A source on politics, war, the Middle East, Arabic poetry, and art.
Wednesday, April 07, 2004
This is from one of my favorite essays of all time. "Repressive Tolerance" by the great philosopher Herbert Marcuse. Gov. Ronald Reagan changed the retirement age at the UC system to force him to retire. "Thus, within a repressive society, even progressive movements threaten to turn into their opposite to the degree to which they accept the rules of the game. To take a most controversial case: the exercise of political rights (such as voting, letter-writing to the press, to Senators, etc., protest-demonstrations with a priori3 renunciation of counterviolence) in a society of total administration serves to strengthen this administration by testifying to the existence of democratic liberties which, in reality, have changed their content and lost their effectiveness. In such a case, freedom (of opinion, of assembly, of speech) becomes an instrument for absolving servitude. And yet (and only here the dialectical proposition shows its full intent) the existence and practice of these liberties remain a precondition for the restoration of their original oppositional function, provided that the effort to transcend their (often self-imposed) limitations is intensified."