Showing posts with label antisemitism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label antisemitism. Show all posts

Thursday, August 10, 2023

Once more unto the Heideggerian breach

You can't go wrong when doing a mash-up of famous Shakespearean phrases (for $1,000, Alex) and amateur philosophical scrivening, can you? At least not in my book.

So, we're taking off from a post a little over a month ago about the latest on Heidegger and Nazism, and a comment by Brett Welch, which led me to update my calling him a "lover of Heidegger" to a "student of Heidegger." I then made an addition.

As for whether one can separate Heidegger's other ideas from his purely philosophical ones, we'll probably disagree. I speak personally, having not read T.S. Eliot in more than a decade as my realization of the breadth of his antisemitism and its intertwining with so much of his poetry led to increasing disgust. As for the power of Heidegger's ideas in a world of increasing fractures and silos today? Brett knows Heidegger's overall philosophy better than I do. If it works for him, it works for him.

I will also note that, beyond this issue, most modern "Continental" philosophy, outside of existentialism, simply doesn't do much for me. Within the world of theology, Paul Tillich and his "ground of being," which has obvious parallels to Heidegger, never came close to enthusing me. I forgot that, a full decade ago, I wrote some highly snarky thoughts — yet highly serious ones — on "the Ground of Being." And, I stand by them. That said, as Tillich clearly did not follow Heidegger's path in politics, one can use such ideas as expressed by people other than Heidegger.

And, from there, we start into new material, based on some journaling I did after more pondering, that, along with Texas heat and other things, kept me up until 3 a.m. one night last week.

By Brett's own words, he IS a lover of Heidegger’s ideas, even though one could get most of them, without Heidegger’s other baggage, from other German existentialists. Like Tillich of one wants Ground of Being with a dose of theology. Or, the later French structuralists, who may have been influenced by him to a degree on “anti-positivism,” but again, without his fascism. 

Per Wiki, which had a pretty good article on him, with a couple of important footnotes to new writings, which I will also use directly, within philosophy, his treatment of Husserl (one of the philosophers I used to transition out of conservative Lutheranism) is disgusting. In addition, he’s simply a liar about his relationship to Nazism — even if that formally pro-Nazi relationship was of short duration — and why he self-allegedly had to do what he did, and of course, ethics is philosophy.

As for whether his philosophy can be separated from his politics? The Frankfurt School said no, at the time, in their mutual Germany. In addition, Heidegger’s anti-Semitism appears to well predate his formal allegiance to Nazism, making him a non-humanist philosopher. 

And, re Brett? Part of his anti-Semitism was to blame Jews for the acceleration of technology and thus saying the Holocaust was essentially self-inflicted. If you really think you can separate his philosophy from his Nazism — and from his pre-Nazi anti-Semitism, well documented in his Black Notebooks, you’re not a better man than I am, Gunga Din, but per an old bon mot, you have a spirit with which I am not familiar.

Per my journaling, I write this at some risk of knowing, per connectedness issues, a whole "web" of ties to the late Leo Lincourt has frayed since his passing. But, per that thought of his, to have Heidegger's ideas as a guiding light on freeing oneself from technology?

And, to the degree he was not narrowly Nazi, per his pre-Nazi anti-Semitism, he was “völkish,” and that many Nazis held such ideas, thus his own stance should NOT be seen as anti-Nazi. And, that's the start of a serious of thoughts based on an in-depth review of a 2020 book, "Confronting Heidegger: A Critical Dialogue on Politics and Philosophy,"  referenced in a Wiki footnote.

Writing all this, as edited from a Word document diary entry, only intensifies a poignancy of Leo Lincourt as a “glue” now missing from my social media world. Karla McLaren is out of it entirely, as is Leo’s journalist friend from Fort Worth and the Indian-American from Houston. Ditto the Minneapolis bicyclist. Jim Lippard disappeared into libertarianism before Leo’s passing.

And now, Brett and a spirit unfamiliar to me. Sadly, after reading Wiki and that review of the 2020 book on him, another sundering may be at hand.

Otherwise? The IEP entry on Heidegger treads very lightly, close to a whitewash. Stanford
openly talks about “apologists,” on the other hand. From there, echoing the Fried book referenced above, it mentions themes that could certainly be considered völkish in the larger context of the first half of 20th century Germany with originally pre-Nazi roots, even if not using that word. One also sees echoes of Hegel in his idea of a German spiritual mission. Actually, it goes on to talk about the “Volk” in Heidegger’s thought. 

Hitler himself may have laughed at the völkish ideas of the likes of Rosenberg, and somewhat of Baldur von Schirach and Himmler. He may have partly purged that from the Nazi Party with the Night of the Long Knives. But Nazism climbed to power in part because the völkish background was already there, and in fact, there before World War I.

Now comes the "turning," but not the one Heideggerians reference. Stanford thinks, which Fried et al don’t seem to mention, that Heidegger distanced himself from the Nazis, and perhaps got in trouble with them, in fact, because he thought they too were technology-focused and not truly völkish. Schopenhauer-ish, with a völkish will and idea? It adds that he appeared to claim the Volk was historical-linguistic, not biological. And yet, he undercut himself here, with his claim, again, well known, that Africa doesn't have a history. Well, there is no single language that represents "Africa," so that knocks both props out from his Volk claim vis-a-vis Africa and means that we're presumably back in race territory. 

Stanford unfortunately doesn’t have the Fried book in its bibliography. Its entry is dated 2011 and doesn’t indicate its had major revisions, so it’s dated. In any case, the “völkish” comes through in his anti-technology attitude, per its subsection on his thought on technology, which strikes me as not Luddite so much as cartoonishly simplistic, setting aside the anti-Semitic angle already noted above. Or, in another, quasi-Hegelian sense, it’s almost as if he posits it in opposition to Being, but absolutely does not want a synthesis.

Or, in another way, he strikes me as a more naïf version of Rousseau, living 150 years later. Let us not forget that, naïf or no, with things like the General Will, Rousseau was not a philosophical innocent. Indeed, his concerns about “authenticity” appear to parallel Heidegger’s concerns about “technology,” with the idea that Heidegger is worried that, in essence, “Man is born free, but is everywhere in technological chains.” And also indeed, I wrote a whole piece about Rousseau starting with him as authoritarian, contra both Leo and Leo Damrosch in his otherwise very good bio of Rousseau. (From there, I moved on to a pathetic [in the proper affective sense] pity for many of Rousseau's struggles and troubles, while also noting that he had a high tendency to shoot himself in the foot, and wasn't very good at self-perception or self-honesty.)

And with that, as not a huge fan of Rousseau either, and definitely not of the "state of nature" idea, which is way overused in a Wökeish (I see what I did) sense in large chunks of American academia in its thought about American Indians, I have squared the circle here.

And, as an almost footnote-level idea?

Beyond all the above, I don’t like him because he’s a “system-builder.” That’s part of why British philosophy way back in Empiricism vs Rationalism days has generally appealed to me more.

Saturday, June 24, 2023

Fascism in the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod? Yes; The Cross and the Swastika

Rick, I am SHOCKED there's gambling in the house of Matthew Harrison (pictured at right), and the people even more wingnut than him). And, sadly, in another sense, I didn't think of the addendum to the original headline, punning on a 50-year-old book that might be remembered by a few, until after the original post.

Vermont Digger has the details on a former distillery owner there who appears to be the owner of a podcast that pushes Lutheran fascism. 

Actually, a Rolling Stone article to which it links has the real details, about a Corey Mahler who co-hosts a podcast with who seems to be Ryan Woodie Dumperth, the Vermont guy, as well as an overview of LCMS President Matthew Harrison's attempts to douse? control? the flames without getting burned himself. (Harrison was just elected to another three-year term to run the denomination, at about 1.8 million, the main one in the conservative wing of Lutheranism, last month.) Update: Yet more in general, and Mahler in specific, here.

A report on Mahler and others from outside the LCMS notes that young alt right are reportedly attracted to Lutheranism because of Martin Luther's own antisemitism. And, that is real, though not unique to Luther in his day, but not just a late-life issue, and sis and others I know, please don't try to explain it away. Martin Luther was antisemitic, not just anti-Judaism after he discovered he couldn't use Jews to do theological judo on the pope.

And, not-quite full-on Nazis in the LCMS didn't want to believe Mahler was who he is until Machaira Action's report forced the issue.

Update, March 22, 2024: Mahler's also some sort of conspiracy theorist. I ran into him on Twitter over a nutter idea he was proposing and ...

He later blocked me.  And, he later yet deleted that tweet.

In detail, here are Part 1 and Part 2 of their report. Punning on Scandinavians and an alleged food delicacy, they call this movement "Lutefash."

That said, per the Rolling Stone piece, Matty Harrison's "excommunication warning," per this blog, appears to have become excommunication action. But, what about Dumperth? What about the other cockroaches that will operate more subtly, perhaps with the cooperation of willing pastors here and there?

Per comments at this "Occidental Dissent" site, there's probably a few parish pastors among the commenters, and others in the Wisconsin Synod, about one-fifth the size of the Missouri Synod, and both even more hardcore traditionalist on theology and further right politically than Missouri. One commenter references a YouTube by Rev. David Ramirez, a LCMS pastor from St. Paul's, Union Grove, Wisconsin. (I guess Hispanic counts as "White" in this world?)

Bethany Lutheran Church, Springdale, Arkansas, and Rev. Gregory L. Jackson another to watch, per this blog by either him or it. Here's Jackson's Goodreads authorial page. Interestingly, he's also a King James Version nutter. Dude took a deep dive in an empty pool, too. Went to the former Lutheran Church of America's Augustana in Rock Island. Then an STM at Yale. Then Notre Dame. Then that deep dive in the empty pool.

As for how this all happened? My sister notes that Matty played with fire by entangling church and state years back. He's been the LCMS president since 2010, and as in the previous presidential election, fended off far-right challengers. He's semi far-right himself, as I see today's Missouri Synod, which is like today's GOP, and just as it's laughable to hear a Republican (like Will Hurd just announced for president) called a "moderate," the same holds true whenever applied to Harrison. He's won on the first ballot every time since his first election, but he's never broken 55 percent. Tim Klinkenberg, a seminary classmate of mine, was the apparent semi-right challenger in 2019. The Wiki link has links to all election results in its footnotes.

It should also be noted that German-Americans broke harder for Trump than any other white ethnic group, apparently driven in fair part by their liking in 2016 his claims to breaking with the neoconservatives within the GOP and having a more isolationist stance in his "America First," and the LCMS' roots are primarily in German-Americans. The LCA, part of which eventually became the ELCA of today, had its roots in older German-Americans from 200-plus years ago who lost more their Germanness, but even more in Scandinavian Lutherans of the Upper Midwest. The ALC half of the ELCA merger had a mix of German-Americans of about the same migration date as LCMS Lutherans, but with a Scandinavian contingent at least half that of the LCA as leavening.

As for how this all plays out? Harrison is enough of a political chameleon to largely stay above the fray, despite the Lutefash pinpricks. To the degree he thinks its too much heavy lifting, he'll ignore the underground network of pastors and congregations, of which I've only scratched the surface. (For the unfamiliar, the LCMS is almost, but not quite, as "congregational" in its church polity as the Southern Baptist Convention. It has all sorts of "underground networks," as I'm sure the SBC does as well. I have family-related info on that as well.)

Beyond that, Harrison has big financial fish to fry, namely the Hot Chalk lawsuit and others (perhaps consolidated into one, I would think, on the student lawsuits) over the LCMS' abrupt closure a couple of years ago of Concordia University Portland. Harrison's mixing of secular politics and church governance was a factor in how the pooch was screwed in its closing, too. So, too, was his eye on the dollar signs CUP was generating with Hot Chalk, and of course, the LCMS, like many conservative wings of mainline Protestant denominations, has a "golden calf" problem as it and others lose members.

Add this to Matty's political chameleon behavior, too. The Boy Scouts of America recently voted to accept gay Scouts, but not leaders. So, Harrison is going down the Bill Clinton route of 30 years ago and saying it's "don't ask don't tell" on gay Scouts at troops affiliated with LCMS congregations, and beyond that, in a legal memorandum of understanding, individual congregations still have the right to boot Scout troops. And, contra Rev. Bart Day, no, sexuality was always an issue in the BSA, until it decided to do its split-the-difference bullshit, presumably on grounds that gay Scoutmasters would be "groomers." (This ignores the BSA's long history of tolerating sexual abuse by Scoutmasters, of course.) I have no idea of what this Trail Life USA alternative to the BSA is, and wonder what happened to the old Lutheran Rangers. As for the Lutefash? Teh gay was sometimes OK in the early days of the German swastika boys, but after the Night of the Long Knives it went pretty much deep underground.

==

Update, Dec. 18, 2023: Matty's got new, and related, troubles since then. Like a pastor arrested as one of Fani Willis' "Dirty 19" Georgia election fraudsters. Said pastor, the Reeevvvvvv Stephen Lee, has gone on to likely violate LCMS doctrine about interfaith participation by appearing at a non-Lutheran church service to promote his part in the Trumpian cause.

Friday, November 08, 2019

A few thoughts on Catholic projectionism, partly Reformation connected

I'm using the word "projectionism" in its normal everyday psychological sense, made more popular perhaps by Freud but existing as an intellectual concept long before him.

As I noted before, Catholics don't seem to miss a dollar with church bulletin ads.

Nor, per my most recent post before this, do they miss a dollar with tchotchkes related to the Sacred Heart of Jesus cult.

And, even though Chimayó is not a wealthy place, the squabble between the Archdiocese of Santa Fe and other folks, plus the fact that it doesn't work even though it has swag for sale and takes donations, show that no dollar is missed there either.

And, the early modern Catholics who developed the Cult of the Sacred Heart (while condemning Aztecs for something, arguably in a symbolic sense no more grotesque) were lusting for gold in the New World.

And, on the reality side of legend vs reality on Martin Luther, the medieval indulgences system was a money-grubbing gold mine, and lots of Germans' beliefs about a ravenous Curia were true.

So, the projection?

First starting around, oh, 1095 CE and the First Crusade, then articulated by kings and emperors (often with Church-blessed titles) who didn't want to pay off bank loans, seems to me that about 1,000 years ago, and moving on from there, talked about "money-grubbing Jews."

Projectionism.

And, the bloodiness of the Sacred Heart, at least symbolically? The ancestors of the priests at Chimayo, the Franciscan missionaries who flagellated themselves (Puebloan society and moiety leaders also did)? The re-sacrifice of the Mass, which comes off not as metaphorical or symbolic, but, yes, as the church proclaims, a re-creation, a re-enactment, and which I also don't get as atheist or ex-Lutheran?

Versus those bloody pagan Aztecs, or other bloody pagans?

Projectionism.

I'm sure Tim O'Neill, cultural Catholic (maybe actual Catholic and not total atheist) proprietor of the deblogrolled History for Atheists will object.

Not that Protestants might not have some projectionism of their own on "pagans." Nor, given British then American capitalism and the so-called Protestant work ethic, that there's not Protestant projectionism on money-grubbing Jews.

But, I'd argue that, once we get past the early Baroque and into the Age of Enlightenment, Protestant monetary projectionism onto Jews was lower than Catholicism's. And, that lacking a cultus of sacrifice, that even if Luther himself held on to elements of the Sacred Heart myth, there still wasn't the same projectionism onto "savages" in this way.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Antisemitic, or just concerned about preservation?

I can see both sides of the issue in a long-ongoing standoff in Litchfield, Conn.

It's a complicated issue. Having seen communities try to preserve historic districts, I can appreciate Litchfield's stance. And, a swimming pool certainly doesn't fit the idea of "historic preservation."
The group's plans included a synagogue, living space for Rabbi Joseph Eisenbach and his large family and a swimming pool for the Chabad group's popular summer camp.

"This case is not about the construction of a synagogue," (Borough of Litchfield historic district commission attorney James) Stedronsky said recently. "It's about the construction of a personal palace for Rabbi Eisenbach, complete with a 4,500-square-foot apartment and an indoor swimming pool big enough to serve a summer camp."

At the same time, rich, WASPy Connecticut communities have some history of being antisemitic sundown towns. Including Litchfield. As the Hartford Courant notes, a Willson Whitman, visiting in 1943, discovered Jews were not allowed to own property there.

That said, on the next page of the Courant story, we find that Jews do live in Litchfield today, and at least some of them oppose the Lubavitcher Chabad project on grounds similar to the historic commission: it's too big and unfitting.

From what I read, I'd say the commission isn't being antisemitic. That said, I don't know if either side has discussed or offered compromises, or not. Unfortunately, a judge and court is not an arbitrator. All the judge can do is rule for either the commission or Chabad; he or she can't craft a compromise. (I wonder if in Continental European jurisprudence, as opposed to the Anglo-American model, judges can do that.)