Thursday, November 26, 2009

Sartre or Guevara?

January 16, 2010 at 11:12 A.M. Hypocritical expressions of concern have appeared in The New York Times, after allegations concerning the arrest of a dissident lawyer in China and his supposed disappearance. Much the same may be expected in response to the death of a Cuban prisoner on a hunger strike, whose family and memory I respect and support, with whom I express my solidarity. I am on the side of dissidents everywhere.
Cuban society today is subject to less criticism for torture or systematic cruelty than the nation operating Guantanamo's concentration camp. American concern for freedom of speech is difficult to believe when readers from many nations may witness my daily struggle against government-sanctioned censorship and suppressions of speech which officials pretend is not taking place or is unknown to them. ("How Censorship Works in America.")
Much of the world is skeptical concerning the genuiness of this U.S. concern with free speech which is seemingly part of a campaign of vilification aimed at China, with many negative articles featured prominently in the paper focusing on Beijing's "human rights failures." Human rights failures that are just as severe (or worse) for which New Jersey is responsible are ignored by the media. The American media's orchestrated silence in reaction to the rape, thefts, destruction of the life of a dissident intellectual living in the city where this newspaper is published -- along with many others elsewhere in America -- makes a lie of these expressions of concern for a single Chinese dissident. ("How Censorship Works in America" and "What is it like to be tortured?" as well as "What is it like to be plagiarized?")
December 9, 2009 at 10:40 A.M. "Is it rational to believe in God?" was vandalized once more and corrections have now been made. Evidently, God is suspected of Communism by New Jersey and Miami Cubanazos. Perhaps Pope Benedict is suspected of affiliations with the Cuban Revolution. ("Havana Nights and CIA Tapes.")
December 4, 2009 at 5:55 P.M. Several essays were altered and corrected, including "Foucault, Rose, Davis and the Meanings of Prison."
December 5, 2009 at 5:00 P.M. to 9:00 P.M. "A Holiday Appeal Will be Made for Class-War Prisoners and for the Freedom of Mumia Abu-Jamal," District Council 1707 Hall, 75 Varick Street, 14 th Floor, Manhattan, N.Y. http://www.partisandefense.org/
December 1, 2009 at 9:40 A.M. Spacing was affected in this essay overnight. I have now corrected inserted "errors."
November 28, 2009 at 2:15 P.M. An advertisement was imposed on this site, against my will: "Harassment Attorneys, Castronovo & McKinney, LLC Free Consultation -- 973.920.7923. CandMLegal.com "
The crude allusion to "Castronovo" ("the new Castro") leads me to believe that clever Right-wing Cubanazos in wife-beater t-shirts, munching cigars, and unshaven (this is only to describe the women) disapprove of this essay. I disapprove of them.
November 27, 2009 at 10:38 A.M. Spacing was affected, but there were fewer "errors" inserted than I expected. Maybe N.J.'s hackers were enjoying their Thanksgiving turkeys, probably at the taxpayers' expense.
November 26, 2009 at 10:00 A.M. This is the essay to infuriate the Cubanoids, who may continue to demonstrate their commitment to freedom of speech through inserting "errors" in these writings. Senator Bob, Dick Codey, and Speaker Roberts will not be in Trenton forever, boys, so make the most of these opportunities. ("Miami's Cubanoids Protest AGAINST Peace.")
July 18, 2008 at 11:32 A.M. After writing the comments that appear below, this essay and several others were vandalized yesterday. I will now attempt to repair the harm done to these works, once again. Please see "Senator Bob, the Babe, and the Big Bucks" and "Does Senator Menendez Have Mafia Friends?"
July 17, 2008 at 10:47 A.M. Once again "errors" not found in print versions of this essay have appeared in the text. It is obvious to me both that such harassment and induced frustration of creative or intellectual efforts are based on the contents of my opinions, and also that they could not take place for so many years without the active cooperation of corrupt local politicians from the Cuban-American community. These people indulge, publicly, in censorship as well as sadism.
Sanctioned censorship is disgusting proof that wherever such low-level political types appear on the scene, democracy and the rule of law are in trouble. I am saddened and humiliated to think that these persons are members of my own ethnic group. I now fully understand some unpleasant things said about Cuban-Americans in the past. I hope that there are many of us who do not reflect these hateful Fascist opinions and tactics. It is possible that these thugs will fail to realize they are alienating their own potential allies and every other decent person in the nation through the use of these tactics. No wonder the Cuban Revolution is thriving by comparison with this opposition. Do you wish to delete another letter from this essay?
February 19, 2008 at 10:32 A.M. "errors" were inserted in this essay. I will continue to correct and re-post it. If you remain passive and apathetic to torture and censorship, along with other evils designed to bring about the destruction or death of any person, then you are complicit in these crimes. This blog and everything that I write in this torture chamber becomes a question for you, the reader, and for America: Will you be a guilty bystander to atrocity?
Religious persons should know that, while I am respectful of religious beliefs, I do not believe in the supernatural. I am sure that there are natural explanations -- even for phenomena that we do not yet understand -- and this includes the natural human inclination for religion and spiritual life.
I.
In discovering a vocation for struggle against oppression, American intellectuals today face frustrating theoretical difficulties. There is a "feeling" (a dirty word in political discourse for some law school graduates is "feeling"), on the one hand, that traditional sources of insight and inspiration for revolutionary struggle, Marxist and anarchist literature, are bankrupt and dated. On the other hand, too much of the best philosophical and jurisprudential work in the United States -- which should be devoted to social justice within the American post-revolutionary and Constitutionalist "situation" -- is made safe and sanitized by coopted intellectuals, whose function is to legitimate the actions of government, whatever those actions may be. Many of these intellectuals (tragically) are law professors; others are judges; still others are journalists or "pundits."
One result of this state of affairs is apathy. Nearly half of all elligible voters in the U.S. are opting out of the process because they feel that elections are a sham, offering few real options among candidates who are essentially identical because they are representative of wealth and corporate interests exclusively. I disagree with this view. However, I understand it. Furthermore, what I do agree with in the so-called "postmodernist disillusion" is the criticism or insight that politics has become -- indeed, it could not avoid becoming -- "show business." ("Colin McGinn's Naughty Book.")
All political dialogue in the future must take account of entertainment values because it will unfold in a media-televisual setting as well as at the level of ideas. The goal must be to avoid sacrificing substance -- by becoming irrelevant or trite -- while remaining serious and contemporary. The challenge of creating a genuine politics of meaning for the future is formidable.
There are two typical responses to this dilemma concerning a loss of political meaning and threats to the status quo: First, the pacifying intellectuals' role is to disarm political theory by the marginalized and oppressed population in America with calls for "patience" and "understanding of the complexities of the situation." (George Will) I am well beyond both at this point in my life. Noam Chomsky is eloquent on the ways in which government intellectuals -- who often gravitate towards media jobs after their "service" -- convince people that "they cannot be involved in [social justice reforms] or foreign affairs because they do not (and can not) understand the 'subtleties' of the situation." Robert F. Barsky, Noam Chomsky: A Life of Dissent (London: MIT Press, 1997), p. 167; and Noam Chomsky, Objectivity and Liberal Scholarship (New York: New Press 2003), p. 13. Second, some radical legal scholars (CLS) suggest that reforms within the conservative, middle-brow culture of the courts and legal academia is impossible because adjudication is too-often a smoke-screen for ideological discourse and a mask for oppression. See Duncan Kennedy, A Critique of Adjudication (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1997), pp. 339-379.
I do not accept that American Constitutional theory and law is inherently conservative, or that "maturity" implies accepting necessary limitations on transformative possibilities. I continue to believe in the U.S. Constitution and in the American Revolution. I refuse to give up on the courts, with the possible exception of New Jersey's hopelessly tainted tribunals. Today the real contest concerns the meaning of America and the Constitution for us and the world. I refuse to allow Fascists or a tiny segment of the population in possession of great wealth and power to define the American Revolution and Constitution for the rest of us. A critique of pacification has been offered by Roberto Unger and Cornel West, for example, whose crucial insight (for me) has to do with the atrophy of imagination in American political-legal discourse and debate. This criticism is particularly relevant to liberals and the Democratic party's "pundits":
"A major contention of this book is that Americans should use the tools of institutional experimentalism to rethink and rebuild each strand in their religion of possibility: the hope of social opportunity and mobility for the individual; the hope that practical ingenuity can resolve, one by one, the problems people face; and the hope that under democracy individual men and women can achieve the largeness of vision and experience that less democratic civilizations have reserved for the exceptional few. Our message is that unless Americans prove themselves to be as open-minded about the institutional arrangements of the country as they have been about almost everything else they will continue to find their hopes frustrated. It is not enough to rebel against the lack of justice unless we also rebel against the lack of imagination."
The Future of American Progressivism, pp. 23-24.
Imagination is desperately needed. It is only imagination in our readings of the Constitution today that will make possible the transformations that these thinkers and many others -- myself included -- demand. I am sure that such transformations are possible within the structures and constraints of American governmental institutions. Imagination is connected to emotion and feeling responses ("Soul") that may allow for greater creativity in resolving issues of pressing moral concern in the public sphere.
For an example of the sort of scholarship that is an effort at a Sartrean "totalization" and still a revolutionary work, see Angela Y. Davis, Are Prisons Obsolete? (New York: Seven Stories, 2003), pp. 60-83. The Jena 6 case should call out for resolution and protest. It should infuriate all of us that such grotesque travesties of justice take place in America. ("America's Holocaust" and "Foucault, Rose, Davis and the Meanings of Prison.")
Senator Obama's candidacy and (now) presidency is inspirational not only because America's language of political symbols is already altered and enriched by Obama's mere presence on the scene, but also because Obama is the only political figure who understands that suffering humanity lives, thrives, or dies on the basis of possibility, what Tennessee Williams describes in "The Glass Menagerie" as the long hoped-for "something" that keeps us going. Ernst Bloch's humanistic Marxism may be brought into relation with the writings of liberation theologians on this question of hope. President Obama is no lightweight on philosophical matters, displaying a theoretical sophistication not equalled by any rival in this election, with the exception of Hillary Clinton in the primaries:
" ... not only art but philosophy -- and especially the latter -- has consciously to bear the responsibility of prefiguration, and the prefiguration at that of an objectively real appearance, of the world of process, of the real world of hope itself. Furthermore, the latter remains uniquely based in matter -- in something that is certainly mobile in a polymorphic and not stereotyped manner; in that-which-is-in-accordance-with-possibility, and as such has a duly determinative effect, and in that-which-is-in-possibility, and as such has a substantively opening effect. To perceive this genesis is the function of philosophy. Its new shape is the dialectically aimed, systematically open, vista into matter as it takes tendential form.
On Karl Marx (New York: Herder, 1971), at p. 43 (emphasis in original).
You can live with almost anything if you still have your future, the future as potentiality. Once that future is taken from you, then you are already dead. Physical disintegration then becomes only a matter of waiting for the inevitable. Persons in such a condition are living in limbo. Prison? Frustration tactics used against me -- insertions of identical "errors" in these essays dozens or more times -- are attempts to take away all that is left to a still struggling and dissenting intellectual, hope. It ain't gonna happen. (Fidel Castro's 'History Will Absolve Me'" and "'The Prisoner': A Review of an AMC Television Series," then "Freedom for Mumia Abu-Jamal.")
The real reason to do such an unspeakably evil action as to "deny hope to the hopeless" is delight in cruelty, unconvincingly rationalized with a patina of political rhetoric. Fascists (like Miami's Cubanoids) believe nothing -- except, perhaps, for the efficacy of cruelty. Keep your eyes on further defacements of this essay. ("Today's Cuban Revolutionaries Are on the Internet" and "Does Senator Menendez Have Mafia Friends?")
The works of Professor Angela Davis should be required reading in U.S. law schools because one of her subjects is the way that racism in prisons -- which is reflected in every aspect of prison life -- is an instantiation of the pervasive and more subtle racism and sexism in society. Much the same is true in courts. There is a substantial literature called "Critical Race Theory" (CRT), which is associated with the work of scholars such as Richard Delgado. I have read several of Professor Delgado's law review articles. However, I do not feel qualified to discuss Delgado's work or CRT, unless I were to spend weeks reading to bring myself up to date. Perhaps that will be a future project.
In America, all major political issues become legal controversies sooner or later -- usually sooner -- which means that the role of courts in important civil transformations that lead to institutional changes (that is, to "new" Constitutional and social interpretations) cannot be overstated. At this point, the obligatory reference is to Karl Marx's early (1843) essay "On the Jewish Question," in Karl Marx: Early Writings (London: Penguin, 1975), p. 211.

We need to transform civil society before meaningful instrumental political reforms, new laws, will be possible or meaningful. This sounds contradictory to the standard law school product ("it's got to be one or the other!"). I am asking you to think dialectically. In fact, I am asking you to think seriously and profoundly. Most importantly, I am asking that you do what you are told not to do in American law schools -- to think originally and creatively about ultimate political and legal values.
O.K., science buffs, try "symbiosis." We need new (non-racist, non-sexist, radically egalitarian) attitudes in society to cope with our more complex world; that need should express itself in new readings or understandings of the Constitution; these new understandings of our Constitutional relations may then lead to more profound changes in society, giving rise (again) to new needs and attitudes. The process will never end. Revolutions are always "unfinished." (See "Manifesto for the Unfinished American Revolution.")
If there is such a thing as a forum in the U.S. where ideas and Dworkinian "principles" (I think I just made up the word "Dworkinian") are SOMETIMES debated, as opposed to pragmatic compromises ("deals") being struck, it must be in law courts and not the legislative or executive branches. As moronic as some legal arguments are, any appellate court is Plato's Academy compared to legislatures and local government. If we hope to encourage a meaningful debate on fundamental moral-political values -- on what America is or means today -- my guess is that it will take place only in the courts and with reference to our always new understandings of the Constitution. Such a debate will be meaningful only if everyone is invited to participate. Jurgen Habermas is a source here, as is Ronald Dworkin's discussion of "The Forum of Principle."
To borrow from Hegel, American law and the courts (heaven help us!) have become the societal equivalent of the third movement in Hegel's dialectic, seeking to make use of some of the best features of the political branches and yet to "do the right thing," in Spike Lee's terms. Law and judges provide the "resolution at a higher stage" of the contradictions of both the executive and legislative branches. If there is to be a hope of resolving these contradictions -- in what is now a viciously divided society -- then it can only happen in the courts, because it is certainly not going to happen elsewhere in government. The political branches are just too responsive to popular pressures and a little thing called "money" to be able to heal the wounds in America's national psyche today. Maybe judges are sold-out too. I said if there is a "hope of resolving these contradictions." The key word in that last sentence is "hope."
The next time you see a judge, walk up to him or her and say: "You are aufheben." Then run. And no, I am not "running" anywhere. Anyone who wants to "get" me, should know where to find me. "What is aufheben? And does it involve a sexual act?" Don't worry, boys and girls, this is not on the bar exam. Compare Walter Dean Myers, Malcolm X -- By Any Means Necessary (New York: Scholastic, 1993) with Mumia Abu-Jamal, Live From Death Row (New York: Avon, 1996).
To suggest that imprisonment of these men -- Malcolm and Mumia -- had nothing to do with politics is absurd. Racism as a motivation for their incarceration is obvious. Given recent incidents of black rage that are all too understandable and the puzzled commentary of experts, a discussion of the conditions bringing about this social reality and response from individuals is desperately needed. I plan to write an essay on this worrisome topic.
Thank goodness that on "Good Morning America" today Mr. Stephanopoulous expressed concern for the homeless by showing a video of a homeless man seeking a job. This concern is so touching and quite rare. The hosts were charmed and amused by the homeless individual's video efforts that produced a chuckle from them.
II.
Aufheben is best defined by Frank Ramsey in his Foundations of Mathematics, pp. 115-116:
"The truth lies not in one of the disputed views but in some third possibility which has not yet been thought of, which we can discover by rejecting something assumed as obvious by both the discussants." ("John Searle and David Chalmers on Consciousness.")
In this sense, judges may yet provide some "truth" for the rest of us. How about this truth? We must never torture or enslave people in America. Robert C. Solomon, "Hegel's Epistemology," in From Hegel to Existentialism (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1987), p. 17. I am not surprised that, among his first official actions, President Obama listed the closing of the Guantanamo prison. I am confident that, eventually, most of the men tortured at that facility will be released because they were never involved in terrorism in the first place. Those released victims of American torture may now become the terrorists we fear and have made them into. ("American Doctors and Torture.")
Accompanying and introducing this essay, I have provided a picture of a conversation between Ernesto "Che" Guevara -- someone with whom I disagree as to the scope of legitimate State power -- and Jean Paul Sartre, whose work I admire much more. That image was blocked. I have replaced it with another photo of Guevara. This image will also be blocked. My ability to post images, together with my access to MSN has been obstructed. I find myself making the same correction in this essay ten or more times. Frustration tactics? ("How Censorship Works in America.")
This use of images and present focus has nothing to do with whether I agree with Che. It is a protest against censorship and cyberstalking, even when such crimes take place under the protection of corrupt politicians from New Jersey or Florida. I do this mostly to infuriate those members of the Cuban exile community in the U.S. who fail to appreciate what is free speech even as they speak of bringing "democracy" to other places. Efforts by such persons with political protection to destroy these writings are an example of the opposite of democracy. You cannot defeat an argument with brutality and violence or the threat of violence. Threatening me with physical harm is not a response that proves me wrong. In fact, just the opposite. If it is true that my writings are being read in Cuba and that an effort is underway to publish writings that are suppressed within the U.S. in Havana, then I am very grateful for the attention. (One letter was deleted from the foregoing sentence since my previous review of this work.)
In case you have not figured me out yet, as a non-Communist who is a democratic socialist concerned to protect civil liberties, allow me to be clear: There are more important things than living a long life or personal survival, like "speaking truth to power" (Malcolm X) and fighting for what one believes. No one is going to prevent me from doing that. In fact, it is because I claim the right to such FREE speech that I love and live in this society. These beliefs make me "unethical" in New Jersey. You decide who is unethical. ("Stuart Rabner and Conduct Unbecoming to the Judiciary in New Jersey" and "Does Senator Menendez Have Mafia Friends?")
You will spend weeks trying to find a single judge in New Jersey who is competent or not a political whore subject to influence by the boss system. Good luck with that effort. Sending off-duty real estate lawyers to threaten me with physical harm will not affect my views or their expression on-line. Inserting "errors" in my writings after attacking my computer will not help you. ("New Jersey's 'Ethical' Legal System" and "New Jersey is the Home of the Living Dead.")
As a critic of human rights violations in Cuba, I have no doubt that I would have been imprisoned or executed if I were on the island in 1960; I also have no doubt that exactly the same would have happened to me under Batista; and if the Right-wing fanatics -- often my fellow Cuban-Americans -- in Miami or New Jersey were to govern anywhere, exactly the same fate awaits me should I be unfortunate enough to find myself in their power.
Publication of my writings in Cuba may indicate a greater willingness to discuss ideas in that society today than exists in Union City, New Jersey. The levels of corruption and complicity with organized crime on the part of Cuban-American politicians makes any hopes for such people ridiculous. Cubans are much better off with what they have than with what such so-called "leaders" in New Jersey or Florida can possibly offer them. This would be a good time to insert another "error." ("Is Senator Menendez a Suspect in Mafia-Political Murder in New Jersey?" and "Is Senator Bob 'For' Human Rights?")
There is no doubt in my mind that New Jersey's legal system and politics are more corrupt and hypocritical than anything in the Cuban system today. The only reason that the tortures and rapes to which I have been subjected by N.J. have not resulted in my fraudulent imprisonment or death is probably public attention. The lowlifes observing these events and doing nothing are as culpable as the cybercriminals. This includes Ms. Milgram and her minions. I wonder why the number of hits at my blogs has not changed? Sabotage? 1 out 3 hits are counted? Or is it less than that? ("Censorship and Cruelty in New Jersey.")
People forget that today's leading Cuban dissident and philosopher, Elizardo Sanchez, is also a self-described "democratic socialist." Professor Sanchez is Cuba's Noam Chomsky. It may be that my experience in the U.S. is worse than what Professor Sanchez has endured in Cuba. My primary emotion in reacting to the daily vandalisms of my writings is embarassment that persons in the Cuban-American community can be so stupid, also that American politicians and jurisdictions can be so corrupt. ("Corrupt Law Firms, Senator Bob, and New Jersey Ethics.")
Cuba is transitioning into a more democratic and open society, despite the attempts to obscure this truth on the part of Cubanazos with political power. I think we should encourage that transition and be a part of healthy changes in Havana now, before we are made more irrelevant by other nations (like China). I refer to changes not only to Cuba's possible future, but also to the destiny of Latin America. Positive change is what matters, not your opinion of Fidel Castro. ("Time to End the Embargo Against Cuba.")
We are being edged out of power and influence in Latin America by other nations whose diplomatic skills exceed our own "tactics" for winning hearts and minds. ("Fidel Castro's 'History Will Absolve Me.'")
I offer the same disdain and defiance to the "puppet masters," pulling strings behind the scenes in New Jersey's smoke-filled and foul-smelling back rooms, where all deals are cut concerning who gets what for next year -- not to mention who steals what in the legal and political system -- right before the hacks go on the judicial bench in order to speak to others of "ethics" and "legality." If you are an American, living anywhere in this country, New Jersey's legal and political system should sicken you. ("Law and Ethics in the Soprano State" and "We don't know from nothing.")
I distinguish between hacks and real judges. The key criteria in making this distinction is fearlessness in upholding the rights of the least fortunate and privileged litigants. Fearless protection of rights is something (sadly) I have not seen lately in many state courts. I say this as efforts are still being made to obstruct my writings. Anybody heard of the First Amendment?
Jurisprudential imagination is desperately needed to reinterpret our great Constitution so that it will address, in a meaningful way, the need for social justice and freedom of a people now burdened with crushing economic suffering and spiritual deprivations. I am referring to Americans.
Only one new "error" since my review this morning? That's good. Spacing between sentences and paragraphs will be altered by New Jersey's whores on retainer. I am thinking of referring to Senator Menendez as "the Prostitute." ("Senator Bob Struggles to Find His Conscience" and "New Jersey Mafia Culture in Law and Politics" then "Abuse and Exploitation of Women in New Jersey.")
What is a spiritual deprivation? Widespread and trendy nihilism, for a start, also denials of education to people who cannot pay for it because too much public money has been stolen by political leeches. Clear enough? Our contemporary "Search for a Method" (see Sartre's Preface, first published as "Search for a Method," in the Critique of Dialectical Reason) in American politics and jurisprudence still comes as news to many judges. Jean Paul Sartre, Search for a Method (New York: Alfred A, Knopf, 1963).
Compassion and some common sense or shared humanity, as well as solidarity with fellow human beings is required from New Jersey's judges, for example, who are often found chuckling and guzzling Champagne at black tie dinners -- provided at public expense -- as persons who are "detained" and not convicted of any offense are tormented by ferocious dogs, beaten, raped and tortured, even murdered in the state's jails, or maybe tortured in their homes. Those who have been tortured or otherwise violated, "for their own good" in New Jersey will not go away. I will not go away. (See "Deborah T. Poritz and Conduct Unbecoming to the Judiciary in New Jersey" and "Jaynee La Vechia and Conduct Unbecoming to the Judiciary in New Jersey.")
Judges are often surprised to discover that they are not universally admired. Ruthless though they can be, judges are mere human beings, "who excrete and yearn," like the rest of us, "suffering sometimes from insomnia and insecurity." (Christopher Hitchens) "They are also vain in the extreme, and often wish to be liked almost as much as they desire to be feared." The intensity of hatred directed at such officials -- often with good reason -- should worry you. No objective observer of New Jersey's legal system will fail to appreciate the impossibility of legitimacy in so corrupt a setting. Persons deserve better that what that terrible place has to offer by way of a court system. The very sight of the people growing rich on taxpayers' money in New Jersey should be revolting to all of us. ("New Jersey's Feces-Covered Supreme Court" and "New Jersey's Legal System is a Whore House.")
The cultivation of feelings by judges is not something to be discouraged, but a necessity. There is no non-emotive form of legal cognition. All legal reasoning is evaluative and in that understanding of the term which relates it to public values, therefore, political. This is not to suggest that legal decision-making is "relative," "non-objective," merely "subjective," so that time and effort must be spent pretending that judicial opinions are deductions from a priori premises. The time for the sort of rubric that insisted that: "It is nothing personal," or that "the" law MECHANICALLY "requires" only one result, is over. (Compare "America's Holocaust" with "Driving While Black [DWB] in New Jersey.")
This has nothing to do with whether there is a right answer to each legal dispute. I am arguing for such right answers. Positivist legal analyses are now known -- even by the general public -- to be nonsense. The violation of a person's rights and denigration of any individual's humanity is always "personal." Legal reasoning is merely a branch of political and moral thinking. Nevertheless, it can be objective and yield truths. There is and can be no excuse for New Jersey's jurisprudential reality. ("New Jersey's 'Ethical' Legal System.")
Unlike Rawlsian or Kantian philosophy, legal reasoning is not best thought of as "pure" abstract reasoning because: 1) there is always a specific case to decide (remember the "case or controversy" requirement in Supreme Court jurisprudence?); and 2) there are always relevant and pre-exisiting legal materials to consider. Reasoning in terms of principles that "fit" a tradition (Dworkin, Fried) is indeed relevant at the point when courts seek to elaborate their own answers to legal conundrums in a fashion that renders coherent both particular decisions -- that means "cases" -- and the system as a whole.
Notice, again, that spacing between paragraphs will be affected regularly in this essay by New Jersey's hackers. This is one of their favorite tricks, which they find amusing, despite the violations of the Constitution and copyright laws. ("Have you no shame, Mr. Rabner?")
You still with me law school graduates? I hope so. Ask the philosophy majors for some help, if you get lost. If courts will engage in social legislation for the "public good" (as defined by them), which they may have to, then please do so intelligently, with a frank acknowledgment of the emotive and value basis underlying legal reasoning as well as your "alleged" reliance on authoritative legal materials.
Be honest, if you are a judge, about the politics at the heart of the judicial enterprise. Be welcoming of non-traditional contributions from interested third parties in society, say, parties filing amicus briefs on behalf of the Constitution. Admit your politics and value choices because we can tell what they are anyway. Do not offer a smoke screen for yet another level of obfuscation and denial of legal justice to oppressed masses, who are stuck with the courts as the only protection we have against the abuse of power by government. Do not become only another level of oppression. If there is a jurisprudential or political equivalent of what theologians call a "salvific mission," then it rests with judges in American society. Scary, huh? ("Roberto Unger's Revolutionary Legal Theory.")
Judges must be good at formulating and applying legal principles (requiring an INDIVIDUALIZED focus), at an abstract level, but they must also keep an eye on the policy impact of decisions (which requires a social or COLLECTIVE focus), balancing a need to protect freedom and rights -- which is primary -- with the responsibility to protect the public or common good, that is, to foster social equality. The most important way in which the public must be protected is by having each person's rights guaranteed, individually. If you agree, then direct your demand for both freedom and equality, for justice with civil liberties, to the tainted courts that most need to hear it:
http://www.judiciary.state.nj.us/supreme/images/justices.jpg ("New Jersey's Feces-Covered Supreme Court" and "New Jersey's Political and Judicial Whores.")
In reading the tepid and forgettable legal prose churned out by appellate tribunals in America (which is deemed, for some reason, to be "good" writing in the legal academy) one is struck by the lack of affect and heavy-handed abstractness in discussions of legal controversies that reveal -- to those with the technical training to see it -- the blood and sinews of U.S. society. This revelatory power in case law is something which cannot be admitted by judges. Discussions of the death penalty are notable in this regard. Such discussions focus on everything except race and economic desperation, which is the crux of the issue. Take another look at my citations to the work of the important philosopher of law and politics, Angela Y. Davis and also, "Mumia Abu-Jamal and the Unconstitutionality of the Death Penalty." Francis Wheen, Marx's Das Kapital (New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 2006). (Law as "instrumental" or superstructural to the economic-power base and also, in postmodernist Marxism, as "constitutive" of social realities.)
One senses intellectual mediocrity and smugness in judges, absence of passion ("isn't absence of passion a good thing?"), and lukewarm commitment to an enterprise that is concerned with life and death, freedom and justice, punishment and redemption. Context is all. To ask for compassion and intelligence from writers of such dismal legal prose may well be a doomed enterprise. Yet there is no alternative. Dispassionate, cool "legal" rationality may be a virtue; inhumanity is not. In confronting Nazi war criminals at Nuremberg, judges did not engage in creative tax accounting, rule-mongering, or policy anaysis, they spoke of justice and freedom, of human dignity, and of what the very idea of law will not tolerate with regard to the treatment of a person. I am not a slave. I am not a laboratory animal. Even minority attorneys who are solo practioners challenging the system should be considered persons. If you will be wearing black robes today, then think of what you have become ... and of what you are supposed to be, even in New Jersey. Get it, Stuart Rabner? ("Stuart Rabner and Conduct Unbecoming to the Judiciary in New Jersey" and "Maurice J. Gallipoli and Conduct Unbecoming to the Judiciary in New Jersey.")
Among the concepts that may be helpful to the sort of argument I am sketching for a revolutionary understanding of legal method, is Professor Unger's work on "deviationist doctrine and argument," as set forth in his essay on CLS. In speaking of the disenchanted "serious law student" with a philosophical and moral-political vocation, Professor Unger says:
"The individual who has undertaken this spiritual itinerary [a life in law] cannot easily regain the faith in a world in which justification comes from the good faith performances of well-defined roles, a world in which the system of roles is itself taken as the outward manifestation of an authoritative moral or even cosmic order. Without either that faith or its successful replacement by the idea of a transformative vocation, work appears as a mere practical necessity, robbed of higher significance or effect. Apart from the pleasures of technical intricacy and puzzle solving, it becomes solely a means to material comfort and an incident, if you are lucky, to domestic felicity or personal diversion." ("Fidel Castro's 'History Will Absolve Me.'")
One either becomes a slave to money and sexual conquests, to status and the grovelling tribute of fellow professionals -- as many American lawyers and judges do -- or one comes to accept a devotion to political change, which is more important than professional status, by becoming a true advocate (maybe for the first time) for those without representation in this broken and wounding legal system. I am thinking of New Jersey. Look at the final paragraph of Unger's essay and visualize that state's befouled Supreme Court, not to mention the Garden State's political bosses (Boss Bob) secretly running the lives of the "little people":
"When we came, they were like a priesthood that had lost their faith and kept their jobs. They stood in tedious embarassment before cold altars. But we turned away from those altars and found the mind's opportunity in the heart's revenge."
"O.K.," my friends in the tax department of a local corporate law firm say, but "is all of this practical"? My response is: Where do you want the argument about fundamental values in America to take place -- because it is certainly coming, given the high level of frustration and anger people feel -- in the streets, violently, with riots? Or would you prefer that discussion to take place in a forum where rationality and persuasion are the weapons of struggle? Let us begin by foresaking violence, censorship, and all attempts at destroying the communicative efforts of others. Has spacing been affected in this essay, again?
I am "for" argument and debate (even feisty debate), just as I am always against terrorism, violence, torture, rape or abuse of any kind, even when it is sanctioned, secretly, by apologists for the State in black robes. Censorship is always wrong. Debate does not have to mean a discussion taking place exclusively in the bland language of privileged, upper middle-class whites (by which I mean all persons, whatever their ethnicity or race, who "choose" such a conformist identity). Rather, the conversation concerning who we are now, as a people, should allow for wit and anger, demonstration and performance. Poetry, literature and philosophy must be welcome at today's debates concerning the politics of the future. ("American Courts Must Not Condone Torture.")
In the choice of companions, I am astonished to find that -- in my forties, when I expected to be anywhere but where I am, much more as I turn fifty -- I prefer the company of oppressed people to that of their oppressors, of the poor (like me) to well-fed and successful "professionals," making the big decisions and staring at their plasma television sets, while wearing black ties or fancy gowns. Maybe wearing both. They say that God or the universe has a wicked sense of humor. I am beginning to believe it. Unger says:
"To live in history means, among other things, to be an active and conscious participant in the conflict over the terms of collective life, with the knowledge that this conflict continues in the midst of the technical and everyday. We teach this by pushing the negative lessons to the extreme point at which they start to become constructive insights."
Unger concludes:
" ... in a world of broken dreams and paper pushing, of abstractions that have long ceased to be living theory and that, once routinized and mutilated turn into the guiding principles or the empty slogans of forms of social practice to which they lend the spurious semblance of sense, authority, or necessity ... The conventional concept of revolution combines at a minimum the notion of basic if not total change in the formative context of routine social life with the idea of more or less widespread participation in the remaking of a social order that the state has temporarily ceased to control. In the ruling traditions of historical and critical social theory and in the vulgar beliefs that these traditions have inspired, [for me, non-violent] revolution [within the structures of American Constitutional jurisprudence] appears as the best hope of real social change, the only clear alternative to the endless reproduction of society through reformist tinkering or to its slow and obscure remaking through the accumulation of an enormous number of largely unrelated decisions and conflicts."
The Critical Legal Studies Movement, pp. 112-114.
Perhaps similar approaches are needed at the international level, not resorts to military invasions or "cruel embargos." (Fidel Castro's latest speech at the United Nations.) This may be an argument for the U.S., finally, to join the community of nations in supporting an International Criminal Court and strengthened human rights tribunals.

Does Cuba support the International Criminal Court? The responsibility for resolving fundamental social conflicts -- in a manner consistent with our deepest values -- rests, first, with judges ... and then, maybe, with all of us. Judges must remember: "No justice, no peace."

Monday, November 23, 2009

"The Prisoner": A Review of an AMC Television Series.

June 21, 2010 at 12:55 P.M. One letter was removed from this essay and from "Drawing Room Comedy: A Philosophical Essay in the Form of a Film Script." I have corrected both inserted "errors."

April 21, 2010 at 11:04 A.M. This essay was, once more, disfigured. I have made the necessary corrections. I expect that these tactics will continue to be used as part of induced frustration efforts meant to discourage all writing by me. Censorship, suppressions of speech, denials of publication efforts or access to images will be routine in my writing life. All efforts to obtain the truth from New Jersey continue to be greeted with silence. ("Is Senator Bob 'For' Human Rights?" and "Senator Bob Struggles to Find His Conscience.")

February 28, 2010 at 1:40 P.M. An attempt to access "White Collar" on Free Prime Time a little while ago was blocked by a notice labelled "Error 101." I am sure that this is only a coincidence and entirely due to "Time/Warner" graphics. Is this a referrence to Room 101 in Orwell's 1984?

January 5, 2010 at 3:46 P.M. "Errors" were inserted in essays and corrected, as usual. Nothing changes. Same old, same old.

December 8, 2009 at 8:48 A.M. I encountered obstacles in reaching this site this morning. I am running a full scan of my computer as I type these words.

December 2, 2009 at 9:19 A.M. A letter was deleted from a word since my previous review and spacing was affected in "The Heidegger Controversy." I have made the necessary corrections. For the rationale and goals of this harassment effort and the source of the protocol, see "Roberto Unger's Revolutionary Legal Theory." The objective is to maximize nerve damage and long-term psychological harm to a designated victim through induced frustrations, anxieties, financial pressures, together with disconfirmations and denials of identity as well as undermining self-esteem. The goal is for the victim to accept a status as a sub-human worthy of exploitation and enslavement. This "acceptance" should never be given. (See the C.I.A.'s so-called, "Bluebird Manual." Many of these tactics have been "tested" on African-American revolutionaries.)

November 26, 2009 at 9:25 A.M. "Error" inserted overnight. I have now corrected that "error." The goal is to destroy a mind and intelligence that is feared. Why? ("Freedom for Mumia Abu-Jamal.") 1988-today. ("Psychological Torture in the American Legal System.")

November 24, 2009 at 6:13 P.M. More "errors" were inserted in this essay since my review a few hours ago. I will make the necessary corrections. (Again: "Roberto Unger's Revolutionary Legal Theory.")

November 24, 2009 at 1:46 P.M. "Error" inserted and corrected since this morning. I cannot say how many other essays have been vandalized.

November 24, 2009 at 9:38 A.M. An advertisement was imposed on this site against my will: "Small Business Network, Connect with small business for ideas, jobs & employees! Free. http://www.PartnerUp.com/ " Allegedly, this advertisement emanates from: "Ads by Google." ("What is it like to be tortured?")

November 24, 2009 at 8:58 A.M. Spacing was affected in this essay hours after I posted it last night. Overnight a single word was deleted from the text. I have now restored that word to the essay. For an example of the harassment process to which my writings are subjected, see "The Heidegger Controversy." ("Fidel Castro's 'History Will Absolve Me.'")

Perhaps with the departure of Mr. Codey and Speaker Roberts, minimal decency will return to (or arrive at) Trenton and, at least, a pretense will be made at compliance with the Constitution of the United States of America. This is a slim hope, but it is all we have. ("New Jersey's 'Ethical' Legal System.")

November 23, 2009 at 1:04 P.M. Attacks on this essay must be expected over the next few days. I will make corrections as quickly as possible. ("Corrupt Law Firms, Senator Bob, and New Jersey Ethics" and "Is American Legal Ethics a Lie?")

"The Prisoner," Sunday, November 15, 2009 at 8:00 P.M. through Tuesday, November 17, 2009 at 8:00 P.M. AMC, Granada ("Brideshead Revisited") and ITV ("Lost in Jane Austen") Productions. Director: Nick Hurran; Written by Bill Gallagher (bravos!); Starring: Ian McKellen (Two); Jim Caviezel (Six); Hayley Atwell (4-15); Ruth Wilson (313); Lennie James (147); Rachael Blake (M2); and Jamie Campbell Bower (11-12).

Alessandra Stanley, "Rethinking of a Number Between 1 and 10," in The New York Times, November 13, 2009, at p. C1. (The Times reviewer did not get this series.)
Benedict Carey, "Surgery for Mental Ills Offers Hope and Risk," in The New York Times, November 27, 2009, at p. A1. (The return of lobotomy as an instrument of normalization. When applied involuntarily and secretly, as it would be in New Jersey, this "weapon" against "abnormals" threatens all of us. I am sure that, if the technique were available in the late eighties, I would have been subjected, involuntarily, to such brain surgery.)
Herman Hesse, Magister Ludi: The Glass Bead Game (New York: Henry Holt, 1963). (A parable similar to "The Prisoner" written by the German Nobel prize winner shortly after the Holocaust.)

Introduction: "Richard Nixon in Hell."

This comment on "The Prisoner" by Alessandra Stanley is a sad indication of the state of "reviewing" in today's journalism. None of the people evaluating movies and t.v. shows for America's premier newspaper these days deserves to be called a "critic" -- with the possible exception of Janet Maslin. The reader of these articles is treated to daily displays of the current prejudices and fashions among Upper West Side hipsters, of a certain age, typically enjoying the correct ethnicity and gender as well as sexual-orientations. No, this does not describe me.

The one thing that may not be said about this television series is that it suffers from a "postmodern fatigue with ideology and big thoughts." Ms. Stanley goes on to observe: "It's still a British production" -- alluding to the sixties' original series that inspired this remake -- "but now the hero is an American from New York City, a sign that when it comes to far-reaching conspiracies, the sun has set on the British empire."

Aside from resorting to such an original phrase, the problem here is that the reviewer does not realize that this story is a political allegory, among other things. "The Prisoner" is all about ideology. The show is a detailed critique of ideological rationalizations of evil. The reason that Number 6 is a New Yorker has to do with the judgments made in this work concerning post-9/11 America. The presence of the Twin Towers, as a symbol, should make this obvious. (World Trade Center, pre-catastrophe.)

The spellbound t.v. viewers undistracted even by the possible death of a member of their family from their idiotic t.v. fare may be a comment on the viewers of this very show. We are the morons sitting before our t.v. sets passively accepting a view of the world from the likes of Number 2. Tragically, this is probably an accurate description of Ms. Stanley. Ms. Stanley's comments concerning Melanie Griffith, as I recall, in "Viva Laughlin" were unfortunate and inappropriate. Michael Sandel, "Herbert Marcuse's America," in The Company of Critics (New York: Basic Books, 2002), pp. 178-184.

" ... Marcuse writes with bland assurance, [of] 'moronization.' It isn't easy to accept his parallel assurance that the culture of consumption is far better than what came before we were morons!). Marcuse asks us to believe in the existence of people instantly and totally responsive to modern commercial advertising, instantly and totally content [like the residents of the "Village"?] once they have purchased the advertised goods and services. [Antonio cologne.] But I don't know many people like that."

Herbert Marcuse, One Dimensional Man (Boston: Beacon Press, 1964), pp. 184-199 and Herbert Marcuse, Eros and Civilization: A Philosophical Inquiry Into Freud (Boston: Beacon Press, 1955), pp. 129-238.

Freud's picture is displayed prominently in "The Prisoner" which clues us in to the engagement with a postmodernist-Marxist reading of Civilization and Its Discontents. This film is a radical political reworking of the original series because it is a vicious attack on America's current role in the world. It is also a mythological exploration of issues of freedom, power, justice and identity. The work explores philosophical-logical puzzles in the context of various familiar thought-experiments in philosophy. The Oxford created "Prisoner's Dilemma" gets a Parisian make-over. Mythologically, the obvious sources for the writer are John Milton's masterpiece, "Paradise Lost" and Shakespeare's poetry. There are also echoes of Kafka and Borges, Alex Garland and Michael Moorcock. Mr. Moorcock's classic Behold the Man (New York: Avon, 1968) and Mr. Garland's The Beach (London & New York: Penguin, 1997) must be sources for the scriptwriter.

Buddha's struggles against Mara -- the trickster-god and deceiver -- parallel the "prisoner's" adventures. Ironically, Number 2 is a trickster-god with all the charm of Shakespeare's Prospero mixed with Falstaff and Iago. Number 2 becomes the analogue of George W. Bush or Dick Cheney. Milton's Lucifer is transformed into a Republican politician. This is Richard Nixon in hell. The residents of the Village are Nixon's "silent majority," coopted by Reagan and both Bushes into doing their bit for America by "adjusting" to being deprived of their freedoms. Gore Vidal's An Evening With Richard Nixon should be read after seeing this series. Among the predecessors of this work are "The Truman Show" and "Mumford." Stephen Bachelor, Living With the Devil: A Meditation on Good and Evil (New York: Riverhead, 2004), pp. 17-29. ("Drawing Room Comedy: A Philosophical Essay in the Form of a Film Script" and "The Wanderer and His Shadow.")

Psychologically, the dystopias of Huxley and Orwell -- in particular, Huxley's fears concerning the complicity of psychology and bio-chemistry in the process of enslaving populations -- are invoked under the shadow of an Abu Ghraib-like facility for "re-training" Villagers failing to "adjust." The works of Michel Foucault anticipate many of the issues dramatized here: the way power insinuates itself into the tissues of its victims -- which is all of us to some extent -- shaping the subjectivities of those who surrender their humanity as well as those who resist enslavement. Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison (New York: Vintage, 1979), pp. 135-170 ("Docile Bodies"). Please compare Richard Schacht, Alienation (New York: Anchor, 1971), pp. 73-123 ("Marx's Early Writings").

Resistance is always called for among us "dreamers" -- that is, artists, intellectuals, revolutionaries, philosophers, all of the "really weird" people in society:

"For at least three decades now, behavior specialists in particular, and consultative experts on life's problems and conduct in general, have constituted themselves the chief outriders of the false and dangerous concept of adjustment. More cogently, in countless cases, by therapeutic and educational devices and practices arising from a preoccupation with adjustment, by the weight of their authority, prestige and influence, they have literally forced people into the mold and co-operated in the establishment of a quietus on protest. ... They operate chiefly by the process of weaning a sufferer from the form of protest which expressed his woe [Number 2's "wife"?] and they broadly ignore the woe itself. ..." (emphasis added)

Robert Lidner, The Revolutionist's Handbook (New York: Grove-Zebra, 1971), pp. 15-17, then Albert Camus, Resistance, Rebellion, and Death (New York: Vintage, 1974), pp. 87-97 ("Bread and Freedom" and "Letter to a German Friend").

John Milton's protest is echoed at several points in this "film-narrative" which poses a hermeneutic challenge: "Give me liberty to know, to utter, and to argue freely according to conscience, above all other liberties." A Speech of Mr. John Milton for the Liberty of Unlicensed Printing to the Parliament of England (1644), then Fidel Castro, "Che Guevara," in Revolution: Faces of Change (New York: Thunder's Mouth Press, 2000), p. 2. ("For the man who fell, as a mortal man, as a man who faced bullets time and again, as a soldier, as a leader, was a thousand times more able than those who killed him by a stroke of luck.")

Perhaps they killed Che while his back was turned to his murderers. This is a method still used to destroy persons that is very popular in New Jersey and among Right-wingers. Right, Senator Bob? ("What is it like to be tortured?" and "Freedom for Mumia Abu-Jamal.")

Friedrich Nietzsche's theory concerning fragmentation of the psyche through power-relations into "multiplicities" is another obvious reference. Leslie Paul Thiele, "The Politics of the Soul: The Soul as a Plurality" and "The Well-Ordered Soul," in Friedrich Nietzsche and the Politics of the Soul: A Study in Heroic Individualism (New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1990), pp. 51-99 and Mark Warren, Nietzsche and Political Thought (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1991), pp. 227-237 ("Nietzsche's Political Elaborations of the Will to Power"), then David Ingram, "Foucault and Habermas on the Subject of Reason," in Gary Gutting, ed., The Cambridge Companion to Michel Foucault (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994), pp. 215-261 and Michel Foucault, Mental Illness and Psychology (Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1987), pp. 44-60 and G. Deleuze & F. Guattari, On the Line (New York & Paris: Semiotexte, 1983), pp. 84-113. (See the mirror scene in "Inception.")

The organic theory of the state is adumbrated in the model of the psyche, as "disturbed," only to the extent that it retains freedom and personality from the collectivity. The Village is a psychic territory and also a social experiment. We are told that we must "assimilate or die." Freud meets Plato, then they go out to dinner with Hegel and Marx. The effects of trauma and shock on a mind are abstracted to the level of collective mind or social theory. Just as persons may be driven to violence through psychological stress and manipulations leading to terminal shock, so entire cultures may go mad and abandon their values in crazy efforts to "domesticate" and control defenseless populations, including children and old people, after tragedies like 9/11. All of us must resist the concerted and well-planned efforts to transform us into "gladiators" for the powerful. Perhaps robot bombs will be fired into enclaves of political radicals on the Berkeley campus. John Le Carre, "The United States Has Gone Mad," in Not One More Death (New York & London: Verso, 2006), p. 11. ("America has entered one of its periods of historical madness, but this is the worst I can remember[.]")

I will focus on the concept of evil as "political-therapy" aimed at subjectivation; I will then turn to the concepts of love examined in this series. "The Prisoner" expresses doubts concerning the capacity of postmodern beings to feel genuine love under conditions of alienation, fragmentation, and mutual suspicion; finally, I turn to "quantum metaphysics." Nick Herbert, Quantum Reality (New York: Anchor, 1985) and Amir D. Aczel, Entanglement (New York & London: Plume, 2001).

Parallel universes are to be expected not only as a product of quantum physics, but also socially -- for fragmented and compartmentalized selves interacting with other "pieces" of human beings recovering from mass-manufactured death as spectacle and entertainment. Days after 9/11, American insurance companies were offering "death planning kits." ("It's never too early or late to prepare!")

"This notion of psychological defense is of major importance. The whole of psychoanalysis has centered around it. An investigation of the unconscious, a search for infantile traumas, the freeing of a libido that supposedly existed behind all the phenomena of the affective life, an uncovering of such mythical impulses as the death instinct -- psychoanalysis has long been just this; but it is tending more and more to turn its attention to the defense mechanisms and finally to admit that the subject reproduces his history only because he responds to a PRESENT situation." (Foucault commenting on Bingswanger, p. xiv.) Please compare Willem Van Reijen, "The Enlightenment Devours its Children," in Adorno: An Introduction (Philadelphia: Pennbridge Books, 1992), pp. 33-43.

Number 6 is a resident of both a bleak mental Village and a post-apocalyptic New York, filled with people who can only connect "for a little while," without real communication or self-giving, dominated by dark corporations and mysterious powers of surveillance, security, and control. The show begins to feel like a documentary. Part of what is suggested in this narrative is that persons dwelling in such shattered territories -- whether psychological or political -- are in danger of being forced to "adjust" to a passive, almost dead condition. We are in danger of dying, inadvertedly, without allowing our demise to disturb our busy schedules or tax planning.

Death is indeed a lingering off-stage presence -- holes that appear in the Village and that seem to lead nowhere symbolize the death that awaits all of us -- even as schizoid division is a constant danger in the individual's journey towards integration. The resolution of this drama has to do with the possibility of self-sacrifice, fulfilling the Christian allegory in a manner that would make Milton proud. Loving others is "Paradise Regained." ("Out of the Past.")

What is analogized to the afterlife is not the semi-life of the Villagers who are distracted by entertainment or medicated into oblivion. The underworld or landscape of death is the so-called "real world" of New York after the impossible has become possible. We are the undead. We are the dreamers. We are all victims of broken minds. We are potential terrorists subject to control and surveillance in the totalitarian society that America is slowly becoming. Observe your neighbors. Inform on mom and dad. Is your child a terrorist? Are you potentially dangerous? If not, why not? In the aftermath of trauma, persons and nations become paranoid. Defensive. Mr. Cheney would remind us that even paranoid persons and nations have real enemies. ("Morality Tale.")

"It is never too early or late to prepare!"

I. "Assimilate or Die!": Thoughts on the Problem of Evil in the Age of Therapy.

Ian McKellen deserves an Emmy for this performance. Mr. McKellen understands the demonic brio of this character -- Number 2. The great British actor's performance is enriched by knowing allusions to Milton and Dante. Mr. McKellen, clearly, is a very well-read man. Byron's "Don Juan" -- who is torn between lovers -- hovers in the mind, as Mr. Caviezel suggests this figure, but we see, also, the more puzzling archetype of Bernard Shaw's "Don Juan in Hell." Sartre's "No Exit" is a way of dramatizing this "prisoner's dilemma." I wonder whether Mr. McKellen has "played" Marlowe's "Dr. Faustus"? As in Sartre's great essay "Anti-Semite and Jew," Number 2 and "The Prisoner" are involved in an intricate dance or dialectic of freedom against necessity. Freedom wins. I hope. ("Jacques Derrida's Philosophy as Jazz" and "'Inception': A Movie Review.")

Both women in this series are hauntingly beautiful and beguiling -- especially Ms. Atwell --seducing audience members into sharing Number 6's dilemma. Ms. Atwell's flawless New York accent is a miracle of British thespians' concern with technique and preparation. Ms. Atwell's character is "blind" in the Village -- like Milton, Borges, and so many blind "visionaries." James Joyce? Is this the blindness of love? Or is this blindness a way of seeing more truly from the heart? ("'Brideshead Revisited': A Movie Review" and "'The Matrix': A Movie Review.")

Alessandro Ferrara has devoted considerable philosophical attention to the phenomenon of evil in postmodernist cultural spaces within the blasted psyches produced by cultural-overload or -shock. Professor Ferrara's work develops in relation to the monuments examining absolute evil after the Holocaust. We see the essential importance of those Twin Towers. For me, 9/11-like horror has been a twenty-one year (and counting) experience:

"I will start from the assumption that radical evil -- provisionally defined as that which is repugnant to our conscience to bring into any kind of relation to the good, even into opposition to the good -- is never pursued directly by human beings. As Plato reminds us in 'Protagoras,' no one commits evil actions while thinking that they are evil. ["This is for your own good."] People commit evil actions while carried away by their misconceived views of the good. ["The Patriot Act."] A similar point is made by Kant. In the section called 'Man is Evil by Nature' of book 1 of Religion Within the Province of Reason Alone, Kant points out that 'man (even the most wicked one) does not, under any maxim whatsoever, repudiate the moral law in the manner of a rebel (renouncing obedience to it). [That's Milton's "Lucifer."] In fact, a 'reason exempt from the moral law' or a 'malignant reason' or a 'thoroughly evil will' cannot, according to Kant, be a human form of reason. [Such a totally evil person abdicates his or her humanity.] It can only be a form of reason of a devilish being. [Inhuman.] The evil person, instead, is distinct from the morally good one neither by the absence of the moral law in her heart (for Kant the moral law is innate to our inner constitution qua moral subjects) nor simply by her receptiveness to incentives of a sensuous nature (for also that receptiveness is equally part of every human subject), but rather is set apart from the good person on the basis of the priority she accords to sensuous incentives, over the moral law, in shaping the maxims of her conduct."

Alessandro Ferrara, "The Evil That Men Do: A Meditation on Radical Evil From a Postmetaphysical Point of View," in Maria Pia Lara, ed., Rethinking Evil (Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2001), pp. 173-188. ("An Open Letter to My Torturers in New Jersey, Terry Tuchin and Diana Lisa Riccioli.")

By this understanding, the evil person is afflicted with a pathological GREED for sensation or possessions, control or domination of others, combined with satisfaction of selfish pleasures regardless of the suffering caused to others. Ginarte? Garcia? Notice that Number 2 is not alone:

"Hitler and the other Nazi leaders presented themselves not simply as military leaders, but also as 'collective physicians' who would take the adequate measures for eradicating what they had discovered -- namely, the ominous consequences of a racial virus called 'international judentum,' [Patricia Cohen?] which had begun to spread its effects everywhere [Al Qaeda?] but with particular virulence in Germany. World history was recast as a biological lab -- where Rassenhygiene, racial hygiene, became the main imperative." (Ferrara, p. 176.) ("The Heidegger Controversy.")

Adjustment. The goal was to produce a Village of healthy and beautiful "Aryan" children and adults. A Pax Americana. No homosexuals. No Communists and socialists. No annoying intellectuals to question everything. No little brown people adhering to strange religions. Everyone would be practical and law-abiding: "Family is very important to the healthy community." (Joseph Goebbels) No "reinventing" the family. No insistence on the right of persons to love others freely and non-exclusively. ("Is there a gay marriage right?") The autonomy of conscience must be forbidden. Everything is subject to invasion by the state, through hypnosis and interrogation, perhaps, a state that acts secretly on the lives of its victims. ("Terry Tuchin, Diana Lisa Riccioli, and New Jersey's Agency of Torture" and "What is it like to be tortured?" soon "What is it like to be raped?")

Not surprisingly, the bioevolutionary project that the Nazis introduced and which fascinated Foucault in his late work ("biotechnology" and "bioethics") features a concern with "masculine courage" and "feminine demureness" or chastity. This is our old enemy, racism. Fascism. Family values? Christopher R. Browning, "Ordinary Men," in Donald L. Niewyk, ed., The Holocaust (New York: Houghton-Mifflin, 2003), pp. 76-91. ("How does a Jew become Mengele?")

Now let us turn to America's embrace of evil: Christopher Kutz, "The Lawyers Know Sin: Complicity in Torture," in Karen J. Greenberg, ed., The Torture Debate in America (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006), pp. 241-247 and Mark Danner, "The Depositions: The Prisoners Speak," in Torture and Truth: America, Abu Ghraib, and the War on Terror (New York: NYRB, 2004), pp. 225-249. (The way to oppose terror is through terror and torture.) Please compare "America's Unethical Medical Torturers" with "Is America's Legal Ethics a Lie?"

Sometimes you have to destroy a village in order to save a village. Perhaps this logic has caused our leaders to protect our Constitutional freedoms and rights by violating them. Unfortunately, my writings are suppressed, vandalized, plagiarized, and censored in America. ("How Censorship Works in America" and "Censorship and Cruelty in New Jersey.")

These thoughts may find their way to readers in the world who will be able to articulate similar concerns, making use of popular culture and works of art -- like "The Prisoner" -- to explore these issues which should be discussed today in America and the world. Someday, it may be possible for these essays to be published outside of America. ("What is it like to be plagiarized?")

The obvious turn to Hannah Arendt's philosophical corpus is unavoidable. Not so much Eichman in Jerusalem, but Professor Arendt's later weary and sad meditations on the systematic nature of evil in our times. We moderns are the only humans to have created "factories" of torture and death. We have chosen in America, in the words of Mr. Cheney, to "go to the dark side." I do not believe that history will judge this Bush/Cheney decision in favor of torture to have been successful or wise. Torture has guaranteed us generations of enemies in the world. Our prison policies have guaranteed us generations of criminals in America. ("Psychological Torture in the American Legal System.")

"It was the totalitarian attempt to make human beings ... superflous by transforming them into something other than (and less than) human, that led her to the themes and questions that are so prominent in The Human Condition. I fully agree with Margaret Canovan, one of the few interpreters of Arendt who traces in detail the trains of thought that led from The Origins of Totalitarianism to The Human Condition, when she writes: 'Not only is The Human Condition itself much more closely related to The Origins of Totalitarianism than it appears to be, but virtually the entire agenda of Arendt's political thought was set by her reflections on the mid-century. ... "

Richard Bernstein, "Arendt: Radical Evil and the Banality of Evil," in Radical Evil: A Philosophical Interrogation (New York & London: Polity, 2002), pp. 212-213.

" ... What is it about superflousness [being an "object,"] that makes this evil so distinctive and so radical? [Is it like being Ralph Ellison's "invisible man"?] It is not exclusively the humiliation, torture, and systematic murder of millions (Jews and non-Jews). It is also the hubris of those totalitarian leaders who think they are omnipotent, that they can rival a God who created a plurality of human beings." (Ibid.) ("David Remnick" or "Daniel Mendelsohn"? "What is it like to be plagiarized?")

Torturers say: "We are the gods." These Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo torturers are our self-professed "superiors." The Villagers are slaves. Are you a slave? Please compare Richard Bernstein, "Evil and the Corruption of Religion," in The Abuse of Evil: The Corruption of Politics and Religion Since 9/11 (New York & London: Polity, 2005), pp. 96-97. ("The widespread use of torture and deliberate humiliation [by Americans] not only at Abu Ghraib, but throughout Iraq.")

This is the hell depicted in "The Prisoner": America as a bizarre and twisted version of Dick Cheney's "wet dream" of power. This is the America that is seen by the world at this moment in our history. A Disneyworld fantasy of normality and order, self-righteous, prescriptive, greedy, intolerant of dissent or contradiction which is also amazingly beautiful and hopeful as well as morally concerned, unable to come to terms with its so-called "dark side," still judgmental of others on the planet. America is schizoid, like Number 6. If you have not done so, please see "Something Wild." ("The Art of Melanie Griffith.")

The paradox in which we live called "America" is also a contradiction that many of us embody as individuals -- the same nation firing drone weapons into villages killing 48 persons to "get" a single alleged terrorist and torturing "detainees" in Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo is rescuing people in Haiti, feeding and clothing victims as well as providing medical assistance. The world sees this contradiction that we are that is best captured in the antinomies of our legal system. ("Roberto Unger's Revolutionary Legal Theory.")

I am afraid that saying these things will guarantee another wave of cybercrime directed at these writings from New Jersey's government, despite the provisions of the Constitution of the United States of America. If I had a dog, they'd kick my dog. As President Bill Clinton said during his first presidential campaign: "Now, they're picking on my mamma!"

Is a conspiracy to violate the civil rights of a secretly selected victim in which lawyers participate not a breach of legal ethics, Mr. Rabner? Is such a conspiracy criminal and legally unethical? I think so. Before turning to the possible solution to America's "prisoner's dilemma" -- through my discussion of love and quantum metaphysics -- I will return to Herbert Marcuse's influential "Essay on Liberation":

" ... 'Law and Order': these words have always had an ominous sound; the entire necessity and the entire horror of legitimate force are condensed, and sanctioned, in this phrase. There can be no human association without law and order, enforceable law and order, but there are degrees of good and evil in human associations -- measured in terms of the legitimate, organized violence required to protect the established society against the poor, the oppressed, the insane: the victims of its well-being. Over and above their legitimacy in constitutional terms, the extent to which established law and order can legitimately demand (and command) obedience and compliance largely depends (or ought to depend) on the extent to which this law and this order obey and comply with their own standards and values. These may first be ideological (like the ideas of liberty, equality, fraternity advanced by the revolutionary bourgesoise), but the ideology can become a material political force in the armor of the opposition as these values are betrayed, compromised, denied in the social reality. Then the betrayed promises are, as it were, 'taken over' by the opposition, and with them the claim for legitimacy. In this situation, law and order become something to be established as against the established law and order: the existing society has become illegitimate, unlawful: [New Jersey-like in its corruption,] it has invalidated its own law. Such has been the dynamic of historical revolutions; it is hard to see how it can be arrested indefinitely." ("Quills.")

Herbert Marcuse, "Subverting Forces --in Transition," in An Essay on Liberation (Boston: Beacon Press, 1969), pp. 77-78. ("Law and Ethics in the Soprano State" and "New Jersey's 'Ethical' Legal System.")

Perhaps the solution has always been staring us in the face. Compare Herbert Marcuse, "Sartre, Historical Materialism and Philosophy," in George Novack, ed., Existentialism Versus Marxism (New York: Dell, 1966), pp. 165-172 with Colin McGinn, "The Evil Character," in Ethics, Evil, and Fiction (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997), pp. 61-92.

II. Love and Soul: Does "The Prisoner" become an African-American Revolutionary?

Among the disturbing features of this series are depictions of a terrible loss of affect from romantic relationships. Ms. Atwell's character encounters the New York version of Number 6. The man and woman -- both become "generic" -- return to the man's apartment. They consider having sex. Their discussion is intense, but weirdly impersonal. They are without genuine self-revelation or burning passion as distinct from desire for each other, or for much of anything. The surreal version of the relationship in the Village includes a symbolic blindness, as I have indicated, on the part of 4-15 (Ms. Atwell), together with jealousy for a rival, 313 (Ruth Wilson).

All of this interaction is deliberately cartoon-like, suggesting the characters' inability to love intensely. This is a condition which seems to have become generalized throughout American culture. ("Martha Nussbaum on the Vindication of Love.") Let us contrast Kenneth J. Gergen's descriptions of the Romantic subject with the postmodern self:

" ... much of the contemporary vocabulary of the person, along with associated ways of life, finds its origins in the romantic period. It is a vocabulary of passion, purpose, depth, and personal significance: a vocabulary that generates heroes, of genius, and of inspired work. It places love in the forefront of human endeavors, praising those who abandon the 'useful' and the 'functional' for the sake of others. It fosters a belief in deep dynamics of personality -- marriage as a 'communion of souls,' family as bonded in love, and friendship as a lifetime commitment. [Furthermore, these relationships are "defined by the heart."] Because of romanticism we can trust in moral values and an ultimate significance to the human venture. For many the loss of such a vocabulary would essentially be the collapse of anything meaningful in life. [Notice that retaining what is good in this system of values does not prevent us from reinventing their implications all the time.] If love as intimate communion, intrinsic worth, creative inspiration, moral values, and passionate expression were all scratched from our vocabularies, life for many would be a pallid affair indeed. Yet, as we shall see, it is just this vocabulary that is threatened by the modernist" -- and postmodernist -- "views that follow."

The Saturated Self: Dilemmas of Identity in Contemporary Life (New York: Basic Books, 1991), p. 27.

Then,

"With the technology of social saturation, two of the major factors traditionally impeding relationships -- namely time and space -- are both removed. The past can be continuously renewed -- via voice, video, and visit, for example -- and distance poses no substantial barriers to ongoing interchange. Yet this same freedom ironically leads to a form of enslavement. For each person, passion, or potential incorporated into oneself exacts a penalty -- a penalty both of being and being with. ... as others are incoporated into the self, and their desires become one's own, there is an expansion of goals -- of 'musts,' wants, and needs. Attention is necessitated, effort is exerted, frustrations are encountered. Each new desire places its demands and reduces one's liberties." (pp. 74-75.)

Men speak of "having to go to a 'chic flic.'" Women complain about sports events. In a culture where the consumer model provides the only example of interaction, the subject is constantly forced to determine whether this "other" person, a lover -- like this appliance -- satisfies "my" needs and demands, or should be replaced. Your true spouse may be your t.v. set. ("A Doll's Aria.")

Notice that this draining of emotion from "relationships" relies on an assumption that selves are separate choosing entities with "needs" that are akin to commercial concerns. This reduces the other to a satisfier of needs who is distinguishable from ourselves. Relationships become a form of prostitution. This is to create one's own "prisoner's dilemma." See Marshall Berman's discussion "Of Marx's Capital," in Adventures in Marxism (New York & London: Verso, 2002), pp. 19-37.

With the obscene multiplication of entertainment and consumer options, opportunities become infinite and demands paralyzing. People wonder about what am I "getting" out of this relationship and whether "the gains outweigh the losses"? Such an attitude to passionate affairs would have seemed insane to nineteenth century figures or romantic persons at any time:

" ... Liberation becomes a swirling vertigo of demands. ... Daily life has become a sea of drowning demands, and there is no shore in sight." (Gergen, p. 75.)

This postmodernist "inner-emptiness" is also a product of psychological disintegration in the aftermath of great shock (or shocks), like 9/11 for America. Subjectivity is projected on to the contents of shop windows and entertainment products -- i.e., movies and t.v. shows, like "The Prisoner" -- these items are often related. People in Manhattan still seem to wander around in a daze, mentally-obliterated, baffled. They are not given the tools with which to understand the geo-political realities that explain events like what took place on 9/11 -- unless they spend hours every day reading elite intellectual works by commentators like Chomsky and newspapers in several languages -- since they are invaded every second of their waking lives by nonsensical slogans and advertising jingles as well as manipulated by power.

How does one come to terms with the disappearance of a person you saw at breakfast one day and never again thereafter? There is no meaning, no reason, no understanding of such malice and evil that can diminish the hatred and disgust that one feels for persons responsible for such human suffering, often out of insane ideological commitments dramatized in gestures or experiments based on those ideologies or religions, fundamentalisms of various kinds.

The banality and ignorance routinely found among American lawyers (who should have some semblance of an education) is shocking to persons from other countries. I am thinking of persons like Sybil R. Moses or Stuart Rabner -- individuals who give "mediocrity" a bad reputation. Below their level are semi-illiterates in New Jersey's legal profession happily wondering "Who had the stop sign?" Therapists may be worse. To have such persons address or seek to resolve cultural-political dilemmas of this magnitude is absurd. Yet it is such judges and officials who classify persons (like me) as "retarded" and "sub-human." ("Why Philosophy is for Everybody.")
The goal of this system is to transform New Yorkers and all Americans into beings like the residents of the Village in "The Prisoner." A revolutionary act in America in 2009-2010 is to turn off your t.v. set and refuse to purchase any consumer item for 24 hours. Most people are no longer capable of these seemingly simple acts and would regard the suggestion to do such things as bizarre to the point of being insane. The Invisible Committee, The Coming Insurrection (Paris & New York: Semiotexte, 2009), pp. 31-35 and Judith Butler, Precarious Life: The Powers of Mourning and Violence (New York & London: Verso, 2004), pp. 128-153, then Alex Callinicos, Against Postmodernism: A Marxist Critique (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1990), pp. 128-129. Finally, Fredric Jameson, "Postmodernism, or the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism," NLR 146 (1984). ("Not One More Victim.")

The Village is akin to a shopping mall (Xanadu?), where persons are guided to walk in some directions that are intended to maximize their consumption of food and goods through the strategic placement of items in displays appealing to synthetically-generated appetites. This is even more true during that special time of the year when we worship Santa and "Frosty the Snowman." It is painful, if increasingly routine, to witness the manipulations of family members transformed into characters in a drama of commercial or other exploitation. Stupidity and ignorance are convenient for controllers, but they are increasingly damaging to America's competitiveness in the world economy. Japanese companies require persons with Masters' degrees in America to do what high school graduates accomplish in Japan. In New Jersey, they will need employees with Ph.D.'s to fill out basic forms.

Sex is only another such commercial appetite. Sex is a commodity, another consumer item, as are the persons transformed into sparkling sexual "items" in shop windows -- like Ms. Atwell, perhaps -- intended to satisfy those yearnings in virtual terms, just as a burger at McDonald's "cures" hunger while providing zero nutrition and, maybe, contributing to killing you at the same time. How about a "happy meal"? See what I mean about "moronization"? Morons are usually blissfully "happy," as in the U.S. Senate. ("Does Senator Menendez Have Mafia Friends?") See the final section of my essay, "The 'Galatea Scenario' and the Mind/Body Problem." Like Number 6, the protagonist of Yevgeny Zamyatin's classic anti-Communist dystopia, We (New York: Avon, 1972), pp. vi-vii, is seduced into ...

" ... violent and irrational passion" -- as an attempt to feel alive in a death-like society, "violence is therapy" -- "he makes a shocking discovery of a long-suspected, long-suppressed realm [...] the realm within, of individual identity, of self. 'Who am I? What am I like?' he cries despairingly. In a supremely comic scene, he visits a doctor, seeking help against this terrifying malady. The doctor gravely tells him [that] he is seriously ill -- he has developed a soul. 'Is it dangerous?' he asks. 'Incurable,' the doctor replies. But alas, it turns out to be curable in the end. The Benefactor's [Lenin, Stalin, Hitler, Cheney] men have found a remedy for individuality, for rebellion, for humanity: a simple operation to excise the seat of all infection -- imagination -- and reduce all citizens of the one state to grinning semi-morons." ("'The Island': A Movie Review.")

How about surprising the family with a lobotomy! In these evil social spaces -- regardless of political affiliation -- all of us must be transformed into brain-dead residents of New Jersey. Of course, "brain dead residents of New Jersey" may be a redundancy, especially in Ridgewood. The goal for state controllers is for victims to accept that "violence is therapy." For this reason urban males are made violent. "Dreamers" must be cured of their failure to adjust. This originally Communist solution has been "improved" upon by postmodernist culture in the megasocieties of the First World, especially in America. Distraction (also, biochemistry) and confusion generated by so-called "entertainment" and the cartoon-version of the world on television is made available just for you. "They are evil. We are good. You are with us or against us." "You give us three minutes and we bring you the world." ("A Review of the Television Series 'Alice.'")

Life in various amusement parks -- each leading into the others, like a labyrinth -- makes it unlikely that contemporary Americans will ever experience the so-called "real world," not the one on MTV, except for the 49 million of us who are hungry on a regular basis, of course, and destitute or homeless persons, illiterates (like Manohla Dargis and/or Ginger Thompson and/or Claudia Dreifus/Patricia Cohen of the Times), and other unfortunate individuals whom we are encouraged to ignore and despise. This may be a good time for New Jersey to insert another "error" in this essay. Is the goal of frustration tactics to make me violent? ("'Inception': A Movie Review.")

The assault on the psyche makes it perfectly understandable that genuine love and romantic passion between man and woman lasting for decades is absurd in the judgment of a Dr. Phil-like dominant ethos. Big Brother in Orwell's vision has been replaced by Oprah Winfrey as well as the women on ABC's "The View." (Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton seem to offer opposing views of family?) Love that results in excruciating agony from unwanted separation or loss of an adored presence in one's life becomes rare, or even impossible, for the semi-humans living in this Wasteland of despair and nihilism. Whatever. This sort of suffering -- or any deep emotion -- is literally incomprehensible for the autistic zombies that emerge in postmodernist cultural spaces, like the Village, which is exactly the goal of Number 2. It is very convenient for powerful forces in American society that the population be made both ignorant and apathetic. ("New Jersey is the Home of the Living Dead" and "Mafia Influence in New Jersey Courts and Politics.")

During the Reagan "go-go" eighties, the slogan was "Greed is Good!" Today, the idea of "Goodness" has been replaced by "Niceness." It does not matter what kind of person you really are, but whether you appear "nice" and "down-to-earth" as opposed to "stuck-up." Dick Cheney or Jeffrey Dhamer may be "nice," in this understanding, even if they have done terrible things. Whereas, someone like Pablo Picasso or Norman Mailer may offend against political correctness in the process of making art, so as to be less "nice." ("Does Senator Menendez Have Mafia Friends?" and "Is Senator Menendez a Suspect in Mafia-Political Murder in New Jersey?")

African-American culture has largely developed in opposition to conditions of dehumanization and resistance against oppression. African-American culture is in eternal protest against official and unofficial forms of enslavement. If there are people in this world who are experts on resisting subtle forms of oppression and coopting, then it must be African-Americans. James Baldwin, at the level of literary genius, and philosophical thinkers like Angela Davis and Cornel West have produced a body of intellectual work that is about RESISTING injustice and promoting psychological-philosophical INTEGRATION. ("America's Holocaust" and "Driving While Black [DWB] in New Jersey.")

Soul, passion, solidarity and hope are weapons of liberation developed by African-American culture that are expressed in artistic works of genius made available to all who remain human and capable of appreciating such works. If you do not "get" Billy Holiday, then you have probably died but have failed to notice the fact of your demise. ("America's Holocaust" and "What a man's gotta do.") Al Baker, "'Hot Potato' With a Gun, and a Bullet Takes a Toll in the Bronx," in The New York Times, November 19, 2009, at p. A1. (Carvett Gentles, 16, accused of shooting Veda Vasquez, 15.)

Judith Butler and many others have found themselves forced to think and act against oppression. Ernesto "Che" Guevara expressed one solution in a conversation with Jean Paul Sartre, allegedly, "commitment to struggle, endless struggle, against social injustice." Casualties of the psychological warfare aimed at the African-American community, poor people, and women are visible in America's streets, every day. This will not change with the election of President Obama nor with the arrival of any Chief Executive. (Again: "Driving While Black [DWB] in New Jersey" and "How to Execute the Innocent in New Jersey," then "What is it like to be tortured?")

Number 6's journey toward integration and overcoming of his violent impulses and anti-social inclinations, the defeat of any tendency toward evil in himself (which is the real defeat of Number 2), is made possible only by his love for two women -- women embodying the dual aspects of independent passionate women in these postmodernist cultures -- and the suggested final act of kenosis or self-giving is the ambiguous resolution of this nightmare, where realities are always in question and evil is omnipresent. Welcome to Manhattan in the twenty-first century.

Why ambiguous? Well, this work is uncertain even about the possibility of resistance, much less of successful revolution against postmodernist society's omnipresent and totalizing power to define reality by creating the psychological equivalent of Auschwitz as Disneyworld:

"Foucault's irony works by portraying the very practices of humane penal reform and sexual liberation as instead further enmeshing us in a 'carceral society' and an enforced regimen of truth. ["Political Correctness."] Yet for many readers his irony is troubling. The tone of Foucault's portrayal suggests that these new forms of power/knowledge ought to be resisted. [For some of us, even in a doomed effort, resistance will always be offered.] Yet he resolutely rejects the idea that there is any ground or standpoint from which such a call to resistance could be legitimated. The connection he proposes between power and knowledge is not just a particular institutional use of knowledge as a means to domination. Foucault objects to the very idea of a knowledge or a truth outside of networks of power relations. The scope of his objection thus also encompasses the possibility of a critical knowledge that would speak the truth to power, exposing domination for what it is, and thereby enabling or encouraging effective resistance to it. [We see the influence of Malcolm X, Mumia Abu-Jamal, Assata Shakur, Angela Davis, and many anonymous African-American heros of resistance.]"

Joseph Rouse, "Power/Knowledge," in Gary Gutting, ed., The Cambridge Companion to Michel Foucault, at p. 99 (emphasis added).

This task of resisting oppression against overwhelming and inescapable power-relations is Number 6's true dilemma. Billions of persons can identify with this dilemma. Tragically, this is a dilemma associated with the U.S. for many persons in the world. (Take another look at the efforts to suppress and destroy this essay because it is better than what appeared in the Times.) Does Mathew Alper know "Benedict Carey"? I wonder whether Mr. Alper has visited my sites? "Again and again" powerful dissenting and protesting speakers will be destroyed through criminal efforts at silencing and suppressing speech or the torture of family members in the interests of preserving an illusory consensus and myth of normality. We will inflict violence and rapes on people in order to generate violence and rapes for which victims may be punished by the legal system. ("Mumia Abu-Jamal and the Unconstitutionality of the Death Penalty.")

Conclusion: Resolving the Quantum Mystery of the "Prisoner's Dilemma."

Robert Nozick explains the so-called "prisoner's dilemma" (contemporary America) which has been widely discussed in terms of this t.v. series:

"Another candidate for a fundamental principle of morality concerns cooperative action in prisoner's dilemma situations, so-called after the example used by A.W. Tucker in first delineating them. ..."

Nozick provides an illustration:

"An action that leaves someone better off or as well off, for each action another person might do, as any other action available to him is termed by game theorists a (weakly) dominant action; while an action over which another act is dominant is termed dominated. It appears that when a dominant action is available in an impersonal situation a rational person should perform it. Yet the prisoners' dilemma situations are so structured that both are worse off performing their dominant action than if both had performed their dominated one."

Philosophical Explanations (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1981), p. 542 (emphasis added). For a cinematic depiction of the classic "prisoner's dilemma" scenario, see Clive Owen's Guggenheim scene in "The International."

American criticisms of other societies -- like Cuba, for example -- as "unfree," are rejected by persons all over the world who are aware of America's public promise of freeedom, even as they see the reality of censorship and oppression, as in this blog, for example. Good luck with the grand juries, Albio Sires and "El Bobo" Menendez. ("The Embargo Against Cuba is Rejected by the World.")

Are any of the "journalists" profiled in these essays acting on behalf of political or legal figures in New Jersey? A little "payola" and you can insert your views in the Times? Are cybercriminals "hired" by American politicians to disrupt the web sites of political dissidents? Senator Bob, can you shed any light on these mysteries? Mr. Openheimer? (Again: "Is Senator Menendez a Suspect in Mafia-Political Murder in New Jersey?")

Much American foreign policy and social scientific "engineering" is based on this type of madness. The very notion that a dominated action is for the "choosing agent's own good" depends upon cultural assumptions concerning agency and human dignity that are not widely shared in the world. You getting this, Terry Tuchin? These are American cultural assumptions that are INSULTING and denigrating of others, especially of persons in the Islamic world. How does it feel for New Jersey's powerful bosses to receive such treatment from one of their victims? Once more: How does a Jew become Mengele, Terry? Why do you assume that you are authorized to decide how others should live or what they should feel? ("Terry Tuchin, Diana Lisa Riccioli, and New Jersey's Agency of Torture.")

This attitude towards others as worthy of "domination" or enslavement is insulting because it denies the independent wills of other persons, often reflecting a hideous will to power and sexual delight in cruelty on the part of powerful politicians or so-called "therapists." This means you, Terry Tuchin. (Number 2.) Senator Bob? ("Corrupt Law Firms, Senator Bob, and New Jersey Ethics.")

For many cultures -- and for an entire central tradition in Western thought -- an action produced by domination (or dominated action) is always the WORST possible action for a person to perform. This is true regardless of material "self-interest." Such an action is a "lose-lose" action. Death is preferable to domination or enslavement. ("Richard A. Posner on Voluntary Actions and Criminal Responsibility" and "Behaviorism is Evil.")

To act under conditions of domination is to be a slave. The actions of a slave are always an abdication of humanity. Number 6 must resist the will of Number 2, just as he must breathe in order to remain human. ("Give me liberty or give me death.") This is what much of the world wishes to say to America. We must decide our own fates. The prisoner is willing to abdicate his own will only when it may serve the interest of another whose welfare concerns him even at the expense of his materially understood "rational self-interest." Compare Jean Paul Sartre, Saint Genet: Actor and Martyr (New York: Mentor, 1964), pp. 71-275 ("I decided to be what crime made of me ...") with Walter Dean Myers, Malcolm X: By Any Means Necessary (New York: Scholastic, 1965), pp. 63-96, p. 37 ("A lawyer -- that's not a realistic goal for a n_____.")

To the extent that you remain silent and passive in response to the tortures that you are witnessing at these blogs, these tortures become your actions. These are the crimes for which you share in responsibility. The same may be said for the events at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo. Furthermore, the denial of one person's inviolable Constitutional rights is the potential violation of every other person's fundamental rights in America. New Jersey has long ago surrendered the capacity or right to pronounce a judgment on my "ethics." You will not stop me from reading or writing. ("Who is responsible for the cover-up in New Jersey?")

A criminal, whore, or n____ is something that you must choose to become or a status that you must accept. As long as you reject the label placed on you, you remain free. "A person can be destroyed, but not defeated." (Ernest Hemingway and "Bernard Williams and Identity.") Who is "unethical"? Me or you? Who is a whore in New Jersey? ("Corrupt Law Firms, Senator Bob, and New Jersey Ethics" and "The Long Goodbye.") You decide. ("Does Senator Menendez Have Mafia Friends?" and "Cement is Gold in New Jersey!" then "Senator Bob Loves Xanadu!")

One letter was deleted from the foregoing statement in parentheses. To define such a highly sensible and widely-shared attitude of hostility towards all forms of domination among billions of persons in the world as a kind of "material rational self-interest" is absurd. This is to make the very concept of "rational self-interest" meaningless. ("Roberto Unger's Revolutionary Legal Theory" and "Richard A. Posner on Voluntary Actions and Criminal Responsibility.")

For many of us, DEATH will always be preferable to such a condition of domination in life. Attempts to induce psychosis or suicide through frustrations (or embargos) will not succeed. Such attempts will merely confirm many of the criticisms of power and fascism found in these essays. The decision by another person concerning what is "for my own good" in terms of my values is always the wrong decision for me. There are contexts -- an example is the welfare of a child -- where the goal of one's actions is not "maximizing self-interest" -- but the welfare of another person, even at the cost of my own welfare, or life. The very notion of a "self" that is distinct from those I love and their interests is ridiculous for many philosophers, for example, Hegel and Marx are strong communitarians. G.A. Cohen, Why Not Socialism? (Oxford & Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2009). ("The Soldier and the Ballerina.")

A revolutionary is always fighting for the future. Such a fight for the future is a kind of love. How that struggle for the future is understood may differ among persons, but the individual's motivation does not change. Number 6 comes to resolve his dilemma only when he struggles for the future. (Mumia Abu-Jamal, Che Guevara, Malcolm X, Dr. King, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, George Washington, Mary Wollstonecraft -- select your hero.)

Please compare Ernesto "Che" Guevara, Marx & Engels: A Biographical Introduction (New York: Ocean Press, 2008), pp. 30-64 with Karl Marx, Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts (1844, published in 1932), then Edward W. Said, "Speaking Truth to Power," in Representations of the Intellectual (New York: Random House, Inc. 1994), pp. 85-103. (The Palestinian struggle is most effective as a moral mission to achieve sovereignty and self-determination.) Finally, Walter Dean Myers, Malcolm X: By Any Means Necessary (New York: Scholastic, 1995), pp. 144-166. ("Malcolm's Haj.")

Within the context of the contemporary American philosophical conversation, the implications of this "prisoner's dilemma" and the values-assumptions underlying the doctrine are rejected by Kantians, like Nozick, whose next section in this very work is entitled "Kantian Structuring":

"There could not be a universe in which it was alright" -- regardless of "self-interest" -- "to murder or torture people with no overriding reason. [9/11-like atrocities are always evil.] Moral truths do not just happen to hold in our universe. They hold in any universe -- anyone containing value-seeking I's. Therefore, they are more like NECESSARY TRUTHS than like contingent ones. [This is true regardless of the dynamics of a situation.]" (Nozick, p. 545.) ("Why I am not an ethical relativist" and "John Finnis and Ethical Cognitivism.")

Among those necessary truths that feature in all rational moral agency is the human capacity for "other-regarding" loves and the actions required by such loves. The Kantian implications undermining the assumptions of the "prisoner's dilemma" are explored by Nozick:

"To ground ethics sufficiently, the structuring that brings ethics in its wake must be inescapable, and also something we would not choose to escape, even if we could. One thing we would not wish to escape is being an I. [Persons must be capable of love.] If the process of structuring ourselves as I's brought ethics along, then ethics would be deeply grounded [in our very humanity.] (One attempt to work out such a theory is Fitche's in his System of Ethics.) [I urge a return to Schelling for Continental thinkers.] Ethical truths, then, would be avoidable only at the cost of no longer being a self; the egoist [Rand] would be able to avoid ethical truths only by giving up the very thing whose interests he [or she] wants to place paramount, the self. (Note that this is a point about the existence of truths, not about motivation.)" (Nozick, p. 547.)

From necessity (ethics) to love (other-regarding action). Nozick fails to realize that the mere existence of a truth provides a motivation to action. However, Thomas Nagel did achieve that realization as he developed this famous response to the "prisoner's dilemma" at Oxford University in 1960, then developed the thesis further as a doctorate at Harvard University, a realization shared by Roger Scruton today. First, Thomas Nagel explains:

"Just as there are rational requirements on thought, there are rational requirements on action, and altruism is one of them. This book defends a conception of ethics, and a related conception of human nature, according to which certain important moral principles state rational conditions on desire and action which derive from a basic requirement of altruism. [Socialism.] Altruism itself depends on a recognition of the reality of other persons, and on the equivalent capacity to regard oneself as merely one individual among many. ..." ("Is there a gay marriage right?")

Therefore,

" ... The view presented here is opposed not only to ethical relativism but to any demand that the claims of ethics appeal to our interests: either self-interest or the interest we may happen to take in other things and other persons. The altruism which in my view underlies ethics is not to be confused with generalized affection for the human race. It is not a feeling."

Thomas Nagel, The Possibility of Altruism (New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1970), p. 3.
A steady hammering noise fills the room in which I write. How curious? "Errors" have been inserted several times today in this essay alone. I wonder why? There is the reality of human nature that "explains" human agency before justifying human conduct. Then there is the essentially human "motivation" of love or concern for the other. There is a political dimension to this discussion, see again: "Fidel Castro's 'History Will Absolve Me.'"

November 23, 2009 at 6:45 P.M. Spacing was affected in this essay posted hours ago, probably by someone who does not like my reference to Fidel Castro. I will make it a point to refer to more of Mr. Castro's writings. ("Havana Nights and CIA Tapes.")

November 24, 2009 at 9:14 A.M. A word and letter were removed from this text overnight. I have now restored that letter and word. ("Time to End the Embargo Against Cuba" and "Mumia Abu-Jamal and the Unconstitutionality of the Death Penalty.")

For those interested in the implications of this discussion in legal theory and decision theories in morality, economics, metaphysics and epistemology, see Robert Nozick, "Newcomb's Problem and Two Principles of Choice," in N. Rescher, et al., eds., Essays in Honor of C.G. Hempel (Reidel: Dodrecht, 1969), pp. 114-146. On the prisoner's dilemma, see R.D. Luce, Howard Raiffa, Games and Decisions (New York: Wiley, 1957), pp. 94-102. Roger Scruton, Modern Philosophy: An Introduction and Survey (New York & London: Penguin, 1994), pp. 413-414, pp. 576-577.

From an aesthetic direction and religious thinking, "escapes" from the prisoner's dilemma are also easy enough. This scholarship is particularly important for those seeking to reinvent postmodernism in theology by rescuing key aspects of Romanticism as reinterpreted to fit our contemporary culture, see Paul Ricouer's Evil: A Challenge to Philosophy and Theology (New York & London: Contuum, 2004), pp. 53-54 (discussing Hegel's dialectic leading to hermeneutics) and the productive dialogue between Jacques Derrida and Hans Georg Gadamer concerning the "fusion of horizons." Fred R. Dallmayr, "Hermeneutics and Deconstruction: Gadamer and Derrida in Dialogue," in Critical Encounters: Between Philosophy and Politics (Indiana: Notre Dame University Press, 1987), pp. 130-158.

Continental thinkers -- like Ricoeur, Derrida, and Gadamer -- mark out the territory where I do my thinking, which is heavily indebted to these much greater philosophers. The idea of a dialectic and "entanglement" provides an "exit" for all of us in a universe of multiplicities inhabited by everyone who feels like a "prisoner" searching for an escape from an unlivable and now obviously evil situation of self-enclosure towards community through revolutionary struggle. ("Freedom for Mumia Abu-Jamal" and "'Che': A Movie Review.")

Time for another inserted "error"? Will New Jersey's legal eagles "instruct" me on these matters? Who was behind the destruction of the "Philosophy Cafe" at MSN groups? Lulu? Publish America? Senator Bob, can you provide any information concerning this criminal conspiracy to violate civil rights through torture and censorship? Will torturers bring freedom to Cuba? ("Does Senator Menendez Have Mafia Friends?")

The escape into freedom that must be available in every possible universe (for me) is a Kantian-Jeffersonian recognition of fundamental human dignity and rights for every person -- like the right to freedom of expression. Ethical recognition is a matter of our universal human necessity. This is as American as you can get. Philosophers to read in order to deepen your appreciation of these issues include Cornel West, Ronald Dworkin, Charles Fried. You will see my essays discussing their works and the writings of legal thinkers, like Lawrence Tribe and Alan Dershowitz, Roberto Unger, Mary Joe Frug, Robin West, Judith Butler as well as many others, especially Drucilla Cornell. ("What is it like to be plagiarized?" and "The Allegory of the Cave.")

Nick Herbert's discussion of the "Interconnectedness Theorem" in quantum mechanics suggests that linkages between entities (New York and the Village) requires that an action upon a smaller unit must affect the larger unit or totality. Politically, this means that the sanctioned violation of one person's rights to freedom of speech or privacy, physical safety, or deprivation of property (Republicans like the last of these rights!) -- like stealing a person's watch, for example -- will affect the rights of all members of a community. "Bell's Interconnectedness Theorem," in Quantum Reality, pp. 211-231, then Amir D. Aczel, Entanglement, pp. 137-148. (How's life treating you, Alex Booth?)

"The Prisoner" is about the insight that we are all trapped in alternate realities and struggling for freedom, both against external forces seeking to control us through ever more subtle methods of manipulation (hypnosis, drugging, tortures, censorship, silencing, rapes, assaults, suppressions of creative work through distractions of various kinds, including forced impoverishment) and within our fragmented and multiple selves drifting in a sea of media images and political slogans intended to stupify and bewilder us. The answer is love. The goal is to translate this love into a politically viable theory and action. ("Roberto Unger's Revolutionary Legal Theory.")

Love for another person can never lead us wrong. This is because, properly, love is always an other-regarding emotion taking us beyond morality into what religions have called, "God." By loving "for" the other, we regain paradise wherever we are, including prisons, defeating those evil Republicans or the villains of your choice, by -- perhaps, painfully -- achieving ourselves even as we give ourselves away. Love (in any form) is not a Communist plot nor a terrorist scheme to destroy your life in the pleasant suburbs of America. ("Is there a gay marriage right?" and "Would Jesus be a Christian?")

"As an outlook on life [Kant's philosophy] is the formal definition of a sane, balanced and critical liberalism. [Democratic Socialism?] Seen in retrospect it is a prophetic warning of the peril to freedom which lurks in the romantic outlook" -- and even more in the total abandonment of that outlook! -- "the danger that the form of the organic will be used to plan and construct the good society on earth. For Kant himself his philosophy is a critical acceptance of Rousseau and the French [and American Revolutions.] For us it is the prophetic analysis and condemnation of totalitarianism. We are aware today of the totalitarian implications of Rousseau's social theory, particularly in its mature development in Hegel. Totalitarianism is the result of determining the good as an object in a spatio-temporal world, and planning its achievement by the use of scientific techniques within a heuristic framework of organic concepts. ["This is for your own good."] Kant's condemnation of the attempt is this, that though it intends a free and self-determining society, it must necessarily result in destroying freedom, and with freedom morality and religion, so bringing human personality under the bondage of a total determination."

This is where we should join our brothers and sisters -- in Cuba and everywhere in the world -- in opposing such a loss of freedom and equality for any one of us in any (or all) of our societies. A word was deleted from the foregoing sentence overnight. Much of what I am saying and everything argued by the Cuban Revolutionary government is established by its enemies in Miami as well as New Jersey and their increasingly pointless totalitarian tactics against me. This censorship is hurting you, and your so-called "cause," far more than it hurts me. You are witnessing the process by which a Jew (Patricia Cohen?) becomes Mengele.

Why are Cuban-Americans called "the Jews of the Carribean"? Has the quest for "freedom" among Cuban-Americans caused us, Cuban-Americans, to deny freedom to others in our country and also in the world? ("The Heidegger Controversy.") I will not be intimidated from expressing my opinions and protests. I will not become your laboratory animal.

Why did Cuban-Americans come to the U.S. if not to enjoy freedom of expression and recognize the same freedom as the RIGHT of other persons? Do you wish to threaten or censor me, again, chico? Mr. Diaz-Balart, censorship is not the answer to your dilemma. Mr. Rubio, come out of the closet and be whatever you are. ("American Hypocrisy and Luis Posada Carriles" and "Miami's Cubanoids Protest AGAINST Peace!" then "Miami's Cubanazos Pose a Threat to National Security!")

"Kant could be content to limit knowledge and leave the beyond to faith and hope. For his time a dualism of theory and practice was possible, and indeed was the path of wisdom. For us it is impossible. We are committed to planning, whether we will or not, and planning is the unity of theory and practice under the primacy of the practical. So long as our most adequate concept is the organic concept, our social planning can only issue in a totalitarian society. [B.F. Skinner's behaviorist paradise.] This is the reason why the emergent problem of contemporary philosophy is the form of the PERSONAL."

John MacMurray, The Self as Agent (New York: Humanity Books, 1999), p. 83 (emphasis added). Good luck with the "ethics matters," Jose Ginarte. How's it going, Gil? (Again: "Is Senator Menendez a Suspect in Mafia-Policial Murder in New Jersey?" and "Does Senator Menendez Have Mafia Friends?" then "Senator Bob, the Babe, and the Big Bucks.")

Did you say something about "ethics"?