Archive | December, 2008

Rage Against the Machine

I’ve previously mentioned my annoyance at discovering, only after leaving Athens’ National Archeological Museum, that it houses the Antikythera mechanism (whose image graces my former blog’s archive page) and I’d somehow missed it.

Antikythera mechanism

As though to rub it in, now comes this story (conical hat tip to LRC) featuring a picture of the mechanism clearly on display in a hall of the museum, as if to say “how could you miss me?”


Lost in Space

BSG shuttle The first of ten Galactica webisodes premieres today to bridge the gap between the previous season, or half-season, or whatever they’re calling it, and the next, um, ditto.

SPOILER ALERT #1: If you haven’t finished watching the previous season, or half-season, or whatever they’re calling it, you shouldn’t watch these webisodes yet.

SPOILER ALERT #2: Don’t read the comments section here until you’ve watched the first webisode.


Guerillas in the Midst

– I know what you’re going to say. You’re going to say, as so many of our enemies do, that you admire our ideals, but loathe our methods.

– I loathe your ideals. I admire your methods.

….. (Ayn Rand, We the Living, 1st edition.)

With a new Che Guevara movie on the way I thought it would be worth reviewing Rothbard’s shifting views on Che’s popularity.

Kill them all! Heh heh. In 1967 Rothbard wrote:

Che is dead, and we all mourn him. Why? … Surely not because Che was a Communist. Precious few people in this country or anywhere else will mourn the passing, for example, of Brezhnev, Kosygin, or Ulbricht, Communist leaders all. No, it is certainly not Che’s Communist goals which made his name a byword and a legend throughout the world, and throughout the New Left in this country.

What made Che such an heroic figure for our time is that he, more than any man of our epoch or even of our century, was the living embodiment of the principle of Revolution. … And furthermore … we all knew that his enemy was our Enemy – that great Colossus that oppresses and threatens all the peoples of the world, U. S. imperialism.

Likewise a year later, commenting on the ’68 uprisings, Rothbard suggested that students revered Che – and also Mao – not because they were a Communist – since, again, Brezhnev was also a Communist and nobody revered him – but because Che and Mao had shown that in our “modern, complex, and militarized world” people are still “able to make revolution.”

Two more years later, however – in 1970 – Rothbard had moved to a less optimistic explanation for Che’s and Mao’s being more popular than Brezhnev, a shift corresponding to his increasing disillusionment with the left:

It is the communist ideal, the ultimate goal of Marxism, that excites the contemporary Marxist, that engages his most fervent passions. The New Left Marxist has no use for Soviet Russia because the Soviets have clearly relegated the communist ideal to the remotest possible future. The New Leftist admires Che Guevara, Fidel Castro, Mao Tse-Tung not simply because of their role as revolutionaries and guerrilla leaders, but more because of their repeated attempts to leap into communism as rapidly as possible. … The New Left, for example, ignores and scorns Marshall Tito despite his equally prominent role as Marxian revolutionary, guerrilla leader, and rebel against Soviet Russian dictation. The reason … is because Tito has pioneered in shifting from Marxism toward an individualistic philosophy and a market economy.

I have no particular dog in this fight; I think different leftists have admired Che for different reasons – some for the “good” reasons and some for the “bad” ones. I also think Rothbard went from an insufficiently selective engagement with the left in the 1960s (too willing to make nice with Maoists, for example) to an excessively broad rejection of the left in the 1970s, and may accordingly have passed in tandem from an excessively rosy interpretation of Che’s popularity to an excessively bleak one.


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