Its author is known popularly as "the Unabomber," but he (the FBI believes it's a lone male) uses the unexplained pseudonym F.C. While F.C. doesn't cite ideological inspirations, he stands in a long line of anti-tech thinkers from William Blake to Gerry Mander. Many of these authors are slicker and more coherent than F.C., but that's part of F.C.'s point. Early reviewers described F.C.'s writing as stilted and dry, detracting from his persuasiveness. I disagree. Any work of criticism carries the aesthetic of its ideal alternative. F.C.'s stodgy, authoritarian pronouncements express his wish for a stodgy, authoritarian future. His rambling arguments visualize his dream for a slower-paced world. His overgeneralizations about human nature reveal a utopia where most people would be treated as "masses," placed in socially-useful labor. F.C. believes "the industrial-technological system" is a social, psychological and environmental "disaster for the human race." He believes people have become slaves to a system working for its own growth, not for human betterment; a system too complex and powerful to ever be "reformed;" a system which, unless overthrown, will eventually destroy the planet. Plenty of non-murderers have said things like that. In his way F.C. essentially says he's tired of talk and wants action. He's tired of college leftists because they just talk, and also because Marxist ideals of collective "progress" and planned economies would require the industrial state he wants to smash. Most dystopians are utopians at heart, and most utopians seek a society in which people like themselves would rule or at least fit in better. While his prescriptions for the world are far more vague than his condemnations, F.C. clearly pines for a society guided not by the "Invisible Hand" of Adam Smith's marketplace, nor by the impersonal demands of production and consumption, but by the force of muscle and will -- presumably other people's muscle and his will. He doesn't mention that modern experiment in a planned neo-agrarian society, Pol Pot's Kampuchea. Here was a philosopher-activist who, like F.C., was willing to sacrifice other people's lives to bring about a more "natural" state; except his system couldn't feed an industrial-age population base, and the industrialist Communists of Vietnam had a stronger army. In F.C.'s utopia, there wouldn't be heavy machinery or internal-combustion engines (he fantasizes about "burning all technical books" so these things can't be brought back), hence no armies capable of reversing his revolution. Cold Warriors used to rant about the Reds' ability to "bomb us into the stone age." F.C. would settle for bombing us into the Bronze Age.
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2001 COLUMNS 2000 COLUMNS 1999 COLUMNS 1999 COLUMNS 1998 COLUMNS 1997 COLUMNS 1996 COLUMNS 1995 COLUMNS 1986-94 COLUMNS ESSAYS FICTION X-WORDS 'THE BIG BOOK OF MISC.' THE BOOK 'LOSER' MISCmedia, THE MAGAZINE FUTURE PROJECTS CYBER STUFF THINGS I LIKE 'MISC. TALK' DISCUSSION FORUM CLARK'S CULTURE CORRAL: BOOKS, MUSIC, MOVIES REVIEWED AND SOLD (Support MISC. Media; make your Amazon.com purchases thru this link.) |
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