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Ethics/Metaethics Geopolitics Philosophy Politics Uncategorized War in Ukraine

I’m Alright Jack Pacifism

I’m going to deal here with some arguments I’ve seen recently in a number of forums with regard to the war in Ukraine. While the war continues past a thousand days, and the heroic resistance during the battle of Kyiv and spectacular breakthroughs in Kherson and Kharkiv are displaced in public memory by other geopolitical events, some commentators in safe countries are giving voice to arguments about “the futility of war”, “risk of nuclear annihilation” and calling reasoned, careful analysts like Lawrence Freedman “warmongers”.

Most directly: these arguments take the view of “we must abandon the Ukrainians: I don’t care how many civilians the Russians torture if Putin adds chunks of their country to his empire, because on a wider scale the way war affects me/humanity/me as part of humanity is worse”.

We are crucial juncture in the war. Russia is performing as badly as it ever has: thousands of soldiers consumed for kilometers of worthless ground, sending [ineffectual] North Korean troops into the meat-grinder, inability to retake sovereign Russian territory in Kursk, a collapsing ruble and soaring inflation/interest rates, strategic disaster in Syria, losses of military infrastructure and senior generals even in Moscow, etc. But the risks for Ukraine are severe: further offenses in 2023 could not be sustained, 2024 has been playing defence, unreliable support from Western leaders/Trump is now a major risk1, and retaking deeply embedded positions in e.g. the Donbas is serious stretch. Putin does not want to make peace: in fact, he has locked himself into trying to wring more than the burnt-out parts of the Donbas he holds as some kind of payoff for his catastrophically ill-conceived war that has wrecked the Russian economy, decimated the working-age population and turned Russia into an international pariah.

So it’s interesting to see these sorts of arguments – which I’m going to call I’m All Right Jack Pacifism – are re-emerging. They were very visible in the first days of the war on places like Twitter – but the basic evolution of the war (the resilience of Ukraine, the embarrassing performance of Russia as a “Great Power”, the basic irrelevance of nuclear weapons even as “red lines” were crossed again and again) has made even those with an actual ideological preference for Putin switch to something more sophisticated.

So based on the facts on the ground and the history of the war, these views are rather crude. But rhetoric and sophism aside, I think there are actually deep philosophical contradictions in these IarJ pacifisms that are at least somewhat interesting to examine.

Categories
Books Lit Crit Nabokov Podcasts Politics Rand The Fountainhead

Ayn Rand – a good writer after all?

Long after the politics have passed, literary quality – or lack of it – remains.

The following is a comment I put together on an episode of the Origin Story podcast produced by Ian Dunt and Dorian Lynskey. The episode covered Ayn Rand and her legacy – while the guys are very unsympathetic to her political position, I was pretty astonished to find that they thought she was a pretty effective fiction writer! This is my response, which became a bit ridiculously long for an inline comment – somewhat edited for clarity and to incorporate my correction. You can see the original here.

(The podcast series is really excellent, highly recommended to check it out)

There is a slight danger of slipping into conspiracism here in thinking that all critics must have had a political axe to grind. There is a simpler explanation: that there really are serious literary defects which become obvious when you are familiar with the history of the form.

Categories
Arcana Ethics/Metaethics Knausgaard Nabokov Philosophy Politics War in Ukraine

Homo homini lupus

Recent events have stirred in me some thoughts about evil.

For an atheist I spend a, probably unhealthy, amount of time thinking about theodicy. The below may also make it clear why I am comfortable using terms like evil and virtue from a non-religious perspective.

I think all of these have some truth to them (and all are problematic) – and I suspect we could point to examples of all of them, even just in the context of Ukraine. But some, I think, are easier for modernist, rationalist (decent?) people to get their heads around. Some are much less comfortable. This is endlessly fascinating to me.

We may think ourselves secure โ€“ but there it is, the dark shape at the door, it seeps through the floor like radon. There is no limit to the limits of our rational power. Evil is a Thing that can ignite, all by itself.

Categories
Books Nonfiction Politics Reviews

Review: How To Be A Liberal

By Ian Dunt (2020)

A real achievement. It’s ambitious – I started off thinking he’d bitten off a bit more than he could chew. It’s both very contemporary – up to the minute even – and a sweeping history of the liberal tradition.

Does a remarkable job considering this scope – even for well-known parts of the story or figures like John Stuart Mill, brings out wonderful details that (I at least) just wasn’t aware of – like he effectively co-wrote much of his work with his partner, then wife, Harriet Taylor, and was dedicated to the rights of women. Not to mention bringing in really interesting guys like Benjamin Constant, who I’d plain never heard of.

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Books Nonfiction Politics Reviews

Reviews: Anne Applebaum on Eastern Europe

Iron Curtain: The Crushing of Eastern Europe (2012) and Between East and West: Across the Borderlands of Europe (1994) by Anne Applebaum

Anne Applebaum’s recent book is so good, I’ve been working my way through her back catalogue.

Two books about the “borderlands” of Europe – Poland, Lithuania, Ukraine, Hungary, Belarus and Moldova – their crushing and Sovietization following 1944, and subsequent re-emergence in the 90s are excellent if you have an interest the region, its history, and the recent destablilisation.

Pure joy, and the best non-fiction book I’ve read this year

Categories
Books Politics Reviews

Review: Twilight of Democracy

The Failure of Politics and the Parting of Friends by Anne Applebaum (2020)

So I’ve been on a massive Anne Applebaum kick for the last couple of weeks. A very long time ago I’d read her history of the Gulag, an extremely jolly read, and subsequently forgot about her.

The best political, and one of the best nonfiction books, of the year. This is a million miles away from the often tiresome hot takes of the internet punditry.