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Does anyone else think a lot of magick has been co-opted by the white-supremacist capitalist patriarchy?

Digiquo

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I see a lot more leftist and sometimes even outright communist or anti-fascist groups that masquerade as being about the occult but really only care about politics and magic comes second.
I'm sure there are some neonazi and similar right wing groups that pretend to care about magic, but I usually see them resort more to inane conspiracy theories and how our government covers it all up. Most consider themselves Christian in some form, so I doubt they look upon people who claim they can perform magic favorably.
 

Kepler

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The downfall of Jordan Peterson illustrates well what happens when white supremist capitalist patriarchy tries artifice to co-opt the occult to prevent progress away from hierarchies and Aristotelian concepts.

It's not like spirits can't tell a quack from a squawk.
 

josuequiros777

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Well, the most religious of each political extreme put their religion over any other belief, including magick, but there's a good portion of each as well which study and practice magick of all flavours.

Also there are those who are with a foot in and another out, which come from a very religious background but are curious about magick and the occult (or viceversa maybe) but likely not the majority. Even if certain religious practice are magickal, their devotees would never admit that, unless it isn't taboo or an active part of worship.

Now I know lefties tend towards secularism and atheism but it isn't unlikely that conservatives also are like this, and even when ideologies look very different on paper, the behavior of extremists is very similar no matter their reasons for acting like this, their ideology or faith, they are mostly dangerous in some form or a have very unworked unconscious mind.

And of course, Politics is a form of Magick. It puts people under a spell, the idea that they have to give their power away to someone who can't use it effectively to fix what needs to be fixed, the idea that you can delegate your responsabilities to someone else. Even mages and witches have fallen under it.
 

Kepler

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It's funny that the op and title didn't mention left and right political distinction associated with the behavior but it's how the post was mostly taken and answered with defensive avoidance fallacies to boot.

OP has picked up on an undercurrent.
 

HoldAll

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We've had these incidents in the Forum Library where somebody posted links to two collections with more than 1,500 books in total, everything from alchemy to zen. Everyone was grateful until somebody spotted some racist and white-supremacist tracts among them. We asked the member to remove them and that was that. When I was still posting books and went hunting for book caches, I noticed that most conspiracy-nut collections often featured right-wing extremist and anti-semitic stuff as well, for example the Protocols of the Elders of Zion or Hitler's Mein Kampf. Did those collectors read all that crap out of academic interest or were they right-wing extremists? No idea. Then there was this guy who posted some Joy of Satan pamphlets which also contained neonazi stuff. As far as I remember, we took most them down, they were nothing but pop Satanist propaganda anyway.

It should be borne in mind that different countries handle the right to freedom of speech differently and that the US model is by no means universal. Disseminating neonazi propaganda, displaying nazi insignia, tattoos or the Hitler salute in public, denying the Holocaust, etc. can get you to prison in some EU countries for historical reasons; rare debates there revolve around the modalities of the statutes' application, freedom of speech never comes into it. These countries have been 'anti-fascist' since 1945, not always consistently so right after the war but formally nevertheless, so these JoS guys should better be careful where they show their swastika tats on their European holidays or they'll be arrested within minutes.

As for 'capitalist'… I see it as the prevalent state of affairs, not as a definite movement with a clearcut ideology. From what I've gathered from friends who had escaped from former Eastern Bloc countries, the Communist Parties there thought that occultism benefitted capitalism because it prevented workers from developing class awareness and rising up against their oppressors, and consequently banned every expression of it. I think they were mistaken, from what I gather from Forum discussions, many members are highly political, just not always in the way those post-war Communist Parties naively expected.

Scholars in the academic world, on the other hand, are woke to the extreme and appear to like nothing better than calling each other some kind of '-ist' or another and accusing each other of various '-isms' once they start argueing (I'm reading mostly scholarly books right now in the hope of finding more reliable information than in purely esoteric tomes); I frequently even have to look up some those '-isms' to understand what they're bickering about.

'Patriarchy': Many witches call themselves feminists, and I don't think I've ever read a modern male occult author pining for the old days where women knew their place (plenty of such authors in the past though!). In line with old-school Communist theory and second-wave feminists like
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, I guess you could call all occult books specifically directed at women and distracting them from their fight against the patriarchy 'fascist' (or some other kind of '-ist'); seen from this black-and-white perspective, all of occultism is a tool of the patriarchy to subjugate women. Fortunately, those days of top-down feminism are long past, and you have to decide for yourself if the contents of a book violates your personal value code.

I guess you could call even this reply 'paternalistic'. I can't help it, I'm a guy, and in the same way many writers probably 'serve the capitalist patriarchy' without even noticing; I don't think they're doing it on purpose though.
 

Digiquo

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Truthfully, I don't think OP's post was a good faith attempt to initiate intelligent discussion, but since it's going that direction anyways thanks to the quality of this forum's members, I'll chime in further.

And of course, Politics is a form of Magick. It puts people under a spell, the idea that they have to give their power away to someone who can't use it effectively to fix what needs to be fixed, the idea that you can delegate your responsabilities to someone else. Even mages and witches have fallen under it.

As for 'capitalist'… I see it as the prevalent state of affairs, not as a definite movement with a clearcut ideology. From what I've gathered from friends who had escaped from former Eastern Bloc countries, the Communist Parties there thought that occultism benefitted capitalism because it prevented workers from developing class awareness and rising up against their oppressors, and consequently banned every expression of it. I think they were mistaken, from what I gather from Forum discussions, many members are highly political, just not always in the way those post-war Communist Parties naively expected.

Scholars in the academic world, on the other hand, are woke to the extreme and appear to like nothing better than calling each other some kind of '-ist' or another and accusing each other of various '-isms' once they start argueing (I'm reading mostly scholarly books right now in the hope of finding more reliable information than in purely esoteric tomes); I frequently even have to look up some those '-isms' to understand what they're bickering about.

'Patriarchy': Many witches call themselves feminists, and I don't think I've ever read a modern male occult author pining for the old days where women knew their place (plenty of such authors in the past though!). In line with old-school Communist theory and second-wave feminists like
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
, I guess you could call all occult books specifically directed at women and distracting them from their fight against the patriarchy 'fascist' (or some other kind of '-ist'); seen from this black-and-white perspective, all of occultism is a tool of the patriarchy to subjugate women. Fortunately, those days of top-down feminism are long past, and you have to decide for yourself if the contents of a book violates your personal value code.

I guess you could call even this reply 'paternalistic'. I can't help it, I'm a guy, and in the same way many writers probably 'serve the capitalist patriarchy' without even noticing; I don't think they're doing it on purpose though.
These lines of thought, specifically how occultism distracts from class consciousness and can be directly compared to the power wielded by politicians echoes many of the conclusions James Frazer brings forth about the very earliest history of magic and magicians in his book 'The Golden Bough.'
At least according to his research (bearing in mind this this book was published almost if not 100 years ago), most indigenous tribes existed in a state of pseudo-democracy/oligarchy of the elders where all tasks were performed by all members of the tribe. Nobody specialized in any particular task. It was the advent of the belief in magic and the subsequent delegation of magical tasks to a single skilled magician that caused magicians to become the very first specialized role within a society where one was not expected to perform other tasks. By simple virtue of the power magicians were expected to wield, this made them a natural focal point for the survival of the tribe, and naturally this granted them significant influence in tribe affairs, and eventually would graduate them to chiefs and kings, thereby transmuting magical power into political power, and changing the dominant governmental structure across the early globe from a loose democracy into pure despotism and monarchy.

My personal thoughts: magic has fallen to the wayside in lieu of science as a means of explaining the functions of the world, and political agents are no longer expected to know anything about anything except how to manage money and talk eloquently. The inclusion of a magical perspective in either realm, science or politics, is in fact liable to have oneself ousted from either arena completely, with some exceptions.
But, the principle of the delegation of tasks to individuals who we percieve to wield some manner of power and influence over realms the average person cannot comprehend still holds true to this day, and granting that person greater influence by a vote of democracy (at least initially) over things outside their realm of expertise is unlikely to ever change. There will always be individuals better at some tasks then others and it would be folly to recognize those differences in skill and allow them to go untapped. We can say all day we don't want to give the guy who kicks a soccer ball really good any measure of additional political influence then he might enjoy by happenstance, but what about somebody who's really good at politics? The natural response is to say that because he's really good at politics, he should be permitted to become a politician and specialize in it, and in doing so we've fallen for the trappings of despotism again, hiding it behind a vote. To remain truly despot free, the man who's good at politics can't be permitted any excessive political influence, nor can the guy that's really good at kicking a soccer ball around be permitted to play it for a living. You enforce a whole new form of tyranny by attempting to circumvent this natural tendency to anoint a leader of the people, whether they be a magician or not.
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I guess as an addendum and conclusion to my previous thought and a more direct response to the OP; magic hasn't been "co-opted" by any particular group who stands as the status quo, but magic and specialized magicians were in fact the catalysts that enabled the consolidation of power within a single individual across nearly every ancient culture across the entire globe. Magic and magicians were the origin of kings and all the pitfalls that entails. The re-democraticization of magic by individuals, after magic gave way to religion, is really more a swinging of the pendulum back towards its origins where all peoples were amateur magicians, and the pendulum will swing the other way yet again once the people realize yet again it's far more efficient for one person to be very good at magic than for everybody to be mediocre at it for the public good. Maybe even within our lifetime we'll see a new Magician King or President elected somewhere that isn't a backwaters hellhole.
 
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