This interview between the NYT and the author of 'how to blow up a pipeline' includes discussion of the social acceptability of political violence. Unsurprisingly, the NYT person flips out at the idea of property destruction and seems to bounce between 'political violence is never acceptable' and calling David Malm a hypocrite for not blowing up a pipeline during the interview. Evidently this is the kind of political violence the NYT doesn't support, in contrast to the kind of political violence they love (i.e. political violence used by the american state against property and humanity both foreign and domestic).
This is my favourite part of the interview in the spoilers.
spoiler
NYT: We live in representative democracies where certain liberties are respected. We vote for the policies and the people we want to represent us. And if we don’t get the things we want, it doesn’t give us license to then say, “We’re now engaging in destructive behavior.” Right? Either we’re against political violence or not. We can’t say we’re for it when it’s something we care about and against it when it’s something we think is wrong.
Malm: Of course we can. Why not?
NYT: That is moral hypocrisy.
Malm: I disagree.
NYT: Why?
Malm: The idea that if you object to your enemy’s use of a method, you therefore also have to reject your own use of this method would lead to absurd conclusions. The far right is very good at running electoral campaigns. Should we thereby conclude that we shouldn’t run electoral campaigns? This goes for political violence too, unless you’re a pacifist and you reject every form of political violence — that’s a reasonably coherent philosophical position. Slavery was a system of violence. The Haitian revolution was the violent overthrow of that system. It is never the case that you defeat an enemy by renouncing every kind of method that enemy is using.
NYT: But I’m specifically thinking about our liberal democracy, however debased it may be. How do you rationalize advocacy for violence within what are supposed to be the ideals of our system?
Malm: Imagine you have a Trump victory in the next election — doesn’t seem unimaginable — and you get a climate denialist back in charge of the White House and he rolls back whatever good things President Biden has done. What should the climate movement do then? Should it accept this as the outcome of a democratic election and protest in the mildest of forms? Or should it radicalize and consider something like property destruction? I admit that this is a difficult question, but I imagine that a measured response to it would need to take into account how democracy works in a country like the United States and whether allowing fossil-fuel companies to wreck the planet because they profit from it can count as a form of democracy and should therefore be respected.
NYT: Could you give me a reason to live?
Malm: What do you mean?
NYT: Your work is crushing. But I have optimism about the human project.
Malm: I’m not an optimist about the human project.
lol, what a fucking loser. He's literally like "I'd rather die than dirty my hands with 'violence' to help people". Christopher Caudwell wrote about how western-style pacifists (he distinguishes from eastern -style pacifism) and related bourgeois ideologies is the ultimate individualist refutation of life itself by being like this.
Liberals and their 'representative democracy' shit lmao. You got to vote and if you don't like the results too bad. Fuck off. Fuck all the way off. You get to choose between shit and real bad shit. Stop pretending like we get to vote on things that matter.
And if we don’t get the things we want, it doesn’t give us license to then say, “We’re now engaging in destructive behavior.” Right? Either we’re against political violence or not. We can’t say we’re for it when it’s something we care about and against it when it’s something we think is wrong.
We literally have an annual holiday celebrating violence because the colonists didn’t get what they want from the English monarch.
How do you rationalize advocacy for violence within what are supposed to be the ideals of our system?
I've worked with a lot of Americans and Europeans, and that exchange at the end is so indicative of other exchanges I've seen at work between Americans and Europeans:
American: "Aww, you're being negative. How about we be positive, huh? It's more fun to be positive. I don't want to think about bad stuff."
European: "I am being realistic about the situation, why would I not be realistic"
This whole thing was bizarre.
It felt like the interviewer was trying to trick him into admitting that everything was going to be OK and that he's just angry because of some aberrant mental deficiency.
Reading these reminded me of Alexander Cockburn’s question to the interns at The Nation, most famously to Ed Miliband. “Is your hate pure?”, Cockburn would ask them. Cockburn dragged this anecdote out after Miliband became leader of the Labour Party, the implication being that Miliband’s answer (“I…I…don’t hate anyone, Alex”) is a reflection of his politics. As Cockburn says, “It’s all you need to know. English capitalism will be safe in his hands.”
In “Overshoot,” you write this about the very wealthy: “There is no escaping the conclusion that the worst mass killers in this rapidly warming world are the billionaires, merely by dint of their lifestyles.” That doesn’t feel like a bathetic overstatement when we live in a world of terrorist violence and Putin turning Ukraine into a charnel house? Why is that a useful way of framing the problem?
There were more dead civilians in Gaza after like 30 days than Ukraine has seen in 2 years of war. Using Ukraine as your example on 1/16/24 is tantamount to genocide denial.
Should have pushed even harder on the acceptable violence nonsense, make it clear that any system is inherently violent and the liberal democracy isn't an exception. I wonder if the bizarre "Could you give me a reason to live?" thing was a desperate ploy to shift the conversation away before he could get to it.
side note: that movie, same title, is real real real good. has the two actors from miseducation of cameron post and the writer/director was the guy who did Cam 2018
Cool interview and I'm more interested in Malm's work than before... But this reads like the script to the scene in "First Reformed" where Ethan Hawke meets with the climate activist, lol. Like it's almost 1:1
The interviewer encouraging adventurism, or not understanding why David Malm would be against it is wild. Tell me you've never done activism without telling me.
We can’t say we’re for it when it’s something we care about and against it when it’s something we think is wrong.
I dunno isn't this like.. the basis of all human reason and logic? That you can support some things while not supporting others??? The interviewer is trying to sound clever but is deranged.
But I’m specifically thinking about our liberal democracy, however debased it may be.
Truly believing in nothing but process. Doesn't really matter what is done, as long as it's done democratically. Motherfucker liberal democracies come with an enshrined set of rights by way of constitution, once you change those enough it's not what is understood as a liberal democracy anymore. This is defending nothing against everything
Always remember kids: all political ideologies justify violence. No exceptions. In fact that's in many ways their entire function. Political ideology is the way by which you determine who has the exclusive moral authority to use violence and who it can be used against. The degree to which you believe your ideology/system is nonviolent is only the degree to which you have been conditioned to see the violence inherent in your system is just the natural default state of the world.
Even if you adopt a philosophy of hardcore uncompromising pacifism you will wind up having to justify your nonintervention in other violence happening around you at some point.
Oh my GOD this is the same argument I have with my well-meaning lib parents every month about this shit. They even have done that "so I guess there's no hope huh" thing and as always it's really just a way to escape. NO, THERE IS HOPE AND IT INVOLVES MAKING OIL COMPANIES AND THOSE INSTITUTIONS THAT DEFEND THEM UNHAPPY.