Columbia’s capitulation

Sent this off the other day. I encourage my fellow Columbians to do likewise.


Dear President Armstrong,

I am writing to express my disappointment and anger that my alma mater has capitulated to the bullying and coercion of the Trump Administration. I understand how worrisome a threat to withhold hundreds of millions of dollars in funding must be. I recognize how complex and contested issues of free speech and peaceful protest on Columbia’s and other American campuses are in these fraught times. Nonetheless, as an institution of higher learning in a free society, you have a duty to resist, even at great cost, powers that want to replace American democracy with an authoritarian and even – I no longer think the term is hyperbole – fascistic state. Next time they come demanding concessions, and you know as well as I that they will, please do the hard thing, and say no. You should be a model to other institutions of rectitude, not cowardice.

Respectfully,
Christopher Patton (SOA ’96)


Some bonus content from one of many newsletters I’ve begun following:

This week I want to talk about a small thing that gives me hope. A “green shoot,” if you will, in a time when so much seems to be withering.

It’s early, it’s scattered, and it’s more of a tendril than a surge of green.

When the leadership of institutions bows down to the autocrat — happening a lot these days — that’s often not the end of the story. In many key cases, the people who make up those institutions are refusing to go quietly. The individuals with less power, not more, are stepping up to defend our democracy.

… If this trend continues, with ordinary people showing courage where their leaders fail, that may just be the determinative factor in whether the autocratic project ultimately falls short.

—Ben Raderstorf, “When leaders fail, people… step up?”

Nero again

We’re watching an administrative coup unfold in real time. Call it what you like, competitive autocracy, illiberal democracy, techno-authoritarianism, patrimonial state, First Galactic Empire come home to eat its makers, this is world-historical bad, end of the Pax Americana, its repressed terms & disjected others unleashed.

If it were it up to me, our world would be small egalitarian communes, each developing its own inner science & making such tools as subsistence requires, each at a cautious distance from the others, permitting & inviting trade in the goods that make this, let’s just say it, hard life, worth living & sometimes a joy to. The bow that so moves me in Japanese public life as diplomatic axiom. Now you know me.

So. No fan of empire. Have always sided with the Rebel Alliance. You too, I assume. But now it’s on its way out, the American Imperium, I can see the good it did, anchoring a fraternity of democracies, extending soft power around the globe. Witness the demolition of USAID occurring in real time in a digisphere that really is too much with us. Getting & spending we lay waste our powers.

A caul of illusion has been torn from my eyes. Liberal democracy, those rights & freedoms, in the sweep of history they’re the exception, not the rule. Even at the best of times, some folks are granted them freely, others have to fight for them, bitterly. And this is not the best of times.

What does #resistance look like at this moment? I’ve signed petitions, written to my reps, disinvested from corporate bodies performing anticipatory obedience with balletic ease, had beers with Democrats Abroad, scheduled recurring small donations to groups advocating for migrants & trans folk & Zen peacemaking & practice, and committed with less than perfect followthrough to withdrawing my attention & business from Facebook, Instagram, Whats­App, Amazon. What else? What works? Boycott? General strike? Divert sums owed the IRS to beleaguered NGOs & university departments? What can we draw from the repertoire of the roshis of civil disobedience who achieved independence for India & civil rights law in America? Do we need a Ghandi, an MLK, or in a time when charisma belongs to the con man, can we do it dispersedly?

And will I, if my one country invades my other, take up arms? I bawled when I killed a mouse my cat only half had. Can’t see myself killing a person – killing a world. Maybe my little cottage up north can be refuge for women & men brave in other ways than I. Meanwhile I read & watch counterfactual fictions, Plot Against America, Man in the High Castle, Civil War & try my hand at same. Here’s one, the last piece I’ll write for Occam’s Aftershave, prospectively dated 2028, the earliest it might see a public or private shelf.


9 March 2028

Last year Articles of Impeachment fell short by three votes. Republican senators who voted to convict have enlisted Academi (né Blackwater) mercenaries to guard their families 24/7. Key cabinet positions, Defence, Commerce, Agriculture, have been arrogated to the Presidency. Elon the Ketamine Jester is halfway to Mars.

Talk-show historians describe the Republican Party as a cult of personality with patrilineal followthrough. Comparison to the People’s Republic of North Korea is the common socmed cliché. Tiktok has resumed operations & benefits from lucrative government contracts. The Democratic Party has split along ideological fault lines. Armed secessionist movements in restive west coast & northeastern states have given President Vance, who assumed power last year upon Donald Trump’s full incapacitation by an assassin’s bullet – late-night comics vie for the best riff on the term “vegetative state” – a pretext for suspending civil liberties & postponing federal elections, even as Trump’s children vie for the Republican nomination.

Among our new entertainments are cagematches between AI-generated corporate avatars of competing socmed algorithms. Hesitant to gather in streets patrolled by federal troops – the Posse Comitatus Act has been invalidated by the Supreme Court, the extent of whose financial enmeshment with the ruling family has only been properly understood since last year’s exposé in the Washington Post, awarded a Pulitzer on the day the paper published its final issue, a gesture whose poignancy was lost on no one – opponents of the regime gather in virtual spaces established by Meta offshoot Maté to cheer progressive factions on to victory over TelegramX8Chan. Bluesky always wins. In WWII the Japanese Imperial government encouraged citizens to dedicate their leisure time to haiku about cherry blossoms. Detention camps bloom in the desert.

In Canada, the newly formed People’s Party, a separatist entity formed by disaffected holdouts from the Liberal–Conservative merger, holds 23 seats in Parliament & is negotiating a Pacte avec le Diable with the Bloc Québecois.

NATO has reformed its Charter to eject the United States & Hungary. Serbia has been admitted. France & Britain extended their nuclear umbrellas to all European Union nations in 2026 upon the latter’s return to the EU on terms compared unfavourably in the tabloid press, which against all expectations continues to thrive, to those of the Versailles Treaty. Iran, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, South Africa, South Korea, Indonesia, Brazil, Argentina, & possibly Japan & Colombia – policies of strategic ambiguity are the norm – have the Bomb.

A climate change feedback loop is releasing vast sinks of carbon stored in northern tundras, laying waste arable land in equatorial & sub-equatorial regions & prompting speculation in diplomatic backrooms that Canada, enjoying robust population growth thanks to an influx of climate refugees & the opening of swaths of land to newly bioengineered supercrops, will be a global power in two decades.

With Canada’s admission to the European Union the world has cohered into four spheres of influence – United States, European Union, People’s Republic of China, Russian Federation – inviting comparison to the nineteenth-century world of Great Powers. Nations of the Global South play these actors against each other as best they can. More align with China than with others due to China’s skilful projection of soft power. International organizations such as the WTO & IPCC have not survived American withdrawal. All but the second listed above are authoritarian regimes with democratic facades that fool no one but are sustained for the injury they inflict on constructs of objective or intersubjective truth. Masha Gessen has taken the lead in close-reading the post-truth world.

The European Union remains committed to representative democracy but is under assault from within by neo-fascist movements that harness popular discontent over immigration, a fraying social safety net & draconian pollution controls. Petrol is €15 a litre. Execution by firing squad is making a comeback. Ukraine is a rump state centred on the city of Lviv, prey to an AI-driven disinformation campaign & slipping in spite of the best efforts of its elites into the Russian sphere of influence. Vladimir Putin was embalmed last month in rosewater. Historical mocudramas set in the early Roman Empire continue to gain in popularity.

Dove sta memoria

I am, as so many are, shocked, appalled, frightened, dismayed by the re-election this week of a convicted felon & rapist who views the Presidency of the United States as his own private fiefdom. I’ve also been grappling again with Pound & his legacy. This wrote itself last night, for a book of prose I’ve started to build, on the theme of fascism, & complicity, & refusal of same.


Dove sta memoria

I remembered this morning in a flash two days after re-election to the office of the Presidency of a moral idiot, a man to call whom a sociopath would give sociopaths a bad name, a moment in the fields of St. George’s, the private boys’ school in Vancouver I attended awhile, the moment I finished a round of push-ups, one I was weakly armed for & had been decreed for me as part of a detention I may have, I can’t remember how, I was an awfully obedient boy, I may have earned, a moment my tormenter, a redheaded boy whose face & name have long since disappeared from view, said, yeah, okay, you’re done, I remembered this as I stood peeing – the toilet a site of introspection almost as rich for me apparently as the long indulgent showers I have long resorted to in retreat from an inner life that feels at times an onslaught – I remembered the rush crush & cascade of gratitude I felt, a sudden grateful self-abasing love for him, that moment, the boy who’d owned & commanded me, for ten ordinary moments, when I had to do what he said. Fascism is built out of such unexceptional surrenders. Let us never use the word detention again except historically. Yesterday morning I found myself sitting crying for children I had never met & could hardly imagine watching their parents shoved onto planes for locales they had for good reason fled, & those children to follow, once the notion that they belong here by birthright has been evacuated by men who can shit but not give life. This evening on the subway home an orange more orange than I’ve ever seen rolled down the aisle. I put out my foot & stopped & picked it up & walking home took a route by the liquor store where a gaunt-faced woman around my age in a puffy white coat was sitting against the building, as I thought she might be, and I asked would she like it. She said sure yeah thanks. Only thing I’ve done since the felon’s re-election that has felt meaningful as response. The world does not make sense but it does rhyme.

“20 Lessons from the 20th Century on How to Survive in Trump’s America”

We are watching a full blown assault on American democracy.

The coronavirus pandemic, which might have seemed to doom Trump to electoral defeat, is providing cover for a renewed attack on democratic norms, practices, institutions, values. Trump has the aid of lackeys in his Cabinet, enablers in Congress, allies he placed in the courts, racist & brutal police forces, and armed paramilitary groups committed to white supremacy & the breakdown of civil society.

Here, because we need it, is Timothy Snyder’s “20 Lessons from the 20th Century on How to Survive in Trump’s America,” as published on November 21, 2016. (It grew into a book which you can get here.) I’ve formatted it to emphasize bits that seem extra salient to me.

If you don’t feel up for marching (no. 10) there are 19 other things here you can do.


Americans are no wiser than the Europeans who saw democracy yield to fascism, Nazism or communism. Our one advantage is that we might learn from their experience.  Now is a good time to do so. Here are 20 lessons from across the fearful 20th century, adapted to the circumstances of today.

1. Do not obey in advance.

Much of the power of authoritarianism is freely given. In times like these, individuals think ahead about what a more repressive government will want, and then start to do it without being asked. You’ve already done this, haven’t you? Stop. Anticipatory obedience teaches authorities what is possible and accelerates unfreedom.

2. Defend an institution.

Follow the courts or the media, or a court or a newspaper. Do not speak of “our institutions” unless you are making them yours by acting on their behalf. Institutions don’t protect themselves. They go down like dominoes unless each is defended from the beginning.

3. Recall professional ethics.

When the leaders of state set a negative example, professional commitments to just practice become much more important. It is hard to break a rule-of-law state without lawyers, and it is hard to have show trials without judges.

4. When listening to politicians, distinguish certain words.

Look out for the expansive use of “terrorism” and “extremism.” Be alive to the fatal notions of “exception” and “emergency.” Be angry about the treacherous use of patriotic vocabulary.

5. Be calm when the unthinkable arrives.

When the terrorist attack comes, remember that all authoritarians at all times either await or plan such events in order to consolidate power. Think of the Reichstag fire. The sudden disaster that requires the end of the balance of power, the end of opposition parties, and so on, is the oldest trick in the Hitlerian book. Don’t fall for it.

6. Be kind to our language.

Avoid pronouncing the phrases everyone else does. Think up your own way of speaking, even if only to convey that thing you think everyone is saying. (Don’t use the Internet before bed. Charge your gadgets away from your bedroom, and read.) What to read? Perhaps The Power of the Powerless by Václav Havel, 1984 by George Orwell, The Captive Mind by Czesław Milosz, The Rebel by Albert Camus, The Origins of Totalitarianism by Hannah Arendt, or Nothing is True and Everything is Possible by Peter Pomerantsev.

7. Stand out.

Someone has to. It is easy, in words and deeds, to follow along. It can feel strange
to do or say something different. But without that unease, there is no freedom. And the moment you set an example, the spell of the status quo is broken, and others will follow.

8. Believe in truth.

To abandon facts is to abandon freedom. If nothing is true, then no one can criticize power because there is no basis upon which to do so. If nothing is true, then all is spectacle. The biggest wallet pays for the most blinding lights.

9. Investigate.

Figure things out for yourself. Spend more time with long articles. Subsidize investigative journalism by subscribing to print media. Realize that some of what is on your screen is there to harm you. Learn about sites that investigate foreign propaganda pushes.

10. Practice corporeal politics.

Power wants your body softening in your chair and your emotions dissipating on the screen. Get outside. Put your body in unfamiliar places with unfamiliar people. Make new friends and march with them.

11. Make eye contact and small talk.

This is not just polite. It is a way to stay in touch with your surroundings, break down unnecessary social barriers, and come to understand whom you should and should not trust. If we enter a culture of denunciation, you will want to know the psychological landscape of your daily life.

12. Take responsibility for the face of the world.

Notice the swastikas and the other signs of hate. Do not look away and do not get used to them. Remove them yourself and set an example for others to do so.

13. Hinder the one-party state.

The parties that took over states were once something else. They exploited a historical moment to make political life impossible for their rivals. Vote in local and state elections while you can.

14. Give regularly to good causes, if you can.

Pick a charity and set up autopay. Then you will know that you have made a free choice that is supporting civil society helping others doing something good.

15. Establish a private life.

Nastier rulers will use what they know about you to push you around. Scrub your computer of malware. Remember that email is skywriting. Consider using alternative forms of the Internet, or simply using it less. Have personal exchanges in person. For the same reason, resolve any legal trouble. Authoritarianism works as a blackmail state, looking for the hook on which to hang you. Try not to have too many hooks.

16. Learn from others in other countries.

Keep up your friendships abroad, or make new friends abroad. The present difficulties here are an element of a general trend. And no country is going to find a solution by itself. Make sure you and your family have passports.

17. Watch out for the paramilitaries.

When the men with guns who have always claimed to be against the system start wearing uniforms and marching around with torches and pictures of a Leader, the end is nigh. When the pro-Leader paramilitary and the official police and military intermingle, the game is over.

18. Be reflective if you must be armed.

If you carry a weapon in public service, God bless you and keep you. But know that evils of the past involved policemen and soldiers finding themselves, one day, doing irregular things. Be ready to say no. (If you do not know what this means, contact the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and ask about training in professional ethics.)

19. Be as courageous as you can.

If none of us is prepared to die for freedom, then all of us will die in unfreedom.

20. Be a patriot.

The incoming president is not. Set a good example of what America means for
the generations to come. They will need it.

Afternoon of a Tweet

I recently finished my first asemic work in colour. True to its spirit of metamorphosis, it went through many titles, & conceptions. In the end I’ve called it Afternoon of a Tweet: Fantasia Upon a Text by Donald Trump. I’m playing on Mallarmé’s L’aprés-midi d’un faune of course, & Debussy’s Prelude to it, which perversely enough came after.

My text is a tweet in which Trump defends his obscene & criminal family separation policy. The page becomes a wide bright river of hungry ghosts, apostolic patriarchs, enraged fertility goddesses, spooky mind bugs & children stranded & bereft. The images, made by rocking handwritten journal pages on a scanner, rely on pareidolia, the tendency to see faces & forms in abstract patterns, to take shape.

On the title page, a brow a bump & a bump make Someone’s face in profile, & a row of overlapping columns, pinched at the right spot, makes a crowd, its shoulders jostling.

Page 0 (30)
How it starts.

Why red black & blue. Notwithstanding what I say on the final panel (just below) the colours came first – those were the Sharpies I had on hand – & the reasons later.

Page 51 (30)
How it ends.

But they were reasons I learned as I worked had been building in me for a while.

When I saw the invitation to Tweet my reply, I thought, Oh yes, friend bird, I will.

I write more about making the images here. Here are two more of them. Their base phrases are both anagrams of “sinister purposes,” a phrase taken from the tweet.

Page 24 (30)
I respire sunspots

Page 25 (30)
to inspire US press

Mallarmé & Debussy, those 2 had a faun they could pull some Classical balance & elegance thru, wherein to frame the lascivious peregrinations of their protagonist. I, like you, have been stuck with Donald Trump, a figure shall we say without proportion. So the results are often comical, grotesque.

I admit I worry I might be thought to have made light of evil tho I don’t feel I have.

And to being a bit queasy at having made things beautiful out of ugliness.

I mean to mock & condemn, console with bitter laughter, rouse indignation.

Letter to Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee uncertain on impeachment

Drafted this today. I plan to send it on Monday to the five Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee who haven’t come out in favour of an impeachment inquiry.*

Of course you’re welcome to steal, part or the whole thing, for a letter of your own. I’d also welcome input. Is it too long? Is there something I missed, or got wrong?


August 5, 2019

Dear Representative _______________:

I am writing to you in your capacity as a member of the House Judiciary Committee to urge you to open an impeachment inquiry into the conduct of President Donald J. Trump.

According to press reports, more than half of Democratic House members – including all but five Democratic members of your Committee – now support opening such an inquiry. My own representative, Rick Larsen, along with every other Democratic Representative from Washington State, has come out in support of an impeachment inquiry. I am writing to you, and other holdout members of your Committee, to beg you to act.

The Constitution gives it to Congress to define “high crimes and misdemeanors.” President Trump’s insults to the body politic, through his venality, incompetence, misogyny, racism, xenophobia, and pathological lying, are beyond counting. But among the documented behaviors that appear to warrant impeachment are:

  • Profiting from the Presidency in violation of the Emoluments clause;
  • Violation of campaign finance laws, as affirmed in sworn Congressional testimony by his former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen;
  • Obstruction of justice, evidence for which Special Counsel Robert Mueller has all but said can only be further pursued by Congress through impeachment;
  • Conspiracy with a foreign power to influence an election, evidence for which has not been fully examined because of said obstruction;
  • Advocating violence and giving aid and comfort to domestic hate groups, in violation of his constitutional duties to “take care that the laws be faithfully executed,” to protect the citizenry against “domestic violence,” and to ensure “the equal protection of the laws”;
  • Abuse of the pardon power, in the case of former Arizona sheriff Joseph Arpaio;
  • Abuse of the powers of the executive branch, in directing law enforcement to persecute political opponents;
  • Efforts to undermine the freedom of the press, through verbal attacks, threats to individual journalists, and threats to change libel laws and revoke licenses;
  • Separation of immigrant families at the US–Mexico border in violation of asylum law, the Due Process clause of the Fifth Amendment, the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against “cruel and unusual punishment,” and international law.

I am sure the images of children held in cages without access to decent food, proper hygiene, or their own parents have shocked your conscience. Whether or not you agree that these “detention facilities” should be called concentration camps; whether or not it worries you that dehumanization of just this sort has elsewhere been a prelude to ethnic cleansing, or worse – it is a simple and appalling fact that thousands of children have suffered long-term psychological harm by these separations. The practice is a crime against humanity, as the American Federation of Teachers has affirmed.

If a private citizen were treating children this way, he would be tried for kidnapping, child endangerment, and negligent homicide. We have only impeachment as a remedy. Indeed, if this were the only charge against the president, it would be ground enough for impeachment.

I know Democratic leadership worries that a drive to impeach Trump might ensure his re-election. And I agree Trump can’t have a second term. But while your political duty to defeat him in 2020 is an imperative, your constitutional duty to impeach, regardless of the outcome in the Senate, outweighs it. Our system of checks and balances is waiting urgently for the legislative branch to do its job – to say to Trump and his enablers that these abuses of power, this dereliction of duty, cannot stand. The process starts with the Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee.

We have an autocrat in office whose actions threaten our core values as a liberal democracy. It’s on you now to reassert those values with vigor and clarity and without letting up. If you count on the election to remove Trump, when it does, you will have faltered in your duty, and history will not be kinder to you than to the Republican Party, whose moral and intellectual collapse this presidency confirms.

Surely you can find a way to fulfill your constitutional duty and win an election against an historically unpopular president. An impeachment inquiry gives time to assess evidence, build a thoughtful case, and persuade an uncertain public. There are times to listen to public opinion and times to shape it.

Thank you for your kind attention. I look forward to your response. With best wishes,

Sincerely,

Dr. Christopher Patton
Department of English
Western Washington University


New York Times impeachment tracker here. The “support” column grows longer daily.

* The five holdouts are Karen Bass (CA 37), J. Luis Correa (CA 46), Hakeem Jeffries (NY 8), Lucy McBath (GA 6), and Chairman Jerrold Nadler (NY 10).

Red Black & Blues (III)

Working on Red Black & Blues, my unravelling of a Trump tweet.

I had hoped to draw asemic eye magic straight from his eructations. Turns out I have to stretch and loosen the material verbally before I can spin it visually. From the tweet

 

I’ve gotten by way of cutting dicing and anagramming to this sequence

  1. Please
  2. understand,
  3. there are cons.
  4. Please, unders,
  5. stand there.
  6. Sequences
  7. when people cross
  8. Persephone’s cowl,
  9. whether they have
  10. children
  11. or not, and
  12. dart noon,
  13. cross our Border,
  14. brood or cuss, err,
  15. legally
  16. ill …
  17. many are just
  18. u
  19. sing
  20. children
  21. for their own
  22. sinister purposes.
  23. I respire sunspots
  24. to inspire US press.
  25. Congress!
  26. Congress
  27. must act,
  28. or Cpl. Pence, whose
  29. copper wholeness …
  30. he hath every thew.
  31. Must! act! on!
  32. on fixing
  33. fixing the
  34. DUMBEST
  35. &
  36. &
  37. WORST
  38. immigration laws;
  39. or await slimming ‐
  40. a militarism gown,
  41. animist rim aglow.
  42. I was a grim Milton……
  43. Anywhere
  44. in the world
  45. ye hear anew
  46. in the world.
  47. Vote “R”?
  48. VoteR,
  49. revote-
  50. vote over.

Hard to get right – it’s gotta roll out a story of sorts, while each line makes for a title w/ some spice, and its text gets me to a visual poem. Fifty for the 50 states. There’ll be a part 2, made of short videos, 50 of ’em, gleaning their frames from images such as

he hath every thew (no. 30, alt take)

To wrap, the end note I also cooked up today:

End note

The text is a tweet by Donald Trump, inflating & breaking up.

The images are that text seen from the inside as it unravels.

The colors are those convention gives to the American electoral map.

The whole may be the first & last work ever of ’Pataphysical cryptography.

His words, once they leave him, aren’t his, and have perhaps hearts & minds their own, may speak of a pain our own, could we only decode it.

Illogical Operators

A few alt takes from Red Black & Blues just published in The New Post-Literate.

screen shot 2019-01-05 at 4.16.22 pm
Click to go to ’em

The base text is taken, as all in this project are, from a single tweet by you know who.

Screen Shot 2018-12-16 at 8.08.41 PM

The phrase for this one, “or not – and.” The pages before they got all shook up:

 

The finished pages are, as said, on Michael Jacobson’s site, here. Just finished a page describing the project, it’s here. Thanks for wreading!

Red Black & Blues (II)

This project’s taking wing. Decided I need a base text not my own words and chose our president’s. Cuz who invites – anticipates – distortion of our discourse more gorgeously than he. Here’s what I’ve got so far

The plan is, take a tweet of his and unravel it, asemically. This may be a dry run, or maybe the thing itself, not sure yet. The execrable tweet:

Screen Shot 2018-12-16 at 8.08.41 PM

“Tweet your reply.” Oh I’ll do more than that, friend bird.

Might be heavyhanded in the chapbook, but here I’ll paste in as a final image (typo: impage, as in imped wing, or I’m page), the arrangement of red black and blue that gave DT his answer, a few months later

1000px-US_House_2018.svg

Hardly a wave to the eye. But a wave it was and more’s to come.

The bathos of Donald Trump

From an anthology yet to be conceived, The Accidental Wit and Wisdom of  Donald Trump. The subject, climate change. The source, this interview with the Washington Post.

“No. 2”

If you go back
and if you look at articles
they talked about
global freezing.

They talked about
at some point the planets
could have freezed
to death.

Then it’s going to
die of heat exhaustion.
There is movement in
the atmosphere!

There’s no question
as to whether or not it’s
manmade and
whether

or not the effects
that you’re talking
about are there.

I don’t see it.
Not nearly like it is.

With a nod to Pieces of Intelligence: The Existential Poetry of Donald Rumsfeld, by Hart Seely. The image up top is from A. Richard Allen’s homage to Katshushika Hokusai’s Great Wave off Kanagawa.

high_res_editorial_a_richard_allen_trump_wave

Read more about it here.