Guerrilla History - The Imperial Theory Industry w/Gabriel Rockhill [Adnan Husain Show]
Episode Date: January 31, 2026In this episode, Adnan discusses Professor Gabriel Rockhill's new book, Who Paid the Pipers of Western Marxism, v. 1 of The Intellectual World War. This incredibly important book contributes an insu...rgent foray, a guerrilla attack, against the imperial theory industry and its ideological work in the psychological, intellectual war that is central to the perpetuation of imperialist capitalism of our era. This first volume lays out a crucial method and approach, a way of performing intellectual history through dialectical and historical materialism, while exposing the relationship between the deep state/permanent state forces that have patronized a compatible left culture and the wider systemic network of institutions where intellectual and cultural production takes place. The work goes on to examine some important figures particularly in the so-called "Frankfurt School" and situate these thinkers/scholars and their work within the imperial theory industry. It is a fascinating conversation about an profoundly important new book. We look forward to further volumes in this important series on the Intellectual World War. Dr. Gabriel Rockhill is a professor of philosophy and global interdisciplinary studies at Villanova University. He is the author or editor of a dozen books and co-founder of the Critical Theory Workshop. Check out its website and consider joining their summer school, attending their events and supporting this collective intellectual and liberatory project: https://criticaltheoryworkshop.com/ Support the show on Patreon if you can (and get early access to episodes)! www.patreon.com/adnanhusain Or make a one-time donation to the show and Buy Me a Coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/adnanhusain Like, subscribe, share! Also available in video on YouTube: https://youtube.com/@adnanhusainshow X: @adnanahusain Substack: adnanahusain.substack.com www.adnanhusain.org You can also support Guerrilla History at patreon.com/guerrillahistory
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, guerrilla history listeners, co-host Henry here.
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We're going to be co-publishing an episode of the Adnan Hussein show in which Adnan interviews Gabriel Rockhill,
former guest of guerrilla history, of course, about his new book.
who paid the Pipers of Western Marxism.
It was a really terrific discussion that Adnan had with Gabriel.
It's a very important work that Gabriel has put together.
I want to encourage you to pick up that book as well.
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So without further ado,
here is the Adnan Hussein show interviewing Gabriel Rockhill.
Mismillah Rahman and Raheim.
Salam, hello, peace to you all.
Welcome to the Adnan Hussein show.
I'm, of course, Adnan Hussein, a historian of the medieval Mediterranean and Islamic
world, and also co-host of Gorilla History podcast, back here with a really exciting
episode and a vital and important conversation.
I'm so looking forward to this.
I'm delighted to be able to welcome to the show.
Gabriel Rockhill, who is a professor at Villanova University,
is founding director of the Critical Theory Workshop
and is the author or editor of a dozen books,
including most recently Requiem for La French Theory
with Imerich Monveille,
apparently an English version of that.
Text is coming out soon,
and Domenico Los Sirdos Western Marxism,
which we discussed with my co-host, Henry Huckamaki,
on guerrilla history.
So do go check out that discussion.
And that, in some sense, covered a little bit,
sort of a prelude to the book that we're going to be discussing today
and made us very excited.
We've been anticipating this work
and the larger project of which it is a part for some time.
Gabriel, it's welcome to the show.
It's great to have you on.
It's such a pleasure, Edna.
Thanks for having me on.
Yeah, I'm really excited again to talk about this book, which is volume one of the intellectual world war, entitled, Who Paid the Pipers of Western Marxism, which is out very recently?
And, you know, where to start?
This is such an important project, and I think is going to do so much in practical way to
liberate minds and be an insurgency in the kind of intellectual world war against imperial knowledge
and imperial scholarship and imperial theory. Maybe you can tell us, you know, at the outset,
situating a little bit, what is this kind of idea that motivated the book to actually do something
like what I believe you called it the last time we spoke with you.
you when you were describing this project to us as a kind of political or maybe geopolitical
economy of theory and of intellectual production.
You know, what is the sort of ground on which this work is really founded?
Well, thank you for starting with that question because it goes to the kind of methodological
heart of the project as a whole.
I found that in my research, the first of the first of the first of the first of the first of,
framework of bourgeois culture tends to isolate both the producer of that culture and the products
from the overall social relations of production, and it thereby gives us a kind of atomized
and individualist account of culture. And this book, as well as the subsequent volumes,
is oriented in precisely the inverse manner. If we want to understand culture in the broad sense
and within that intellectual culture and knowledge production,
then we need to begin from the point of view of a systemic analysis
of the social relations of knowledge production.
And if we do that, then we can more easily situate individual producers
and their products within the overall system
that tends to reproduce very similar subjects
and very similar products over time.
And in particular, if we do this in,
a kind of geohistorical manner.
So we look at the entire globe and it's deep, deep history.
Then we see that this system of knowledge production
is by no means neutral, but is instead inscribed
within at its highest level of concrete abstraction,
the principal contradiction that undergirds life
on planet Earth under capital, and that is imperialism.
So a lot of the focus is on the institutions
of imperial knowledge production, but of course also dissemination and consumption.
This vantage point allows us to better grasp something like the theory industry.
And one of the arguments in the book that goes along with what I just said is that if we
want to study theory, we should not take our marching orders from the bourgeois humanities or
the bourgeois social sciences.
And I could go into what I think the limitations of them are.
just for the sake of focusing on the positive project, what we need to do is understand that
theory itself functions like an industry. Just as we have a movie industry, you know, we have a
television industry, we have a music industry, we also have a theory industry. And that theory
industry is undergirded by material institutions that are the result of the deep history of
imperialism that have a political orientation and valence that is baked into them.
And so a lot of what the book does, I think that actually I should just say one final thing,
that is that a lot of people, I think, unfortunately, if they have a facile or superficial
engagement with the book, they see CIA, they think about kind of individuals being compromised,
they really ignore the systemic nature of this intervention.
And what I'm really interested in is the historical effects of imperialism on the type of knowledge that is produced and widely disseminated and how it has become fashioned into a theory industry that is waging a sometimes open, often secret war on the forms of theory that are the most dangerous empire.
And in particular, the tradition of dialectical and historical materialism that has been the principal weapon of class struggle from those who have been the victims of imperialism.
So the book is not just a diagnosis of the kind of imperial system of knowledge, production, and dissemination, but it is also an attempt to bring to the four the forms of knowledge that have been produced primarily within the global periphery as weapons of struggle.
against the imperial world system.
Okay, yes.
Well, so this is a profoundly important project, obviously, you know, when it's placed into that context.
Some people, you already alluded to some of the work of the book is to examine some of the ways in which certain kinds of producers of knowledge,
certain kind of approaches and theories, you know, gained approbation and were promoted by,
you know, imperial, not both the imperial kind of structures and networks of these institutions,
of foundations and of institutions like universities and think tanks and so on, but that also
practically speaking, there were choices made for promoting and patronizing and recruiting
by intelligence, so-called intelligence agencies. I think you make a really great point about
how the CIA isn't actually an intelligence agency.
It is about, you know, promoting false knowledge and occluding knowledge.
And sometimes that's at least as important as what it actually presents and that much of what it
presents as we, you know, you know, remember during the Iraq War, the way in which, you know,
famously the real vice president, Dick Cheney, you know, established his own intelligence kind of
house, a production house, because he didn't receive enough of what he wanted from the CIA.
And so these priorities, you know, tend to undermine the actual, you know, nature of like the real
information to describe reality, but are to serve imperial interests. That's just a kind of small
example of a larger, you know, case of this systemically. But as a result of that, that, you know,
some people, you know, might think that this is reducing complex, you know, intellectual and
cultural productions to simplistic, you know, kind of response to patronage. And so I wanted to talk
a little bit about the history that you've uncovered. And I know many other scholars and historians
have done relevant work to establish these connections of patronage or the Congress of Cultural
Freedom and other institutions and so on that were supported by the CIA.
What was the sort of material basis for an effort by the U.S. empire through these institutions and organs?
And with what consequences do you think?
We could start with those practical kind of connections before we then elucidate how it functioned within the wider system.
But let's actually have a sense of how deep did that go, this kind of involvement by what some would call the deep state or the permanent state and these agencies.
that reflected U.S. imperial interests.
Let me just begin by highlighting one of the important methodological interventions of the book,
and that is pushing back very hard against the idea that as soon as you investigate material reality
and the social totality, you're being reductive, right?
It's actually the bourgeois humanities that are reductivist because what they do is they isolate
individual producers and their products from the social totality.
And in that sense, they reduce everything to the product of an individual, which is perfectly in line with liberal ideology writ large.
And so in my own research, I've done a lot of scores of Freedom of Information Act requests, consulted a number of different archives, also done a lot of digital archival research to bring to the fore some of the elements of the history of knowledge production that have largely been invisibleized for most likely understandable.
reasons. And I've also drawn, of course, extensively on a very large body of literature that has
focused on the history of the national security states of the imperial powers. And the breadth and depth
of these operations do truly boggle the imagination. Because when I first started doing this work
15 years ago, or maybe even more than that at this point, maybe 20, you know, I came to learn that
they were involved in the New York art scene and that they were promoting various artists and that in fact,
if you look at the board of trustees of the MoMA or major institutions, they're stocked with
national security state operatives. And that I found surprising 20 years ago, but now that I'm,
you know, very, very deep into this research, it becomes, has become readily apparent to me
that when a historian like you Wilford claims that the Central Intelligence Agency in the early
Cold War ran what was likely the largest patronage system of arts and culture in the history of
humanities of humanity he's likely correct in so far as there were there's truly just an unlimited
budget and it's also true that francis stoner saunders whose book of course is kind of referenced in the
title of my own book her book was originally title who paid the uh who paid the piper um and that book looks at
the transatlantic relationship between the U.S. national security state and Western intellectuals
and writers. And she argues that there's not a single writer intellectual artist in Western Europe
who was not affected in some capacity by these networks. I think both of those statements are
born out within the archival record. And we could get into some of the details and some of the
things that I've found out, you know, myself in my own archival research. But I would like to connect that then to one
kind of larger issue that might allow people to understand the broad scope of the book,
because it's not just a story of the CIA funding a few people or a few connections like this,
or, you know, Theodore Adorno inviting over to his house and corresponding directly with the CIA
agent who was the point person for the cultural Cold War in Germany and continued to work for the
Congress for Cultural Freedom after it was revealed that it was the CIA.
front organization, all of this is important. But these are the symptoms of the broader system.
And the overall focus is on the symptom. And so there is within the book a kind of theory of the
bourgeois state and how it operates as well as a theory of the bourgeois cultural apparatus.
And the bourgeois state actually does particularly in the age of imperialism as understood by Lenin,
right? So about from the latter part of the 19th century to the present is really beholden to a
a modality of dual governance in which the democratic facade of government, the political
theater is seconded by what people call the invisible government, the deep state, the intelligence
services, etc. CIA is part of this, but there are many other organizations as well.
And that these are actually the fundamental forces that are governing capitalist society.
And what they do is guarantee that capitalism will be maintained and even intensified by any
means necessary. And this logic of dual governance is important to see because it undergirds a kind of
theory of the superstructure, and that is that the superstructure, particularly under imperialism,
relies increasingly on covert operations. In fact, many of the intelligence services that we have
in the Western imperial powers, they all date from the age of imperialism. And there are very specific
reasons for that that actually go into quite a bit in the second volume of the book. But conjoined
with that, you have the bourgeois cultural apparatus, which needs to appear as if it's
meritocratic and democratic. Anyone who has good ideas or great art or culture or is a writer is free
to participate in the marketplace of ideas or so we are told. While at the same time, just like the
political theater of the kind of bourgeois political legal apparatus, in the cultural realm,
there is very tight and even totalitarian levels of control exercised from behind the scenes.
And so a lot of my research focuses on the darker
forces of the bourgeois state and the bourgeois cultural apparatus that create and condition
cultural forms that ultimately advance the interests of imperialism, often in complex and sophisticated
ways. Last thing that I'll say is one of the things that the CIA did in the early Cold War and
continued for quite some time is that they actually funded and supported leftists on the condition
that they were anti-communists. And they aimed at shoring up and consolidating what they called the
compatible left, the respectable left, and this is the form of leftism that as critical as it
could be of capitalism, nonetheless ended up accommodating capitalism and even imperialism because
they were worse, I'm sorry, they were a better option than actually existing socialism,
which they loathed and denigrated to no end. So there's more in your question, but I'll leave it
at that, and then we can dig deeper if you like.
Yeah, we can certainly, and there's so many different directions to go to pursue this as such a rich analysis in this book.
It's a very kind of comprehensive project.
And, you know, usually if somebody says it's three volumes, you might sort of gasp.
But in fact, actually, I think each of these volumes is going to do some very important work in advancing a more comprehensive understanding of this kind of intellectual world war.
But I did want to kind of, you know, maybe pick up a little bit further on this.
because one thing that I really appreciated so much about this work was its methodological sophistication,
and you drew some great inspiration from a quote I didn't know of Lenin's that was about dialectics being a multi-faceted.
Well, I don't think that's the exact word that he used, but it was...
Multi-sided knowledge.
Multicided knowledge, yes.
And that was a kind of interesting kind of point.
And you started by saying that very often in bourgeois humanities,
individual texts or individual, you know,
thinkers or producers are extricated from their social conditions,
from their histories.
And even in some of the kind of later methods of, say, new historicism and so on,
there's something very similar to what you're describing about.
this kind of compatible left, shoring up the compatible left through leftist kinds of
intellectual analysis that are avowedly not going to talk about like, you know, communism or, you know,
will be avowedly anti-communist or try and sublimate some aspects of the modes of production,
as that's too crude a sort of frame in which to pursue. So even if they're doing historical,
sort of work. It'll be curtailed in some ways. So that was one thing that I really appreciated here
was the attempt to look at things in their context and the way in which the specifics fit into a
larger systemic framework. Maybe you can elucidate a little bit further how you took to heart this
approach to dialectics that Lennon sort of pointed the way, at least as a way of encapsulating,
you know, through that quote that you had of his of a multi-sided form of knowledge and analysis.
Yeah, I really appreciate that question because it brings to the four, really the first half of the book,
which I'm a bit not necessarily concerned, but I want to make sure that people read that part of the book
because the reason this became a trilogy is just because I had too much information.
So I had a draft of the book that was well over 500 pages and in discussions with Monthly
Review Press, we decided that there were three natural parts, so why don't we break it into three
parts? But the first half of this book that is a kind of methodological crash course in, in my
opinion, how best to draw on the dialectical and historical materialist tradition and advance it
in the direction of developing additional ways to best analyze culture. And a lot of this is a direct
response, if you will, to what's referred to as cultural Marxism, which has some minor strengths,
but I think is ultimately held back by its limitations because there's not a serious political
economy of culture. There is a reification of individuals and their products like you just
mentioned. They don't center the principal contradiction of imperialism and so forth.
And part of the methodological sophistication or intervention is in the first part of the book is
based on my own trajectory because I have training in bourgeois philosophy and humanities on the one hand,
but then I also have training in the bourgeois social sciences and in particular the historical social
sciences. And the reason I pursued this dual training is because I wasn't satisfied with either of them
and I was looking for the necessary tools to understand them. And in very simplistic sense, you could say
that, well, the bourgeois humanities focus on the isolated product of cultural production. They focus on the
Whereas a lot of bourgeois social science focuses on the context.
And what this does is it creates a kind of fragmentary knowledge in which then even within the social sciences,
you have particular domains that are broken off from one another.
So it's economics, or it's politics or it's sociology and they're all splintered.
Opposed to all of that, what I try to do in the first half of this book,
is to draw on because of course, you know, we are all collective beings who are learning from the traditions that we're working within.
So to draw on the rich tradition of dialectical and historical materialism in order to further develop its account of culture.
And a big part of that is recognizing that culture is not produced by isolated individuals as they intuit magical forms or in conversation with other theorists in the kind of transhistorical ether of ideas or culture.
Culture is produced out of material situations and concrete social.
relations of production and there is a political economy that drives it. Therefore, what we need to do is have an analysis of the socioeconomic objective forces operative within bourgeois culture, knowledge they're, you know, included therein, but we also need an account of subjective agency and how it operates within that objective force field, if you will. So in doing so, it's not about, you know, abandoning human freedom and making it reductivist and just focusing on to
determination is really mapping out the complexities of how individual subjects situated within an overall objective material world make choices and then there are reactions to those choices on the part of the more objective structures such that for instance they're rewarded for the work that they're due and they receive uplift within the imperial superstructure or they don't do the work that is demanded of them they're sidelined you know invisible eyes
in certain instances, they're eliminated, they're killed.
And so that's part of the logic that goes into studying the cultural forms that I'm studying in the book.
But then there's also an attempt to further develop a dialectical account of hermeneutics
that isn't just the relationship between individual subjects and an objective world,
but that situates that within time.
And this is drawing very strongly on a lot of Lucchatch's excellent work, Lenin's great work,
Ilyenko, the best dialectical historical materialist accounts of dialectics.
And within those accounts and trying to further develop them in particular ways,
one of the things it's recognized is you never have a reified and isolated relationship
between a stable subject and a stable objective system within which they're situated.
This is always changing over time.
And so when Lenin describes dialectics as many-sided knowledge, what he's doing is he's identifying the fact that we're subject situated in an objective world.
And that if we want to have the best possible understanding of the objective world, we have to look at every single facet of it.
We have to analyze it as if it's a prism and we have to explore not just the economics, not just the politics, not just the culture, every aspect of it, not just the objective forms, but also the subjective forms.
but also the subjective agency that's operative within a particular situation.
So that's the kind of phenomenon of many-sided knowledge.
But Lenin, just like Lukach, then also adds to that, since time is a factor in absolutely everything
and is essential to a dialectical understanding of reality, there's no stable objective world
or subjective pole, but these are changing over time.
And the objective world is changing as subjective agents are trying to change it,
or contributing to its perpetuation in various ways.
So this many-sided knowledge actually has to be tracked in a temporal dimension.
And the goal, Lukach is fantastic on this,
is that our subjective knowledge comes not to carve nature at its joints,
predict the future in this kind of positivistic and reductivist-objectivist sense,
but instead that we as subjects can develop a better apprehension of the
multifaceted nature of the objective world over time,
so that we can intervene much more forcefully and more successfully in it and have our agency
maximized.
How do you maximize agency?
It's not by a blind belief in the individual freedom of subjects isolated from a situation.
It is by having the best changing multifaceted knowledge of the objective world, intervening in that
objective world with that knowledge, and then changing and adapting that knowledge over time so it is
better and better adapted to the situation because ultimately dialectics is founded on a primacy of practice
and it needs to be a materialist dialectics, right? And this is maybe the last thing that I'll say is that
a lot of the dialectics that you get in Western Marxism, it's actually one of the reasons that very
early on I was turned off to dialectics is a subjectivist, idealist dialectics that is disconnected
from material reality. So we're all hopefully familiar with the way that dialectics comes to
of function free form independently of any materialist analysis.
And it basically amounts to a series of rhetorical gestures,
gotcha moments of overturnings, of contradictions,
and it just becomes an idealist formal apparatus, if you will,
not a materialist way of analyzing and improving our apprehension of the world.
Because I'm increasingly convinced that the dialectical materialist
understanding of the world while situating subjects within the objective world absolutely needs to be
grounded in a primacy of objectivity in the sense that the objective world was there before any of us
and will be there after any of us and subjects themselves are part of this larger objective world
hence the necessity of the dialectics of nature and of a broader analysis of the materialist world
within which human beings are only nodal points.
We're only part of the broader natural world,
but we can, you know, reach our full potential
if we engage in all this many-sided knowledge
in order to become real practical actors in that world
and harness the powers of that world
to direct it ideally in a more egalitarian
and ecologically sustainable direction.
Yeah, that's such a hopeful vision
for what genuine dialectical analysis could help us achieve.
Because one thing that I've always noticed or felt a little bit about the Western Marxist framework
is that with a pseudo-materialism, it kind of argues for, you know,
a kind of inevitability of the contradictory.
And, of course, it's pulling from Marx the idea that, you know, at some point,
capitalism, you know, has to fail. And of course, what we're seeing is that, you know,
these ideological mechanisms in the superstructure are very useful in occluding that on a
broad level of consciousness. But there has been this kind of sense of, oh, the inevitability
of capitalism's collapse, almost as if history, as if they forgot the other dictum of Marx,
you know, which is that history is what we make. We don't make the conditions of our
history, but we make our history. And so the point, of course, is to be able to understand objective
reality so that we can actually intervene in it and make change, right? And that seems to be a part
of this that tends to be under-emphasized. It seems in Western Marxism, where there was much
less of an optimism about actually making change or making a difference, which is perhaps
why it focuses so much on those theological questions of ideological purification.
and so forth rather than the praxis of how you might, you know, actually intervene in one's historical moment.
But it also seems like this analysis that you have helps resolve some of those classic, you know,
kind of problems of base and superstructure, you know, puts it in a much more complex and dialectical way.
I think that point you made about time is so crucial.
As a historian, I'm very sensitive to that that very often we reify.
and when we're doing a kind of necessary structural analysis,
it has to be accompanied with the sense that this is unfolding in time.
It's not like these are structures that just exist in an abstract sort of way.
So that's all been so helpful,
and I really encourage readers to take a look at that first part.
One thing you said earlier that I want to now turn to
is about imperialism being a primary, perhaps the primary,
contradiction. And this seems to be partly because a lot of Western Marxism might characterize
what it's doing as a critique of capitalism. But that doesn't necessarily mean that they
understand it in its historical unfolding globally through colonialism and subsequently imperialism.
What do you think is so important for the intellectuals? You know, the intellectuals,
World War about, you know, the need to really apprehend and understand and critique and confront
imperialism as a primary contradiction, which is something that you don't find so much in Western
Marxism. How does it, how does, you know, what is that, I mean, it reminds me a little bit of,
you know, the importance of a contribution, even if he's not so much a materialist scholar,
but somebody like Edward Said who kind of foregrounded the problem of colonial knowledge,
but then, of course, didn't put it in the same kind of materialist framework of analysis that one might, you know, want for a full and thorough understanding of the operation of colonial knowledge.
But it seems that it is absolutely crucial to capitalism, you know, this creation of imperial knowledge.
And perhaps you could talk a little bit more about what you do to unpack that.
Yeah.
The first thing that I would say is just concerning the methodological points in what you highlighted,
it's absolutely true that the orientation of the book is such that the goal is to really
maximize the agency that people have in order to engage in praxis in the contemporary world.
and that there is also a kind of dialectical analysis of the base and superstructure that I don't need to go into.
But I do think that this terminology understood metaphorically is extremely useful for understanding how some people will simply refer to simplistically as ideology operates.
There's a material reality and an institutional instantiation, if you will, of ideology that the book attempts to tease out.
regarding imperialism though if you want to understand human life on planet earth then you need to
situate it within the historical underdevelopment of the tri-continent the global south the third
world call you call it what you will in order to favor the hyperdevelopment of the global north
and in particular the line the pockets of the capitalist ruling class that is
the fundamental force that has structured human life and extra human life, meaning the entire
ecosphere on planet Earth. If you ignore that, then you're really ignoring the material
baseline for how to understand anything else on planet Earth. And the reason that so much
Western Marxism has done that is precisely because they were the victims knowingly or not, or, you
to varying degrees, let us say, of the ideological effects of the imperial superstructure.
What I mean by that is that a lot of the intellectual work that is done in the global north,
when it is analyzed from the vantage point of the social relations of production,
needs to be situated within what I call in the book the intellectual labor aristocracy,
meaning that the leading figures of the theory industry today are at the absolute summit of global pyramids of intellectual labor in which they're given incredible economic and symbolic perks for doing the type of work that is rewarded by the Imperial Academy.
And arguably the single most important thing that these intellectuals can do if they're,
they're on the right, left, center, or they imagine that they're not beholden to these categories.
The single most important thing that they can do is to invisible, invisibilize, obfuscate, naturalize, imperialism,
while at the same time denigrating or misrepresenting the most important and most successful forms of struggle against imperialism,
which historically have been forms of actually existing socialist state building.
In that regard, one of the things that I found in my research,
and I didn't go into this with a chip on my shoulder or dedicated to just being critical of a bunch of people,
I went into it actually with quite a different vantage point,
and that is that I assumed, because there are earlier iterations of this project,
that certain of the more radical intellectuals, including within the imperial core,
would nonetheless live up to their reputation as being radicals.
And what I found is that really the principal dividing line is between those who center
the principal contradiction of imperialism and support the real world struggle against it and those
who do not.
And what is pretty incredible, and I'll spell out in the rest of the trilogy, is that you
would be very hard pressed to find a prominent left intellectual who has a platform.
akin to the platform, you know, that one would have either, you know, on the right or in the center or just a liberal, who maintains a resolutely anti-imperialist position and even more radically is supportive of socialism in the real world in some capacity.
So this book focuses partially on Western Marxism and a Frankfurt school, but the second volume looks at French theory and the third volume engages in contemporary radical theory.
And there's an incredible level of ideological consistency.
The reason for that is that all of these are subjects who have agency and are acting and making decisions within an imperial superstructure that is rewarding them and encouraging them to rise to the top if they give to it what it wants.
And what it wants is a left discourse that's compatible with imperialism.
And that's what it has gotten because it's paid for it.
Hence the title, yes. I mean, that's what's been funded. I was really astonishing to learn the extent. You said at the outset that, you know, in terms of cultural patronage, it was, you know, the kinds of investment that was made in cultural production, art, intellectual work is historically unmatched, really, by any other era. That obviously, when we think of the cultural monuments of ancient,
histories and societies and the exploitation that was required, you know, in order to build these wonders of the world and so forth, we're seeing something that is at a level, you know, even greater than that, that has, of course, built this architecture of universities and foundations, sponsoring just hundreds and thousands of work. So this is really a major cultural formation.
I was fascinated also by all this work that you've done looking at these CIA papers and so forth.
And you quoted from one of them, the kind of five aims of the psychological warfare campaign in the chapter entitled Imperial Intellectual Apparatus.
And here it's put in its most kind of policy.
style language with these five points.
Eliminate communist influence, reduce neutralist sentiments.
Interesting.
Transmute nationalism.
I found this one fascinating.
Transmute nationalism from a single country basis to identification with membership
of the large European community for unite Western Europe with it.
Atlantic world. And five, this one was hilarious as well. Demonstrate to non-Europeans that the
Atlantic community is not a white man's club, but rather the democratic bastion of the free world.
I mean, this is indeed a tall order. When you put the propositions out there in this way, it seems like,
wow, that is a really difficult task. How are you going to convince people of these things in this
sort of direct way.
But that with the kind of investment, the material, you know, kind of investment that went
into it translates into a very subtle and complex and sophisticated and variegated.
What I found so important is that you pointed out here that the best tactic was not just
confrontation with, you know, by promoting anti-communism.
But, you know, creating these alternatives that were anti-communist in their way, while selling an idea that the American kind of way was a superior one.
Like it was important, it was absolutely necessary to assert, you know, that the United States was promoting democracy and freedom and freedom.
you know, that this was, you know, a positive alternative to communism.
And in order to do that, it also had to, it had to recruit, you know, these kind of
compatible left sorts of theories that were anti-communist.
And so that's what's so fascinating is that they invested in a lot of things that on the
cruder side of anti-communist rhetoric would have been seen as totally,
useless and in fact cultural Marxism. This is what's so amazing about it is that the what's condemned
by the contemporary right about, you know, the depredations of so-called cultural Marxism,
destroying the fabric of Western civilization and all of that is in fact the tool by which it
most effectively promoted and sapped, promoted a vision of alternative that sapped actual
socialist organizing and support for really existing, you know,
of socialism. I'm wondering if you wanted to talk a little bit about how you get from, you know,
these kind of 1952 very direct propositions as goals to sponsoring such a variegated and sophisticated
set of forms of cultural and intellectual production. I think it's important to remember
that when the U.S. inherited the helm of global imperialism at the close of World War
they actually inherited it on its heels, right, in the sense that it was the communists who had just
defeated fascism. Communism had a level of global credibility that arguably has never been seen,
you know, before or since. They liberated the concentration camps. They really routed not only
fascism, but prior forms of authoritarianism from Eastern Europe. And they gave 35 million lives in the Soviet
Union doing this. And there were many major cultural figures, you know, Pablo Picasso, the most
famous artist in the West was a outspoken communist, you know, self-declared. Jean-Paul Sartre in
Beauvoir in France were fellow travelers of the Communist Party or became fellow travelers
of the Communist Party. Pablo Neruda, you know, as many, many at Paul Robeson. Communism was culturally
identified not only with the anti-fascist fight, but also with the anti-colonial struggle,
which was the continuing anti-fascist fight after World War II. And so what the U.S. had to do was it was
faced with kind of an impossible situation. They needed to brand themselves as anti-fascist.
They needed to brand themselves even as anti-colonial, while of course the reason for that was that they were seeking to recapture the colonial possessions of the former imperialist powers and use them for their own ends.
And they wanted to find a way of using a soft-cell approach to get the Marxist intelligentsia as well as socialists on board with their project.
The reason they did this is because they had no choice. They could not defeat Marxism openly.
They simply couldn't. And so what they ended up settling on in the early Cold War, and it's quite
brilliant when you think of it, and it is important to recognize that the intelligence services
in the United States really come out of the military, industrial, academic complex.
So you have the government, you have Wall Street,
and then you have the academy.
And the principal site of recruitment for the CIA
was and is the university.
And the intellectuals that they tend to recruit
are from the most prestigious universities.
So the Ivy Leagues in particular.
So we're not dealing with people who, for the most part,
are intellectually inept.
We're dealing with quite a savvy and well-trained crowd.
And these groups of people decided that the soft
cell, even at certain points in the Cold War,
going behind the back of the U.S. Congress to fund socialists in Europe because they were the only
ones in the words of Thomas Braden who oversaw some of these operations who gave a damn about fighting
communism. And so the goal was to split the left between the respectable and the not, you know,
the disrespectful left and to shore up socialism as a weapon of war against communism.
Socialism understood, of course, as social democratic and therefore a form of socialism that could or often did easily acquiesce with the interests of capitalism and even imperialism.
And it's that orientation that is so key.
And so the psychological strategy board was established in 1951 to oversee and coordinate the psychological warfare operations of the entire intelligence apparatus.
So what you have in this trove of documents that's available at the Eisenhower Library in Abilene, Kansas,
is amazing insight into the fundamental architecture of what I call in the book, the intellectual world war.
And one of the focal points, I actually included this document in the short appendix that's at the end of the book,
that they did is they decided that they needed attacks against communism that were formulated in Marxist terms.
And they also wanted defenses of the West formulated in Marxist terms.
They wanted to create the ability on the part of people in the West to remain self-described Marxists
while being able to be anti-communists.
And it's this version of anti-communist Marxism that, of course, became predominant.
And it's what we call Western Marxism.
And so there's not a one-to-one correlation.
And if people are approaching the book with a kind of liberal ideology of conspiracy theory,
like there'd be three guys in a dark room with a few briefcases and they'd pay Adorno or Horkeheimer,
this is all just a laughable, Hollywood-driven image of how these operations actually work.
And in fact, many of these images themselves are a consequence of CIA operations or state-depart operations
because they've been involved in all of the films about the CIA
and have a very strong role in the cultural apparatus.
We have to understand is that there's not a mechanical relationship,
not a one-to-one relationship,
but there's more of a kind of systemic and organic nature
that of the imperial superstructure
that makes it such that what these intelligent services did
is they kind of guided the nature of intellectual production
in a particular direction,
but with the ultimate goal that these systems would just function on their own.
And so if you can prime the pump and get the system functioning in that way for the first generation,
then the second and third generation of intellectuals will be hired by these people,
behold into them for their jobs, behold into them for letters of recommendation and everything else,
and you can do it in a more kind of hands-off manner.
The last thing that I would say is that there has been some confusion, unfortunately,
after the publication of Lissorto's Western Marxism,
concerning the critique of Western Marxism and cultural Marxism,
some people even assuming that somehow this aligns us,
you know, who are doing this on the Trump agenda or something like that.
What you have to see is the historical evolution.
The war on cultural Marxism is a recent war that is the result of the fact
that the operations that I analyze in the book,
unfortunately have been largely successful in shoring up a foe left within the imperial
core, a left that is pro-capitalist and pro-imperialist. In doing that, now they have set the stage
for the further war that they want to wage, and that is a war on any left whatsoever. So the term
cultural Marxism is just a stand-in for woke politics, identity thinking, anything that's
kind of lefty. And so for all, you know, we know, maybe Obama or Biden or these people are
cultural Marxists according to the way in which they characterize them. But the goal is ultimately
to move things further and further to the right. And so our critique of cultural Marxism or Western
Marxism isn't, you know, pulling out from underneath us the last bulwark against Trump-style
fascist agenda. On the contrary, it's pointing out why and how we got here and the fact that if we
want to wage a real war against increasing fascist encroachment, then we need to do that with the
tools and the strategies that are precisely the ones that have had a war waged against them by the
compatible left versions of Marxism that have become predominant under the name of Western Marxism.
Absolutely. I think that's really helpful in clarifying. You know, I don't want to keep you
too long. You've already been generous with your time, but this book has so much to discuss.
there was a couple of other areas that I wanted to ask you a little bit about.
One thing is that, you know, Edward Bernays features, interestingly,
in that kind of complex and matrix of sort of, you know, weaponizing theory, you know,
as part of the propaganda, psychological war, disinformation, information war.
that is also crucial to capitalist commodity marketing in consumer in a society.
And that was an interesting sort of area to think about a little bit more,
particularly since I only recently learned that he was, I guess,
Freud's nephew or something like this.
And you mentioned it also in the book.
And that he may have really consciously been developed.
psychoanalytic insights from Freud's work for this kind of imperial form of knowledge on a mass scale,
rather than for this kind of therapeutic sort of application, but to this broader approach.
And that's something I wanted to ask a little bit about, because the place of psychoanalysis also in the story is a little bit less prominent, say, than,
then, you know, kind of critical theory.
And I'm sure, you know, it's integrated, of course, at various points into, you know, the Frankfurt School and so forth.
But as a discourse that also comes from the late 19th and early 20th century, I just was interested.
That's an imperial era, you know, colonial era discourse.
How you think about that.
Is it really a separate story?
How would you see that and particularly via somebody like Edward Bernays,
it playing a major role, you could say, in imperial forms of knowledge?
That's a fascinating question, because Freud himself, of course,
was very deeply inscribed within bourgeois culture
and was a kind of liberal ideologue, if you will.
And there are excellent critiques of Freud for his dependence on a kind of
naturalization of colonialism, the naturalization of patriarchy, and there are excellent kind of both
feminist critiques, anti-colonial critiques of Freudian psychoanalysis, as well as anti-capitalist
critiques of Freudian psychoanalysis. And Bernay's own history is quite fascinating because he was the
double nephew, actually, of Freud, so two family lineages, basically. And he quite consciously was
drawing on psychoanalysis and using it as a form of mass mind manipulation. And it's what he then
offered the capitalist ruling class and the major corporations that he was working with, like United
Fruit, in overseeing their operations for the CIA orchestrated coup d'etat in Guatemala in 1954.
But he also, and I found this out through digging through archives, corresponded with Alan Dulles,
who is the longest serving head of the Central Intelligence Agency.
and himself a master in psychological warfare.
And you can't really understand, I don't think,
the 20th century or imperialism,
without understanding the role of the public relations services,
propaganda, psychological warfare
in being essential components for how it is
that the capitalist ruling class does the impossible.
I mean, they have redistributed wealth upward
in a way that means that the overwhelming majority of the planet,
increasingly so over time, is strangled by the search for super profits
on the part of a tiny, tiny minority of the population.
This contradiction is unmaintainable unless you are able
to capture hearts and minds and direct them in particular ways.
And this is one of the reasons that a lot of the psychological
and propagandistic work that was being done by Bernays and Ivy Lee is one of the other major figures, of course, in the history of the U.S. propaganda apparatus.
All of this needs to be understood as part of the kind of broader imperial superstructure and the war on the mind of the working masses.
In fact, the psychological strategy board, which has an important title that we should recognize, like the focus was on psychological.
warfare, many of the documents point out very explicitly that the pen is mightier than the sword,
that intellectual war is more important than military war, because the war for hearts and minds
is the overall global war within which individual military skirmishes take place.
Therefore, these psychological warriors, like Bernays, Ivy Lee and others, are absolutely
essential to everything that they do. The last thing that I would say, and this is taking the question
in a very different direction, is that Freudian psychoanalysis and later major influence by Lecon
became integral to a lot of Western Marxism. And so one of the narratives that you get about the
Frankfurt School of Critical Theory, which is, of course, one of the focal points for the second half of the
book, is that they recognized that classical or orthodox Marxism had a major limitation because they
only focused on objective structures and they didn't have an adequate account of subjectivity.
Therefore, Marxism had to be supplemented by psychoanalysis because psychoanalysis allowed us to
peer into the subjective psyche and thereby fully develop a kind of broader critical account
of consumer society. I think that this is a very, very misguided approach. First of all,
it ignores the very deep and important work done across the Marxist tradition on questions of subjectivity, subject formation, ideology, etc.
It has to basically invisibilize Marx, Engels, Lenin, and all of their accounts of ideology in order to come up with this idea that somehow Marxists weren't dialectical.
They were just focusing on reducing everything to class forces or economics.
And it also then, unfortunately, takes Freudian psychoanalysis without subjecting it to a materialist critique.
And they don't engage seriously with the critiques that were operative at the time by the likes of people like Vygoatsky and Vagotsky School in the Soviet Union and many other psychoanalytically trained individuals who recognized the extreme limitations, subjectivist and idealist limitations of psychonautically trained individuals who recognized the extreme limitations, subjectivist and idealist limitations of psychos.
psychoanalysis and thereby sought to situate psychoanalysis within the social totality of global
class struggle and thereby draw on, obviously, you know, there are contributions by psychoanalysis,
but draw on it and further elucidate it by situating within the broader objective world.
So one of my other critiques of Western Marxism is precisely that it doesn't do that.
And so if we want to draw on insights from psychoanalysis, we have to do it in this more robust
manner by drawing on some of these other traditions that have been critical of the subjectivism
of psychoanalysis.
Oh, that's so helpful and really well observed.
And it's a great segue into the last sort of question or topic that I wanted to ask you about,
which is, of course, really your critique of critical theory, of your analysis of what it's
actually doing and performing, including not only the main figures of adornment,
Horneau, Horchheimer, et cetera, but also you do spend quite a lot of time talking about Marcuse and his rather unique place.
And maybe he's a bit of a different case since he comes out of that, but maybe ends up in a different sort of location.
But how would you, you know, what should readers take away from your analysis apart from the way in which they tried to resolve the question of subjective agency and so on by importing psychoanalysis?
this without an appropriate critical and materialist locating of it and critiquing of it.
What other kinds of projects, you know, were being performed by what we might think of as the
Frankfurt School or, you know, critical theory?
Yeah.
I look at the Frankfurt School because of the foundational role that it played in Western Marxism.
And methodologically, I highlight this in the early part of the book.
I engage in a kind of constellational approach.
What I mean by that is that you can't map everything out in great detail.
Otherwise, you know, you would have books that would be hundreds of thousands of pages long.
And so I chose Adorno, Horkeimer, and Marcuse as important nodal points in a constellation.
If you understand what they were up to and some of the other figures they were working with,
then that allows us to engage in microanalyses of the specifics of each of these figures.
while the kind of analysis that situates them within the objective social totality allows us to use
those specific analyses to shed light on the broader tendencies of both the Frankfurt School
and Western Marxism. And what you see in the case of the Frankfurt School is not a Marxist
think tank that was centering the principal contradiction and arguing for, you know,
forms of socialism that would liberate us from them that are actually
real forms of socialism, not utopian, new ideas of socialism that are subjectivist and imaginary.
What the Frankfurt School actually is, is a group of intellectuals who made their careers by cozying up
to the capitalist ruling class and their foundation managers, as well as working directly with
the U.S. national security state, depending on how you count the numbers, at least seven of them
worked for a combined total of over 50 years for the U.S. national security state, so much so that
I referred to them during their U.S. American exile as the Washington School instead of the Frankfurt
School. Their entrance into the academy was largely due to the springboard of the U.S.
National Security State and all of the academics and movers and shakers that they met during that time,
prior to World War II when they were exiled in, you know, Morningside Heights in Manhattan,
they were publishing in German.
They were largely disconnected from the Anglo-Sphere.
They were pretty unknown.
And then when you look at the post-war period, you have Frankfurt School Scholars
at the most prestigious universities across the United States, from Stanford to Harvard to
to Columbia, to the new school and on and on.
And they worked with a public relationship.
campaign to, I'm sorry, a public relations firm to promote their work within the Anglo-Sphere.
And they were funded in particular by the Rockefeller Foundation who obviously appreciated the work
that they were doing because they funded them not only in the United States with individual
and then also collective grants, but then they funded their return to occupied West Germany
in the wake of World War II. And then some of the figures who were working within the U.S.
National Security State and for many propaganda agencies within the U.S. national security state,
like Voice of America, the Office of War Information, other agencies that I highlight in the book,
they continued those ties after they moved into the university.
So Marcusa was arguably the leading State Department specialist on communism.
And when he began working at Columbia and Harvard, he was still a State Department operative.
He was still on contract with the State Department.
And in fact, this should not be surprising because the people he was relocated with were the other
national security state operatives who are specializing in sovietology, who were relocated because
both of the institutions that he worked at at the beginning of his academic career were U.S.
national security state cutouts that were doing the same work they were doing in Washington,
except they were doing it under academic cover at Columbia and Harvard, as I spell out in some detail
in the book. Now, all of this needs to be situated within the dialectical methodology that we
talked about a moment ago. Individuals aren't reified, fixed, you know, like butterflies with a pin
in their back on a board. They are changing individuals and they have their own trajectories.
Horkheimer went full-on reactionary, supported the war in Vietnam, et cetera. Adorno arguably followed
more or less the same path with some exceptions. Markusa has his own trajectory. He was radicalized.
Clearly by the student movement, the anti-imperialist movement, he ended up coming out in support,
of the feminist movement, the ecological movement, the racial liberation movement.
He was a kind of what he referred to as the kind of movement of the minorities.
He supported.
And he got on board with a particular version of New Left Marxism.
At the same time, and I'd encourage people to read through the details of this,
he occupied a position that ended up maintaining the anti-communism that was foundational
to all of the work that he did with the U.S. National Security State.
every major book that he published outside of like collections of interviews or lectures or things like that
were vetted by former or current members of the U.S. national security state.
So he continued to work closely with the colleagues that he had forged.
And the idea that he was just doing kind of anti-fascist work within the OSS is a real misrepresentation of what was going on
because he continued to work in the State Department.
He knew that Nazis were coming in through Operation Paperclip that brought 1600 Nazis to the United States,
States and other operations that were bringing tens of thousands of Nazis and fascists to the
United States and elsewhere, if not hundreds of thousands, because the full, you know, the full
calculations aren't, you know, readily available. And he then had a trajectory where the
critiques of fascism were always combined with a critique of the principal way in which you fight
against fascism, which you eliminate the seedbed of fascism, which is the capitalist system. So I
raised a larger question of, well, can you really be anti-fascist if you're resolutely anti-communist?
And the last thing that I'd say, and I again just invite people to look at the sections in the
book on this, is that the Frankfurt School is often depicted as being at the forefront of the
anti-fascist struggle for the work in the OSS, but then also because of all of the research
on the authoritarian personality, they're held as a kind of reference point for the leftist critique
of fascism. One thing that I discovered in a lot of my research is,
how closely they worked with fascists, including in the post-war era when they were relocated on partially
Rockefeller's dime to West Germany, they worked with a whole series of former fascists who were members
of the Nazi party. They were not light, you know, accommodators. They were full-blown Nazis,
including people they integrated directly into leadership positions of the Institute for Social Research.
Von Friedenberg is an individual I point out explicitly because he spent more time as a Nazi than as a former Nazi
before he was integrated into the Frankfurt School. And then he became one of the leaders of their work on social scientific research and became the longest serving director of the Institute for Social Research.
So the idea that the Frankfurt School was this, you know, hotbed of Marxist scholarship that was resolutely anti-fascist and really motivated to change the world in meaningful ways is a complete misrepresentation of this history.
What we have is compatible left Marxian anti-communist version of intellectual work that segues extremely well with the
of the leading imperial forces, and this is the reason that they saw them as allies.
They weren't idiots.
They understood that the work that they were doing was precisely the type of work that they
wanted to promote.
Gabriel, I really want to thank you so much for laying all of this out, for writing
this really important book.
I think the whole, you know, three volumes are going to be really sensational.
And I'm hoping that we'll get a chance to talk with.
you further, both about things that you've covered here, but also as volumes come out. But I just
wanted to end with one, you know, final point of praise for the final conclusion actually had a,
I thought, a very interesting and important discussion about strategy versus tactics. That I actually
had a conversation like this with somebody before reading this about, you know, the problem with us on
the left is that we don't have enough of a sense of strategy and strategic goals such that you know
when you can adjust and change tactics. And it's only if you have that kind of sense of the
overall strategy that comes from this multi-sided form of knowledge and dialectical analysis that
you can actually make wise decisions and choices that might look to others as abandoning a particular
orientation, et cetera, but are in fact actually the tactics that you need in order to achieve
the strategic objectives and the goals. That was a really helpful kind of final conclusion,
which promises more as we go through unpacking the imperial knowledge, debunking it, and
trying to resuscitate genuine dialectical, historical materialist analysis. And so I really want to thank you
for not only really informative and analytically interesting and methodologically significant work,
but also for giving us more hope, I think, and useful sources and resources in which to sustain that,
that there is a chance in some ways to do some real thinking, even in the Imperial Corps.
And so I want to thank you so much for coming and talking with me and for the work that you're doing.
Well, thank you, Edna. And thank you for all the great work that you're doing. And it would be a pleasure to continue these conversations as additional work comes out or as, you know, whenever we have the opportunity. I'll close also by saying that I wanted to conclude the book as well as I open it on a more positive note, not because of some, you know, psychological need for optimism in spite of all odds, but because I think that any true,
dialectical critique can only be grounded in a positive project because the reason for criticism isn't just to debunk certain claims.
It's because you have the clarity of vision of a positive project, and that is the need to develop real forms of egalitarian politics and ecologically sustainable social formations before it's too late for humanity and the planet.
And that form of strategic thinking is really the highest form of socialist consciousness.
And it's what we see in the work of Marx and Engels and Lenin and Lukach and so many other figures within this tradition is they operated a very, very high level.
It's what if we could invoke a non-Marxist thinker, someone like Hegel referred to as thinking in world historical terms.
Not to over-dramatize things or things like that, but really to be able to see the fundamental forces driving life on planet Earth and identify bracing points by which we can gain leverage over them.
And also, as you said, very importantly, strategic thinking does require identifying when it's necessary to engage in moments of retreat, backtracking, changing of tactics.
You have to be supple. You have to be able to give up on your ideal forms of knowledge and always source your knowledge from the practical reality that you're trying to transform.
This is, I think, precisely what we need to do. And maybe it's a great point to conclude. It's the last thing that I'll say on this is that so much of the Western Marxist tradition is praised for being innovative and creative and coming up with new thought forms and not being held back by these Orthodox,
Marxist, et cetera. This is really a profound misrepresentation because the most creative,
innovative, high-level thinking that you see is the thinking on the part of the people who are
literally charting uncharted territory for humanity, not just theoretically, not just by
reading history, understanding it, and having the strategic vision of how you build socialism
in an imperialist world, but also by practically doing it. And so,
solving all of the complex problems that have had to be solved, or at least advancing toward a
solution because full solutions are not always possible. Sometimes you have to work through
contradictions, and that takes time, and it's a process. And so we have a lot to learn from
this rich, deep tradition of anti-imperialist Marxism, which at the end of the day is just
Marxism, right? It's what we should know and recognize as real Marxism, not
the imperial product that has been shoved down people's throats as a weapon of class warfare
against the forms of dialectical and historical materialism that actually contribute to human
liberation and the salvation of the of the planet.
Speaking of learning, I think it would be great if listeners heard about the critical theory
workshop summer programs where maybe they can engage in some of this collectively training
how to do exactly what you're what you're talking about. Where can people find out more information?
When do these typically happen? What information can give listeners who might be interested?
Thank you for mentioning that Adnan because I think both of us, well, I know that both of us have
an intellectual practice that isn't limited to our individual production. And this is because we
recognize that the collective struggle and institution building is essential to moving things in the
direction that we need to move them. So the critical theory workshops in educational nonprofit,
and we run a summer school that's hybrid. People can find information on the critical theory
workshops web page. And it's also a portal to a number of other collective projects that I'd love
for people to know about in general. These are book series, the journal The World Marxist Review,
spine, which is an association. Anyway, if people go to a critical,
critical theory workshop.org. They'll find all of that information. And I'd encourage them to support
the work that you're doing with the various collective projects and get collectively plugged in
to the larger struggle, if it be through direct political organizing, through political education,
or other means. We need to work collectively. Nobody's going to do this individually.
And we need the systems and structures by which we can do that.
Absolutely. And so take it from Gabriel. You know, you can, there's a lot of good things to support both for your individual learning, but also projects that will put you in networks with larger collectivities of people collaborating together. That's the way we need to do it. And in the meantime, also check out and get this book, Who Paid the Pipers of Western Marxism, Part One of the Intellectual World War. Until next time, comrades, peace with justice and solace.
solidarity to you all.
