Rev Left Radio - [BEST OF] Buddhism and Marxism w/ Della from Upstream

Episode Date: May 28, 2025

ORIGINALLY RELEASED Aug 1, 2023 When you think about the philosophies and practices of Buddhism and Marxism, you might not immediately think that they have much in common. However, you might be surpri...sed at how much overlap and complementary resonance there actually is between these two rich and beautiful traditions. We’ve brought on Breht O’Shea, a Buddhist practitioner and Marxist political educator based out of Omaha, Nebraska. Breht is the host of the podcast Revolutionary Left Radio and co-host of the podcasts Red Menace, Guerrilla History, and, most recently, Shoeless in South Dakota.  In this conversation, we explore how both Buddhism & Marxism offer helpful pathways to liberation and provide a spot-on analysis of the root causes of suffering. We also explore some of the potential tensions between Buddhism and Marxism, as well as what each tradition can learn from the other. And we end with a powerful invitation to embark on the path of the Bodhisattva Revolutionary to both end the internal and structural causes and conditions of suffering and to bring forth the systemic changes necessary for the transition to a socialist and eventually communist economy based on liberation, equity, and justice for all. This interview was inspired by an episode of Revolutionary Left Radio titled Dialectics & Liberation: Insights from Buddhism and Marxism where Breht read a speech he gave at Arizona State University on the topic of dialectical materialism, Buddhism, and Marxism. Definitely check that episode out when you’re done listening to this — it’s a great complement to this conversation. Thank you to Carolyn Raider for this episode’s cover art and to Mount Eerie for the intermission music. Upstream theme music was composed by Robert Raymond/Lanterns. Further Resources: Upstream: Revolutionary Leftism with Breht O'Shea (In Conversation) Dialectics & Liberation: Insights from Buddhism and Marxism, by Breht O’Shea on Revolutionary Left Radio  For more from Upstream, visit www.upstreampodcast.org 

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Before we get started on this episode, if you can, please go to Apple Podcasts and rate, subscribe, and leave us a review there. You can also go to Spotify to leave us a review there, too. It really helps us get in front of more eyes and into more ears. We don't have a marketing budget or anything like that for Upstream, so we really do rely on listeners like you to help grow our audience and spread the word. And also, Upstream is a labor of love. It's really important for us to keep our bi-weekly conversation series and quarterly documentaries free of charge and accessible to anyone who's interested. But it all takes a lot of time and resources. If you can, if you're in a place where you can afford to do so, and if it's important for you to keep this
Starting point is 00:00:44 content free and sustainable, please consider going to upstreampodcast.org forward slash support to make a one-time or recurring monthly donation. Thank you. Buddhism is interested in the inwardation of the human mind from sort of self-imposed limitations and delusions and the incessant fear-produced need to cling on to things that we like and to run away from things that hurt us. And then of course Marxism in simplest terms wants to seek humanity from dividing us up into classes. There should be ultimately no poor people and super rich people. There should not be a world in which we have billionaires that own everything and don't have to work who live exclusively off the toil of other human beings while
Starting point is 00:01:55 huge masses of people suffer, live lives of extreme precarity, are brutally exploited for the billionaires, classes, and the owning classes profits, and who live half lives, deformed lives so that the richest among us can live lives of utter luxury and opulence and unknown comfort. You're listening to Upstream. Upstream. Upstream. A podcast of documentaries and conversations that invites you to unlearn everything you thought you knew about economics. I'm Robert Raymond. And I'm Della Duncan. When you think about the philosophies and practices of Buddhism and Marxism, you might not immediately think that they have
Starting point is 00:02:37 much in common, but you might be surprised at how much overlap and complementary resonance there actually is between these two rich and influential traditions. In this conversation, we brought on Brett O'Shea, a Buddhist practitioner and Marxist political educator based out of Omaha, Nebraska. Brett is the host of the podcast Revolutionary Left Radio and co-host of the podcast's Red Menace, Guerrilla History, and, most recently, Shulis in South Dakota. You might remember Brett from when he was on the show about a year ago to talk about revolutionary leftist theory. In this conversation, we explore how both Buddhism and Marxism offer helpful pathways to
Starting point is 00:03:19 liberation and provide a spot-on analysis of the root causes of suffering. We also explore some of the potential tensions between Buddhism and Marxism, as well as what each tradition can learn from the other. And we end with a powerful invitation for all of us to embark on the path of the Bodhisattva Revolutionary, to both end the internal and structural causes and conditions of suffering, and to bring forth the systemic changes necessary for the transition to a communist society based on liberation, equity, and justice for all. This interview was inspired by an episode of Revolutionary Left Radio titled Dialectics and Liberation, Insights from Buddhism and Marxism, where Brett read a speech he gave at Arizona State University on the topic of dialectical materialism, Buddhism, and Marxism.
Starting point is 00:04:09 Definitely check that episode out when you're done listening to this. It's a great compliment to this conversation. And now, here's Della, in conversation with Brett O'Shea. Well, Brett, welcome. So happy to have you on for these two topics, Buddhism and Marxism. Maybe let's start with an introduction. If you could introduce yourself, particularly in relation to the two topics of our conversation. Sure. Well, first of all, thank you so much for having me. I'm a genuine fan. of upstream, not only the podcast, but your presence on social media as well. It's always an honor and a pleasure to be able to collaborate and engage with your work in particular, so thank you so
Starting point is 00:05:02 much for having me on. For those that don't know, my name is Brett O'Shea. I host Rev. Left Radio and co-host Gorilla History and Red Menace, all three of which are basically Marxist, left-wing political shows with different emphasis, different forms of analysis, different co-host, et cetera, sort of addressing the tradition of Marxism from, you know, kind of three distinct angles. Red Menace is more about theory, guerrilla history, more about, you know, history. And Rev. Left is like a casting a wide net, touching on whatever I find interesting, trying to bring more people into the left, et cetera.
Starting point is 00:05:36 In relation to the two topics of Buddhism and Marxism, I would honestly say that they are like the core constitutive ideological approaches that really are the pillars of my worldview. Buddhism. I got into Buddhism as a late teen after a pretty intense mental health crisis and subsequent existential crises where I was just really struggling with the big issues of life. Who am I? What is this life about? What is the meaning of life? What happens when we die? And, you know, those questions were really haunting me. And so I went on, as many people do, a search to try to find something that can begin to address those issues at the level I wanted them addressed at. And I had just through actually like friends and acquaintances and random life events
Starting point is 00:06:25 gotten into and introduced to the basics of Buddhism and became very, very interested in it in my late teens and early 20s. And that's how I got into that. And then Marxism, it really arose just from, you know, if Buddhism is me concerned with the inner world, my own suffering, my own existence, Marxism was the highest and best articulation of a politic that fit with my life experiences and my personal values. And so it was really my late teens, early 20s that these things were completely separate, but I was into them and diving deeper and deeper spent my entire 20s not becoming, I don't ever say I'm an expert on anything, but just as somebody genuinely interested learning and wanting to teach others what I've learned,
Starting point is 00:07:10 got into Buddhism and Marxism separately and through my engagement with both as my understanding of both traditions deepened, I started to see some interesting ways in which they dovetail or some interesting connections in their overall worldviews that I had always, or since then, you know, I was really interested in and then I got this wonderful opportunity to write an essay and give a speech at ASU combining these two topics. I was explicitly asked by them, could you do something where you talk about Buddhism and Marxism and their relatedness? And I was like, this is what I've been preparing, you know, my intellectual life to do. And so it was a nice little occurrence.
Starting point is 00:07:48 And so I wrote out my thoughts that I had, you know, been developing for years and my interest in both traditions, wrote those out in my episode on Rev Left called Dialectics and Liberation. If anybody's interested, I'll certainly be drawing heavily from that. But I've also had many more discussions on Rev. Left with people in Religious. and spiritual communities, because I think it's an important element that sometimes gets completely dismissed out of hand by Marxists to our detriment. And so I'm sure we'll get into some of that later. But that's kind of who I am and how I came to be interested in these two beautiful traditions. Wonderful. Thank you. And yeah, it was Robert told me to listen to Rev. Left, particularly because I was wondering about what dialectics was and dialectical materialism.
Starting point is 00:08:34 And he was like, okay, well, here's a primer. from RevLF Radio, and I was listening, and it was, it was that moment when I was listening when I was like, wait, this sounds so much like Buddhism, like the codependent arising of all things. And so I too had this kind of like, wait, this feels very familiar. So I really appreciate the way that you're linking the two and distinguishing. And also, what can the two learn from each other? It's a great, great prompt, great question. So let's dive in first to the synergies or connections. So what do you see as the overlaps or the synergies, the connections between Buddhism and Marxism? Yeah, I think they're very different traditions arising out of very
Starting point is 00:09:16 different cultures in very different time periods of human evolution. So, and, you know, historically there's been some conflict between them. We can think about, you know, Zen Buddhist kamikaze pilots in World War II, the Chinese communist versus Tibet and that whole, you know, situation so it's like not only on the face of them they're so different but even just recent history they've seemed to be at odds so it's sort of counterintuitive for many people to think of these two things as as having a relationship but i think they have several relationships but the core of their synergy the core of their overlap is in my estimation their dialectical worldviews so for those that don't know of course this is a very big
Starting point is 00:09:58 topic and I'm not going to be able to fully flesh out the entirety of dialectical materialism here, but I have many episodes on Rev. Left and Red Menace. I'm walking people through the complexities of dialectical materialism and historical materialism for those that really want to dive deep into it. And of course, in my dialectics and liberation speech, I also give a pretty good primer, I think, on what dialectical materialism is. And I use evolution via natural selection to sort of highlight the dialectical worldview. But in short, a dialectical, approach to the world, particularly as articulated in the Marxist tradition, is one that apprehends all phenomena as fundamentally in motion, as interconnected in relationship with all other phenomena,
Starting point is 00:10:41 this idea that higher levels of existence are rooted in and emerge from lower levels, you can think of humans evolving out of lower primates, that contradictions between and within phenomena propel their evolution, and that this process of evolutionary advance is governed by laws which are knowable. So this idea in particular really gives rise to what in philosophy is called a process philosophy, meaning that process philosophies apprehend all phenomena as processes instead of things or objects, right? They're not metaphysical, static things or objects or platonic ideals, but that all phenomena, including you and I, including the cosmos itself, is in a constant perpetual state of process, of unfolding, of development. And so in that way, both Buddhism and Marxism are processed philosophies. And the dialectical worldview
Starting point is 00:11:34 within Marxism is well known and understood. It's a core feature of the tradition. In Buddhism, they don't use words like dialectics, right? These are phrases that come out of European philosophy, German philosophy in particular out of Hegel. Buddhism existed thousands of years before Hegel or Marx existed. But some core ideas within Buddhism are certainly dialectical. One, and there are many, but some that I highlight are no self or emptiness, which is this idea within Buddhism that nothing, including us, has a permanent, unchanging essence. There is no unchanging, abiding self or thing at the center of our subjective experience, and there is no permanent essence in any given seemingly static object or thing. And of course, the other idea within Buddhism that I
Starting point is 00:12:22 highlight is dependent origination, which is this idea that everything, including you and I, including the cosmos, including the earth, everything you can think of, is the product of near infinite causes and conditions coming together to allow something to exist. So one of the examples I often use is, I mean, there's several, but we can talk about biting into a peach, right? On one level of experience, it is a static thing in your hand that you bite into, and this is a peach, and then you digest it, and that's it. But what does you? You do it? But what does it? You, gave rise to that peach? Well, through the concept of dependent origination, we can see that in order for that peach to exist at all, there had to be fertile soil. There had to be storms that bring in
Starting point is 00:13:04 rain. There has to be a proper amount of sun. And then when you go back and say, well, how is the sun there? How do storms happen? You begin talking about, you know, cosmology, physics, gravity. And so you can quickly, just from starting from something as simple as a piece of fruit in your hand, elaborate to the entire universe that in some sense the entire universe comes together to produce this thing here and now, which in and of itself is a process because a peach, it starts as a seed, it grows, it becomes ripe. If you don't eat it, don't consume it. It decays and goes back into the earth as organic material. if you do consume it, it goes through your bodily processes, which extracts nutrients, giving you more life and energy, et cetera. So this idea of dependent origination is a really powerful and core feature of Buddhism. And outside of Buddhism, I mean, we can also think of a
Starting point is 00:13:58 political context in which we can understand dependent origination and its power of analysis because we can think about what we're told about billionaires, about rich people, what are we told in capitalist society? We're told that people are rich because they work really hard. They grind it out. They're talented or their geniuses who through hard work pulling themselves up by their bootstraps and determined grit amass an amazing amount of wealth. But we know as socialist that all of that wealth and the very existence of a billionaire in and of itself is dependent upon a near infinite amount of causes and conditions. There is no billionaire without an army of workers and consumers. There is no wealth without countless generations of
Starting point is 00:14:44 human toil by people that will never know their names and never remember their faces. In order for one man to amass all of that wealth and then to turn around and tell us he did it all by himself is, you know, flagrant, fallacious, absolutely absurd by logical standards, by Marxist standards, and certainly by Buddhist standards through this concept of dependent origination. So you can see here that, you know, both Marxism and Buddhism very different traditions, very different cultural contexts, but both are basically advancing a worldview that is inherently dialectical. And because of that, you can take certain Marxist ideas and make more sense of them within Buddhism and vice versa, which perhaps what we'll get into here as this conversation develops. Yes, thank you for that. I'm recalling in a meditation once, a teacher once said, okay, you know, when I say, you know, may I be well? we mean not the I, but, you know, the phenomenon that is sitting here, the countless coordination of the many beings that are teeming on the surface of my skin and my gut, but also the phenomenon that is colloquially referred to as I, or Della, right? And that really nailed that point home for me. And also this phrase interbeing from the late teacher Tikna Han. That's another way to think about this, that we all inter-ar with everything else. And then, you Yes, this assumption that capitalism is somewhat a historical, right, that it's really, it doesn't have a very future thinking point of view.
Starting point is 00:16:17 Like I'm thinking of indigenous wisdom traditions and seven generation thinking, right? It doesn't consider the effect or the impact on the seventh generation from now. But it also right now doesn't seem to really appreciate the deep pain and suffering that has gone into the great wealth accumulation and the structures that we are currently in. So I really appreciate that. And I've heard a reframe that is money is commodified grief. What if we saw money as commodified grief? To me, that speaks to the historical processes of those who have so much wealth that it comes from both primitive accumulation but also processes of ongoing accumulation that, of course,
Starting point is 00:16:57 come from deep suffering. So just, yeah, uplifting things that you're saying. I think that's incredibly profound and very on point. And again, this, I was talking about the billionaire, but what we see more broadly in our society is this hyper individualism, this worship of the self, and this idea that everybody is a truly unique individual that gets what they deserve. So if you're poor, people won't come out and say it these days, but basically the idea is you're not morally worthy. You didn't work hard enough. You weren't smart enough. You didn't do the right things.
Starting point is 00:17:28 And so the position you're in is wholly and exclusively a product of your own failing. And the opposite is true if somebody's rich. They got there because they worked really extra hard. They're way more talented. They apply their talent in the right way. And so we can see how capitalism just re-entrenches this idea of all of us as individual little islands unto ourselves that either make it or break it. But in reality, when you look at you or yourself, what are you really? You are a product of everybody you've ever come across.
Starting point is 00:17:57 You're a product of your culture, the ideas that it gives you. You're a product of the genetics of your parents. your product of your early socialization there is nothing about any one of us that is disconnected from the panably of causes and conditions that gave rise to us and so for us to then say this is all mine or that's all your fault it's silly and marxists know this because we shift from individual failures to structural analysis and buddists know this because they undermine the very idea that there's a separate abiding self that is called i that actually exists they undermine that entire idea and show how all of us are processes and dependent on dependent origination. So
Starting point is 00:18:38 yeah, I think I think there's so much there. You could have an entire discussion just about the implications of dependent origination. Yes. And I'm also hearing just the power of systems thinking, you know, thinking systemically, both in terms of time, but also in systems. So let's go into the aim, the aim of Buddhism and Marxism. They both share it of liberation. So what does, Does that mean liberation to each of these paths or each of these philosophical practices? Yeah, and that's another synergy that I point out, of course, the dialectical worldview, process philosophy, but also this idea that both of these traditions in very different ways, but in complementary ways, seek liberation. So for Buddhism, there's an inner liberation, and for Marxism, there's an outer liberation.
Starting point is 00:19:25 And we also understand through dialectics the need to bring the outer and the inner together in the unity of opposites, right? there's no night without day, there's no up without down, there's no inward without outward. So Marxism can definitely account for an analysis of the outward, and Buddhism can definitely account for an analysis of the inward, but they really shy away from doing the opposite. You don't hear Marxists talking about the self and the eye and, you know, the individual's experience, and you don't see Buddhists talking about the structural development of capitalism out of feudalism, right? Because they're fundamentally aimed in different directions. But I like to bring them together and see how there's,
Starting point is 00:20:02 there's a totality of liberation that can be achieved by these two seemingly different traditions. So in Buddhism, what do they mean by liberate? What's liberation within Buddhism? It can certainly mean sort of different things. And by necessity, there's a bunch of different sex and, you know, factions within Marxism and Buddhism like there isn't any tradition. So I'm speaking very generally about these traditions overall, and most of what I say is going to be shared by most factions within either one of these two major traditions. But Buddhism seeks to liberate human beings from the unnecessary suffering that stems inevitably from our constant desiring, our identification with our egos, and our desperate clinging and attachment
Starting point is 00:20:44 to things that by their very nature change and dissolve away. We are always talking to ourselves in our heads. We are always grabbing at pleasure and trying to push pain away. We have this nagging sense of always being not quite satisfied, never quite complete. And so we spend our entire lives leaning forward into the future and backwards into the past, searching for something external to us that will finally make us happy and fulfilled and trying to protect ourselves from all the pain and tragedy and despair in our lives by building up our psychological defense mechanisms and reifying our sense of separateness. So we're always extracting ourselves from the present moment, what is right here and right now, in anticipation
Starting point is 00:21:26 for what's coming or in nostalgia for what we once had. So in a sense, we're a mess. And the world is a mess, according to Buddhism, because we're a mess. And every individual suffers in this way. So Buddhism seeks to liberate us from our delusions, our self-inflicted suffering, our desperate clinging and craving, and the faulty idea that we are located somewhere behind the eyes and between the ears, looking out at a world that is fundamentally not us, and acting as a trembling little commentator to our own lives. So to be liberated from all of this is to genuinely fill ourselves viscerally, completely at home in the world, completely at home in our own skin. It makes us feel in the highest levels of Buddhist liberation to be the very cosmos we think is outside of us, to neither
Starting point is 00:22:13 cling to pleasures nor run from pain, but to live our lives in the present moment, in deep equanimity, and to accept life and death as they come on their terms with love and compassion and joy in our hearts. So there is this deep sense in which Buddhism is seeking to liberate us from the delusions of mind, of ego identification, of this idea that we are put into a world that is fundamentally not us, and we're quaking and shivering and talking to ourselves in our heads until we're ultimately annihilated. And that is a scary thing, and we all sort of internalize that in various ways. And through Buddhist meditation, specifically, but through the eightfold path more generally. Buddhism gives us a path toward liberating ourselves from all the unnecessary
Starting point is 00:22:58 suffering that comes from those things that I mentioned above. And the eightfold path, of course, is the path to get there. So that is Buddhist idea of liberation, and that is the Buddhist path to liberation. Now, Marxism, as I said earlier, it seeks to liberate humanity as a whole outwardly from the exploitation, the irrationality, alienation and injustice of class society and all of its forms. Marxism seeks a human civilization wherein human beings are no longer divided into rich and poor, into exploiter and exploited, into master and slave, into king and surf, into worker and boss, but rather a truly human civilization where an equal and free human beings can cooperate in order to benefit all and to increase the quality of life for all people.
Starting point is 00:23:49 So in a sense, Marxism aims toward a world in which we can be fully human for the first time, perhaps since primitive communism. Historical materialism within Marx, talking about the path to get to this liberation, historical materialism is the scientific approach to societies and their evolution over time in the Marxist tradition. So it's this attempt to study the development of societies through history by understanding. the material economic base of that society, how humans come together to produce and reproduce the necessities of life. That's the core locus of analysis for Marxists trying to understand societies and their evolution over time. And then dialectical materialism, if historical
Starting point is 00:24:32 materialism is the scientific approach of Marxism, dialectical materialism is the sort of philosophical framework through which we think through historical materialism, where we can generate social analyses, we can strategize movements and build organizations dedicated to engaging in class struggle with the hopes of ultimately transcending this current mode of production and ultimately class society altogether. And the way we do that is engaging in class struggle consciously. That's the path. Though the form that that class struggle takes, of course, will differ dramatically between different societies at different times and different contexts. So, you know, sort of summing up what I'm saying here, Buddhism is interested in the inward liberation of the human mind from sort of self-imposed limitations and delusions and the incessant fear-produced need to cling on to things that we like and to run away from things that hurt us.
Starting point is 00:25:29 This running away and clinging doesn't get rid of suffering. It exacerbates it. It's pouring gas on the fire of suffering. and Buddhism shows us a way out. And then, of course, Marxism, in simplest terms, wants to seek humanity from dividing us up into classes. There should be, ultimately, no poor people and super rich people. There should not be a world in which we have billionaires that own everything and don't have to work who live exclusively off the toil of other human beings, while huge masses of people suffer, live lives of extreme precarity, are brutally exploiting, are brutally exploiting.
Starting point is 00:26:06 for the billionaires, classes, and the owning classes, profits, and who live half lives, deformed lives, so that the richest among us can live lives of utter luxury and opulence and unknown comfort. You know, these are the things that Marxism is seeking to liberate us from, and it does so not by appealing to the morality of how bad things are, or coming up with ideas, sitting in your armchair about what the world should be like, but by actually analyzing the real world, analyzing contradictions in the current state of things and seeking to, using those contradictions, move from the way things are now, toward the way things could be scientifically, methodically, organizationally. And so, yeah, I guess that would be my answer to that
Starting point is 00:26:51 wonderful question. Yeah, thank you. And just to highlight one phrase you use, you said something like Buddhism helps us in liberation from unnecessary pain. And I just want to highlight this idea, this distinction between suffering and pain in Buddhism, because there's this idea of the double arrow sutra, this idea that, imagine you're hit with an arrow, that first arrow is pain. It's unavoidable. It's there. But suffering is the second arrow that we stick into the first arrow. And that is our perception or view on certain things.
Starting point is 00:27:26 So just to distinguish that Buddhism isn't trying to liberate us from all negative sensations, feelings, experiences in life. it accepts that there is change, there is death, and there is aging or sickness, right? Like those are inevitable parts of life. But what Buddhism is trying to liberate us from is the mental formations or habits or clinging ways of thinking that we put on top of those sensations, on top of that pain. And so as you were speaking, I got this sense that in some way, too, Marxism might appreciate that there are natural ways that we have pain in our lives. However, it makes a clear distinction of the ways that are human-made, capitalist made, that is suffering.
Starting point is 00:28:11 So that the division, the alienation, the exploitation, and the inequality, that is not inevitable. That is totally changeable. We can have an alternative system. So I just wanted to, yeah, appreciate that difference between pain and suffering and both Buddhism and Marxism. I don't know if you have any thoughts on that. Yeah, I think that's a really, really important point. And like the two arrow is a great metaphor for this. And, you know, the original arrow, the first arrow is the pain, right?
Starting point is 00:28:40 The pain of life. These things, this isn't the necessary suffering of being an embodied, sentient being in the cosmos. We're going to deal with pain. It's not this, Buddhism is not this idea that you'll never have a negative experience ever again. Once, you know, it's about reorienting not the outside world in reality, but your relationship to it. And interestingly, especially with like physical pain, just as an example, And perhaps you could speak to this as somebody who has practiced meditation. I find when you're incredibly mindful of something like stubbing your toe, right? What happens when you're walking around
Starting point is 00:29:12 your house and unexpectedly you slam your pinky toe into the side of your couch? What happens is this huge rush of sensation flooding up to the brain. And what do most of us do most of the time? We resist that pain by clenching our face, screaming out so our partner knows we're in pain, grabbing our foot and hopping around like an idiot, right? That's what we're. We do because there's holding our breath, holding our breath, exactly, a bunch of different things that we do because there's the initial pain stimulus and then there's our rejection and our urge to get away from that pain, which is this second arrow of suffering that exacerbates the pain and the suffering. But in physical pain in particular, I find that the other option, especially if you're keeping up a Buddhist practice because momentum within the practice I think is important to be able to meet things as they arise, you can start being interested in the sensation of pain. Now, you slammed your toe into the couch and your body is being flooded with signals that say you need to start grabbing your foot and hopping around screaming cuss words. But if you can hold back on that reaction and just become curious of what actually is this pain, what is this sensation?
Starting point is 00:30:20 You can start to break pain apart. You can start to see its constitutive parts. And what is really there is just intense sensation. you know this not really i mean there is pain of course that is what we call those intense sensations but if you can disassociate that concept and just sort of address and look at and face the sensations themselves i find that you can even turn physical pain into at least an interesting sensational experience and that that right there is not eradicating the sensations but is refusing the second arrow is refusing to suffer by redoubt
Starting point is 00:30:59 projecting and trying to wiggle out of and escape the pain that's there. And you can you can radically reorient your relationship with that physical pain as mere sensation instead of trying to rub it away, get away from it through all the extra suffering that we do in that moment. And so I've found that that is a really interesting part of my meditative practice of seeing pain as merely intense sensation and being curious about it as such, it can be a very powerful, you know, sort of a practice to engage in. And I wonder if do you have any experience with doing anything like that? You know, I do. And I'm also thinking, though, around how Marxism can be a way to feel into or notice or honor the more societal or social pain. Like I'm using the same
Starting point is 00:31:49 analogy that you're doing. For example, I remember learning about the concept of alienation and then having a friend who was hired as a designer, he did all this design work, and then he was let go. And his employer said that he couldn't bring any of his designs or have like a portfolio demonstrating anything that he had designed while working for this person. And I was like, oh, that is alienation. You were alienated from your artistic, creative, labor endeavors. And so that was a moment of pain. And Marxism gave me a word to be able to give in that moment to this person to explain his experience. And that can be a path to liberation. This is why one thing we're interested in is liberation psychology, this idea that we can feel into our societal
Starting point is 00:32:38 pain, but when we're given a name for it, like class consciousness or alienation or exploitation or understanding why it is that we're feeling a certain way, and pathways to alternatives, the lens of Marxism on our pain can be very liberating. Absolutely love that. Yeah, I love how you're taking the other side of what I'm saying about Buddhism and applying it to Marxism so wonderfully. And you said something earlier, too, about necessary versus unnecessary suffering that I think is really interesting. And you attached it to capitalism.
Starting point is 00:33:10 And I just kind of want to flesh that out a little bit because there, is the necessary suffering of life. We've talked about it in the Buddhist context, but just in the existential context, like, what is life? Well, we're born through no choice of our own into an incredibly imperfect world, right? The birthing process itself is painful and traumatic. We're socialized into pretty rotten societies, at least if you take the last, you know, thousand years of slave societies, feudal societies, capitalist societies. We are born into a world in which everybody that came before us, our parents, our grandparents, our aunt and uncles, everybody we love slowly dies one by one until it's our turn to fall into the grave and say
Starting point is 00:33:52 goodbye to everybody else who's still alive that we love. Life already is suffering. And these are sort of this like life and death thing and our grappling with it is a necessary part of our existence that can never be washed away. We can never get out of the fact that we are finite creatures in a finite cosmos and we one day will die after watching everybody we love die that is horrific but the true state of things at some level then on top of that necessary suffering in the capitalist epoch is all this other suffering that nobody should have to put up with it's not necessary it is imposed socially culturally systematically on us and that is the suffering of not being able to get health care because you can't afford it you know the
Starting point is 00:34:39 suffering of having a low self-worth because you live in a society with minimal class mobility and you were born into a lower-class family. But our society tells you if you're not rich and successful and, you know, famous, then your life is a failure. And you internalize that, not as a structural problem of, you know, capitalism, but often people internalize that as a character flaw. As I did not live up to my potential, I did not make it. And, you know, you struggle to pay bills, all the indignities of, you know, having your house for closed on, losing your job and your sense of self-esteem and your ability to provide for your family, right? And then you go and turn on the TV and you're dazzled by this spectacle of people
Starting point is 00:35:19 in Ferraris and Bugatti's with, you know, $450,000 watches like DJ Khalid, you know, more money on his little wrist than you will ever have in your entire life and your kid's life combined at any one time. This is the unnecessary suffering imposed on this by a class society. And of course I'm talking about capitalism, but think about feudalism. Think about ancient slave societies. All class societies divide people up into categories of exploited and exploited, as I was saying earlier, rich and poor, et cetera. That entire structure of imposing class divisions on humanity causes so much unnecessary suffering, whether it's feudal, slave, or capitalistic. And so I think that that dichotomy between necessary and unnecessary pain and suffering,
Starting point is 00:36:08 has a lot of traction, whether we're talking about Buddhism or we're talking about Marxism. You're listening to an upstream conversation with Brett O'Shea, host of Revolutionary Left Radio, and co-host of Red Menace, Gorilla History, and most recently, Shulis in South Dakota. We'll be right back. The feeling of the mountains The feeling of being in the mountains is a dream of self-negation To see the world without us
Starting point is 00:37:10 How it churns and blossoms Without anyone looking on It's why I've gone on and on And why I've climbed up climbed up alone but actual negation when your person is gone and the bedroom door yawns Her absence is a scream, saying nothing. Saying nothing. Conceptual emptiness was cool to talk about, back before I knew my way.
Starting point is 00:38:33 knew my way around these hospitals I would like to forget and go back into imagining that snow shining permanently alone could say something to me true and comforting BOR. BOR, BOR, BOR, BOR, BOR,
Starting point is 00:39:12 TOWS. I don't know. That was Emptiness Part 2 by Mount Erie. Now, back to our conversation with Brett O'Shea. And so moving from the experience of necessary and unnecessary pain, let's move to the causes. Because I think Buddhism and Marxism really do offer kind of an understanding of why. Why are we in these certain systems or structures that are bringing about so much unnecessary suffering? So can you tell us about the three poisons in Buddhism and how it also relates to a Marxist view?
Starting point is 00:40:24 And looking at this in the relationship between the causes of the unnecessary suffering that we are experiencing under capitalism. Yeah, absolutely. And I'd love to get your thoughts on this as well. But within Buddhism, the three poisons are known as greed, ill will, or hatred and delusion. So let's do greed, ill will, and delusion. These are the three poisons. And they are features of the unenlightened human mind. And when they are present in the mind and importantly when one is identified with them, they wreak havoc on an individual psyche. They bolster the ego delusion and create suffering for all involved. And while Buddhism talks about this stuff almost exclusively in terms of the mind, your own personal struggle with your insatiable
Starting point is 00:41:11 greed you're desiring and wanting things and like the ugliness that comes out when you have a chance to grab what you want even if it's at the expense of somebody else or ill will in the way our ego finds people to hate and be disgusted by and want to hurt and delusion all the ways in which we're ignorant about how reality actually is and how that ignorance of reality drives our own suffering and makes us actually the perpetrators in so many ways of unnecessary suffering within ourselves So while Buddhism again talks about this exclusively in terms of the mind, I think it's quite natural to argue that if most people, as Buddhists say, are susceptible to these poisons, that when you get a bunch of people who are susceptible to these poisons together in a society, they can be instantiated not just at the individual psychological level, but also on the collective social political level. And so it's my argument that capitalism in many ways institutionalizes, not creates these three poisons. because the Buddha was talking about these three poisons being present in the human mind
Starting point is 00:42:13 you know 2,500 years ago but institutionalizes them attempts to naturalize them and then by doing so exacerbates their intensity on both the individual and the collective levels so you know what is greed under capitalism if not the urge to profit at all costs right when you're a CEO of a company structurally you have a fiduciary responsibility to increase profit margins for your shareholders as much as you possibly can. And if you start getting sentimental about how you're treating the workers or how the environment's being degraded by the poisons you're producing and you start thinking maybe we should pay our workers a little bit more and maybe we should put a few more of our costs and our revenue towards blunting our terrible environmental impact,
Starting point is 00:43:02 what's going to happen? You're going to be fired and replaced. And so I think it's important when we're talking about greed. In the Buddhist context, this is an individual problem. The person that's greedy, but structurally, this has been institutionalized. So it's not just an individual problem. And if an individual in a certain position of power within the capitalist hierarchy decides that he wants to fight against the greed in himself or in his company, he will be easily replaced. And this is why structural analysis is more important than moralism. A lot of times you'll hear a liberal say, oh, Jeff Bezos, or inter-billionaire here, is so greedy. You know, if only we had a less greedy person that was more willing to share
Starting point is 00:43:39 his revenue with Amazon workers and all of this. Like this greed of this guy is terrible. But it's not the guy. Of course the guy is also greedy. But he's incentivized by an entire structure to be as greedy as fucking possible. And if you're not super fucking greedy,
Starting point is 00:43:56 you don't maximize profits at all costs, you will be replaced. And then there's ill will. What is ill will, if not in the capitalist context, the colonial expansion the genocide, the slavery, the primitive accumulation that it took to build capitalism, you know, the closing off of the commons, and then the modern day imperialist wars and brutality
Starting point is 00:44:20 and bombings going on right now as we speak that maintains the domination of the American empire and its fundamental value of protecting corporations and their ability to profit at all costs, this going out to Iraq, destroying an entire country, turning it over, ruining countless lives, going over to Afghanistan, doing the same, all for nothing, really? What was gained by humanity, by the people of Iraq, by the people of America, by these adventures? Absolutely nothing. What is delusion, if not the ideologies that come along with capitalism, right? Marxism tells us that the ruling ideas in any epoch are the ideas of the ruling class. This is what we mean Marxist-wise when we say ideological conditioning, ideological propaganda.
Starting point is 00:45:09 We are given the values and ideas of the ruling class and then internalize them as our own. So you have a guy who's making $30,000 a year arguing against raising taxes on the rich or against universal health care, not because it's actually in his direct financial interests, but because he has been conditioned with an ideology of our rulers who want to profit. more than they want to take care of human beings. So these are just some examples. We could sit back all day and think about the ways in which delusion is instituted in capitalism, the ways in which ill will. I mean, one way that jumps to mind right now, ill will is like the intense competitive
Starting point is 00:45:47 nature of the free market, where you and your coworkers are alienated from one another and you're pitted against one another for who's going to get that promotion, right? Or you're in the unemployment line and somebody comes up to you and says, hey, I'll hire you at my job because my workers are striking. They want $15 an hour. That's disgusting. I'll pay you $10 an hour to come scab. It's better than the $0 an hour you're getting.
Starting point is 00:46:12 And so in so many ways, and these are just a couple that jumped to mind, we're pitted against our fellow human beings for the interest of other people that are not us or the people we're pitted against. It's for the interest of a ruling class that profits from us being pitted against each other. Another thing that jumps to mind? Racism. You cannot understand class divisions and capitalism within American society in particular without understanding the role that racism has played historically and presently in pitting working class
Starting point is 00:46:41 desperate people against one another for the benefit of people that are not us. And so in all of these ways, these things are already present in the human mind. They manifest through history in different societies and different cultural contexts. We could make this exact same argument for the feudal context, right, greed, will and delusion, how do those things manifest in feudal monarchies? How did they manifest in ancient slave societies? Wherever there's class society, these things are institutionalized in one way or another. But we live under capitalism, and so those are some of the ways that capitalism institutionalizes those three poisons. Now, from a Buddhist point of view, and this is some of the
Starting point is 00:47:20 limitations of spiritual communities in particular, is you'll often hear, and I'm sure you've heard this too. Yes, but you can't go out and do anything really about it. The best thing you can do is not attack necessarily the institutions that that incentivize these things, but to root it out in your own mind. And there's some truth to that. If you did the work of, you know, following the eightfold path and uprooting greed, ill will and delusion within yourself, you are going to be a better neighbor, a better partner, a better father, mother, husband, wife, friend, community member, right? You might even inspire a couple people in your life to do the same. Wow, this transformation and so and so was so profound.
Starting point is 00:47:59 This meditation has changed their life so much. Maybe I'll get into it. Right. And even if you don't, you're creating good vibes and good karma to the people around you because you're not dominated by greed, ill will, and delusion. But that has limitations. And the idea that everybody or most people in the world are going to sit down and meditate their way to uprooting greed, ill will, and delusion in enough time to save humanity from the environmental apocalypse or nuclear war or whatever, I think is incredibly sort of naive. it's important in its own right, but you have to have both sides of that puzzle. We have to not only work on uprooting those things within ourselves through meditation practice, but we also have to find ways to challenge those things on the institutional, structural, and collective levels through political organization and struggle. And so this is another way in which concepts within Buddhism can be made sense of within Marxism and even elevated in some way, taken from the individual realm, which is still essential, but also applied to the external outward realm, which is crucial for a totalizing approach to uprooting these problems. Now, if you're a Marxist
Starting point is 00:49:09 and you want to attack these institutions the way that these things are institutionalized, but you yourself have not even thought about doing the internal work to uproot greed, ill will, and delusion within yourself, right? That's going to dramatically impact and limit your ability to take these things on institutionally, you know, collectively and politically. So these are two sides of a very important coin. And if you only do one side of that coin, you're doing good in the world for sure. It's better than doing nothing. But in and of itself, it's incredibly limited. And so I see this bringing together of these two traditions, you know, and using these conceptual tools within Buddhism and Marxism to complement one another and to fill out
Starting point is 00:49:53 the other side of that picture. And so, With greed, ill will, and delusion, I think I've sort of articulated how that might make sense. But again, there's so much more to be said on this front. Yeah, Brett, I totally hear you that, yes, when we think, oh, I just need to heal myself or get my own mental formations, you know, in check and really root out greed, hatred, and delusion to myself, like, that'll take so long. And that really is quite a sedentary and very, like, quiet, reflective path. and really, you know, this time on earth is really calling us to get off the cushion and bring our spiritual practices into action. And yet I'm also thinking of the beautiful Robert M. Persig quote from Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance. He says, if a factory is torn down, but the rationality which produced it is left standing, then that rationality will simply produce another factory.
Starting point is 00:50:48 If a revolution destroys a systematic government, but systematic patterns of thought, that produce that government are left intact, those patterns will repeat themselves. So it is this interesting both and, the inner and the outer transformation that is necessary. And this brings me to one of the things that I kind of see as a, maybe we went over the commonalities and the synergies of Buddhism and Marxism I see as one of the potential differences. And I'm really curious to hear what you think. So it's this idea that in Buddha's view, there's a real sense of equanimity, right? Equanimity in my mind is like seeing beauty in the microwave as well as the flower, like really holding things kind of with an impartiality,
Starting point is 00:51:36 a lack of attachment and kind of appreciation for all things, but also, you know, being a quantumist to all things. And it also has a quality of loving kindness to all beings. That's another element of Buddhist view is loving kindness. And the delusion part, of Buddhism, the rooting out delusion, is rooting out a sense of like othering, like separation and othering. And so then when I think of Marxism and at least some of the words and phrases that are used like class war, class struggle, right? It has a very oppositional frame. Like there is us and them. And, you know, there's the bourgeoisie and the proletariat, for example. So I'm, I'm struggling with how to tap into this Buddhist view of equineering.
Starting point is 00:52:23 and loving kindness. And even what you said about how the billionaire, yes, they may be personally greedy and yet the system is also that they're a part of is also reproducing or encouraging them to be greedy. So I'm holding that with this very, very also helpful view of understanding who are capitalists and what is that separation and the very real class struggle. So I'm just curious what you think about that dynamic. I'm also thinking of a quote by the Buddha, hatred is never ended by hatred, but by love. And I'm just, I'm like hearing that and, and, and thinking of Marxist text and Marxist analysis. I'm just wondering, how do you, how do you see this tension that I've laid out? Maybe you don't or you do. And how do you reconcile with it? Yeah, great question. And I, I'm not going to be able
Starting point is 00:53:13 necessarily to do an exhaustive answer, but I'll definitely give some thoughts and would love to hear yours as well. First thing that jumps to mind is under capitalism, everyone suffers. So there is this sense in which, yes, rich people live lives of opulence and luxury and comfort, but we often see, and it's portrayed very well in popular culture how when they get the money and the fame and the status that capitalism incentivizes them to get, they still so often find this yawning void within their souls that's still there. And it's extra scary and extra bad because you were taught your entire life that by getting fame and money and status, you could make that feeling of not being whole, of not being worthy or whatever, go away. And the neurosis produced by
Starting point is 00:53:56 having insane amounts of money when in your very city, people are sleeping on the concrete, intense, crime is on the uptick, society and the fabric of it is falling apart. And your very role in that, whether it's conscious or not, create suffering within you. If only the fear of one day this money being taken from you of one day the barbarians knocking down the gates and flooding into your gated community and taking all the things that whether you think about it consciously or not you know you didn't fully get in a just way you know and i don't want to i don't like talking about this in the sense that i don't like to compare the neurotic suffering of the rich to the material suffering of the poor but there is a way in which the insanity of
Starting point is 00:54:42 capitalism makes everybody suffer in different ways. So that's what's the first thought. So, you know, Buddhists are concerned with ending suffering. We should at least think about the suffering on all parts of that spectrum because it would allow us to feel perhaps some compassion on a human level for a figure within capitalism who is noxious. For example, and this gets to your point, can you feel compassion for Donald Trump? Can you see the Donald Trump within yourself?
Starting point is 00:55:12 Can you feel for a little boy Donald Trump who clearly did not get the love and validation he needed from probably his dad, but maybe both his parents, and whose ego was distorted in such a fantastic way that it produced the man we see today, a man with no real inner depth, no sense of connection to friends or family. Everybody is just a transaction to be used. Every assault is an assault only on the ego. the ego is the only thing that needs to be defended and the more he tries to defend it the more people hate him and attack him right now on one level i can feel compassion for that i can feel the little trump within me that is narcissistic as fuck you know that wants to give into every ego craving um that wants the validation of other people but doesn't want to look like i need the validation of anyone right that that that person is within us but it's brought to monstrous proportions in the figure of of trump So, okay, let's say yes. Let's say yes. I can feel compassion, even love for Donald Trump. I can imagine him as a five-year-old boy who just wanted a fucking hug and wanted his dad to say he's proud of him. Right. At the same time, look at the suffering he unleashes on others. Look how he takes his own suffering and puts it on to other people, right? Through these immigration bans, through the re-entrenchment and resurgence of fascist groups and organizations.
Starting point is 00:56:41 through the ideological conveying and dog whistling about who the real Americans are and who the non-real Americans are leading to spikes and hate crimes and more and more suffering. So this is a figure whose internal suffering is not addressed, is not looked at directly, is projected out onto the rest of the world, and makes other people suffer. So on one hand, you can feel deep compassion and understanding for him. On another hand, you have to stop the suffering he's imposing. And I'm just using Trump as a specific figure, but you know, you can think about anybody throughout history or even today that has this impact on people. So then if you're totally in the feeling love and compassion for Trump and you're not in the, what about the suffering he's helping cause for so many
Starting point is 00:57:24 other people? It's only one side of the coin, right? So with that in mind, I think that there is something to this idea of the dialectical unity of opposites. You know, it's precisely our love for others that pushes us into the fight against those who would hurt them. It is my love for human beings sleeping on the street that makes me want to go out and do whatever it takes to get that person a home, even if it means confronting and fighting with, maybe even going to war with other human beings, right? It's our embrace of class war is often out of love for other sentient beings. And this dialectical reality is brought to a sharp point with both quotes from Mao and Che.
Starting point is 00:58:08 You know, Che would talk about a revolutionary is guided by a great feeling of love. You know, communism is love in some sense. And what does Mao say? Communism is not love. Communism is the annihilation of the enemy. Communism grows, the power grows out of the barrel of a gun. It is destroying our enemies. Both of those things can be true at the same exact time.
Starting point is 00:58:29 And you have to ask yourself, what suffering, unnecessary suffering, is being caused by this system, And then, once you figure that out, what would it take to actively confront this system? And when you say, what does it take to confront the system, what you're really talking about, what does it take to confront the people who have all the wealth and power and who make all the rules and who this unjust order, it solely or almost exclusively benefits them? You know, what do we do about those people? Because they're not just going to one day wake up with compassion flooding out of their heart and hand over their billion dollars in the reins to political power to the working class.
Starting point is 00:59:08 So look at the suffering capitalism and imperialism and colonialism and colonialism cause around the world. Okay, that's terrible. It's unnecessary. We want to end that unnecessary suffering. And then the minute you start saying, how do I do it, you have two options. Well, it's going to be ugly. So either I'm going to not do it because I have this sort of a priori commitment to nonviolence and peace. So I'm just not going to engage with the political realm at all. I'll just turn inward. Or you say, I'm willing to weaponize my love in the fight for justice. And I'm willing to take on other people who want to entrench this unjust system of suffering and impose misery on countless people so that they can live with as much power and wealth as they currently have.
Starting point is 00:59:52 It is a tough issue. But again, you have to, I think, see it from both sides. So a great challenge for us is to try to hold both simultaneously. Can we love other human beings? beings while we struggle against them? Can we relate to and even feel compassion for those who are totally lost and greed and ill will and delusion while at the same time challenging that greed, ill will, and delusion? Are we lost in our polarity or can we see the totality? Right? We need darkness to appreciate light. We need death to appreciate life. We need hate to appreciate love. So we can play our role on the side of light and life and love without losing our place in the totality without seeing the darkness within ourselves, the death within ourselves, the hate
Starting point is 01:00:35 within ourselves, right? And so it might not be a perfect answer. There's contradictions are still going to exist in this realm. Different Buddhists and different Marxists will come to different conclusions about this question. But I believe something important is in this sort of attempt to hold both simultaneously and to challenge ourselves on both levels. It's hard to think of having compassion for a Hitler, right? Even unthinkable, even disgusting to even utter those words. But it's even more unthinkable to not challenge that Hitler when he starts the Holocaust. And if that means putting a bullet in Hitler's head to stop the imposed misery, destruction, and annihilation of six million Jewish people, are you going to say, I can't do violence?
Starting point is 01:01:21 Or are you going to say, hey, this is the real world, it's fucking messy, this fucking asshole is causing insane misery and suffering for countless innocent people and while I can be on some level compassionate and sympathetic with what turned him into this monster, it doesn't stop him from being a monster until we stop him.
Starting point is 01:01:39 And so you can engage in violence with love in your heart. Maybe not always. Maybe not all the time. Maybe not even very often. But it's at least possible. And if that's a possibility, I think it's a possibility
Starting point is 01:01:52 that we should think very deeply about. But again, I'm really curious to hear your thoughts on that. Yeah, thank you for that. And I do think this one thing you said about, you know, if one is committed to nonviolence and peace, that it means that they turn inwards. And I do want to say that in some very inspiring ways, I have seen people who would call themselves engage Buddhists or engage spiritual people who turn towards nonviolence in a more active way. Like I'm thinking about the self-immolation of the monk in Vietnam as an anti-war protest, or even more recently in April of last year, there was a man named Win Bruce who also self-immolated in protest of climate change.
Starting point is 01:02:38 And so I do think there are, maybe there's stages, maybe the efforts first are nonviolent, but not non-violent as in passive, but non-violent as in active, if it's possible. to prevent the bullet to the head of someone first. I don't know. I don't know if you have any thoughts on that. But I do find a lot of courageous actions of nonviolence in particularly the engaged Buddhist world. Yeah, I agree with that. And I think it's a beautiful thing. I think if you can achieve your goals through peace, that is always and everywhere the preferred option. And there have been historical movements that have, you know, successfully sort of, I don't want to say We have a kind of weaponized peace. You can think of the civil rights struggle, the MLK side of the civil rights fight that was
Starting point is 01:03:25 very dedicated to this idea that we're not going to fight back. We are going to be incredibly peaceful. They're definitely going to get violent. They're going to brutalize us and we're going to use our own brutalization. It's kind of like self-immolation on a lower level, right? We're going to let ourselves be hurt and beat up and sometimes even fucking killed and we're not going to fight back. We're not going to meet hate with hate.
Starting point is 01:03:45 We're going to meet hate with love. And that was a very effective movement. But importantly, it wasn't the only part of that movement. On the other half of the civil rights struggle, you had the Black Panther Party, you had the Black Liberation Army, you had the Malcolm X's of the world, the nation of Islam, these people who were ready to engage in violence to protect themselves and their families and their loved ones. Malcolm X's house was firebombed. They threw a bomb into his baby's bedroom where multiple of his children were sleeping because they hated him, right? And so when you're met with that level of immediate direct violence against totally fucking innocent people only for the gall of saying we should be equal human beings, peace and
Starting point is 01:04:27 civil disobedience and nonviolent forms of protest can quickly meet their limitation. And in the case of self-immolation, I think that is a admirable, incredibly courageous, sort of stunning approach to a problem. I'm like, I'm not going to inflict this harm and misery on anybody else, but I'm willing to annihilate my own being to bring attention to this issue. But I have to ask, at the risk of sounding callous, which I'm not intending to be, what did it accomplish? Did it stop anything? I mean, even in that last instance where the guy self-immolated on the White House lawn or whatever to end climate change, he was in the news for a day, and then it went away. Nobody barely
Starting point is 01:05:08 even remembers. It was almost immediately memory hold. Nothing politically changed, not a single drop of carbon was prevented from flying into the atmosphere. And so while it's noble, admirable, fascinating, I can't even imagine the courage and bravery and selflessness it takes to take a stand like that. There's also the question of efficacy. And that really has to come in with it. And there's a level of socially engaged Buddhism that I think through its association and commitment to nonviolence can really sort of, in my opinion, degenerate into a sort of lukewarm liberalism, a sort of walking around with signs that the people in power are so protected, their power and wealth is so protected by the violence of the state that they
Starting point is 01:05:51 laugh at the idea that 100 or 1,000 or 10,000 people holding signs walking peacefully through the streets is going to do anything. In fact, they don't even notice. They don't even look out their windows. It is so irrelevant to them and their day and their week and their year. It makes no impact whatsoever. Maybe in certain political situations with certain real democracies, people engaging in robust, peaceful efforts to overcome injustice can make headway. If we had a real democracy, perhaps we could do it totally peacefully. It would be our preference. I don't, I hate the idea of hurting people, of people dying, of violence. Look at the 2020 protest. Black Lives Matter. How many people were killed? You know, Brianna Taylor, Tamir Rice, Philando Castile, these names will forever be
Starting point is 01:06:39 in my brain as totally innocent human beings doing absolutely nothing wrong gunned down by a racist white supremacist militarized American police force rooted in slavery right these are the injustices and the brutalities and the violences being inflicted on innocent people and if you're going to only meet that brutality and that violence that organized violence with mere peaceful symbolic protests i think in some instances it can work in many it can And I look at the current American situation, the current power and hegemony domestically of the violent American state. And I see how they respond to even a initially incredibly peaceful Black Lives Matter protest. They respond to it with rubber bullets and tear gas and attack dogs and tanks in our streets.
Starting point is 01:07:29 So if you're going to want to seriously commit to peaceful resistance, I get it. I think it's admirable. I think it's lovely. But you have to admit that if it's ever going to be effective, it at the very least also needs a certain group of people who share your ideals except the part about not being violent. Because when you try to take power and money away from the most powerful, wealthy people in the world, they will meet you with violence every time. And if you're going to meet them with your hands in the air, you're going to get shot in the face. And again, I have deep love and appreciation and admiration for people who engage in that.
Starting point is 01:08:04 But I think there are deep limitations to it. and if you're really serious about changing this world, eventually, when you get to a certain, we should do it as peacefully as we can. And we should never be the first to start the violence. But the moment you get too far, you will be met with extreme insane violence. And you're going to have to at least think very deeply
Starting point is 01:08:25 about how you and your organization and your movement is going to react to it. Having said that, there are a whole bunch of terrible things that come with non-peaceful protest and militant forms of activism. It immediately escalates the violent sort of spiral. Good people are killed.
Starting point is 01:08:45 Innocent people who might just be associated with your organization often get killed, right? With Black Lives Matter and stuff, there was like these hate crimes against black people, for example. Not the people out on the street necessarily, but just because people were angry at the idea that black people in general were standing up for their rights would take it out on any random black person. And that's in the context of, you know, Black Lives Matter was both peaceful and militant and had both sides of that coin. And innocent people catch the backlash often. So again, neither side of this coin is without its own specific deep issues. And again, I come back to this idea of granting legitimacy to both sides of that coin and to seeing how one side helps bolster the other and vice versa. And then quickly on the question of violence in general within Buddhism, you know, What if you are, just a classic example in America, this is all too classic and all too common,
Starting point is 01:09:39 a mass shooter, right? Nonviolence. I don't believe in violence. I cannot hurt somebody else. But this person is actively hurting innocent people. So do I set aside my commitment, my laudable and admirable commitment to peaceful resistance and take this person out because they are hurting others? You know, or do I stick to my peaceful protest? Maybe stand in front of him. Maybe be one of his victims. prevent him by killing me, he doesn't kill an extra innocent person. But you can see how that has limitations and you can see how it would not be unjust to take out that mass shooter with extreme violence and prejudice to save others. And that is always the question of violence. That is always
Starting point is 01:10:21 the ethical conundrum of violence is how do you not use violence against somebody who is so willing to use violence against people you care about, love and who are totally innocent? So this is a very complicated picture. But again, I go back to, we need both sides of that coin. Thank you. And I really just appreciate your, the delicateness of this question and really the nuances, because it really is a complex question. And yet very, very alive for our movements and activism and also for thinking about how do we get to the future, the post-capitalist, communist economic system that we want to have. So these are really, really delicate and and great things to speak through.
Starting point is 01:11:02 And so I want to ask about the Bodhisattva Revolutionary, because it's also related to this. So this idea that you've offered in your talks is that combining, right, communist revolutionary and the Bodhisattva path. And so would you tell us about that idea and also frame it in terms of invitations for our listeners, like how might someone listening start on this path
Starting point is 01:11:28 or act on this path? inspired by this transition, this change that we want to see. Sure. Well, for this, I think I am just going to read directly from that essay. It's only a couple paragraphs. It's my concluding essay. But I really think I try to tie everything together very well and answer all your questions in one with this.
Starting point is 01:11:46 So let me read this out. And then I'd love to get your thoughts on what you think about this idea. And this is just an idea that I came up with when I'm thinking about Marxism and Buddhism and the ways they interlap, you know, as my concluding sort of call to arms, if you will, I advanced this idea of the Bodhisattva revolutionary. So let me just read this last part that I wrote about it and flesh this out. So today I've argued that Marxism can benefit from a sincere engagement with Buddhism and that Buddhism in turn can benefit from a sincere engagement with Marxism. I hope I've outlined effectively the primary goals of each tradition, the ways in
Starting point is 01:12:18 which their philosophical orientations share a deeply dialectical lens, and the ways in which each tradition could benefit and deepen the other. To end, I want to leave you with an image, an archetype, if you will, that synthesizes everything I've said here today into a template that each of us, insofar as we are more or less convinced of what I've been arguing for, can adopt and strive to fulfill. This archetype is what I call the Bodhisattva revolutionary. Now, we all know what a revolutionary is. It is someone committed to confronting the injustice and inequality and suffering that are ubiquitous in class society and working to build a better, more just, more equitable, egalitarian world. The revolutionary is selfless, dedicated to the people, and shaking with indignation
Starting point is 01:13:03 at every injustice. Figures like Che Guevara, Thomas Sankara, Rosa Luxembourg, and many, many others jumped to mind. All of these people mentioned were also willing to pay the ultimate price for their vision of a better world. All three of them were brutally murdered by agents of the status quo of capitalism, of fascism, of imperialism. Their images are seared into our brains, and we strive to contribute even a fraction of what they did to the project of building a better world. Now we must combine that with the image of the Bodhisattva, that figure within Mahayana Buddhism who, in one telling, is an already enlightened being who, out of pure loving compassion for other sentient beings, remains in the cycle of samsara and foregoes nirvana simply in order to save
Starting point is 01:13:54 others. Now, that version might be too ideal for many of us who are anything but enlightened. And of course, I count myself among the unenlightened. The other version of the Bodhisattva is a little more realistic. It is someone who is on the path towards buddhahood and who commits themselves to dedicating their entire life and their whole being to the alleviation of suffering in others. The Bodhisattva is selfless in an even deeper sense than the revolutionary, because she seeks to actively dismantle the illusion of a separate self, and uses the insights gained from that endeavor to better understand and thus help other sentient beings. Bodhisattvas set for themselves the impossible task of ending all suffering and helping all beings to awaken. They vow not to enter
Starting point is 01:14:42 nirvana themselves until all beings can enter it together hand in hand. By combining these archetypes, one Marxist and one Buddhist, we can create for ourselves a well-balanced ideal to strive for. Instead of dedicating our lives to careerism, the accumulation of wealth, and the pursuit of high status within the capitalist framework, as we are trained to do, we reject all of that and dedicate our lives instead to alleviating the suffering of other beings, confronting courageously the forces of oppression and hate and greed and toppling structures of domination and exploitation and suffering in order to build an egalitarian civilization rooted in interconnectedness, justice, truth, beauty, and solidarity.
Starting point is 01:15:29 A world where no one sleeps in the gutters. A world where no one goes without health care or food. A world in which no one goes without an education. In a world where no one suffers and totally. avoidable and unnecessary ways so that others may live lives of extreme opulence. So let us all strive to embody within ourselves the Bodhisattva revolutionary ideal. And that's kind of how I ended the speech and tied Buddhism and Marxism together into a practical template that any individual can strive to work towards. And I think, again, going back
Starting point is 01:16:04 to this idea that we've been batting around this entire conversation of both sides of the coin, And I think the Bodhisop for Revolutionary really embodies that idea of having both and and using both to end suffering and all the unnecessary ways that it exists internally and externally. Yeah. Thank you for that. And just to highlight some of the things from this conversation that I'm taking with me, one of them is, you know, I really love what you said about that capitalism, under capitalism, everyone suffers. And I think about the book, The Spirit Level by Kate Pickett and Richard Wilkins. and about this idea that under capitalism, everyone is worse off in terms of physical and mental health, in terms of drug abuse, trust, discordance with neighbors, violence, et cetera. And so it's this idea that we can do something different and that it would be better for everyone. So that was a really heartening thing. And then I also recalled the Tibetan Shambala warrior prophecy as you were speaking about how the billionaire may be greedy, but it's really
Starting point is 01:17:07 the structures that they are acting in that also encourages and enables their greed. In the Shambalo warrior prophecy, the Tibetan prophecy, they say that our weapons are monomaya. They are made by the human mind, and therefore they can be unmade by the human mind. So capitalism is not necessary. It's not ever present, right? It can change. We can have something different. So not only can we have something different, but it would be better for all.
Starting point is 01:17:34 And then finally, this Bodhisattva revolutionary, really combining the two practices of Marxism and Buddhism, is really saying, you know, while the Buddhism can help uplift greed, hatred, and delusion within, and also address the suffering, that second arrow that we inflict on ourselves, we bring in Marxism to be able to address that second arrow that we inflict in terms of our social structures and institutions, again, not necessary. And also, Marxism is a way to uproot greed, and delusion societally, culturally. So just thank you so much for this beautiful combination of these two practices and what we can learn from them. Any last words? Yeah, all I would say is thank you so much for having me on. I really appreciate this conversation and I really appreciated your insights as well. I feel like we could go for several more hours talking about some of this stuff. But the big thing I want to emphasize at the end here is that, you know, change is the only constant. What emerges from both Buddhism and Marxism is that all of life is nothing but a continuous cascade of relentless change. And why that is threatening to the status quo
Starting point is 01:18:39 is because those at the very top of the capitalist world order want to naturalize it. They want to make it synonymous with human nature. They want to basically pretend that this is the end-all, be-all of economic systems and arrangements. And while it might need some finagling around the edges, it might need some reforms here and there, we've pretty much arrived at the end of history, economically speaking, and that capitalism is here to stay. But everything within Marxism, within Buddhism, within process philosophy, and within dialectics says that change is the only constant. And so we should never fall prey to these attempts to naturalize these fleeting ephemeral systems. And we should work with that idea in our head that change is constant,
Starting point is 01:19:21 work toward the next change, the change out of capitalism and toward communism, that thing that we call socialism. And so I think that is something to definitely keep in mind. And so I think that is something to definitely keep in mind going forward and to resist any attempt by anyone to naturalize in a fundamentally unjust social order. You've been listening to an upstream conversation with Brett O'Shea, host of Revolutionary Left Radio, and co-host of Red Menace, Guerrilla History, and, most recently, Shulis in South Dakota. Please check the show notes for links to any of the resources mentioned in this episode. Thank you to Carolyn Rader for this episode's cover art and to Mount Erie for the
Starting point is 01:20:05 intermission music. Upstream theme music was composed by me, Robbie. Support for this episode was provided by the Resist Foundation and listeners like you. Upstream is a labor of love. We couldn't keep this project going without the generosity of our listeners and fans. Please consider chipping in a one-time or recurring donation at upstreampodcast.org forward slash support. And because we're fiscally sponsored by the nonprofit independent arts and media, all donations to Upstream in the U.S. or tax exempt. Also, if your company or organization wants to sponsor one of our upcoming episodes, we have a number of sponsorship packages available. Find out more at upstreampodcast.org forward slash sponsorship. For more from us, visit upstreampodcast.org and follow us on Twitter and Instagram for updates and post-capitalist memes.
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