but one has to wonder, as the lights start to go out on globally-integrated, internationalist civilisation, what happens when the power vacuums open back up, and nobody from the outside gives a shit? What happens when all that are left are power vacuums—and the Neoleviathans that seek to fill them?

Irreligious Pessimism

Before they started doing it to everyone, they began by re-cognitising the undesirables, which is what they called the genomic lobotomy back then. The public loved the idea, which was sold to them by the obsequious pro-Neoleviathan cognoscenti. These people had gotten a hold of some book, called Neoleviathan: Political Blueprints for the Post Collapseand were utterly convinced its predictions, painted in broad enough strokes to be almost truisms, would come to pass. ‘We really ought to get ahead of the curve on this one!’ its convinced readers would say. ‘We don’t want the other side beating us to it!’ The Neoleviathan integrates the arms race of the Schmittian political and the cutting-edge of technology to ensure stability by any means necessary, and so the opposition was promptly re-cognitised and put to work on fracking sites, farms, oil rigs—just about anything the respectable majority had no interest in doing. Resources were less scarce back then, there was still enough water for everybody and the grasses hadn’t gone extinct yet. Really what the opportunists were pursuing was only the process of leviathanisation. The Neoleviathans hadn’t truly arrived until even its supporters were being sent down the mines or having their heads split open for the few moments of amusement it would bring to the ever-dwindling ruling class.

There used to be more Neoleviathans. In the beginning, that is, after the end of the old system, there was an incredible scramble for territory, setting innumerable wars and petty skirmishes in motion. This blood-soaked economy of conflict produced much political diversity, though the willingness to use all sorts of chemical and biological weapons, to target and exterminate entire civilian populations, poison water and food supplies, assassinate military and political leaders, and all sorts of previously-frowned upon behaviours quickly selected the weaker Neoleviathans out of existence, as well as the most reckless. Now, a select few exist in a tired stalemate as their outer limits shrink. Deserts claim much of the once fertile land, and nobody is all that bothered about fighting any longer. Most of the time everyone keeps to themselves, and even the fights which do occur are perfunctory, disinterested—nobody bats an eye at another ten thousand dead.

In the night, there’s this eerie silence. There are no vehicles out, of course. The roads have long since fallen into disrepair. But there are no birds, no bats, no animals of any kind—few living people even know there was once something other than cracked soil as far as the eye can see. Everything is grown in repurposed shipping containers with salvaged LEDs. The air is sterile. The sky is brown. “In this way the ramparts of the great world also will be breached and collapse in crumbling ruin about us. Already it is far past its prime. The earth, which generated every living species and once brought forth from its womb the bodies of huge beasts, has now scarcely strength to generate animalcules . . . Already the ploughman of ripe years shakes his head with many a sigh that his heavy labours have gone for nothing; and, when he compares the present with the past, he often cries up his father’s luck and grumbles that past generations, when men were old-fashioned and god-fearing, supported life easily enough on their small farms, though one man’s holding was then far less than now. In the same despondent vein, the cultivator of old and wilted vines decries the trend of the times and rails at heaven. He does not realize that everything is gradually decaying and nearing its end, worn out by old age.”Lucretius, On the Nature of the Universe (Harmondsworth, UK: Penguin Books Limited, 1951), pp. 94–95.


What comes after Lucretius? After one realises it really isn’t over until it’s over, and that, with humanity, nature has perfected its inner tendency towards self-destruction? It is, of course, ridiculous to imagine that anthropogenic climate change will be reversed—before the age of the Neoleviathans, there will not exist a state concerned enough for the future to try and do it, and after the age of the Neoleviathans has begun, any state which diverts resources to such an endeavour will quickly find itself smashed to pieces. Everybody knows there will not be a worldwide simultaneous revolution as Kaczynski correctly recognised would be necessary for the system (capital, industrial society, whatever you’d like to call it) to be toppled. If you are honest with yourself, you know that we won’t clean the oceans of plastic, suck all of the greenhouse gases back out of the atmosphere (and keep them out), decarbonise our economies or otherwise do anything other than business-as-usual. The future looks like a slow winding down, followed by a spectacular period characterised by strange combinations of atavism and modernity, followed by a gradual ebbing, then a rapid crumbling, away. And that’s if we’re lucky.

After Lucretius comes Darwin: the belief that things can always get worse in the absence of a hard limit. The question is not one of revolution, then, but of escape—whether spatially or mentally—of producing a world within the world, of becoming disillusioned but not despondent. Foucault: “Do not think that one has to be sad in order to be militant, even though the thing one is fighting is abominable.”Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2000), p. xiii. And yet, is there really anything to look forward to? Has everything not been burned down to the substrate? No morality and no meaning, no exit and no hope, only the rushing wind of the outside as progress generates extinction? Why bother? What should we do? “The highest values devalue themselves . . .”Friedrich Nietzsche, The Will to Power: Selections from the Notebooks of the 1880s, tr. R. Kevin Hill and Michael A. Scarpitti (London: Penguin Classics, 2017), p. 15; §1. Was this really it? Did you really slog through all that Proudhon just to die for some rich man’s greed? Am I telling you that you shouldn’t have bothered handing out those papers at the student union? And what about the long history of the revolutionary movement? Was it all for nothing? Why are you even here? The crisis of meaning: the great zero, death itself.

Abandoning the Rubicon

Contact with the outside: I am standing amongst the beautiful graves of the Necropolis, taking advantage of the first dry spell we’ve had in days. Along the grassy bank of the exit path stand a queue of elm trees, their skeletal branches gnarled and twisted in petrified supplication, like leprotic beggars, hands around the alms bowl of the autumn sky.

I’m here to visit the departed in their great grand tombs, interned forever by the grace of God. William and his whole family buried together from the looks of it: Christina, Robert—two young kids—Connell, his wife, and Margaret, born 16 days before Connell’s death—dead less than a year later. Mary made it to 21 before she died. Certrude lasted 10 days. Must have remarried.

I can’t look anymore.

It’s hard not to be struck by the ostentatiousness of bourgeois death, the one-upmanship of the grave. Imagine them in their heaven, sucking pipes: ‘My family got me a lovely grave, you know. It’s a good 20 feet tall. Pierces the sky like a javelin. Of course, no expenses were too much. I noticed yours was a little petite—must have been a lean business year for your family, eh? Eh, old boy?’

‘My God,’ some must have said as they saw that light at the end of the tunnel. ‘I am coming home. So what of all this? I am free at last.’

The old cathedral bells chime as I go. A paper windmill spins in the wind. Crisp leaves, burnt brown, trip towards the bridge. Fresh weeds, green and vivacious, shoot up by the memorial benches. Saccade. “Lest we forget.” Saccade. Lest I do. The sunlight blooms diffuse, another beautiful domed church almost seems to swell in joy, like your sunlight-kissed skin on that beach that summer. We were at the edge of the world then, tumbling through space but calm, so calm, by those sweet and sparkling waves. And you, stranger whose name I barely had the chance to learn, on that bench with the world roaring by, how long did we kiss? Four seconds? I swear the world stopped tumbling for that, my body thrown and broken as the Earth hit the brakes. I should wonder if that’s how beautiful death can be—defenestrated out of this world.

So then! A lot of shit I give about your crisis of meaning! Ask the dead if meaning saved them! You think you love life because it has meaning? How dull, how sick, how sad. Tell me: did you ever have a moment where the world stopped tumbling? Did you dare ask at that moment what it meant?


We should never have set up some transcendent goal or all-consummating utopian ideal for ourselves. To do so is to become a slave to a fixed idea, to invite vitrifying passions into our wheelhouse, to lay the foundations for the nihilism of disillusionment. We have had enough of the cop, the moralist, and the dreamer in our heads. “Thou shalt not, thou shalt, thou art.” After all this time, why are you still seeking after commandments?

The only way out is out: strategically calculated withdrawal or running headlong, screaming, into the desert—it doesn’t matter. To stay is to die, for the state will not go quietly. Unbound from the injunction to build the new world, we can perhaps imagine a true existentialism, a true reckoning with what we are: temporary assemblages of organs, machines running strange software, backseat spirits tethered to base matter, undulating modes of God or Nature. To recognise what we are is to lose all fear. Socrates laughed at his penalty—as if death was a penalty, he said, something he could have avoided by playing nice. It comes to us all. What does it matter when? And why? If it matters at all it is because it matters to you, in all your anguish and all your joy, in your desire, for you love life, not meaning! You love the body and its sensations! Disillusionment need not lead to catatonic withdrawal and lifeless miserabilism. You still love, don’t you? Then love! But save yourself the pain of believing in fairy tales, and don’t bother us about the revolution either. We are packing our bags.

Defeatist? Perhaps. But all the time we are running, we’ll be searching for our guns!


Ulysse Malcoeur is a writer interested in philosophical pessimism, the ecological crisis, and the intersection of both. He runs a podcast and posts essays on his Substack, as well as a few other things, including editing this journal. You’ll find him on Twitter here.

Categories
Futures

Nadrix, The Dealer

Rain falls heavily, noiselessly, onto the illuminated concrete below Nadrix’s window.

A splotch had begun developing, Nadrix had noted, in a convalescence of two flows: the flow from the northernmost corner of the eavestrough meets with another from the east; they find a new departure point, they pool, slightly, on this illuminated concrete, before dispersing again under the radiation of the sun, leaving its residues, bacteria, microscopic populations distributed along its shoreline.

Within a few days, the splotch would be noted by a State official, removed and aseptised. Nadrix was one who noted these passings, long forgotten by others, and who dealt in these disturbances. Long ago, before the technicalities of chemical stimulation jurisprudence or even digital property realism had come and gone, people were said to be more broadly aware of this para-reality outside of reality where life still persists. And in this world there were merchants. Dealers. People whose duty it was to inscribe reality into reality, though they certainly had not realized that was their Destiny at the time. Nadrix sometimes considered themself to be in that lineage—the merchant—but knew the metaphor was not sufficient; perhaps sufficient just enough to be desired.

Nadrix was relegated now to the log-sign, Dealer, whatever circumstances may come with that, until they were no longer able or willing to register another log. At which point, Nadrix was no longer officially a subject of the State. Of course, only Nadrix—as far as Nadrix knew—knew this, and it didn’t matter anyway, because Dealing suited Nadrix well, or so they had been told.

A 213 Hz hum breaks the silence of the rainfall. The cleaning crews were 21.5 seconds earlier than Nadrix’s approximated arrival time. They pull the mask over their face, and they become untraceable. Everyone could do this; most just preferred to be seen. This is what made Nadrix a Dealer, or so they had been told.

22 steps down the fire escape, one for each second the crew had been early, and then one more for the rounding error. This number is the initial condition for the Deal. Every subsequent step, for Nadrix, must carry with it the mark of these 21.5 seconds.

Curling around on the final landing of the fire escape, Nadrix pulls out of the downpour of rain and light into an alcove and observes as the Cleaners take up the battery of the State. Along the side of their long, sleek, dark green vehicle were inscribed the insignia of the State and the acronym SIS (Sanitation and Immigration Services). The standard Cleaner outfit. The Cleaners operated through a state encrypted communication network. Of course, why they kept anything encrypted was beyond Nadrix’s capacity to fathom; it was so obvious what they are here for. The splotch? Perhaps. But Nadrix calculated it would be another 16 or 18 hours at least before someone else noticed that, let alone was able to log a complaint. Nadrix knew that they were really here for the Deal. There was only the Deal.

The Cleaner turns towards the gate of Nadrix’s residence, and Nadrix slips from the dark alcove into the naked invisibility of the LED illuminated street. Who knew—in the rain, against the camouflage—what really moved in the blinding void of information. Their target is the social engagement perimeter, into the Publics. The zone of Dealing.

They pass through every security checkpoint without a single blip from any of the guards. Nothing registers, nothing is there, until at last the threshold stands between them and some other reality. There was no longer officially a “Public” zone, its space was carved mysteriously out of the concrete. Like sigils carved into ancient monoliths. One had to create the barrier as much as traverse it. Original sin.

22 steps, 21.5 seconds, approx. 3558 milliseconds between flow pulses out of the spout on this corner, indicating a rainfall volumetric flow of f(3558)””[l;… If the rate were increased by 15 ml/s, the period-doubling would increase, increasing the erosion on this point… This was the point. Nadrix stops, the State would not recognize this fault for another 6 months at least, or longer… often it was longer in these cases, because of the nature of Cleaning. Always stupefied to find that the world has become dirty again. Nadrix was the splotch, naked in the light, standing in laughing defiance against cleanliness, and still always invisible.

Now the disturbances begin, as the last green Cleaner unit’s electric hum fades into nothing. A window (re)opens; a child begins to cry. And a man comes around the corner. Huey: the Deal’s target.

Nadrix approaches Huey as he slinks up to the console of the structure. Huey is dressed in plainclothes, or as plainclothes as one could be in the rain. He had somehow obtained a pass encryption key, allowing him to forego the chafing of the polyskin camouflage against his genitals.

For a passionless microsecond, Huey’s line of sight diverges slightly from his direct path and his gaze passes into Nadrix’s eyes, whereupon he returns to face the console calmly. Huey now knew of Nadrix’s presence, though he could not betray it too obviously.

Huey coughs twice, another luxury afforded him by plainclothes, and punches in a code at the terminal, emitting a barely noticeable grumble over the raw muffle of air-conditioning units and rainfall. He steps back twice, and the console dissolves back into the wall, revealing an opaque black opening: the social engagement perimeter. Without hesitation, Nadrix glides in and Huey routinely follows.

Across the darkness threshold is a double door airlock. Once on the other side, it takes a moment to adjust to the light, a moment sitting in sensory deprivation, to fully acclimatize oneself. No one could speak in this private border space. There was no NETCOM service. Whatever this space was, it didn’t belong to you. No one knew who it belonged to, but there were consequences for breaching the silence.

After 10 or so minutes, though it was nearly impossible to tell how much time had actually elapsed without NETCOM, a faint light begins to fall upon the contours of the space. Versace, Gucci, Baskin-Robbins. These are the ruins of a lost empire. Huey glances at Nadrix, acclimatized, then towards the end of an aisle of cleared debris: tin cans, obsolete auto-parts, broken consoles and uplink sticks from ages long gone. The tools of primitive man. There was a glow, and even a murmur which issued from that corner and Nadrix and Huey silently approached it, swung the door open, and breathlessly shut it behind them.

“I guess they were 23 seconds early today.”

“21.5… 22 is generous. You have to get on the updated algorithm. These rounding errors could cause a colossal fuck up… wouldn’t be my fuckin’ problem though.”

“We both arrived at the same point at the same time; what difference does it make?”

“Aren’t we Dealers?”

Huey says nothing in response. There is no reply. They both know the grave consequences if Huey hadn’t been there. The question was rhetorical. One second was as valuable as all the seconds thereafter, forever.

“C’mon, I’ll show you where we’re headed,” mumbles Huey as he begins slowly and carefully down the dilapidated passage before them, slapping a mask over his nose and mouth. Nadrix follows, removing their mask, replacing it with another. One is the mark of the invisible Dealer in the Privates, but here in the Publics, one needs a different kind of mask.

The panelled ceiling above them hums with the glow of the outdated lighting system—hardly enough light to make it to the floor, insects gnawing at whatever scraps of death they can scrounge.

“I just lost my license,” Huey nervously chokes, “I shouldn’t even be here, it’s just because of my condi…”

“Your log-sign says Dealer,” Nadrix cuts in. they’re not interested in small talk. “I can’t help you.”

In the Privates, everything moved according to a rigorous system. One had to see the faults in it to locate oneself, while in the Publics it was reciprocal. Nadrix observes a lightbulb flashing 27 times in 3 minutes. With this rating of light, the electron flow would be f(27/180s…)… How can we get more accurate?… 14 times in 1 minute, 3 times in the next, 10 times in the third… An exceedingly low sample size, but judging by the light spectrum… against the distribution of flashes, the electron flow is… it seems this building was originally constructed in 2018? It’s hard to know how old buildings are when they’re not on the newest calendar… Nadrix knew it was from before the calendar change, so that was enough information for their purposes here. Even the most ancient structures in the City still feed off the grid. This one used to be a distribution centre, common places for populations to pool. In the Publics one had to see the perfection in the chaos that issues from the purity of non-being. Of not properly being a real place. That was the means of carving geographies and territories here.

After meandering through the maze-like structure for two painstaking hours, avoiding the micro and macroscopic dangers of the dark, Huey diverts his path towards a cavern breaking off tangentially from that before them.

“Over ‘ere,” Huey snorts as he kicks a moldy panel aside, beginning to gag.

The stench coming from the pit behind the panel was the smell of life, beautiful human life. A gag sometimes was a necessary reaction, but this was not that time. Huey was not attuned to the world of life. He was not for this world at all. He was the target and he was completely unaware. Blinded by his perfect vision, deafened by a reality of noise.

“After you,” Nadrix says harmlessly.

“Just gimme a minute,” Huey adjusts his mask, spits, and quickly replaces it. “Place fuckin reeks.”

Huey descends the first step, the staircase was short and was marked at its end by a sign reading CAR PARK in faded red lettering.

That’s when Huey notices her. From the corner, a small being unfurls from where she was previously scrounging and begins to dart towards the car park.

“SHIT,” Huey exclaims as he stumbles down a few stairs, catching himself on the rusted handrail.

He examines his hand. There’s a small scratch.

“Dammit.”

“That might be infectious, did you bring your aseptic?”

“No, did you?”

Nadrix had brought two, there was always a chance you would get paired with a first-timer on Deals like this. Huey wasn’t a first-timer, but Huey was stupid. Nadrix knew Huey wouldn’t last long. They thought briefly about withholding it—why should it be wasted on Huey? He was not for the world of 27 minutes from now, so why should he be spared in this second? This was the shaky logic of the Private world, the logic to which Nadrix could not allow themself to entirely succumb. This is what made them human, why they were a Dealer, or so they had been told.

“Take mine. if you don’t aseptize that now, I’d say you stand a sixty-seven percent chance, minimum, of contracting tetanus 3. Its mutation rate has taken off in the last fourteen months.”

Panic-stricken, Huey swipes the applicator from Nadrix.

“You terrified that girl. You have to pay attention.”

“I didn’t even see her! She should have been paying attention to me!”

Nadrix didn’t need to dignify such stupidity with a response. Instead, they gesture impatiently down the remaining stairs.

At the bottom, sure enough, there was a sea of whispering flesh. People come here because they have nowhere else to go, and in 6 to 8 months they will have to move again, or be aseptized… or apply for immigration. Though that was probably pointless, some would never stop trying. That’s why there were still the Dealers. Others learned to love their life here, in the places that don’t exist. And those folk knew the Dealers well.

“Well, I don’t know where to find ‘em from ‘ere,” Huey blurts, his voice thundering brazenly through the chamber, over every other (non)sound. Several bodies nearby jolt meekly in apparent surprise at the outburst.

“Speaking like that, it won’t take very long for…”

Disembodied voices become intelligible above the din, interrupting Nadrix’s low whisper. “Deelahs! Deelahs!”

“Shut the fuck up, pig!”

“Shh! Are you trying to bring the Cleaners here?!”

Of course, this wasn’t possible. There was no way any sound from this room could possibly register a complaint – that was a negligible factor in this environment. It would have to be well above 150 dB and persist for at least 4 minutes… Or at least, that was the average threshold for breaching the silence of the perimeter zone, let alone registering a street-level complaint. But no one knew that… except Nadrix… and maybe Huey? Huey’s log-sign says Dealer, but then again, Huey hadn’t seen the girl. He had gagged at the signs of life. Huey was right, he wasn’t a Dealer. One had to be human to be a Dealer. Huey is a target.

A shadow vaporizes up from the flesh onto Huey’s arm and Huey leaps back, aghast. He’s tense. He’s scared and his heart rate has quickened. Sweat is pooling on his forehead. He’s going septic. He should have worn his polyskin. Nadrix had tried to help Huey, but it seems that Huey might not even make it to the delivery. 23 minutes was the delivery time, and Huey likely had only 18 before convulsions and heart arrhythmia would begin. Good thing it was the body they wanted. Not the life. The bacteria can be aseptized. Huey was… what… 60 kilos? Goddammit.

“Here are my Dealers,” the shadow hoarsely whispers, “and… here’s my trinket.”

A frail pair of hands with “live free” tattooed across the knuckles stretch out towards Nadrix and uncoil to reveal a faintly glimmering token.

“This is unexpected, the delivery time is not for another 22 minutes… I’ll…”

“Sometimes the chaos, too, issues decrees unto the Law.”

Huey begins to look down at the token, as his eyes fall in and out of focus. He’s seconds from entering convulsions.

“I can’t complain. Our friend managed to get himself septic and I wasn’t looking forward to dragging him through here.”

Spittle begins to form on Huey’s chin as he begins silently shaking… Nadrix didn’t hate Huey, but many others died who Nadrix also didn’t hate. Huey was no different.

A low, pathetic moan rattles from his lungs, as his body slumps forward. Nadrix reaches out their arm to touch Huey’s body just below the mask.

1… 2… 3… As suspected, no pulse.

“He’s all yours… such as he is.”

“Thank you,” the shadow replies as it wraps Huey in a shroud of dark.

Nadrix gently takes the token from the hands as the shadow sublimates back into the tide of bodies beyond. Offering a small tear for their sacrifice, Nadrix traces Huey’s vector back through the labyrinthine crypts of the ruined distribution centre until they find themselves again at the console, standing in the rain, remasked for invisibility in the light.

The hum emerges from the east. Early again! Nadrix must have spent a few more minutes acclimatizing with Huey than they’d originally predicted. This would all have to be logged, with the token sacrificed to processing. Who knew what it meant. That wasn’t part of the Deal. And Nadrix was a Dealer, or so they had been told.


Robert Grieve is a Toronto based artist. Their work encompasses a passion for mathematics, philosophy, and improvisation. 

In their musical career, they primarily work as a session guitarist, having performed, recorded, and toured with a number of popular music artists.
In addition to this work, Robert has a separate creative practice which involves procedurally tracing fractal patterns at odd angles into vibratory membranes, setting undulatory forces into flux against themselves. This practice has produced several recordings and numerous performances with artists such as Karen Ng, Nick Fraser, Tatsuya Nakatani, Jess Ackerley, Matthew Fong, Colin Marston, Chris Pruden, and many others. 

Robert’s current theoretical work sits between speculative realism and pure fantasy, meeting realist skepticism with the only assurance of its truth: that it is radically unknown. Robert holds a Dip. Contemporary Music Performance from MacEwan University, a BMus in Jazz Performance from the University of Toronto, and a MFA in Music Composition from the Vermont College of Fine Arts.