Rev Left Radio - Louis Althusser: Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses
Episode Date: January 23, 2020On this episode, Melody (aka A World to Win!) joins Breht to introduce and discuss the work of Marxist philosopher Louis Althusser, specifically his work on ideology. Follow Melody on Twitter @AWorldt...oWin1 Check out her YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iUi0YpOtyEE&list=PL-Kz2ZYArX3gJkdFdP4hxB-BOdhZKHEfe Check out her guest appearance on Radical Reviewer here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yKe5Wg-rpdw Outro music: 'Paradise' by C-Rayz Walz Find more of this music here: https://crayzwalz.bandcamp.com ------- LEARN MORE ABOUT REV LEFT RADIO: www.revolutionaryleftradio.com SUPPORT REV LEFT RADIO: www.patreon.com/revleftradio Our logo was made by BARB, a communist graphic design collective: @Barbaradical Intro music by DJ Captain Planet. --------------- This podcast is affiliated with: The Nebraska Left Coalition, Omaha Tenants United, FORGE, Socialist Rifle Association (SRA), Feed The People - Omaha, and the Marxist Center.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello everybody and welcome back to Revolutionary Left Radio.
I'm your host and comrade Brett O'Shea.
And today we have on Melody to talk about ideology and ideological state apparatuses.
It was originally an essay by Al Thuze, but it eventually became the appendix to a much bigger work called On the Reproduction of Capitalism.
And in this episode, we talk about ideology.
psychoanalysis. We talked about how Althusay took Marks and Engels' original concept and expanded
it. We talk about RSAs and ISAs and interpolation and a bunch of different stuff. I really wanted
this episode to sort of be a 101 introduction to the main ideas of Althusay and, you know, deeper
dives in the future perhaps. But I really wanted to help listeners orient themselves to Althusay's
work just because if for no other reason, we mention him all the time. We mention him in our
psychoanalysis episode. We have a philosophy episode coming up where we talk about him.
Just mention him a lot and I realize we've never done any real work on him.
So this will be a really good hopefully 101 introduction with a lot of fascinating detours
in our conversation about quantum mechanics, free will, science and math, etc.
So it's really interesting, wide ranging and we hope that everybody listening enjoys it.
And as usual, if you like what we do here, you can go to Revolutionaryleftradio.com,
become a supporter on our Patreon in exchange for bonus monthly content.
And if not, you can also find our YouTube channel, our sister podcast, Red Menace, etc.
So without further ado, let's get into this conversation with Melody on Al Thuze and his
philosophy surrounding ideology and ideological state apparatuses.
Enjoy.
Hi there. Thanks for having me on. It's an honor to be invited to talk with you. I'm Melody. I use she-her pronouns. I'm a Marxist-Leninist, and I create educational YouTube videos for revolutionary leftists on my channel, which is called A World to Win. I talk about history, philosophy, political theory, and so on, but I don't do so being any kind of
expert or professor, my background is actually in physics. I'm simply an intellectually curious person
who likes to read and then share what I learn. In terms of my personal theoretical approach,
I am very much a Marxist and also an institutionalist thinker. For those who are unfamiliar,
institutional economics was founded by the American economist Thorsten Veblen and carried on by others
such as John R. Commons, Seyright Mills, and others. And on the Marxist side of thing,
My biggest influences are people like Kim Moody, Harry Braverman, Paul Barron, Paul Sweezy, the whole monthly review crowd.
And on the institutional aside, my biggest influence is J.K. Galbraith, who is the author of the new industrial state.
And he was host of a BBC documentary series called The Age of Uncertainty.
And he was kind of regarded as the Carl Sagan of economics, sort of what he did.
He had a, it was kind of the people's economist who would get on TV and explain these things in very accessible terms.
So I do what I do because I think it embodies kind of the fundamental pedagogy at the heart of Marxism,
which is that, you know, history and philosophy and so on shouldn't be abstract academic pursuits,
but tools that everyday people can pick up and learn to use to forge their destinies together.
As I often remind my own audience, I'm learning right alongside them.
I'm not a professor handing down the holy word of our Lord and Savior, Carl Marks.
I'm humbly reading these books and sharing what I learn.
That is what I see my mission as being, and I think I share that mission with all of you at Rev. Left and Red Menace.
And Marx has a really wonderful quote that I just wanted to share on this, which is, in that case, we do not confront the world in a doctrinaire way with a new principle.
Here is the truth.
Kneel down before it.
We develop new principles for the world out of the world's own principles.
We do not say to the world, cease your struggles.
They are foolish.
We will give you the true slogan of struggle.
We merely show the world what it is really fighting for.
And consciousness is something that it has to acquire, even if it does not want to.
So the way I see it, we're in the United States anyway emerging from this long period where the revolutionary left has been
kind of a marginal voice in terms of its size and impact compared to a previous epochs in our
history. And something new is emerging and what that something is remains to be shaped. And
the way I see it, the work we do here and now is going to lay the contours for what that something
will be. It is thus our job as educators in the infancy of this rekindled interest in socialist
politics to learn the lessons of past struggles and through our organizational
praxis become the living memory as us Marxist Leninists often make reference to the
need for a political party to bring life to such praxis an organization that's
capable of collective education and being as Lenin said a tribune of the
oppressed to be a weapon wielded by the oppressed classes to wage war and
emerge victorious against capitalism so I see our respective projects as kind of
preliminaries to such an organization. We can do our best to provide a solid foundation of our
class history and a theoretical framework with which we can adapt to the specific needs of our
present fight. A little bit more biographical. I've lived in the city of Portland, Oregon, my whole
life. I'm a proud member of the Portland DSA, where I'm active with the political education
working group, bringing into the real world what I do online. So big,
shout out to the amazing community of activists both in Portland, DSA, and the rest of Portland.
I would not be the revolutionary socialist I am about your support and teachings. So, thanks,
guys. That's awesome. Shout out to all the comrades in Portland for sure. And thank you, Melody,
for coming on for tackling this text with me. I know I wanted to work with you for a while,
and we settled on this text as a thing to sort of tackle together. And so it's an honor to have you
here. And just so my listeners know, this will be a bit of a 101 introduction. Like, we're not going to
go into every nuance of every major idea or minimal idea that Althusay ever had. We're not going to
go into all the criticism of Althusay's work from Marxists and non-Marxists alike. What I wanted this
episode to be was really just an overview of his main ideas in the most popular essay of his
ideology and ideological state apparatuses. So this is very 101. It will help orient yourself
to who Althusay is and what his basic ideas were so that when we mention him in other shows,
you'll have some idea of who we're talking to. And we're also going to have an upcoming show
on Gramsci. And as you'll find out through this discussion, Althusay is very much sort of operating
after Gramsci in response to Gramsci, disagreeing and agreeing with Gramsci, but is heavily
influenced by him. So we have an episode on Gramsci coming up. And so it's nice that we can tackle
some of the main themes of Althusay's work before we get into that. And then obviously, like we
mentioned Althusay a lot. Like I think in our psychoanalysis episode we did in our upcoming episode
on Marxist philosophy, we mentioned him a lot. So I just wanted my list.
to have a 101 orientation to him and that's what this episode is going to be but before we get
into the ideas of al-thusay i was hoping melody that you could just very quickly sort of talk about
al-thusay's just life but specifically his mental illness and sort of how that culminated you know
because it's it's often associated with him people that don't know al-thusay's ideas will know that
oh he was mentally ill and killed his wife right so could you just briefly talk about that sure so
Yeah, so Altusar was born in 1918 and served in World War II and ended up in a prison of war camp for, I think, five years and suffered from either as a result from that or other factors suffered from a lot of depression and schizophrenia and other forms of mental illness throughout his life.
he spent a lot of time hospitalized and for psychiatric reasons.
And in, I think it was 1980, he, in a psychotic episode, tragically murdered his wife, Helene.
And that was used to by both his Marxist detractors and his, you know, kind of the bourgeois haters of Marxism was used to discredit him.
And so a lot of his work kind of fell into the, into the background for many years.
And recently there's been a bit of revival in interest in his work now that, you know, he died back in, I think, 1990 or so.
And so there's been kind of a renewal of interest in his work.
But there, he does carry that baggage of, you know, being the, nobody wants to be remembered as that guy who murdered his wife.
it's not it's not a good look right yeah and you and you mentioned before we started recording that
like he like after it happened right he grappled with it he had like 10 years after the murder of his
wife until his own death and so there were moments of clarity and coherence where he could wrestle
with sort of the fallout of what he did to somebody that he loved right yeah yeah that's rough
but yeah so i think that's the big thing people know like when they know when they hear his name
they're like oh that guy that killed his wife and so we just wanted to talk about that up front so
people know that that is who we're talking about, but there's a lot more to him than just
that. And that should never be used as a thing that discredits his ideas. Sure. And I mean,
his impact is just like huge when you think of not necessarily exclusively in terms of
Marxism, but like, you know, he was a teacher, I believe, of Michel Foucault and Alon Badoo.
So his influence on the world of philosophy more generally was, was, is kind of hard to
overstate. Absolutely.
Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, he had a lot of students and they went in a lot of different directions.
I mean, just, you know, the direction that Elaine Badu went in compared to Michelle Foucault.
I mean, there was like many trajectories off of Al-Douzae. It's really interesting.
Right. I'm digging for quotes here, but I'm thinking it was Jean-Paul Saunt, who said,
Foucault, the last barricade, the bourgeoisie can erect against Marx or something like that.
That's a great quote.
Some goofy line, uh, saw his silly, uh, wild.
liners. Yeah, that's great. We also have an episode on Sartre coming up, too, for people that are
interested in all. Oh, great. So, yeah. All right, but let's go ahead and get into the main ideas,
and the main ideas will be from, originally from the essay ideology and ideological state
apparatuses, which eventually became the appendix to the bigger book called the Reproduction
of Capitalism, which is well known. I think if people saw the cover of this text, they would
immediately know it if you've been around on the left. You've probably seen it if you haven't
read it. But that's what we're going to focus on today. So let's start off by getting
just your thoughts, melody on the text overall. Did you enjoy reading it? How was the experience, etc.?
Yeah. Did I enjoy reading it? Frankly, no. It was a pretty tedious read. This book was a slog,
but it definitely had some very interesting ideas in it. I don't particularly care for Al Tusser's
style. If you're new to reading the more philosophical as opposed to historical or political
Marxist text as I am, the approach can be a bit of a jolt and takes them getting used to. So I'm,
as I said, in my biographical introduction, I'm a little bit more accustomed to the economic side
of Marxism. So guys like, you know, Braverman and that whole crowd. So Altersaer takes, takes us through
a number of kind of main topics in this book, foremost being, of course, ideology and its relationship
to the state and the reproduction of the conditions which make capitalism possible.
So if capitalism makes us as the working class so miserable, why hasn't it been able to revolt
across the whole system yet?
So Altusayr answers this broadly by saying that ideology is what does that job of creating
some level of buy-in for the working class.
They have to be convinced on some level or another that this is how things have to be.
But what is ideology?
This is another question that Altusair sets out to answer.
He does this in a very novel way, and we'll get into that shortly.
Yeah, absolutely.
And, you know, the things that I pulled out, I sort of, so I agree with you that it's a slog, right?
And any sort of philosophy text at all is going to be sort of a slog in that way.
But I also think there is a sort of clarity with the way that he writes that, you know,
more or less allows you to really follow his argument and understand to some extent what he's saying.
He's not an obscurantist, that's for sure.
No, absolutely.
he writes very clearly it's just i don't think it's any less tedious it's a good way to put it
it's not it's not like say reading uh hagel which i've also done
yeah not like that it's a uh as as as lenin said it was it's the fastest way to get a headache
to read hagel that's true um it's not nearly that bad yeah yeah i agree and you know
another thing to know before we move on is not only is obviously i'll do say a marxist and
doing work in marxism but he's really drawing on both
Freud and importantly, Lacan.
I mean, I think earlier in the Frankfurt School, you know, in the 50s and 60s,
you had a lot of focus on Freud, and then Lacan popped up and you see Althusay really taking
Lacan and weaving it into Marxism, as well as Freud.
So you have him making analogies to Freudian conceptions of dreams.
He really takes on board a lot of Lacan's structural linguistics, the Lacanian terms,
like the symbolic order or the Freudian notion of the unconscious.
These things are really woven in.
And so I think, at least I think of Althusay is really taking Freud and Lacan and using some key concepts in psychoanalysis to help us understand how ideology works.
But I think in this instance, psychoanalysis is sort of subordinated to his Marxism, right?
It's not start from psychoanalysis and also do some Marxism.
It's like, I'm a Marxist, but here are some helpful concepts from psychoanalysis.
Yeah, absolutely.
And you mentioned Lacan.
I think Althusser has quite a bit in common with Al-Lacan's.
concept of the subject
and how he talks about
how we develop our subjectivity
under capitalism.
And we will get into that because we had a recent
episode on Marxist Humanism
and in that episode obviously Al Thusay
was brought up as the critic of
humanism and we'll get into basically
how more or less Althusay
sort of eradicates the subject
that would make humanism
reasonable but maybe that's getting ahead.
Let's just go to the next question for now and we'll get into that.
So for those listeners who have
haven't read the book, and I assume most of them have not, and may have little to no familiarity
with Althusay. Can you just give a summary or overview of what Althusay is basically doing in this
text and what the main point of it is? I know you touched on it, but just sort of re-say it.
Yeah, sure. So the big thing this text is setting out to achieve is to develop a Marxist
conception of ideology, as the title suggests. Marx and Engels did, of course, comment on the
nature of ideology, but neither developed a systematic approach to it.
So, Mark says, for example, that it is not man's consciousness which determines his being, but rather man's social being, which determines his consciousness.
Similarly, for Altusir, ideology can't simply be reduced to a list of tenets and beliefs that a person or group of people submit themselves to explicitly, like the teachings of religion, for example, but involves the practical activity of people participating in those social institutions.
to greatly simplify Altusera's view of ideology, it could be condensed into this short
aphorism. It is not action which follows belief, but rather belief which follows action.
This is not unlike Blaise Pascal's advice to the non-believer who wants to believe in God,
that is, which Altusera himself echoes several times throughout the text, kneel down and say
your prayers and belief will come to you. The reference to theology,
here is relevant as Altutera was a Catholic, and this certainly colors much of his work.
So to illustrate this idea, the philosopher Slovojizhijek frequently references the story
about the field, well, it's probably an apocryphal story, about something that's very near and dear
to my heart as a student of physics. It's a story about the physicist Neil Spor, one of the
fathers of quantum mechanics who was an atheist, and yet he kept a horseshoe nailed above
the door to his countryside home, which is an old superstition to keep the evil spirits away
or something like that. So when his similarly atheist colleagues inquired, Boer, you're an atheist
and a scientist, I do have this, you know, silly, superstitious artifact nailed to your door if you
don't actually believe in it, to which Boer is said to have responded, I know I don't really
believe in it, but they say it works even if you don't believe in it.
So this is, I think, really illustrative of, you know, like, this is what I keep coming back to
whenever I got hung up or confused on anything that Al Tusser was saying about ideology.
So in this text, Al Tusser is also developing a further Marxist conception of the state,
which is something that Marx had intended to do more systematically in his,
writings after capital, but of course he passed away before he could. He had planned, you know,
several other volumes on the state and all kinds of other big topics that were going to be
developed into books that were of kind of comparable size and scope as capital. And of course,
Lenin's writing on the state and revolutions, another seminal Marxist text on the state. So in
this text, Altersera proposes two aspects of the state, namely ideological state after
and repressive state apparatuses.
We'll get into what those are later in this interview, but briefly, the state for Altusir is a much more expansive and elaborate set of institutions whose demarcations aren't always super cut and dry.
Absolutely.
And I think it's really important here because I was watching an actual interview with Al Thuze speaking about his ideas and the whole role that, you know, in both the repressive state apparatus and the ideological state apparatus,
the role of the state is obviously sort of central and he's working from some stuff that Gramsci put
for it and I think Gramsci even used the word a hegemonic apparatus and Althusay himself said
you know Gramsci was on to something but he didn't really fully put the state as the focal point
and what Gramsci did do though and this is what Althusay really picked up on and ran with
and I think as Marxists this should be pretty commonsensical even if we haven't heard it laid out for us
is saying that the distinction between private and public life is
really a construct of bourgeois law. It's not really anything that really exists. There is no
real separation between public and private and a capitalist society. And thinking that way can
really, really be confusing. And when people that think that way that there is this hard and fast
distinction will say, you know, well, and we'll get into what the ISAs are, but, you know,
why are the ideological state apparatuses, which aren't actually formal parts of the state as we
know it? Why are these included in the state? And we'll get into why that is. But I think the
important thing to know for now is both Gramsci and Althusay, as any good Marxist should do,
rejected this distinction as if it, you know, this distinction between public and private life.
Not rejected it entirely because it does exist in bourgeois law, but rejected it as a way of
really thinking where capitalism and power ends and where it begins. It doesn't. It's ubiquitous,
right? Right. And they're coming at it from an angle of just viewing it much more fluidly.
So not that there's no distinction whatsoever, but that, you know, there's, um, the, the barrier
between them, the divide between them is a little bit more fuzzy than we'd be led to believe.
Definitely, definitely. And that is really brought out when we get into what the RSAs and ISAs are.
Before we get there, I always do that. I always sort of foreshadow, but I think it helps people
sort of follow the conversation and, you know, we plant seeds that later will blossom. But the next
question for you, because I want to sort of root it in marks and angles, is that, you know,
in some ways this text is, of course, building on the concept, the bare bones concept of
ideology developed by Marx and angles. So before we move on, can you just talk quickly about
what the core idea revolving around ideology was in the original Marx and Engels, how they thought
about it? Sure. So the most concise definition that Marx gives of ideology was in the German
ideology, which I will quote at length here. The phantoms form in the human brain are also
necessarily supplements of their material life process, which is empirically verified.
and bound to material premises. Morality, religion, metaphysics, all the rest of ideology and their
corresponding forms of consciousness, thus no longer retain the semblance of independence. They have
no history, no development. But men, developing their material production and their material
intercourse, alter, along with their real existence, their thinking and the products of their
thinking. Life is not determined by consciousness, but consciousness by life. So plainly, for Marx,
ideology doesn't exist in the realm of pure thought as such. Our direct experience of the world
shapes our ways of thinking. This is similar to how another thinker of political economy and
sociology that I mentioned in our introduction, Thorisd and Veblen conceived of ideology,
a complex reproduction of social behavior that takes place foremost at the material level.
This is what Veblen and the institutionalists call institutions.
So for Marx and later Marxist thinkers of ideology, including Altusayr, the praxis of everyday life is what forms the structures of belief.
The ruling ideology for Marx is the ideology of the ruling class in any given historical epoch, the church in feudal times, or the more secular ideologies of liberal capitalism in our own time.
The function of the ruling ideology is to both create and reinforce the hegemony of the ruling class, such that its rule is viewed as good.
or at the very least natural and unchangeable.
The classic example of this in our current era
is the ideology of capitalist realism,
which is a term popularized by the late Marxist writer, Mark Fisher,
and best exemplified from that infamous quote from Margaret Thatcher,
that there is no alternative to liberal capitalism, Tina.
Yeah, yeah.
They even made an acronym out of it, Tina.
I remember that, damn.
Yeah, so that's great.
And, yeah, so you think of just basic marks and angles, thinking about ideology.
Some things come to mind, obviously, what Melody said, plus, you know, the ruling ideas of any epoch are the ideas of the ruling class, this idea of false consciousness, and just the basic materialism that undergirded all of Marx and Engels and all Marxist thought moving forward.
Those are some of the basic ingredients offered by Marx and Engels.
But I would argue that the reason why later thinkers like the Frankfurt School and Althusay could expand.
on those ideas and make ideology much more comprehensible and wide-ranging is precisely because
some of the concepts needed to unlock the depths of ideology were sort of yet to come in Marx's
time, and they came in the form of Freud and then ultimately also Lacan by expanding it.
So a lot of those ideas with the unconscious, especially, you know, those ideas come into play
here. And without that sort of conceptual toolkit, it is sort of hard to understand ideology
in a way that we do today, right?
Like try to think of ideology before Freud.
And there's some basic conceptual tools that we don't have
that could help us make sense of it.
And so I think a lot of people will understand this
when we think about the perverts guide ideology, right?
What Zijek does is try to combine Lacanian psychoanalysis
with Marxism.
And it does, for all of Zijek's flaws and faults,
it does help understand how ideology works and how it functions.
And they've really been able to expand that beyond
what even marks and angles were capable of conceiving at their time.
Yeah, I mean, Gishech definitely carries through that.
His lens on ideology is clearly informed by Al Tusser's work,
which you'll find in a lot of his books, such as the opening chapter in
Absolute Recoil, actually, is all about Althusser.
Interesting.
Yeah, that's great.
Definitely sort of, you know, Gijek can be seen, like, sort of in the, one of the
trajectories off of Althusay, right? I think that's a helpful way to think about him, just on some
extent. Okay, but let's go ahead and move on. So, you know, now we're getting into ideology.
We know where Marks and Angles sort of left the question. And then Althusay, you know, develops this
underdeveloped concept of ideology throughout this text. And a good way to understand his view is to
talk about what he calls the two theses on ideology and what they mean. So can you just explain
that to our listeners? Yeah, sure. And we can do this pretty briefly. They're not terribly.
difficult concepts to wrap our heads around. They just require some
clarification. So the first of these
theseses reads as follows. Ideology represents
individuals' imaginary relationships to their
real conditions of existence. This reinforces
the point made earlier about ideology, not simply being a
belief system, but how we are even able to make sense of the
world around us. We have the facts of our material existence on the one
hand, and then on the other hand, we have our rational ability to narrativize those facts and
understand how they fit together in some kind of coherent whole. So in the second thesis, Altouser
writes, ideology has a material existence. This, again, marks Altusir as centering praxis in his
analysis of ideology. We do not act because we believe. We believe because we act. So we repeat all
kinds of habits, social customs, handshakes, transactions, and so on, and these embody
materially what ideology is. Remember from Pascal earlier, kneel down and say your prayers
and belief will come. To be more specific, we habituate going to our jobs, exchanging
commodities with money, taking orders from our bosses, et cetera, et cetera, to the extent
that these things seem as natural as a dog chasing a squirrel. And while we're caught up in the act,
it's almost impossible to see it.
So this Altusair posits is what makes ideology so gosh darn effective.
Yeah, and I think that's really important.
I mean, I think the first thesis ideology represents the imaginary relationship of individuals
to their real conditions of existence is good.
And I think some people on the Marxist side should be more or less sort of oriented to that concept.
But what I found the more challenging or interesting one,
was Al Thuze's insistence that, you know, the second thesis,
ideology has a material existence.
And I think what you said is perfect, right?
What Al Thuze is arguing is not that ideas come first or that ideology even manifests primarily
through our beliefs, but he says ideology manifests materially through the physical practices
and behaviors that we do.
And I think one of the examples is, you know, walking across down the street and a cop says,
hey you and you physically turn around to look at the cop signaling you and in that moments right ideology
is manifesting um and and so i think really really anchoring ideology in the the physical patterns of
behaviors and practices of individuals and then the the beliefs come sort of after the sort of physical
rituals that we all conduct i think it's a really interesting at least way to understand and
think about ideology. Yeah, absolutely. And this is, um, as I said earlier, this fits really well
together with the institutionalist framework that's developed by, uh, Veblen about the habits and
customs of, of a capitalist society. Yeah, definitely. He takes a little bit more of a kind of a
behaviorist approach, I guess is what you would call it. But yeah. And so I just, I just really like
that idea of like, you know, the performance, the physical performance of ideology sort of instantiating.
us as subjects and I think we'll get into more of how that constitutes subjects when we talk about
interpolation in a bit but just thinking this is this is pretty new this is a pretty interesting
way to think about ideology and it might not make total sense at first but it's worth thinking about
and thinking about how ideology manifests not just through you know cultural products or in the realm
of peer ideas and beliefs but really in our physical behaviors and practices I think that's
fascinating and helpful right and I mean it's like this the things that
I think that Altuser would say are like really exemplary of ideology that is kind of like what I said about a dog chasing a squirrel, which is like if it's working right, you don't even know that it's there.
And you might even like, you know, stamp your feet and say, this is not ideology. This is not ideological. You're ideological. What are you talking about? You know, and I think that's really clear when you have like conversations with people about a number of things like,
especially about capitalism and just like, well, what do you mean?
And that's just the way it is.
It's not ideology.
It's just how the world works.
It's human nature.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, exactly.
Like it's as kind of Mark Fisher again described, it's like inscribed in our like social
ontology.
It's like irrefutable.
It's as natural as the sun coming up every morning.
Right.
Exactly.
And a lot of people do think of it that way.
And that does play in a capitalist realism.
limiting your your political imagination but i think we're all very familiar we should be and i think
i've said this multiple times on twitter and on this show that the most ideological people in the
world are the ones that really believe themselves to be operating outside of ideology to say
no i'm not ideological i'm just practical or i'm not ideological i'm just focused on how to
get results through policy you know those people are the most ideological and i sort of thought
of this metaphor when i was reading this book of a puppet you know like think of like a pinocchio
puppet who believes themselves to be a real boy and somebody comes to the puppet and says no look
at you're a puppet i can point out the strings holding you up and the person looks up and still doesn't
the puppet looks up and still doesn't see the strings you know that that's sort of a metaphor of
like no i'm not ideological i don't have any ideology i operate outside of it but you know you're
caught up the most deeply in the web of ideology once you start uttering statements like that yeah
and i think a lot about that in the context of the world i come from which is uh you know
physics and science and there's all kind you know it's we're saturated with with people who think
that they're totally above politics and and that science has nothing to do with politics or
philosophy or anything like that and of course we as Marxists know that's a bunch of nonsense
fortunately there are plenty of you know politically minded scientists out there so for sure all right
well let's go ahead and move on i think this question is actually really easy i think people
People will immediately understand this, but it's worth saying because I think understanding
this will help you understand the next thing.
So what is a repressive state apparatus, aka the RSA, and maybe give an example or two?
Yeah, sure.
So this one, as you said, is very straightforward and recognizable.
A repressive state apparatus is what the classical Marxists like Lenin are generally referring
to when they talk about the state, the special bodies of armed men who are given privilege,
shrank and so on to enforce the law. So the repressive state apparatus is the system of
cops, courts, enforcement agencies, bureaucracy and so on, which give body to the violence
that's necessary to perpetuate capitalism. But for Altusayr, the RSAs are simply one
dimension of what the state is. To achieve a more holistic understanding of what the state
is, he develops the accompanying concept of the ideological state apparatus, ISA, which will get
into shortly, and just briefly, this is why his contribution is so important, which is
that I think there's a tendency in Marxism to think of the state purely as an element of
the so-called superstructure in that model of base superstructure, where the base is constituted
of the economy and the forces in relations to production and the superstructure is the legal
system and the cultural
apparatuses and so on.
But I think that this analysis
kind of pushes the state to be
more interconnected with the base
than the superstructure, frankly.
At least that's my take on it.
And we can get into that later.
Sure, yeah, no, absolutely.
And then so then the next question
is sort of the focus of
this essay and this overall conversation,
which is, and this is really,
you know, Al Thurzé's unique
contribution to Marxism, and that's
known as the ISAs or the ideological state apparatus. So what is an ideological state apparatus as
compared to a repressive state apparatus? And what are some examples? Okay. Yeah, sure. So an ISA is an
institution such as a trade union, a political party, the school system, and so on, which will
fulfill the function of inculcating society with the norms, values, behaviors, and so on,
necessary for continuing capitalism. Altus says the centrality of the school system as the main
ISA as it is where in most Western capitalist societies where the church has kind of faded away
in terms of its being the main ISA. Young people spend a tremendous amount of time where they learn
the basic functions of cultural literacy skills they will perhaps learn eventually to use at the
workplace, et cetera, et cetera, along with, of course, regular reassurances that the way society
is doing business is all well and good. Altusera notes that RSAs and ISAs differ into key ways,
first of which is the fact that as their names imply, RSAs function primarily through
violence, whereas ISAs function primarily through ideology. Two, RSAs are given a much greater degree
of organizational coherence and consistency of message, as opposed to ISAs, which, because of
their much more diverse functions within society, are accordingly relatively autonomous in Altaire's
words. The ISAs have more of a life of their own, and they have a bit more freedom to potentially
stray from the official story of the state ideology. So the police, the FBI, the NSA, ICE, and so on,
are all following the program to a much stricter extent.
Their purpose is specific, violent, and almost always direct.
School systems, trade associations, the news media, chambers of commerce, think tanks,
and so on, by contrast, all upholds some dimension of the status quo, but in a way that's
much more general, less immediately violent, and much less direct.
Finally, Altersera notes that ISAs and RSAs can't function all on their own.
they need one another.
On a similar note, ISAs do not function exclusively through ideology.
They sometimes employ violence.
Likewise, on the flip side, RSAs also have their peculiar ideologies, which pertain
to their particular mode of violence, like the police are our friends, they protect and serve,
and so on.
Yeah.
Yeah, incredibly well said.
And another ISA would be even like the family unit.
I think that's a huge one, especially like I haven't read Engels as a whole,
book on the family yet, but I, you know, I plan on doing that at some point, but I'm just
interested to read this first and then go see what Engels has to say about it. But like when,
I think it's an important thing that you said is, you know, the ISAs and the RSAs, they
depend on each other. And while the RSAs are primarily repressive and violent, using explicit
violence to get their way, right, the army, the Navy, the police, et cetera, they also use
ideology as a secondary strategy. And then that's inverted in the case of the ISAs where it's
primarily ideological, but it can still be violent. And one way it can still be violent if we're talking
about the family unit, you know, think about an abusive patriarchal dad who uses physical violence
to beat his kids and wife into submission, or think of like Catholic schools where they used to have
rulers, they'd smack your hands if you got something wrong. So violence is still right there,
but that's not the primary thing that they lean on. And the last thing I wanted to say, because I think
about this a lot when it comes to the school system, will clearly.
Clearly everything that Melody said is very true when it comes to schools, what they teach,
trying to make you a competent worker for the workforce, et cetera.
But, you know, I have two kids myself.
And I also think about how just the structure of the school day is a sort of ideological conditioning for the structure of the work day.
You know, obviously it's built around like parents' work schedules.
These kids who should not be waking up at 7 a.m. every morning are they're going into a place that the older you get, the less you like it, right?
when he comes to school, maybe as a kindergartner, you were excited, but, you know, past fifth grade,
it fucking sucks.
Your teachers are your bosses.
You have to raise your hand to go to a bathroom break.
Some schools have uniforms.
You know, you have a lunch break that segments your days.
And this whole thing has started off in the U.S. with the Pledge of Allegiance, standing up
and pledging your loyalty, your undying loyalty to the United States of America, to the state as such.
And that whole process is carried over in the workplace.
and that's why I believe most workplaces are deeply infantilizing,
especially my experiences with bigger corporations that have HR departments.
I remember, you know, working in one of those places where, you know,
if we meet this mark for the holiday, we'll get a pizza party.
And they even took us out to the fucking pumpkin patch for a field trip at work.
And I'm like, yo, I'm not fucking a fifth grader, you know.
I feel infantilized.
I have to ask you when I can piss and shit.
I have to ask you what I can wear.
I have to cover up my tattoos.
You know, I have to be there when you say, I have to leave when you say.
Yeah, so this, and we get like these little disgusting little childish rewards for doing good, you know, making profit.
It's just really gross.
And so that's just one way in which not only the explicit teaching of schools with like, you know, U.S. history and how that reinforces ideology, but just the structure of the school day itself and how that is ideological.
Yeah.
Yeah, absolutely.
And I think that's part of what Altersair is getting across in, in, in, in, in.
talking about the ISAs, which is that it's not just about the explicit, overt messaging that we're receiving, you know, like the U.S. is the greatest force of good in the world, blah, blah, blah, all that bullshit that we get crammed down our throats for 12 years. But also just, like, as you just said, like, we're inculturated with the habits and customs of, you know, proletarian work life.
Yeah, exactly. And if you take seriously the idea that ideology manifests primarily in our physical behaviors and practices, well, you know, standing up and putting your hand over your heart for the Pledge of Allegiance as a kid, shuffling from one class to the next, shuffling from your classroom to the lunch at the time when the teacher says you can go to lunch, those are physical, those are embedded in our physical practices and physical behaviors. But every time we do them, we sort of reinstantiate the ideology of,
the dominant ideology of the ruling class. It's just, it's a fascinating deep way to understand
it. So let's go on to the last big idea and then we'll zoom into the conclusion of this
episode. And again, I said this in the beginning. This is really 101. We'll do deeper dives
perhaps at a different time. But this is a really important concept and that is the concept
of interpolation. So can you just explain to our listeners what interpolation is and how Althusay
uses the term? So interpolation is a unique term that
Altusair develops to explain how ideology in capitalist society weaves us into its social fabric.
Interpolation or hailing or addressing is the mechanism by which ideology imbues us as individuals
with subjectivity. We are hailed by society at large, one could say, and hence provided with a point
of reference for our identity. In this way, Altusir argues we are subjects in a dual
sense of the word. First, we are established as subjects in the sense of being a gential human
beings going about our lives and making choices in the world and so on. And second, we are
subjects in the sense of, you know, like the king's subjects that is subjected to the authority
of capitalism's sociological rules. Yeah. Yeah. And this was sort of a difficult concept
for me to grasp at first, but it really, it really is crucial. And,
I don't think I'm wrong in saying that what Althusay is really saying with this point and what makes him controversial and this gets into the whole humanism versus anti-humanism thing is that I think he's like literally saying that this process of interpolation is the process by which ideology sort of constitutes individual peoples as subjects like you know the very subjectivity um it's hard to almost put into words but it is sort of crafted and shaped by this process such that
your very subjectivity, what you think is free and that you have free will and human agency
and can do what you want, that is called deeply into question.
The entire concept of free will is basically eradicated with this concept.
So it's really doing a lot here, you know?
Yeah.
And so, yeah, so what you just brought up is really important.
And it speaks to the other aspects of what AlteuSphere gets into with ideological state
apparatuses, which is what constitutes our subjectivity.
And what I would say is that I think, you know, looking at things through a lens of ISAs, we can say that we have, you know, many multiple constituted subjectivities in this way. You know, if you are a student and you go to school, your identity is kind of, you know, you are interpolated as a student. You are addressed in that social context, interpolated, hailed, addressed, et cetera, as a student. And you acquire all the, you know, norms, habits and custom.
of that. And then, you know, when your classes are over, you go and you start your shift at a fast food restaurant to, you know, help pay for your tuition or whatever. And then you are interpolated as a worker, as a capitalist, you know, subject. So I think part of the point of this concept of interpolation is that, like, our subjectivities are, you know, there's a plurality of them.
I think, you know, without fearing too far out of my intellectual lane here, that's kind of
parallel to what I think Gil de Luz calls the schizophrenic nature of capitalism, that
kind of, you know, separated marks of subjectivity that we adopt by engaging with different
aspects of ideology.
Yeah, and I think you said it really well, too, with the role.
that you play, whether you're a student or then you go into work and you're a worker, you go
home and you're the father or the mother or whatever, and you're always playing these
roles and your subjectivity, how you think and introspect is shaped by these roles that
you play almost to the point where, I mean, in Althusay is sort of reading that there is
no free will, there's no way for you to have any other subject, your entire subjectivity
is structured by the dominant ideology of capitalism, the way you view yourself, the
you experience yourself, you know, is completely controlled by that.
And I know you're into science and I don't know what your position on free will is,
but, you know, he may be right here, right?
Like if the, if we take seriously that the universe is determined, that there is no free will,
which I think is pretty popular on the scientific side of things.
Like a lot of people in science, you know, can pretty much be convinced that, yeah, free will
especially as we think about it, colloquially, certainly doesn't exist.
Well, then, you know, it's sort of interesting to think,
like, okay, if that's true, then maybe Althusay is onto something, but this is where the anti-humanism
comes in, right? Because there is no subjectivity outside of these confines, outside of this
domineering imposition on you. So you can't, there's no sort of subjectivity that is humanist
outside of these ideological confines. And so that that subject that can exist outside of the
confines of capitalism is really erased in the Althusian take. And so that's what we mean by
sort of, you know, anti-humanism, there is no something there that unites all humans, right?
Everything about subjectivity is structured by the dominant capitalist society and its ideologies.
Yeah. And so if you'll allow me a brief detour since you brought up science and my kind of
opinions on that, which is so just to familiarize those who are outside of the field,
in physics there's a major problem, which is that in the theory of how the universe works,
which is that we have two theories, one which is general relativity, which is the theory of how
gravity works and how, you know, the cosmic timeline unfolds, and it works very, very well
for describing things of massive scale.
And then on the other side, we have quantum field theory and the state.
standard model of particle physics for describing the very, very small things. And it works
ridiculously well for predicting those things that are, you know, going on over in Switzerland,
over at the large Hajon Collider. You can predict things to a ridiculous level of precision.
But the trouble is that these two theories do not mesh. They don't work together. And to come
around to this discussion of, you know, determinism versus free will, one of the problems that I see, at least,
This is maybe in my kind of naive reading of it, which is that, you know, general relativity is incredibly deterministic and the idea that, you know, if you have the initial conditions of a, say, you know, like a planetary system, a star with a planets going around it, you can predict its motion effectively for all eternity if you have all the right variables, if you have enough information.
But then there's this other side, which is quantum mechanics, which says that at the most fundamental level, reality is actually probabilistic, right?
Like if you look at something like the double slit experiment, which I would encourage listeners to go look up on YouTube, you find a million videos on it, which is such that you can only kind of predict the potential trajectories of a given quantum particle, but where it actually will turn up is actually still a well-defined point.
so there's there's that kind of clash as well with which is you know uh so you have on this cosmic
scale this incredibly rigidly deterministic universe that on the quantum scale you have this
layer of unpredictability which to say you know what does that lead us to conclusions about how
our you know social world looks like i don't know and that's just that's that's that's purely
you know speculative for me but it does kind of
does make me think about it, which is to say, to what extent is our, you know, and where's
free will involved there, if at all? Like, we have determinism on the one side and then, as
Einstein would put it, God playing dice on the other. Yeah. Yeah, so now you're getting me
really excited because this is definitely an interest of mine outside of politics and philosophy.
You know, people will, you know, listen to the double slit experiment and then in quantum
mechanics, right? We often hear this mini-worlds theory of like, you know, how do we explain that,
you know, two particles separated by enormous distance in time can, you know, sort of act simultaneously
in the exact same way, right? Einstein, I think, called it spooky action at a distance, right?
Yeah, quantum entanglement. Yeah, quantum entanglement, exactly. And so you have a lot of randomness
at this level and, you know, the mini-worlds theory is one theory that might explain why these things
happen, right? There's other dimensions and they pop in an aspect. And so you have a lot of randomness. And you know,
out of those dimensions, et cetera. But when it comes to free will and determination, because
this is also a question in philosophy, like scientists and philosophers wrestle over this,
and this is sort of where the two fields can overlap at times, you know, the sort of quantum
randomness, at least it's my argument, that that doesn't necessarily provide a way for
human agency and free will to exist. So even if we say, yeah, the world is not fully determined
like the Einstein general theory of relativity might say that it is, at least on the quantum level,
it's not determined that way.
And there's randomness that happens on this level.
Well, I'm not so sure that that level of randomness allows for any free will either, right?
Whether it's fully determined or completely random, it's out of our control either way, right?
Absolutely.
And I mean, like my angle on it, and this is why I tend to side on the more kind of determine,
like overall on the more deterministic side, which is that the things on the quantum level don't,
The effects are so negligible at our macroscopic, you know, level that the world that we inhabit is, for the most part, Newtonian, right?
We don't even need general relativity to talk about, you know, just the everyday workings of, you know, machines and, and, you know, kicking cars.
Yeah, soccer balls, basic, you know, physics of everyday life.
We still pretty much live in a Newtonian universe in that sense, which is completely deterministic.
And then there's another thing, which is that even in quantum mechanics, where the so-called wave function, which determines the probability of where particles will end up, it's still, it's time evolution is still deterministic.
So it's a probabilistic function, but it still evolves in time, in a deterministic fashion.
Interesting. Yeah, that's fascinating.
Well, Dan, this really could be its own episode.
Yeah, I'd love to come on with you sometime and just talk science.
Let's do that.
That'd be a pleasure.
And I know for a fact that a big chunk of my listeners are into that and are interested in that and like when we talk about it.
So, yeah, if there's interest in that, hit me up if you're listening and want to hear more of these sorts of discussions.
I do a little bit of it on Patreon, but there's certainly more room for us to explore these things in.
Yeah.
As we know, as Marxist, you know, talking about science is not not talking about politics because everything's connected.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Yeah, and for those who are interested in, who maybe don't have a background in math and science
and want to have a very accessible introduction to the topic of what we were just talking about,
I would suggest a series of books called Theoretical Minimum by the physicist Leonard Suskin.
Yeah, they're really a fabulous guide to kind of acquainting oneself with the fundamentals
of physics without you know needing a whole bunch of math and you know as prerequisite yeah because
that's exactly where my scientific inquiry ends is the moment I have to start putting pen to
paper I suck at math and so yeah my shit really exists is sort of theoretical and stuff I can't
get into the math to do it myself but it's funny you should say that because I was always
absolutely dreadful at math all the way up through until I got to college really decided that I
wanted to study science, like, as a potential career. And then I was just like, well, I guess
I have to get good at this now. So I pounded it into my head for the better part of eight
years. And now I'm, now I'm functionally okay at math. Enough to kind of say these things about
physics and science. You know, me and the chalkboard didn't make friends until I was well into
my 20s. Well, that's interesting. As somebody who failed algebra one in college, that gives me
some hope, so thank you. Oh, yeah. That's my other belief, just also as a Marxist, is that, you know,
that, you know, those experiences change you, right? And, you know, I think a lot of people have
kind of a bad taste left in their mouth from the ideological state apparatus, which is the
science instruction system. Nice. Nice connection.
Yeah, no, no, I really, really bringing this back home, which is that, you know, it's always taught in this very kind of esoteric way, which is like almost deliberately constructed to confuse you and, you know, make you go, oh, this is just for smart people. I'm going to, you know, leave this alone, which I think is like I talked to so many people for whom that's their experience. And frankly, it was my experience. And the only way I was able to get around it was in a very kind of pounding it.
into my head until it hurt.
And that shouldn't, that shouldn't be how it has to be.
I really think that there's a better mode of pedagogy to approach, not just, you know,
math and science, but just learning in general.
And that's what I try to do with my, my YouTube channel and my other things.
Yeah, absolutely.
I totally agree with that.
And I think sometimes, because I'm guilty of this as well, like your first forays into math
don't end up well.
And so then you start convincing yourself, like, oh, I'm just not mathematical.
you know other people have mathematical minds i don't um yeah i did that my whole life and then i started
hearing my my um my preteen daughter start to say that like you know start to have that narrative
in her mind and i said oh i see the danger here because what you're doing is you're cutting yourself
off from any future attempt at even trying to get good at it and saying like you know i'm i'm
constitutionally unable to do math and that's a problem it's bourgeois thinking it's a static
reified thinking of oh i'm not a this person i'm a you know et cetera really good yeah bourgeois thinking
that's a great point okay so let's go ahead let's go ahead because it's an hour and just do the last
question before you let listeners know where they can find you in your work sure which is just
you know what's your favorite part of this text and what do you think what revolutionaries
marxist leftists today can learn and should learn from it overall like what is what's the big
takeaway from this conversation in this book? Yeah, okay. I really liked AltuSER's
clear kind of anatomization of the state into ISAs and RSAs. It's a framework that's
flexible enough to be adapted to historically specific conditions, as all good Marxist theory
ought to be, yet also clear enough to provide relatively stable categories for talking about
different aspects of the state. I think that for revolutionaries, it's
its confrontation with the RSAs is like an inevitable part of class struggle.
However, the ISAs, as Altusar argued, are a powerful weapon in the bourgeoisie's arsenal in this class war.
So for us, as revolutionaries, I think it's critical to take from his materialist conception of ideology at minimum two things, that we are all being inculcated with capitalist ideology at virtually all times, not simply through direct.
overt messaging that you know capitalism is good but also through the practical activities of
our banal everyday lives right so this is something that you know like we as revolutionaries who are
still living under capitalism have to have to wrestle with like you know capitalist thinking
kind of seeping into our very pores just by being here sociologically and absorbing the
the systems and thoughts and habits and so on of being in society and then the second thing
that I think we should take from it as revolutionaries is that in building our own anti-capitalist institutions,
you know, things like dual power structures and our organizing spaces and so on, I think we really
have to take this theory of ideology into account. So I think that means being, you know, conscientious
about minimizing to the extent that we are kind of reenacting these capitalist social habits
that we learn from growing up in a capitalist society, living in a capitalist society, et cetera,
and that, you know, on the flip side of that, we need to be doing the active work of
cultural production that has, say, counterculture, institutions of our own that consciously
defy those capitalist structures, both in words and in practice. And this is why, and dear God,
I struggle to follow my own advice on this like nobody else.
I always tell folks to stay the heck off of social media to the greatest extent they can.
I say, as my thumbs twitch, reaching for my phone to scroll through Twitter for the 17th time in the last 10 minutes.
I'm kidding, I think.
But, no, but, like, really, like, I think social media is just like a great example of this, you know, it's designed to, in this, like, here, here's a great example of an ideological state apparatus is Facebook or Twitter or whatever.
it is an ideological state apparatus in that way because it's encouraging us to think in this very
short-term capitalist way, right?
Like get your quippy response out there to every new thing that's happening, right?
Right now, right now, right now.
And you've got to have the funniest, smartest, hottest take, right?
It reifies the individual.
Absolutely.
And, you know, we're kind of, I think what it really, like, what I see this happen on, you know,
is Twitter especially, but just social media in general.
all over and over again, which is that like somebody, and this maybe applies more loosely to
social media, but I definitely see it especially in kind of leftist circles, which is, you know,
somebody will make kind of a, like a bad take or a, or say something kind of mean or whatever,
and then they'll get called on it. And then instead of kind of learning and growing from it,
they'll double down because now it's like, you know, you have to kind of defend your brand,
as it were and you can't be seen as being like self-contradictory or whatever so it's like a lot i think
the kind of instinct on social media is to like protect your ego and protect your brand rather than
just being like hey yeah i fucked up i'm sorry i'll avoid saying those things in the future or whatever
yeah that's that's a great point and yeah and those sorts of self-reflections and honest self-criticisms
they can't happen on on these websites that are structured against that and that you know they
privilege anonymity there's no accountability um it's really just everybody out there brand building
and fighting other brands and that is neoliberal subjectivity to the fucking core and i look at i look at
twitter and i look at facebook and i've deleted my facebook i've gotten my my social media presence
down to a very small amount of things just for my own mental um well-being but i often think about
Mao's combat liberalism and the things that out absolutely yeah as Mao points out in that book like
these are ways of behaving and operating in the world that are liberal, right, meaning anti-communist,
unprincipled, sloppy, individualistic, and everything about social media, from the algorithms
to the structure to what's incentivized is what Mao's warning against in combat liberalism.
So to think that Mao and Al Thuze were writing these things way before the advent of even the
internet, let alone social media, and then to be able to say, wow, both of them were 100% right
in with this totally new social formation known in social media, these things are still true as
ever. Absolutely. And actually, it's funny you mentioned Mao because I saw a Red Menace podcast
and when I was following along when we were all reading Mao together, when I read on
contradiction, I was like, huh, you know what this reminds me of is all two says essay
contradiction and overdetermination, which is like it fits right in with.
with what we've been talking about.
And it's less about kind of the,
it's a little bit more focused on kind of that,
the dialectic of base and superstructure.
And, you know,
what's really the driving motor
of capitalist society's dynamics and so on,
which I think, you know,
there's just a lot of kind of similar topics
that are covered by Mao in Contradiction
and by Altusair in that essay,
which is in a collection of essays called
four marks.
Yeah, it's awesome.
And it's awesome when people employ the same materialist analysis in totally different
context and totally different epochs and come to the same conclusion.
That is a point in favor of the sort of efficacy of the Marxist materialist outlook
and the mode of analysis that comes with it.
Last things I'll say before I let you plug your stuff is, you know, a big criticism
of Althusai to kind of wrap this up.
One criticism is, is, you know, his understanding of how subjectivity is really,
shaped and dominated by ideology. It leads to questions like, you know, how can we understand
those who fight back? How can we understand people who from all and, you know, from all points
of view seem to be the sort of people that would have their subjectivity completely imposed upon
them in this way. But, but do somehow find a way to overcome it, to learn through it and to
fight back. And if there is no room for human agency, if there is no room for, you know,
taking control of your own subjectivity to some extent, then it sort of leaves open the question,
we explain, you know, the Fred Hamptons of the world, the, you know, enter person here who
did fight back, even though they were completely inculcated in their society. And that's
something that you don't totally get the answer to in Althusay. And also the Gramscian notion
of organic intellectuals who, you know, fight back, you know, grow up in the working class and
then fight back against the dominant ideology and offer new ways of looking at the world. I'm not
sure in the Althusarian model where the organic intellectual could come from if we take
seriously this anti-humanist anti-subjectivity sort of position that he takes. I don't know.
Those are just questions. I don't expect you to have the answers, but no, I don't. But I mean,
I have kind of loose thoughts that are definitely coming to mind, though, and I will go ahead and
kind of expound on that a little bit, which is that I think that maybe a very, like, strict
reading of Altusera on ideology kind of maybe precludes human agency. But I think if, you know,
we account for, you know, the fact that, you know, like, class struggle happens, right?
And I think that, you know, this is how, you know, counterhead of hegemonic ideology itself develops, right?
And it's like, it's in constant dialectic with the ruling ideology.
And the ruling ideology is always going to, you know, try to, you know, do that process of what
DeBoard called recuperation, right?
It's always going to try to take those rebellious elements and turn them into part of the machine, right?
And I think, but I think that, you know, accounting for things like class struggle makes it clear that the ruling ideology isn't the only ideology that there is and that there's plenty of like ideology going on outside of the so-called ideological state apparatuses, right?
you know there is like of course because otherwise how would how would there be things like as you said
like fred hamptons and and you know bolsheviks and and black panthers and you know countercultural
music scenes like punk rock and and and so on right i i hear you and and i think maybe if i'm hearing
you correctly something like you're saying is is in the process perhaps of class struggle in the
process of struggling against the ruling class in whatever way that shapes. Maybe new subjectivities
can be born. Maybe in the actual material practice of confronting class society, it allows us to
maybe escape or at least reflect on or have a meta perspective on how ideology functions and thus
allows us a way out. Absolutely. Yeah, I'd say that it definitely like when we have these big
eruptions of class struggle, like I think of a couple of things in recent history in the U.S.
I think of, you know, Occupy Wall Street.
I think of Black Lives Matter.
I think of the teacher's strike wave that hit the red states in 2018, right?
There's a huge, kind of a sea change in the way that class struggle has been in the U.S.
in the last 40 years.
And I think that that's kind of like, that's what helps shatter that illusion, right?
And I think that, I mean, I have kind of very partisan opinions on this, but I think that that's kind of part of what, you know,
the Democratic Party tries to do is when they see this kind of thing going on, they go,
oh, I see people are interested in getting all these funny ideas now. Let's pretend like we are
on their side and then recapture their energy and turn them all into good neoliberal subjects again.
So we can all go back to sleep. Yeah, exactly. Go back to brunch.
Exactly. Yeah, well said, well said. All right, well, I'm going to wrap it up there. Of course,
there's a million more things to say, but
I like this episode a lot as an
introduction to the main
points of Althusay's main work
and hopefully we can do more in the future
and of course, if you mentioned this
in this episode, like if you want to come on and have
a talk, even if it's just for our Patreon
supporters, it's purely about
science and quantum mechanics and stuff.
There's definitely a need and an interest in that
on the left and I think we can address that
together for sure. Wonderful.
All right. Well, thank you. Before I let you go, Melody,
can you let listeners know where they can find you and your work
online? Sure. So my YouTube channel can be found at YouTube.com slash C slash a world to win. I'm on Twitter
at a world to win one and my blog can be found at patreon.com slash world to win. If you're interested
in a Marxist educational project, which shares many of the same visions as Rev. Left and
Red Menace, I encourage folks to hop over to my channel and
it out. Right now I have an ongoing series on the history of the Democratic Party and why the
left should stay as far away from it as humanly possible. It's the most pernicious ISA that the U.S.
has, in my opinion. Anyway, thanks for having me on. It's been a real pleasure. I hope we
get to talk again soon. Absolutely, Comrade. Thank you so much for all the work in this episode,
and we will definitely be in touch and definitely work together. Thank you so much.
Thank you.
and overthrow your mind, mind.
Keep it moving.
You can hold it down.
You know, we can go ahead.
Keep that moment.
Who can hold it down?
No, we don't get to go inside.
Keep the movement.
You can hold it down.
If you know, you can follow it aside.
Keep that moment.
You can hold it.
You can hold it.
No, you don't get floating inside.
I'm the American dream in action.
The veteran is esteem.
The fractured piece of freedom.
bed and homeless recaptured watch news columns combined blow your mind at nine read the signs
but should i say this 41 times watch the floors though before can't get out the train
and y'all can't get out the box yo get in you train do not hold doors do not lean on walls
do not pee on floors this is be on war we are peon on pawns red neon dorns watch the bushes
patriot games get prolonged snake super sperman aim shoot the vermin is it burning we'll see now you're learning
Don't think that your gun could protect your girl
This is New York hell
This affects the world
Paradise green grass meditation
Calm greens fresh fruits
Vegis clean out of valley streams
I mean check is a chest
Truth is the square of your life
Truth is the beats
Eats when reality bites
Pandora's box
Radio Rahim's battery charge
I lean back like Pisa
To the dark side of the dark
The speech is salt
It sucks here and lead just talk
Think it's the force
We hear more door
Police is the Oaks
Walking Cerepist with the Razor
hell t-shirt crack has been locked up for stem cell research you're in
Bob or something beyond your comprehension the real millennial exfowlety conditions
living in a paradise secret missions caught in a middle of conspiracy and espionage
go against all ours us born in a paradise my equals travel like the old priest and I'm told we
me bullet holes like police be mohithe paradise songs in your farm like a paradise you
compete christ if you pay the passion of the price again in paradise half new perception you'll
get a procedure of power prophesied the points of progression within paradise
those cajurize he meditate your position fuck rock prosecute poke fiction persecuted poison
from the pulpit proving the rich lie the poor procrastinate die and make excuses
profits past prime pickpockets and practice pointing pencils at feces will pass the
My paradox.
See you the poetic reminitions apart.
Preaching the POWs
Impresing the back to the block
When creativity was God
Everybody wasn't changing the dollar
Skid of Jihad
The paradox
When they can change the Mars
To the temple's shrine
Cathedral or the synagogue
Nah
Just the one sentiment that's in us all
Hey confusion
The actor being underwear
Stuck in the fog
But this ain't mission for Mars
This is more like
Spitting these bars
To ensure my position the mall
Then you do Bible rap prophecy
Watch tower mockery, I mean
Your mind's been molested sloppily
I got a bomb in my beeper
A laser in my sneaker
Radiation reed for students
Kidnapped the teachers
But there's cameras in the bleachers
Police dogs with six heads
12 grenades in my dozen of eggs
Trying to stop the plague
Before it spreads
Striving not to fall off
Because I know I know I know the ledge
Allegiance to my soldiers
Would I truly pledge
My babies after six bottles with this
I'm truly fed
I check the weather
The forecast is pollution
My resolution
Some radiation
Su shit
They introduce
Team execution
By the Constitution
Confucius the illusion
So I think straight
What they use in my hood
The ducks
Toxic waste
I got this case
But I ain't trying to see the judge
I got this wound
I feel of heat
But I ain't trying to see the blood
I got this heart
But I ain't fit in the bleed love
I see the plug
But I can't blow that shit out
And you know who control the side
Too much excuses
They bring it back the nooses
With no strings attached
Chemical drug abuse
and pass crack, using NASDAQ to kill black, round yellow and white, the ALI fight versus
illuminate Mike, paradise, seeing buildings crumble, the tower's babble, manifest the meaning in the mumbles.
You're in, barbed with something, beyond your comprehension, the real millennium, exfow,
reality conditions.
We're living in a paradise. Secret missions, corner the middle of conspiracy and espionage, go against all laws.
hold it down and you know who control the sounds keep it moving you could hold it down and you know the control of the sound