November 2,
2017
Rats are opportunistic social mammals that can adapt to – and survive in
– a plethora of environments. They are skilled diggers, climbers and swimmers,
have highly developed olfaction and hearing and communicate by leaving scent
markings and
emitting
ultrasonic vocalizations.
Rats can serve as vectors for a variety of diseases. For example,
the “Black death” pandemic
(aka “plague” and “Bubonic plague”) of the 14
th century that killed
up to a third of Europe’s population was caused by the
Yersinia pestis
bacteria, which was transmitted to humans by the bites of the Oriental rat
flea. The infected fleas were transported to Europe from China through trade
routes in Central Asia most likely on the backs of
Black rats (
Rattus rattus),
which typically served as vehicles in a rodent-flea-rodent
enzootic cycle, but were
sometimes the fleas’ initial victims. Humans entered the plague’s cycle only
accidentally due to a convergence of conditions that enabled its propagation.
Rats are nocturnal animals that tend to live in damp, tight and dark
places such as gutters and burrows and avoid interaction with humans. As a
result, rat sightings during daylight are (
correctly
or not) associated with major infestations. However, repeated daytime rat
sightings may better indicate a diseased population rather than infestation.
Throughout the spread of plague many infected rats likely surfaced
during daylight as a result of their disoriented diseased state. Dying and
injured rats tend to exhibit abnormal
defensive
behaviors. Thus, it is likely that sick, Oriental flea-infested rats occasionally
attacked humans, and were blamed for directly transmitting the plague via bites
or scratches, even though the real culprits were their resident fleas.
Nonetheless, rats served a critical function in the spread of plague and
have been vilified for centuries as purveyors of death and disease.
The Black Death of the 20th century
In a similarly ruthless fashion to the plague of the 14
th
century, the Black Death of the 20
th century –
Nazism/fascism
– destroyed much of Europe.
But Nazism did not easily infect the German public and by extension
everything the Nazi war machine touched. Nazism was able to proliferate due to
a convergence of conditions in Europe in general and in Germany in particular
and
was
normalized by its own version of rat vectors who bridged the gap between
the plague of Nazism and the German public.
Nazism’s rats, Goebbels and other propagandists, had the essential role
of normalizing Hitler and Nazism, a process known as
Gleichschaltung,
or Nazification, i.e. infection of German society with fascistic thought.
This process relied on systematic smoke and mirrors that involved lying,
diversion and scapegoating as a means of enabling Hitler and his Nazi party to
dominate past the point of no return.
One such example of scapegoating was the Nazis’ portrayal, vilification
and targeting of Jews. In an astounding case of
psychological
projection, Nazi propaganda created images and even a motion picture –
Der Ewige
Jude (“The Eternal Jew”) – which depicted Jews as invasive species that
infested and plagued Europe while devouring its precious resources.
And just like the Bubonic plague, Nazism had its own enzootic cycle,
maintaining a healthy population of rat carriers, while infecting and killing a
minority; Hitler infamously used people to propagate his ideas, only to kill
them once they served their purpose and/or became a threat. The case of
Gregor Strasser who
was murdered on Hitler’s orders on the purge of the “Night of long knives” in
1934 was emblematic of this phenomenon.
Today’s neo-fascism
Fascism, the plague of 20th century Europe, had to be
forcefully crushed in order to stop its global spread. All attempts to defeat
it through diplomacy or attrition failed.
Since its defeat, the plague of fascism has been lying relatively
dormant, restricted to local and very limited outbreaks. As such, fascism’s
vectors have also been contained to their dark and hidden burrows, away from
the general public, confined to esoteric publications and the dark corners of
the internet.
But the years 2016-2017 have signified a rise to power of a mutated yet
distinctly related form of fascism – a 21st century neo-fascism,
propelled by a unique set of variables, which have enabled its outbreak.
Though
dissimilar
to the 20
th century version in some ways, 21
st century
neo-fascism has many of the attributes of its ancestor. In line with
Umberto Eco’s
simple and useful characterization of 20
th century fascism,
Trump’s
contemporary version has, among others, the following symptomatically
fascistic attributes: (i) traditionalism (e.g. Make America Great Again!); (ii)
a distrust of the intellectual world (e.g. climate change denial, unfounded
conspiracies); (iii) fear of difference (e.g. Muslim ban, the US-Mexico wall);
(iv) appeal to a frustrated middle class (see
here,
here and
here);
(v) militaristic elitism and
contempt
for the weak; (vi)
machismo
and; (vii)
newspeak.
Donald Trump echoes a form of demagoguery reminiscent of Hitler’s in many
ways. Trump’s pathological lying, his buffoonery and his anti-Semitic,
misogynist and xenophobic appeal to the masses have kept people off balance and
enabled his
fascist
creep into power.
Trump is skillfully
using
trial balloons to test public resistance before creating precedents that
would serve to shatter acceptable taboos as a prelude to authoritarianism.
Though still incapable of fully consolidating power, Trump has been able
to manipulate a corrupt and often times subservient media to serve his purposes
of distraction and scapegoating, which mask his ongoing looting of the American
democracy and public sphere.
What’s more, the surge of the plague of neo-fascism has stimulated an
accompanying emergence of its rat vectors from their hideouts. For example,
Breitbart news, a fringe,
conspiracy-ridden
and
White
supremacist haven, has been virtually normalized and mainstreamed,
tragically also by
figures
associated with the Left.
Rats in sheep clothing
Infiltration of Left-wing spaces is a common and insidious form of
normalization of fascistic ideology, politicians and policies. Such vectors of
the fascist plague – rats in sheep clothing – seek to promote “red-brown”
alliances, and squash any meaningful threat from a mobilized anti-fascist Left.
Rats in sheep clothing are easier to spot if one knows what to look for.
In essence, these propagandists perpetuate
a
con job by using pseudo-intellectual, ahistorical analyses, and ambiguous,
manipulative and convoluted language to mask their underlying motivations.
Rats in sheep clothing provide the smoke and mirrors necessary for the
fortification and domination of the reactionary, White supremacist,
anti-Semitic, counter-revolutionary forces they champion, and will attack and
ridicule their sworn enemies – anti-fascists and anarchists, from a so-called
Leftist perspective.
Rats in sheep clothing will deny the very existence of fascism,
scapegoat Jews and other “out” groups such as immigrants (also groups that are
more sensitive to growing bigotry), convey opinions as facts, and heavily rely
on a contrived “unity” to deflect challenges to their writings and actions (see
here).
Finally, due to their syncretistic and often contradictory set of belief
systems, rats in sheep clothing will continue the fascist tradition of
psychological projection and scapegoating, accusing their enemies of their own
inadequacies.
A case study
The recent articles by the writer Diana Johnstone: “Antifa in theory and
in practice” and “The harmful effects of Antifa” both published on
CounterPunch, are
examples of this phenomenon.
The first article begins with a quote by Ennio Flaiano, which equates
fascists with anti-fascists. This sort of immoral equivalency was
unsurprisingly echoed
by
Donald Trump himself after the tragic events at Charlottesville.
Johnstone continues by denying the very existence of fascism, a word she
often places in double quotes, mocking antifascists as “more inspired by Batman
than by Marx or even by Bakunin”, and attributes the alarm over the
American and global trend to the “ancestral fear in the Jewish community”:
“The scarcity of fascists has been compensated by
identifying criticism of immigration as fascism. This identification, in
connection with rejection of national borders, derives much of its emotional
force above all from the ancestral fear in the Jewish community of being
excluded from the nations in which they find themselves.”
– Diana Johnstone; “Antifa in theory and in
practice”
This ahistorical assessment (one of many in her piece, see
here),
which depicts national borders only from an exclusionary and limited uniformity
perspective and not as borders of oppressive/racist/fascist regimes beyond
which is refuge, contradicts the aforementioned symptoms evident in
Donald
Trump and his administration, blaming them on a sort of Jewish hysteria.
What’s more, it denies the indisputable
trend
in Europe, which has plagued
Germany,
Austria,
and
Greece,
among other countries.
It is unsurprising that Johnstone would protest against “criticism of
immigration”, as
she
whitewashed the racism and nativism of the far-right French candidate
Marine Le Pen before the elections in France, and even went so far as to claim
that Le Pen was on the Left of the French political map (for more see
here).
The reference to Jews’ “ancestral fear… of being excluded” is a regurgitation
of an anachronistic, factually false and anti-Semitic trope. Nowadays, many
Jews continue to be in line with the Zionist notion of nation-states and global
apartheid rather than “rejection of national borders”. In fact, it is Zionist
ideology itself that
manipulates
Jewish fear to justify its exclusivist national borders, not their
rejection.
Tellingly, in an email exchange Johnstone could not provide a reference
for the above quote, claiming it was a conclusion that she arrived at after “a
long lifetime of observation”. When probed further she referred to the
activities of “influential Jews as George Soros, Daniel Cohn-Bendit, and
Bernard-Henri Lévy”, and sent a reference from a “
totally
Jewish source”.
Finally, Johnstone’s writing continues a tradition of psychological
projection when she refers to Antifa as “storm troopers of the neoliberal
war party” (in “Antifa in theory and practice”). Her brand of writing
serves as a vector for the epidemic of neo-fascism, which only expands on and
continues
the neoliberal establishment policies of its predecessors, and is now at
the helm of the American empire.
Lessons from history
The Left must learn the lessons of 20th century fascism and
apply them to the rising tide of 21st century neo-fascism.
The spread of neo-fascism and the neutralization of its opposition depends
on propagandists who normalize fascist ideology and enable it to dominate. In
order for the Left to protect itself against infiltration of rats in sheep
clothing, it must learn to detect their
modus operandi, refuse to coddle
them or participate in propagating their ideas. Lefty anti establishment
outlets should preserve their integrity and learn from the example of
the
Munich Post, which relentlessly and fearlessly documented the Nazi party’s
atrocities and Hitler’s dubious and duplicitous political maneuvers, up until
the outlet was forced to close.
Only by keeping to principles of truth, justice and equality, and
chasing the rats/propagandists back to their natural dwellings – the gutters
and burrows of the media world – will humanity have a chance to survive the
looming neo-fascist plague.
Art by Banksy; Photo by Yoav Litvin